Chapter 77: Chapter 77: The Mask
"THEY’RE STILL YOUR EYES," she said softly, though they both knew that wasn’t entirely true anymore.
"Are they?" Grayson asked, and for the first time since she’d known him, he sounded truly uncertain about the answer.
The blue-gray swirl in his eyes seemed to shift even as she watched, like storm clouds gathering on a distant horizon.
The change was subtle but undeniable—a visible manifestation of the supernatural awakening that had begun to reshape him from the inside out.
Mailah woke to sunlight streaming through tall windows and the disorienting realization that she was alone.
The chair by the window where Grayson had settled the night before was empty, the silk cushion still bearing the faint impression of his form.
She sat up slowly, her body protesting the movement with a bone-deep exhaustion that reminded her vividly of the previous night’s feeding.
The events came flooding back—the dreamscape seduction, the near-death experience, Lucson’s ominous warning, and most importantly, the change she’d seen in Grayson’s eyes.
The memory of that blue-gray swirl made her chest tighten with an emotion she couldn’t quite name.
She found him in the kitchen, standing at the island with a cup of coffee cradled in his hands.
He was fully dressed in dark jeans and a charcoal sweater that emphasized the breadth of his shoulders, but there was something different about the way he held himself.
More contained, more careful, as though he were consciously restraining some inner force.
"Good morning," she said softly, not wanting to startle him.
He turned at her voice, and she caught her breath. In the morning sunlight, the change in his eyes was even more pronounced.
The gray hadn’t just spread through the blue—it seemed to pulse with its own inner light, creating depths that spoke of ancient power barely held in check.
"How are you feeling?" he asked, his voice carefully neutral as he gestured toward the coffee pot. "There’s fresh coffee, and I can make you breakfast if you’re hungry. I gave Mrs. Baker and the staff the days off—thought we might need some privacy last night."
The domesticity of the offer contrasted sharply with the supernatural energy that seemed to radiate from his skin like heat.
Mailah found herself studying his face, searching for signs of the man who had held her so tenderly just yesterday.
"I’m okay," she said, though she wasn’t entirely sure that was true. "A little tired, but okay. What about you? Did you sleep at all?"
Something flickered across his expression—too quick for her to interpret fully. "Some. I’ve been thinking about what Lucson said, about what happens now."
He poured her coffee, carefully avoiding any contact between their fingers when he handed her the mug.
The deliberate distance didn’t escape her notice. And though he stood apart, as if restraint were his only defense, the connection between them crackled like lightning, spanning the gap with invisible threads that tugged at her every nerve.
"And what did you conclude?" she asked, wrapping her hands around the warm ceramic as though it could somehow bridge the growing gap between them.
"That we need to be practical about this," he said, his tone becoming businesslike in a way that made her heart sink. "The feeding awakened something in me that’s going to require... management. We need to establish boundaries, protocols. Ways to ensure your safety while meeting my supernatural needs."
The clinical way he spoke about their connection made her feel hollow inside.
Where was the man who had whispered her name like a prayer just hours before?
"Protocols," she repeated, unable to keep the hurt from creeping into her voice.
Grayson’s jaw clenched, and for a moment she saw a flash of something raw and vulnerable in those transformed eyes before he shuttered it away.
"I won’t risk hurting you," he said quietly. "Last night proved that I’m capable of losing control, of taking more than you can safely give. That can’t happen again."
"But it didn’t happen," Mailah protested. "You pulled yourself back, you saved me—"
"Barely." The word cracked like a whip between them. "I barely stopped myself, Mailah. And that was with Kieran there to monitor the situation. Next time—"
"Next time will be different," she interrupted, setting her coffee down with more force than necessary. "We’ll be more prepared, more careful. We’ll learn from what happened."
Grayson stared at her for a long moment, and she could see the war being waged behind his eyes—the human part of him that wanted to believe her fighting against the demon that knew the dangers involved.
