Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband

Chapter 277: The Demon’s Plan



Chapter 277: The Demon’s Plan

"WE MIGHT HAVE AN IDEA WHO OR WHAT DID THIS."

Mason’s words hung in the air like a death sentence. The normally stoic brother looked almost unsettled, which was saying something for a demon who fed on nightmares.

Grayson’s hand tightened around Mailah’s so abruptly she nearly winced. His expression went completely blank—the kind of blankness that meant something terrible was happening behind it.

"Show me," he said, his voice devoid of inflection.

Mason gestured toward the helicopter. "The nightmare extraction pattern—it’s not just old. It’s specific. There’s a signature woven into the fear residue. A calling card."

Ravenson held up his tablet, displaying what looked like a thermal scan overlaid with swirling patterns of light and shadow. "Only three entities can bend metal like this. Cross-check that with the fear signature, and we’re down to one."

"Who?" Lucson demanded, stepping closer.

But Grayson was already moving, pulling Mailah with him toward the wreckage. His jaw was set in a way that made Mailah’s stomach drop.

This wasn’t surprise. This was confirmation.

"You already knew," she said quietly.

"I suspected." His voice was tight. "I was hoping I was wrong."

They stopped a few feet from the twisted helicopter. Grayson crouched down, examining something on the tarmac that Mailah couldn’t see. When he stood, his expression was carved from ice.

"Theron," he said flatly.

The name seemed to suck all the air from the airfield. Even Carson’s perpetual grin faltered.

"Oh," Carson said, drawing out the word. "Oh, that’s bad. That’s impressively bad. That’s ’maybe we should reconsider the safe house’ levels of bad."

"Who’s Theron?" Mailah asked, looking between the brothers. Their expressions ranged from grim (Mason) to calculating (Lucson) to genuinely worried (Carson), which was terrifying because Carson was never worried.

"Theron," Grayson said, still staring at the wreckage. "An archdemon from our realm. Feeds on terror and despair, like Mason, but takes it to... extremes. He was one of the most powerful in the realm—" He stopped abruptly.

"Before you humiliated him in front of the whole realm," Lucson finished, his tone carrying an edge of disapproval. "Publicly challenged his authority, exposed his corruption, and got him stripped of three ranking titles."

"He deserved it," Grayson said coldly. "He was torturing lower demons for entertainment.’"

"I’m not disagreeing with your moral stance," Lucson replied. "I’m pointing out that you made a very powerful enemy who now appears to be on Earth, murdering pilots to get your attention."

Mailah felt her heart hammering. "Wait, so this demon—Theron—he’s here because of something that happened in your realm?"

"The timing suggests it’s not coincidental," Ravenson said, still studying his tablet.

"Months," Mason muttered. "He must have had plenty of time to establish himself here, learn about our situation, identify weaknesses."

"Identify you," Carson added, looking at Mailah with unusual seriousness. "New human. Close to Gray. Obvious vulnerability."

Mailah swallowed hard. "So he’s been watching us?"

"Likely," Lucson confirmed. "Though he would have been discreet about it. Theron is many things, but he’s not stupid. He would have observed, planned, waited for the right moment to make his presence known."

"And murdering a pilot and destroying a helicopter is that moment?" Mailah’s voice came out higher than intended. "What’s the next moment? Because I’m getting the impression this is just the opening act."

"You’re correct," Grayson said, finally turning to face her. His expression was controlled, but there was something fierce burning behind his eyes. "This is a declaration. Theron doesn’t do subtle threats. He does escalating terror until his target breaks or begs for mercy."

"Charming friend you’ve got there," Mailah managed.

"He’s not my friend. He’s my—" Grayson paused, as if searching for the right word. "He’s someone who has dedicated considerable time and resources to hating me. And now he’s here."

"The question is how," Lucson interjected. "How or why he’s here."

"Most likely he was exiled too," Mason said darkly.

"So he’s been here, on Earth, nursing a grudge," Mailah said slowly.

"The question is what he really wants," Lucson interjected. "Beyond revenge. Theron was exiled, which means he can’t simply return to the realm. Killing you won’t change that."

Mailah squeezed Grayson’s hand, drawing his attention back to her. "Okay. So. Archenemy. Probably exiled. Very powerful. Very angry. Enjoys escalating terror. What’s the actual plan here? Because ’reinforce the estate’ suddenly feels insufficient."

Grayson’s expression softened fractionally.

"The plan," he said carefully, "is to ensure Theron never gets within a hundred feet of you. Which means yes, reinforcing the estate. But also establishing protocols, backup locations, emergency contingencies."

