Chapter 273: The Last Day
Chapter 273: The Last Day
BY THE TIME SUNDAY MORNING rolled around, the tension from the "Julian incident" had been replaced by a strange, domestic truce.
Mailah had insisted on one last walk along the shore. This time, she didn’t ask for a picnic; she simply asked for his company. Grayson, perhaps sensing that the weekend was ending and his "fortress" was about to be tested, agreed without his usual lecture on tidal surges.
They walked in silence for a while, the wind whipping Mailah’s hair across her face. Grayson reached out, catching a stray strand and tucking it behind her ear with a grace that still felt alien to his large, powerful frame.
"You are thinking about the city," he noted.
"I’m thinking about what happens when we go back," Mailah admitted.
Grayson stopped, turning her to face him. The morning sun was bright, making the blue of his eyes look like clear glass.
Standing there on the wet sand, his shirt unbuttoned and fluttering in the salt breeze, he looked like a god who had accidentally wandered onto a postcard. But his eyes remained sharp—crystalline and focused on Mailah.
"You are worried," Grayson said, his voice easily cutting through the roar of the Atlantic. It wasn’t a question. He had become disturbingly good at reading the tension in her shoulders, even if he still struggled with the ’why’ behind it.
Mailah looked down at their feet, where the foam of a dying wave hissed over their toes. "Here, it’s just us. Back there, you’re a CEO and a Prince. You’ll go back to being a fortress, Grayson."
Grayson went silent. He didn’t offer a platitude. He didn’t even move. He simply stared at her with that unblinking, predatory focus that made her skin prickle.
"I have existed for eons," he began, his voice dropping into a register that made the very sand beneath her feet seem to thrum. "In my realm, the concept of a ’weekend’ does not exist. Time is measured in conquests and the endurance of one’s flame. My previous mates—if you could call them that—were creatures of cold ambition."
He stepped closer, closing the distance until the heat radiating from his chest rivaled the morning sun.
"They were Princesses or Arch-Dutchesses. They spent our time together calculating how many legions my name could bring to their house. Or they spent it attempting to satisfy my more... carnal requirements to ensure their own survival. They wanted my power. They wanted my seat. They never once," he paused, his eyes flickering with a faint, confused silver, "concerned themselves with whether I was ’watching others’ or looking at them. In my world, looking at someone is a prelude to a challenge or a claim. There is no middle ground."
"I’m not asking for a challenge," Mailah whispered, her heart doing a frantic dance against her ribs. "I’m asking for... connection. To be a priority, not just a protected asset."
Grayson reached out, his hand hovering near her jaw before his fingers finally brushed the skin. His touch was electric, a searing contrast to the cool sea air.
"It is fascinating," he murmured, more to himself than to her. "You do not want my crown. You do not want my vaults. You want my presence. It is a demand I have never encountered, and yet, it is the only one I find myself inclined to fulfill."
He tilted his head, studying her like a scientist looking at a new element. "I find your concern odd. Irrational, even. But I also find that the thought of you retreating into the background of my life creates a sensation in my chest that feels remarkably like... a malfunction."
"It’s called missing someone, Grayson," she said softly.
"Whatever it is, I find it inefficient. Again," he countered, though his thumb traced the line of her lower lip with agonizing slowness. "But I will make a concession. My overprotectiveness... I will attempt to keep it ’in check’. Does that keep you at ease?"
Mailah laughed, a bright, startled sound that made Grayson’s eyes soften in a way that would have terrified his demonic subjects. "Grayson, I’ll take it. It’s the most romantic thing I’ve ever heard a pre-exile demon say."
"I am not being romantic," he grumbled, though he didn’t pull his hand away. "I am being tactical. If your ’ease’ ensures your survival, then I will provide it."
He leaned down then. "But make no mistake, Mailah. I will not lose the only creature who thinks I am an ’idiot’ and stays anyway."
It was as close to a confession as Grayson Ashford could get in his current state, and it was enough to make Mailah’s knees weak.
