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Now reading: Chapter 243: The Ember 2 from Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband, a Romance novel by rachsales.

THE ENGINE IDLED like a restrained animal.

Inside the car, the silence didn’t feel empty anymore. It felt sharpened—polished to a blade edge by everything they were refusing to say.

"If I take the Ember Sigil back," Grayson said, "my brothers will assu I intend to use it."

"Do you?" Mailah asked.

His jaw tightened, the smallest movent telegraphing how much he hated questions that forced him into truth.

"I intend to ensure it remains out of reach," he said at last.

That answer was so careful it was almost evasive.

Mailah narrowed her eyes. "That wasn’t a yes or no."

"It wasn’t ant to be."

His hand stayed on the wheel. He didn’t look at her, but she could see the tension under his skin, the way his restraint looked less like peace and more like a clamp holding sothing down.

"What’s important," he continued, voice even, "is that no one else gains access to it."

Mailah let out a slow breath. "Okay. Fine. But—Grayson." She leaned closer, forcing him to acknowledge her with proximity if not eye contact. "Is it even possible for anyone else to use what’s inside it? Or is it safer to keep the artifact in the museum?"

He finally turned his head. His gaze held that calm, predatory patience that always made her feel like she was the one who’d stepped into a trap.

"You think I enjoy being cautious?" he asked.

"No," she admitted. "I think you enjoy being right."

A flicker—almost a smile—ghosted his mouth and vanished.

"The ember is mine," he said. "Only I can draw it back into myself."

Mailah’s shoulders loosened, relief slipping in before she could stop it. "So if you’re the only one who can extract it, then why—"

"Because extraction is not the only kind of possession," he cut in.

The words struck colder than the night air.

Mailah stilled. "What does that an?"

Grayson looked forward again, as if the driveway and the manor were safer to focus on than her face. "There are other ways to take power," he said, voice low. "Not by becoming its rightful bearer. By siphoning. Distorting. Breaking the container and drinking what spills."

"That sounds..." She swallowed. "...impossible."

"In your world," he corrected. "Impossibility is often a failure of imagination."

Mailah’s mouth tightened. "So soone could... what? Crack it open like a coconut?"

He didn’t answer imdiately, and that made her stomach turn.

"There are rituals," he said finally. "Old. Unstable. Designed by desperate things that never cared whether the world survived the experint."

Mailah stared at him. "And you’re telling the museum is basically hosting an apocalyptic science fair project."

His gaze flicked to her, unimpressed. "Do not trivialize it."

"I’m trying not to panic," she snapped, then imdiately regretted the sharpness. Her nerves were already stretched thin.

The museum. The near-loss of control. The brothers’... bedroom situation. And now this.

Grayson’s tone softened in the smallest, strangest way. "Panic is not useful. Awareness is."

Mailah turned her head toward the estate. It stood ahead of them like a held breath—warm lights in windows, dark gardens, too much stone, too many secrets.

"So," she said carefully, "you want to take it back because even if no one can wear the ember, soone could... steal it another way. And if they do, the power is big enough to destroy this world."

"Yes."

"And you’re not telling whether you plan to use it because—"

"Because," he said, cutting her off, "my intentions are not the current threat."

That was the most ambiguous answer he could have given. It was also the most Grayson answer he could have given.

Mailah stared at him, exasperation mixing with sothing else—sothing frighteningly close to understanding. He lived like a ruler. He spoke like one. He moved like he assud the world would bend if he pushed hard enough.

Mailah opened her mouth, ready to demand more, to push until he either cracked or finally offered her the courtesy of honesty—

—and then the estate gates opened.

Not dramatically. Not suspiciously. Just smoothly, as if the house itself had been waiting to receive them.

Before Mailah could ask another question, the sound of another car on the drive broke the tension.

Then another.

Headlights swept the gravel in slow arcs. Tires crunched. Doors shut.

Grayson’s gaze sharpened as if he could taste who had arrived before he saw them.

"They’re early," Mailah murmured.

And then Lucson appeared.

He stepped into the warm spill of the porch lights with the kind of presence that didn’t need volu to dominate. His expression was grave—more severe than Mailah had ever seen it.

Ravenson followed a beat later, coat open, eyes scanning the estate.

Mailah’s pulse kicked.

The way they moved—together but not clustered—made it obvious this wasn’t just a family dinner. This was a response.

A crisis.

Grayson got out of the car first. Mailah followed, pausing at the edge of the gravel as she watched the brothers converge near the entrance. Their voices were low. Their body language clipped. Not frantic, but edged.

Mailah hugged her arms around herself and considered whether she should excuse herself.

This was demon business. Demon politics. Demon consequences.

She was human.

Barely healed.

And still... she was involved. She’d seen the artifact. She’d seen Grayson nearly fracture in public. She’d heard the threat: other ways to take power.

She took a step forward—then hesitated.

Lucson’s head turned, his gaze landing on her with unsettling precision, as if he’d felt her uncertainty shift the air.

"Mailah," he said.

It wasn’t a request.

It was an inclusion that sounded suspiciously like an order.

Mailah blinked. "I—"

"Co," Lucson repeated, already turning toward the estate as if the decision had been made long before she was asked.

To her surprise, she didn’t bristle.

A rare opportunity, she realized.

Not to be protected from the truth. Not to be kept in the dark while n with impossible power decided her world’s fate in another room.

She followed.

Inside, the estate’s warmth swallowed them.

They didn’t go to the dining room.

They went to the library.

Mailah lingered near the doorway, unsure where she belonged.

