"GOOD NIGHT," Grayson said as he stood abruptly, and then he was gone, leaving her alone in the study with the echo of his last question hanging in the air.
The door shut behind him with a heavy, echoing click that seemed to reverberate through Mailah's bones.
She stood frozen in the sudden silence, the fire in the hearth hissing and spitting as if protesting his abrupt departure.
The warmth of Grayson's kiss still clung to her lips like a brand, the ghost of his touch lingering along her waist where his hands had gripped her with such desperate intensity. But the room itself seemed to cool instantly, as if his presence had been the only thing keeping the shadows at bay.
It wasn't just that he left.
It was how he left.
Without warning. Without looking back. And with a pain behind his eyes that made her feel as though she were missing a crucial piece of an increasingly complex puzzle.
The question he'd asked—would you start to wonder if your husband is exactly what he seems to be?—echoed in her mind, each word carrying weight she couldn't quite comprehend.
Had it been the whiskey talking? Or had there been something deeper, something more unsettling in the way his eyes had seemed to glow in the lamplight?
She turned slowly, her bare feet silent on the Persian rug as her eyes scanned his private study. The room felt different now that she was alone in it, more intimate somehow, as if the walls themselves were holding their breath.
Grayson rarely allowed anyone in here. Even Mrs. Baker had once mentioned, in a rare moment of disclosure over morning tea, that she hadn't stepped foot in this room in over a decade.
Books lined the walls from floor to ceiling, leather-bound volumes with brittle pages and titles etched in fading gold. Heavy velvet curtains were drawn closed against the night, their deep burgundy fabric so thick it seemed to absorb sound.
A single lamp on the massive mahogany desk cast long, dancing shadows across the room, and in that amber light, everything looked older, darker, more mysterious than it should have.
She could almost imagine the shadows breathing.
Mailah hugged her arms around herself, suddenly aware of how thin her dress was, how exposed she felt in this space that was so thoroughly his. The scent of him lingered here—that intoxicating mixture, something wilder, more primal. It made her skin tingle with remembered sensation.
Grayson had changed tonight.
She had seen flashes of vulnerability—flashes that felt real, unguarded, devastatingly attractive. But those moments had come wrapped in something else, too. A strange unease crept in, quickening her pulse for reasons she couldn't quite grasp.
That moment when his headache struck—the sheer violence of it, the way he'd recoiled like a wounded animal. His refusal to be touched. The look in his eyes when he'd spoken of not being entirely human.
Not just pain.
Fear.
But fear of what?
She walked slowly toward the desk where his whiskey glass lay tipped over, amber liquid dripping steadily onto the expensive carpet. The sound was rhythmic, hypnotic, like a heartbeat.
She picked up the glass absently, noting how warm it still was from his touch, before setting it upright.
Her fingers trailed over the leather desk pad, over scattered papers covered in his bold handwriting, until they found the brass handle of the top drawer.
It was unlocked.
Odd, for someone so secretive. Someone who clearly guarded this space so carefully.
Unless he'd wanted her to find whatever was inside.
The thought sent a shiver down her spine as she slowly pulled the drawer open.
Inside were a few personal items: an old, creased letter tied with black ribbon; a leather-bound notebook with worn edges; a strange brass coin with markings she didn't recognize—symbols that seemed to shift and writhe in the lamplight.
But what caught her attention was a weathered photograph tucked between the pages of the notebook, used as a bookmark.
She slid it out with trembling fingers.
The image was simple: a young woman standing beside a man who bore an uncanny resemblance to Grayson. But the man's clothing and hairstyle suggested a different era—decades ago, maybe more.
The photograph itself had that sepia tone of old daguerreotypes, the kind that predated modern photography by generations.
Grayson's father? Grandfather?
But the resemblance was so strong it was almost disturbing. The same sharp jawline, the same intense eyes, the same way of holding himself that spoke of controlled power. If not for the antiquated clothing, she might have thought it was Grayson himself.
And the girl...
There was something hauntingly familiar about her. Not identical to her or her sister but familiar.
She turned the photograph over.
No date. No names. Just a single word written in fading ink: Remember.
Mailah placed the photo gently on the desk and looked down at the notebook. The page it had been marking was covered with a series of erratic notes, written in Grayson's unmistakable handwriting but with a desperation that made the words jagged, almost violent:
Bloodlines must be preserved.Time is running out.Control is slipping—her presence accelerates it.
Her fingers trembled as she read the words again, each one sending ice through her veins. Was this paranoia? Some kind of mental breakdown brought on by stress and alcohol?
Was he referring to her?
Or to someone else?
She flipped back a few pages, her heart hammering as she read more entries:
She's pulling away again. Good. Better that she hates me than discovers what I'm becoming.
The headaches are getting worse. Dr. Morrison's medications do nothing. I can feel it building, like pressure behind my eyes.
Found blood on my pillow again. This can't continue.
Mailah's breath caught. Blood on his pillow? What did that mean?
She flipped to the most recent entry:
She's different tonight. More responsive. More... alive. If I touch her again, if I allow myself to feel what I've been denying... the consequences could be catastrophic.
But God help me, I want her. Want to claim her.
Heat crept up Mailah's neck as she read the words—random scribbles really, not proper journal entries at all.
These were Grayson's private thoughts, scattered and raw on the page, and she felt like she was trespassing on something deeply personal.
Her cheeks burned with shame as she realized she was reading his most intimate musings, thoughts he'd never intended for anyone else to see.
The notebook felt heavy in her hands suddenly, weighted with secrets she had no right to know. She closed it quickly, her fingers trembling as she placed the photograph back between the pages exactly where she'd found it.
Her movements were careful, deliberate, as she returned everything to the drawer in its original position, making sure nothing looked disturbed.
She stepped back from the desk, her face still flushed with embarrassment. What kind of person was she becoming, sneaking through his private things like this? But even as shame coursed through her, she couldn't shake the questions that swirled in her mind.
She glanced once more at the closed drawer. The woman in the photograph—why was she so familiar?
And why did looking at her make Mailah feel like she was missing something crucial, something that was right at the edge of her consciousness?
A creak broke her thoughts. She turned sharply, eyes locking on the door. The hallway beyond was dark, silent, but she could have sworn she'd heard something. Footsteps, maybe. Or the sound of breathing.
"Grayson?" she called softly.
Nothing. But the silence now felt thick, oppressive, as if the room were listening. Waiting for her to discover something she wasn't ready for.
She took a step back, then another, and nearly stumbled into the edge of the desk. Her hand gripped the corner tightly as she steadied herself, her pulse hammering in her ears.
There was something Grayson wasn't telling her. No, many things. And the deeper she was pulled into his world, the more she wondered what other secrets lay hidden in the shadows of this sprawling estate.
Back in her bedroom—the master's bedroom that had been the source of the fire—she climbed into bed alone, still wearing the black dress that had made Grayson's eyes darken with desire. She lay there facing the door, wondering.
What was he hiding? And why did the thought of discovering his secrets make her feel more alive than she had in months?
Just as her eyes started to drift shut, she heard something. Not footsteps. Not voices. A low, guttural sound from somewhere deep in the house.
She sat up, straining to hear more, but the sound was gone as quickly as it had come. Like it had never been there at all. Or like something was very, very good at hiding.
Mailah pulled the covers up to her chin and stared at the door, her heart hammering against her ribs. Whatever Grayson Ashford was hiding, she had the growing certainty that she was about to find out.