"Will we?" he asked softly. "Or will I lose myself a little more each time until there’s nothing left of the man you think you know?"
The question pressed into the space between them, sharp enough to cut through all her careful optimism.
Because the truth was, she could see the change in him even now.
Not just the eyes, but something deeper—a restless energy that made him seem like a wild animal pacing the confines of a cage.
"You’re still you," she insisted, though her voice lacked the conviction she wanted to project.
"Am I?" He moved away from her, creating more physical distance as though proximity itself was dangerous. "Because I can feel it, Mailah. The hunger. It’s not just for life force anymore—it’s for everything. Your touch, your breath, your complete surrender. And the worst part is that I want it. Not just the demon in me, but the man too."
The raw honesty in his confession made her pulse quicken despite everything.
She could see the truth of it in the way his hands trembled almost imperceptibly, in the careful control he exercised over every movement.
"Maybe that’s not such a terrible thing," she said quietly.
His laugh was bitter. "Isn’t it? Because I’m not sure I can trust myself to know when enough is enough anymore. Last night, when you were dying in my arms, all I could think about was how incredible the feeding had been, how alive I felt with your life force flowing into me. What kind of monster does that make me?"
The anguish in his voice broke something inside her chest. She took a step toward him, then stopped when he immediately stepped back.
"It makes you honest," she said softly. "It makes you someone who’s struggling with something incredibly difficult and trying to protect the people you care about. That’s not monstrous, Grayson. That’s human."
"But I’m not human," he said, and for the first time, he sounded like he was truly accepting that fact. "I’m something else wearing a human mask. And that mask is slipping."
Before Mailah could respond, the sound of tires on gravel drifted through the open windows. They both froze, immediately on high alert.
"Are you expecting anyone?" she asked, though she already knew the answer from the tension that had appeared in his shoulders.
"No." Grayson moved toward the window with fluid grace, his enhanced abilities evident in every step. "But after last night..., we should probably expect visitors."
Mailah joined him at the window, careful to maintain the distance he seemed to need, and peered out at the circular drive.
A sleek black Mercedes was pulling to a stop near the front entrance, its tinted windows revealing nothing about its occupants.
"Another brother?" she asked, though something in her chest told her this was different.
"Maybe." Grayson’s voice was tight with wariness. "Or something else entirely."
The car door opened, and a figure emerged that made Mailah’s breath catch in her throat.
Not because of supernatural magnetism this time, but because of sheer, devastating beauty that seemed almost offensive in its perfection.
The woman who stepped out of the Mercedes was tall and elegant, with platinum blonde hair that caught the morning sunlight like spun silver.
She carried herself with a predatory elegance, every step betraying the unmistakable mark of her supernatural lineage, her emerald eyes sweeping the estate as though reclaiming what was already hers.
"Do you know her?" Mailah asked, though she already dreaded the answer.
Grayson’s face had gone completely blank, the careful mask he’d worn for centuries sliding into place with practiced ease.
But she could see the tension in every line of his body, could sense the way his supernatural energy had shifted.
"Yes," he said quietly, his voice carrying undertones that made the hair on her arms stand up. "That’s Kassandra."
"Who is Kassandra?"
Grayson’s jaw clenched as the blonde woman approached the front door with confident strides.
"My wife," he said, the words falling like stones into still water. "From about two centuries ago."
Mailah’s breath caught.
Wife.
The word sliced through her, sharp and cold, even though she told herself it shouldn’t matter. She wasn’t his anything. And yet... she couldn’t ignore the burn low in her chest.
Kassandra’s smile was languid, too knowing, as if she already sensed the storm she was about to ignite.
Mailah whispered, her voice unsteady despite her best efforts, "And what does she want with you now?"
Grayson didn’t look at her.
His eyes stayed fixed on the woman drawing closer, a muscle ticking in his jaw. "With me?" he said, voice dark and taut. "I haven’t the faintest idea."