LOGINThe Devil You Called Grimace. Hunger. Love like a curse. They say some doors open only once. She opened hers with three red candles, a drop of blood, and a whisper. Lonely nights, overdue rent, and a heart too heavy to carry — that’s all it took to call him through. Malik. The man made of smoke, shadow, and everything her prayers forgot to protect her from. He came smiling, with promises sweet as sin — protection, money, revenge. Every favor he gave her tasted like salvation until she realized he was feeding on her, one piece at a time. A memory here. A dream there. Her laughter swallowed whole. Now he’s the warmth in her sheets and the whisper in her nightmares. The devil she named, the lover she can’t unmake. Because Malik wasn’t summoned. He was chosen. And love — the kind that burns red under candlelight — always demands a body to keep it alive.
View MoreChapter thirteen Malik had ruled hellfire without hesitation.But nothing had ever terrified him like standing still.The ancestors did not summon him the way they had Sarai. They did not flood him with visions or tear truth into his bones. Instead, they waited—silent, unmoving—until he felt the absence of his power like a missing limb.That was when he understood.This wasn’t about what he could do.It was about what he was willing to lose.“You want to know your place,” the elder ancestor said, voice low and ancient. “So listen carefully.”The lost realm shifted, folding inward, isolating Malik from Sarai and Aunt Dee. Not a prison—an examination.Malik clenched his fists. “If this is about whether I’ll abandon them—”“It is not,” the ancestor interrupted. “You already chose.”The ground beneath Malik’s feet turned reflective, like dark glass. Images rose from it—not memories, but futures.He saw Sarai standing tall, her power controlled, her eyes steady.He saw the child grown—not
Chapter twelve The circle of ancestors tightened.Not physically—spiritually.The air grew dense, heavy with intention, and Sarai felt the weight of generations press into her spine. These were not distant spirits. These were mothers who had buried daughters, fathers who had sealed their own magic away, bloodlines that had chosen silence over extinction.“You will not be taught like the others,” an elder voice said, deeper than the rest. “Because you do not carry power alone.”Sarai clutched her stomach as another wave rolled through her, the child responding—recognizing the presence around them. The symbols etched into the air shifted, rearranging themselves into something sharper, more precise.“You are the vessel,” the ancestor continued. “But the child is the anchor.”Malik stiffened. “Anchor to what?”The ancestors turned as one.“To balance.”The word struck the realm like a bell. The ground answered with a low tremor, and distant structures—ruins Sarai hadn’t noticed before—ro
Chapter eleven The moment Malik’s knee touched the ground, the lost realm listened.Not like a witness.Like a judge.The air thickened, pressing inward, and Sarai felt it first in her chest an ache sharp enough to steal her breath. The baby shifted hard, a pulse rolling through her womb, and the ground beneath them rippled outward in slow, deliberate waves.The watchers stepped back as one.No one spoke.No one dared.Sarai reached for Malik, panic flaring. “You don’t have to”“Yes,” he said, cutting her off gently, his voice steady but stripped bare. “I do.”He looked up at her then, and the mask he wore for the world confidence, charm, the devil’s smirk was gone. What remained was raw and frightening in its honesty.“I’ve ruled by fear,” Malik continued. “By deals and debts and bloodlines. I’ve taken souls who begged and laughed while I did it.” His jaw tightened. “But loving you? That wasn’t conquest. That wasn’t hunger.”The realm hummed.A low vibration rolled through the color
**CHAPTER nine The warning came from Sarai’s blood before it came from the world. She woke screaming, hands clutching her stomach, a sharp, unfamiliar pain slicing through her like ice. The realm answered immediately—walls pulsing, wards flaring, shadows snapping into place like soldiers called to attention. Malik was at her side before her scream finished echoing. “What’s wrong?” he demanded, already scanning the room, fire burning low beneath his skin. Sarai shook her head, breath coming fast. “It’s not pain like before,” she gasped. “It’s… memory.” Her vision fractured. Suddenly she wasn’t in the hidden realm. She was standing in a ruined house on Earth—her childhood home. The walls were scorched, furniture overturned, blood staining the floor where laughter used to live. She smelled smoke, heard echoes of voices long gone, and then— A woman stepped out of the shadows. Her mother. Not as Sarai remembered her in sickness or death, but strong, eyes sharp, spirit












Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.