He was trying. One of the most powerful entities she had ever met was trying to learn the etiquette of a heart, and the sheer effort of it was more swoon-worthy than any bouquet of roses.
The walk back to the house was lighter, though Grayson still insisted on walking on the seaward side of her, eyes constantly scanning the cliffs.
When they reached the terrace, the "funny" side of their mismatch returned. Grayson had decided that he would handle the "packing protocol."
"Grayson, what are you doing?" Mailah asked, stopping in the doorway of the bedroom.
Grayson was standing over her suitcase. He wasn’t folding clothes. He was staring at her silk pajamas as if they were a complex puzzle.
"I am optimizing the space," he said without looking up. "I have determined that your methods of ’folding’ are chaotic and waste the available volume."
"Grayson, are you... are you using a vacuum sealer on my socks?"
Grayson paused, his knee pressed firmly into the center of Mailah’s suitcase. He was currently holding a high-powered, industrial-grade suction hose he had apparently scavenged from the house’s pantry.
"They’re socks, Grayson! They don’t need oxygen, but they also don’t need to be turned into plastic bricks!" She walked over, looking at her now rock-hard, vacuum-sealed floral socks. "I can’t even put these on until they ’re-inflate.’ You’ve turned my wardrobe into emergency rations."
He sighed, standing up and smoothing out his trousers. "Humans are remarkably comfortable with chaos. It is a wonder you ever managed to build a civilization when you cannot even pack a bag with basic efficiency."
"We built a civilization so we could have soft socks and look at pictures of cats," Mailah countered, gently nudging him away from the suitcase. "Go. Stand on the terrace. Look at the horizon. Let me handle the ’chaos’ of my sweaters before you decide to shrink-wrap my hair dryer."
Grayson grumbled something under his breath about "unstructured logistics" but retreated to the terrace.
He stood by the railing, his silhouette sharp against the morning light, looking like a man who was personally offended by the lack of punctuality in the natural world.
Mailah watched him through the glass.
It was funny, in a strange, endearing way. This man could probably dismantle a corporation or a kingdom with a single phone call, yet he was currently locked in a silent battle with the concept of a weekend bag.
He was a mess of contradictions.
Ten minutes passed. Then twenty.
The roar of the Atlantic was the only sound filling the silence.
Usually, the private helicopter was as punctual as a heartbeat. He ran his life—and hers—on a schedule that didn’t allow for a single wasted second.
Mailah stepped out onto the terrace, shielding her eyes from the sun. "Where are they? You said the pick-up was at nine sharp."
Grayson checked his watch. His jaw tightened. "They are three minutes and forty seconds late."
He pulled his phone from his pocket and swiped it open.
"Status," Grayson barked the moment the call connected.
Mailah watched him. At first, he looked merely annoyed—the typical ’CEO-at-work’ frown. But as someone spoke on the other end, Grayson’s expression shifted. It wasn’t a slow change. It was as if a mask of stone had suddenly cracked.
His eyes suddenly darkened. The stormy silver returned, swirling with a cold, sharp intensity. He didn’t say anything for a long time. He just listened, his grip on the phone tightening until his knuckles turned white.
"Repeat that," Grayson whispered.
He went completely still. Even his breathing seemed to stop.
"Understood," Grayson said finally. "Do not move him. Do not touch anything. I am coming."
He ended the call and stood there, staring out at the ocean. He didn’t turn around to look at Mailah.
"Grayson?" she asked, her voice small. "What is it? What happened in the city?"
He didn’t answer immediately. He tucked the phone away and finally turned to her. His face was a mask of lethal, unreadable calm—the kind of calm that was far more terrifying than anger.
"The helicopter is not coming, Mailah," he said, his voice as cold as the deep sea. "Change your shoes. We are taking the armored SUV."
"Why? Grayson, you’re scaring me. What happened?"
He walked toward her, his presence suddenly overwhelming, the "human" mask completely gone. He took her face in his hands, his touch firm, his eyes searching hers with a desperate, raw intensity she had never seen before.
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