The room felt oppressively quiet once Vivienne was gone. Mailah sat on the edge of her bed, staring at the closed door, her mind spinning with impossible choices and terrifying possibilities. The weight of decision pressed down on her chest like a physical thing.
Run or stay. Safety or salvation. Her life or his.
She pressed the palms of her hands against her temples, trying to ease the throbbing headache that had taken root behind her eyes. Every time she thought she'd reached some semblance of clarity, another consideration would surface, another consequence she hadn't fully grasped would rear its head and send her spiraling back into uncertainty.
The rational part of her mind—the part that had kept her alive through years of emotional abuse at the hands of her adoptive family—screamed at her to pack her bags and disappear into the night. He's a demon, that voice whispered. A creature that feeds on human essence. He could kill you without even trying.
But the irrational part, the part that had somehow bloomed to life in this strange estate, reminded her of the way he'd looked at her with genuine fear when she'd asked him to show her his true form. Not fear of her discovering what he was, but fear of what revealing himself might do to her.
And then there was Vivienne's revelation about the slow suicide he'd been committing for three centuries, the image of him growing weaker with each passing decade while maintaining his noble abstinence. The thought of him wasting away to nothing while she ran to safety made her stomach twist with something that felt suspiciously like guilt.
Exhaustion pulled at her limbs like lead weights, but she fought against the urge to lie down. Sleep meant dreams, and dreams meant the possibility of unconsciously summoning Grayson again. After everything they'd discussed, after learning what those nocturnal encounters were really costing both of them, the idea of accidentally triggering another feeding session made her skin crawl with anxiety.
But what if she didn't summon him? What if, instead, her weakened mental defenses attracted one of the other incubi Grayson had warned her about? What if she woke up to find herself drained dry by a creature with none of Grayson's restraint or conscience?
Or worse—what if she didn't wake up at all?
The more she tried to avoid thinking about sleep, the heavier her eyelids became. It was a cruel irony that the very thing she needed most—rest—had become the most dangerous activity.
Finally, unable to bear the suffocating weight of her own indecision any longer, Mailah rose from the bed. Her legs felt unsteady beneath her, whether from exhaustion or emotional overload she couldn't tell, but she forced herself to move toward the door.
Fresh air, she told herself. A change of scenery. Maybe if I stop thinking so hard, the answer will come to me.
She slipped out of her room and into the darkened hallway, her bare feet silent against the cool marble floor.
She had no destination in mind, no plan beyond the desperate need to escape the claustrophobic confines of her bedroom. Her feet carried her through familiar passages and down staircases she'd explored during her weeks of playing Lailah, but tonight everything felt foreign, charged with an energy she couldn't quite identify.
The nightgown she wore—one of Lailah's, naturally—whispered against her skin as she walked. She'd grown accustomed to wearing her sister's clothes, but now the fabric felt different somehow, more sensual, more aware.
It was the soft glow emanating from beneath a set of heavy oak doors that finally gave her feet direction. The light was warm and inviting, a golden beacon in the sea of shadows that filled the corridors. Without consciously deciding to do so, she found herself moving toward it.
The library. The doors were slightly ajar, and the light spilling through the gap was too warm, too flickering, to be electric. Candles, then, or perhaps a fire in the hearth.
She hesitated at the threshold, her hand hovering over the ornate brass handle. Part of her knew she should turn around, return to her room. But a larger part urged her forward.
Just a quick look, she told herself. Maybe there's something I can read, something to distract me from...
She pushed the door open and stepped inside.
It was a library fit for a palace. That was what she always thought each time she entered it, but what stole her breath wasn't the opulence—it was the figure standing silhouetted against the tall windows at the far end of the room.
Grayson.
He stood with his back to her, perfectly still except for the slight movement of his arm as he raised what appeared to be a glass of amber liquid to his lips. The firelight played across his dark hair and the broad line of his shoulders, visible through the white shirt he still wore from their earlier encounter. He looked like a figure from a Renaissance painting—beautiful, brooding, touched by shadows and flame.
