Chapter 14: Chapter 14: The Auction
The war room—because that's what Mailah had mentally dubbed Evelyn Morrison's PR command center—looked like a cross between a NASA launch facility and a fashion magazine's editorial office.
Three wall-mounted screens displayed real-time social media sentiment analysis, trending hashtags, and what appeared to be a color-coded calendar that looked more complex than international peace treaties.
Mailah sat in a chair, trying not to fidget while Evelyn paced before her like a general preparing troops for battle. The older woman's silver hair was pulled back in a chignon so severe it could have been classified as a weapon, and her navy suit was pressed to military precision.
"First rule," Evelyn announced, pointing at Mailah with a Mont Blanc pen that gleamed like a tiny sword. "You are not Grayson Ashford's wife. You are Grayson Ashford's humanizing factor. Your job is to make him seem approachable, warm, and capable of love."
Luke, perched at a standing desk with three laptops open, looked up from his screens. "According to our latest polling, sixty-seven percent of respondents found Mr. Ashford 'attractive but terrifying.' We need to shift that to 'attractive and aspirational.'"
Mailah blinked. "People actually poll about my husband's attractiveness?"
"Honey," Evelyn said with the patience of someone explaining basic math to a particularly slow child, "people poll about everything. What matters is that you're going to help us flip the narrative from 'corporate villain' to 'devoted family man who occasionally has to make tough business decisions.'"
The phrase 'devoted family man' made something twist uncomfortably in Mailah's stomach. She thought about the way Grayson had looked at her in the solarium yesterday—like he was trying to solve a puzzle that kept changing its pieces.
"What exactly do I need to do?" she asked, proud that her voice came out steady.
Evelyn smiled with the satisfaction of a chess master who'd just cornered an opponent's king. "Everything."
The first event was supposed to be easy. A charity luncheon for childhood literacy, hosted by the Manhattan Women's League at the Plaza Hotel. According to Evelyn's briefing materials—a three-inch binder that Mailah had stayed up until two in the morning memorizing—it was a "soft launch" into Lailah's public rehabilitation.
"Just smile, nod, and let people come to you," Evelyn had instructed during their final prep session that morning. "You're mysterious, remember? Mysterious wives don't chase conversations—they magnetize them."
Mailah stood in front of 'her' walk-in closet, staring at an array of designer dresses that still felt like costumes. She'd chosen a navy Chanel sheath dress that Lailah had worn to similar events, paired with pearls. In the mirror, she looked exactly like the society wife she was pretending to be.
The problem was, she felt like an actress who'd forgotten her lines.
Grayson appeared in the closet doorway, adjusting his platinum cufflinks with the mechanical precision of someone who'd been dressing for high-stakes events since birth. He was wearing a charcoal Tom Ford suit that fit him like liquid smoke, and when he looked up to find her staring, something flickered across his expression too quickly to identify.
"Ready?" he asked.
She turned back to the mirror, applying lipstick with hands that were only slightly trembling. "Define ready."
His reflection appeared behind hers, tall and imposing and close enough that she could smell his cologne—something expensive and understated that made her think of midnight and secrets. For a moment, they looked like exactly what they were supposed to be: a powerful couple preparing to conquer the world together.
"You'll be fine," he said quietly, and something in his tone made her meet his eyes in the mirror.
For just a second, she saw something that looked almost like... encouragement? But then his expression shuttered closed, and he was back to being the controlled, unreadable man she was supposed to be married to.
"The car's waiting," he said, already turning away.
The Plaza Hotel's ballroom was a study in understated elegance, filled with women who looked like they'd been sculpted from pure social confidence. Mailah recognized faces from the last gala they attended—charity board members, museum patrons, and social media influencers who'd turned philanthropy into personal branding.
She and Grayson made their entrance with the kind of synchronized timing. His hand found the small of her back—a gesture that looked possessive and protective to outside observers but felt more like moral support to Mailah.
"Mrs. Ashford!"
The voice belonged to Vivian Hartwell, a woman who she heard chaired approximately seventeen different charity boards and had the kind of smile that could slice glass. She descended on them like a perfectly groomed missile, air-kissing Mailah with the precision of diplomatic protocol.
"You look absolutely radiant," Vivian gushed, her eyes conducting a microscopic examination of Mailah's outfit, jewelry, and general existence. "We've missed you at the recent committee meetings."