Then she saw Grayson.

He was already there, standing near the hearth with one hand resting against the mantle as if he were holding himself in place. When his gaze swept to her, it didn’t harden.

It didn’t even change.

He simply looked at her, then looked away again, as if her presence didn’t disrupt him.

Relief loosened sothing in her chest.

He isn’t going to throw out, she realized.

Or worse—pretend I’m invisible.

Lucson took the seat closest to the fire without asking permission. Ravenson remained standing, arms folded, eyes sharp.

Mason and Carson arrived monts later, conspicuously more dressed and conspicuously more innocent than they’d been at Ashford Manor.

Carson tossed himself onto a chair like the world wasn’t about to implode.

Mailah took a seat near the edge of the circle.

Lucson didn’t waste ti.

"The Ember Sigil stays in the museum," he said flatly.

Carson lifted a hand. "Unprotected, apparently. Humans are adorable."

"Humans are reckless," Ravenson corrected.

Mailah’s eyes narrowed. "I’m right here."

Carson offered her a grin. "And we love you for it."

Lucson’s gaze sliced toward Carson, and whatever playful comnt had been forming died on Carson’s tongue.

Lucson turned back to Grayson. "You want to retrieve it."

"Yes."

Lucson’s expression remained carved from stone. "I don’t."

The quiet that followed felt heavier than shouting.

Mailah’s attention snapped between them. She’d never seen Lucson outright oppose Grayson—not like this.

Grayson didn’t flinch. "Your objection is noted."

Lucson’s voice stayed calm, which sohow made it more dangerous. "Your mind is not stable enough for proximity to that power."

Grayson’s eyes flashed. "My mind is not the concern."

Lucson’s brow lifted, slow and skeptical. "Isn’t it?"

Mason, who had been silent, finally spoke. "We should focus on whether the museum is already compromised. If anyone has noticed what it is."

Ravenson nodded once. "That should be the first question."

Mailah cleared her throat. "I didn’t see anyone reacting to it. Just... normal visitors."

Lucson’s gaze flicked to her briefly, assessing, then back to Grayson. "Normal visitors don’t worry . Collectors do."

"Collectors?" Mailah repeated.

"People who collect power," Carson said. "Not antiques."

Grayson’s voice cut in, controlled. "The ember responds to . If soone is attempting to tamper with the Sigil, I will know."

Lucson’s eyes sharpened. "You assu you’ll have ti."

Grayson stepped closer to the fire, the light turning his features sharper. "I rember why I sealed the Ember away," he said, voice dropping. "That mory is enough."

"It’s not enough," Lucson said. "It was never only about the Ember. It was about you."

Grayson’s gaze hardened. "You think I’m going to lose control."

Lucson didn’t deny it. He didn’t need to. The grave set of his mouth did the work.

Then Lucson added, quieter, more pointed: "The exile version of you might have had a reason for keeping the Ember Sigil where it is."

That line struck the room like a thrown knife.

Mailah’s pulse spiked.

Grayson’s stare went still.

"What reason," Grayson said slowly, "could justify leaving the Ember in a human museum?"

Lucson’s expression didn’t soften. "That’s what worries ."

Carson leaned forward, suddenly less amused. "Lucson—"

"No," Lucson said, cutting him off. "Listen. Past Grayson did not tell us why he chose that place. Not the museum specifically. Not the donor route. Not the exact logic."

Mason’s jaw tightened. "He only told us it needed to be sowhere he couldn’t reach."

"And he was very precise about it," Ravenson added. "Which ans there was more to it."

Mailah felt a chill slide down her spine.

Because that ant sothing she hadn’t dared to consider.

Maybe the Ember Sigil wasn’t hidden in a museum because it was safe.

Maybe it was hidden there because soone else was being kept away from it.

Or because the museum itself was part of the protection.

Or because the act of donating it had been a ssage.

A test.

Grayson’s voice went quiet. "You’re suggesting I placed it there for a reason I don’t rember. A reason you don’t know."

Lucson held his gaze. "Yes."

Grayson’s eyes flicked toward the shelves, as if they might hold the missing answer in plain sight.

Mailah swallowed, then spoke before fear could make her polite. "Then we don’t retrieve it recklessly."

Four sets of inhuman eyes turned toward her.

Mailah forced herself not to shrink. "If past Grayson chose that place carefully, then we need to understand why before you change the conditions. Otherwise you might be walking into your own trap."

Grayson’s gaze pinned her, intense, unreadable.

Then—so softly she almost missed it—he said, "You think I set a trap for myself."

"I think," Mailah replied, heart pounding, "that the version of you who lived three centuries on earth knew things this version of you doesn’t. And that version didn’t do anything casually."

Mason’s mouth twitched. "She’s not wrong."

Carson looked impressed. "I love it when the human is brave."

Lucson didn’t smile, but sothing in his eyes shifted—approval, edged with concern.

Grayson remained silent.

And in that silence, Mailah felt sothing dangerous settle into place.

A plan.

Not spoken yet.

But forming.

Because Grayson didn’t look like a man who could tolerate uncertainty for long.

He looked like a man who would go find the answer—even if the answer was waiting behind glass, behind caras, behind strangers who might not be strangers at all.

The fire popped in the hearth.

Lucson’s voice cut through the quiet. "If we do this, we do it discreetly. We do it intelligently. And we do it with the assumption that soone else is already watching that Sigil."

Mailah’s stomach tightened.

"Soone else?" she echoed.

Lucson’s eyes held hers for a beat too long.

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