For a moment, neither of them moved. The only sounds in the vast room were the soft crackle of the fire and her own rapid breathing. She knew she should leave, should retreat before he became aware of her presence, but her feet seemed rooted to the marble floor and he might have already heard her before she even pushed the door open.
"Mailah." His voice carried easily across the space between them, low and rough with something that might have been exhaustion. Or hunger.
He didn't turn around, but she could see his reflection in the window glass—the sharp line of his profile, the tension in his jaw, the way his free hand clenched and unclenched at his side.
"I couldn't sleep," she said, surprised by how steady her voice sounded. "I kept thinking about... everything."
He moved away from the windows, approaching her with that fluid grace. Each step was deliberate, controlled, like a predator stalking prey. But the prey in question felt no fear—only a growing heat that seemed to emanate from somewhere deep in her core.
"What are you drinking?" she asked, more to fill the charged silence than from genuine curiosity.
He glanced down at the glass in his hand as if he'd forgotten it existed. "Whiskey. Very old, very expensive, and completely ineffective at dulling supernatural senses." He took another sip, his throat working as he swallowed. "Would you like some?"
The offer should have seemed innocent—a simple gesture of hospitality between two people struggling with an impossible situation. But the way he asked it, the way his voice dropped to a near whisper, made it sound like something far more intimate.
"I probably shouldn't," she said, even as she found herself moving closer to him. "Alcohol and... this situation... it seems like a bad combination."
"This situation is already a bad combination." He finished his drink and set the empty glass on a nearby table, his movements precise despite the alcohol he'd consumed. "Adding whiskey to the mix hardly seems like it could make things worse."
They were standing close now, close enough that she could smell the liquor on his breath mixing with that dark, intoxicating scent that was purely him.
"Grayson," she whispered, not sure what she intended to say next.
"I know." His hand rose to cup her cheek, his thumb tracing the line of her cheekbone with devastating gentleness. "I know exactly what you're feeling right now. The pull, the need, the way your body responds to my presence even when your mind knows better."
His touch sent shivers of electricity racing through her, and she found herself leaning into the caress.
"Is that what this is?" she asked, her voice barely audible. "Some kind of supernatural compulsion?"
"Partly," he admitted, his own voice rough with strain.
His other hand came up to frame her face, tilting her head back so she was forced to meet his burning gaze. The intensity there stole her breath, made her knees weak.
"Show me," she whispered, the words tumbling from her lips before she could stop them. "Show me what you really are."
His hands stilled against her skin. "Mailah..."
"I need to know," she said, her voice gaining strength as the decision crystallized in her mind. "I need to see all of you. How can I decide when I don't even know what I'd be choosing?"
For a long moment, he simply stared at her, and she could see the war playing out in his expression. Desire warred with protectiveness, hunger battled with conscience.
His thumbs traced small circles on her cheekbones, and she could feel the tension thrumming through his body like a live wire.
"If I show you," he said finally, his voice barely above a whisper, "there's no going back. You'll see me as I really am—not the human mask I wear, but the creature underneath. And once you've seen that..." He swallowed hard. "I don't know if I'll be able to let you leave."
The confession hung between them like a challenge, dangerous and thrilling and absolutely terrifying. But instead of fear, Mailah felt a surge of something that might have been anticipation.
"Then maybe," she said, rising up on her toes to bring their faces closer together, "I won't want to leave."
Something in his expression shifted, the careful control he'd been maintaining finally beginning to crack. His grip on her face tightened fractionally, and when he spoke, his voice carried an edge of something wild and hungry.
"God, Mailah. You have no idea what you do to me."
"Show me what I do to you," she breathed against his lips.
The last thread of his restraint snapped.
He kissed her with a desperation that stole her breath, his mouth moving against hers with hungry urgency.
This wasn't the controlled passion she remembered from their dream encounters—this was raw, primal, edged with centuries of starvation and need.
His hands tangled in her hair, angling her head to deepen the kiss, and she could taste the whiskey on his tongue along with something darker, more exotic.
She melted against him, her hands fisting in the soft cotton of his shirt as her body came alive under his touch.