Mailah's mind went completely blank. She had recently asked Emma to handle various social obligations.
"I've been..." she began, then caught Grayson's almost imperceptible nod toward the exit, "focusing on some personal projects."
"Oh, how mysterious!" Vivian's laugh was like wind chimes in a hurricane. "You simply must tell us about them. Is it true you're working on some paintings?"
Paintings? How did they even know about that? "They're... still in development."
"Well, we're all dying to see those soon. You should join the exhibit at the Halcyon Gallery next month. It's going to be quite the event."
Mailah felt sweat begin to gather at her hairline. Exhibit?
"Well, who knows?" she said with what she hoped was a mysterious smile.
Grayson's hand pressed slightly more firmly against her back, and she realized he was guiding her away from Vivian with the subtle skill of a bodyguard extracting a client from hostile territory.
"Ladies," he said smoothly, "if you'll excuse us, I believe they're starting the auction."
As they moved through the crowd, Mailah caught fragments of conversation that made her stomach clench with anxiety.
"—looked different somehow—"
"—lost weight, don't you think?—"
"—something about her eyes—"
She was failing. They could tell. Somehow, despite all her preparation, despite studying Lailah's mannerisms for hours in front of mirrors, people were noticing that something was wrong.
"Breathe," Grayson murmured close to her ear, his voice so quiet only she could hear it. "You're doing fine."
The charity auction was a surreal experience in competitive generosity. Mailah watched women bid thousands of dollars on spa weekends and European vacations with the casual indifference of people ordering coffee. When a week at a private villa in Tuscany came up for bidding, she found herself raising her paddle almost by accident.
"Fifteen thousand from Mrs. Ashford!" the auctioneer announced, and suddenly every eye in the room was on her.
The bidding escalated quickly—twenty thousand, twenty-five, thirty. Mailah kept raising her paddle, caught up in some combination of performance anxiety and competitive instinct she didn't know she possessed.
"Forty-five thousand to Mrs. Ashford!"
She glanced at Grayson, expecting to see disapproval or concern about the rapidly climbing price. Instead, she found him watching her with something that looked almost like amusement, one corner of his mouth lifting in what might have been the beginning of a smile.
"Fifty thousand!" called out someone from the back of the room.
Without thinking, Mailah raised her paddle again. "Sixty!"
A murmur ran through the crowd. This was getting serious.
"Sixty-five!"
"Seventy!" Mailah called out, and suddenly she wasn't thinking about being Lailah anymore. She was just a woman who really, really wanted to win.
"Seventy-five thousand to the lady in red!"
Mailah looked over to see her competition—a woman in a crimson dress who looked like she could buy and sell small countries before lunch. Their eyes met across the ballroom, and Mailah saw recognition of a worthy opponent.
"Eighty thousand," Mailah said, her voice carrying clearly across the room.
The silence stretched taut. Then the woman in red smiled and shook her head gracefully.
"Sold to Mrs. Grayson Ashford for eighty thousand dollars!"
The applause was thunderous. Mailah sat down abruptly, realizing she'd just spent more money than she'd ever seen in her life on a vacation she'd probably never take.
"Well," Grayson said quietly, "that was unexpected."
She turned to look at him, expecting censure. Instead, his eyes held something that looked suspiciously like pride.
"Was that too much?" she whispered.
"For a good cause?" His voice carried the slightest hint of warmth. "Never."
Mailah felt a flush of relief mixed with embarrassment. "It's a pity we won't actually be going to Tuscany though. Eighty thousand dollars for a vacation we'll never take."
She expected him to agree, maybe make some comment about the absurdity of charity auction economics. Instead, Grayson's expression shifted to something unreadable, his storm-blue eyes studying her with an intensity that made her breath catch.
"Says who?" he asked quietly.
The two words hung in the air between them like a challenge, loaded with implications that made Mailah's heart skip several beats. Around them, the auction continued, voices calling out bids and amounts, but suddenly it all seemed very far away.
"I..." she started, then found herself completely speechless under the weight of his gaze, her words dissolving like sugar in rain.
Before she could form a coherent response, the auctioneer's gavel came down with a sharp crack, and the spell was broken. But Grayson's words echoed in her mind, along with the way his voice had dropped to something almost intimate when he'd said them.
Says who? What the hell did he mean by that?