"And figuring out what he wants," Lucson added. "Terror demons don’t just kill for revenge. They extract maximum suffering first. Theron will have an endgame beyond simple murder."

"Probably wants Gray to watch everyone he cares about suffer before finishing him off," Mason said clinically. "Standard terror demon playbook. Psychological torture, escalating threats, breaking the target’s will to resist."

"You’re really bad at the comforting thing," Mailah told him.

Mason shrugged. "I feed on nightmares. Comfort isn’t my specialty."

"What Mason is inelegantly pointing out," Lucson said, "is that we have time. Theron will want to draw this out. Which gives us an opportunity to prepare."

"Or to go on the offensive," Carson suggested. "Find him first. Turn the tables. Make him regret leaving whatever hole he was hiding in for months."

"With what resources?" Lucson countered. "We don’t know where he is, how he’s hiding his signature, or what assets he’s brought with him. Going on the offensive would be reckless."

"So we just sit in the estate and wait for him to make the next move?"

"We fortify, gather intelligence, and prepare for multiple scenarios," Lucson said firmly. "It’s called strategy, Carson. You should try it sometime."

While the brothers descended into debate, Grayson pulled Mailah a few steps away from the group. His hand was still wrapped around hers, warm and solid despite everything.

"I need you to understand something," he said quietly. "Theron is not like other threats we’ve dealt with. He’s ancient, powerful, and singularly focused. He won’t be distracted or deterred. And he will absolutely try to use you against me."

"I got that impression from the whole ’murder the pilot to send a message’ thing," Mailah said, trying for lightness and not quite succeeding.

"I mean it, Mailah." Grayson’s other hand came up to cup her face, thumb brushing across her cheekbone. "He’ll try to get to you. Hurt you. Make you afraid. Use your fear against me. And I—" His jaw worked. "I have to stay rational if that happens."

"Meaning?"

"Meaning I will be completely, coldly rational. Which means I’m going to make decisions you won’t like. Decisions that prioritize your survival over your comfort, your autonomy, possibly even your trust in me," Grayson said, and there was something almost apologetic in his eyes.

Mailah stared at him. "That’s... actually worse than losing control."

"I know." His thumb continued its gentle path across her cheekbone, a stark contrast to the steel in his voice. "But Theron knows how demons think when they’re emotional. He’ll expect rage, possessiveness, irrational protection. He won’t expect calculated strategy. So that’s what I’ll give him."

"Calculated strategy that involves doing things I won’t like," Mailah repeated slowly. "Such as?"

Grayson’s jaw tightened. "Such as using you as bait if the tactical advantage is significant enough. Locking you in a warded room if I determine the threat level requires it, regardless of your objections. Making decisions about your safety without consulting you first because waiting for consensus could cost seconds we don’t have."

"You’re telling me you’re going to treat me like a chess piece."

"I’m telling you I’m going to treat this like war, because that’s what it is. And in war, you don’t always get to ask permission. You act, and you apologize later if you’re both still alive."

Mailah pulled back slightly, studying his face. The honesty there was brutal—he wasn’t sugar-coating this or trying to convince her it would be fine. He was laying out exactly how cold he was prepared to be.

"So the man who just spent a weekend with me is going to go full demon strategist," she said.

"Even if it means you hate me for it afterward."," Grayson said.

"I won’t hate you."

"You might." His hand slid from her face to rest against her neck, feeling her pulse.

Mailah’s throat tightened. She had been working to humanize him, to pull him toward warmth and connection. And now he was telling her he was about to shove all of that aside in favor of pure survival calculation.

"How long?" she asked quietly. "How long are you planning to be this cold, rational version?"

"Until Theron is neutralized. Dead, banished, or otherwise removed as a threat." Grayson’s eyes held hers.

"That’s a terrible promise."

"It’s the only one I can make right now." His voice dropped lower.

Mailah wanted to argue. Wanted to tell him that relationships didn’t work like that, that he couldn’t just decide to be cold and tactical and expect her to accept it.

But the look in his eyes stopped her. This wasn’t arrogance or control. This was fear wrapped in strategy—a demon who’d learned to feel things trying desperately to protect what he’d learned to feel for.

"Okay," she said finally. "Be rational. Make your cold tactical decisions. But Grayson?"

"Yes?"

"When this is over—when Theron is neutralized and you don’t have to be the ice-cold strategist anymore—we’re going to have a very long conversation about this relationship."

His mouth twitched. "Noted."

"I’m serious. You get to be protective demon prince during the crisis. But after? We renegotiate."

"I look forward to it," he said, and despite everything, there was warmth in his voice.


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.