This was what she'd been craving, what her body had been yearning for since those first impossible dreams.
But even as she lost herself in the kiss, she became aware of changes in him. His skin grew warmer beneath her hands, radiating heat like a furnace. His grip on her hair tightened, not quite painful but possessive in a way that sent shivers of dark excitement through her.
And his scent—already intoxicating—grew stronger, more complex, carrying notes of smoke and spice and something indefinably otherworldly.
When he finally pulled back, his breathing was ragged, his eyes no longer quite the same shade of blue. They were darker now, deeper, with flecks of silver that seemed to move and shift in the firelight.
"Last chance," he said, his voice rougher now. "I can still stop this, still let you walk away with nothing more than memories of a few kisses."
But Mailah was beyond rational thought, beyond fear or self-preservation. The need coursing through her veins was unlike anything she'd ever experienced. All she knew was that she needed more of him, needed to see him as he truly was, needed to understand the full scope of what she was choosing between.
"Don't stop," she whispered, her hands sliding up his chest to tangle in his hair. "Please, Grayson. I need to see."
His control shattered completely.
The transformation began slowly, subtly, like watching a photograph develop in reverse. His already perfect features became more angular, more defined, as if an artist had taken a fine brush to the lines of his face and made them impossibly sharp.
His skin took on a luminescent quality, pale as moonlight but somehow radiant from within. His hair darkened to true black, absorbing light rather than reflecting it.
But it was his eyes that truly changed. The blue deepened to the color of midnight sky.
When he looked at her, she felt as if he could see straight through to her soul—and the hunger there was so intense, so consuming, that she should have been terrified.
Instead, she was mesmerized.
"Beautiful," she breathed, reaching up to trace the sharp line of his cheekbone.
He caught her wrist in his hand—and she could see now that his fingers were longer, more elegant, tipped with what might have been claws.
His grip was gentle despite the obvious strength in those inhuman hands, but she could feel the barely leashed power thrumming beneath his transformed skin.
"This is what I am," he said. "This is what wants to devour you completely."
The words should have been a warning, but the way he said them—with such raw need, such desperate hunger—only inflamed her desire further.
She could feel her pulse racing, her breath coming in shallow gasps.
"I'm not afraid," she whispered, and realized with surprise that it was true.
His transformed features twisted into something that might have been pain or ecstasy. "You should be."
But even as he said it, he was pulling her closer, his inhuman hands mapping the curves of her body through the thin silk of her nightgown. Everywhere he touched, her skin blazed with sensation so intense it bordered on pain.
The room around them seemed to shift and blur. The firelight grew brighter, more golden, while the shadows deepened to pure black.
She was dimly aware that they were moving, that he was backing her toward one of the reading nooks tucked between the towering bookshelves.
All that mattered was the feel of his hands on her body, the heat of his transformed skin against hers, the way his inhuman eyes burned with silver fire as they devoured her.
When her back hit the soft velvet of the reading chair, she gasped, and he was immediately there, caging her against the furniture with his arms.
His face was inches from hers, those impossible eyes boring into her soul.
"Mine," he growled.
And instead of terror, instead of the survival instinct that should have been screaming at her to run, she felt something deep within her respond with eager agreement.
"Yes," she whispered, arching up toward him. "Yes, I'm—"
The scream that tore from her throat was involuntary, born of shock rather than fear. Because suddenly, impossibly, his beautiful face was changing again.
His features elongated, became sharper, more predatory. His mouth opened to reveal teeth that were definitely not human—long, curved fangs designed for tearing flesh. And his eyes...
His eyes had become windows into something vast and terrible and absolutely inhuman. Not silver flames now, but swirling vortexes of hunger that threatened to pull her in and consume her utterly.
This was no longer Grayson. This was the creature he'd been hiding, the demon that lived beneath the beautiful mask, and it was looking at her like she was prey.
Her scream echoed through the library as darkness rushed up to claim her, and the last coherent thought she had was a question:
Was this a dream, or had he finally decided to feed properly?