The Devil's Heir

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The Devil's Heir

Fantasylast updateLast Updated : 2026-07-08

By:  Pure moonUpdated just now

Language: English
16

Chapters: 13 views: 2

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Born with a forbidden bloodline, he was destined to inherit the Devil's throne—but he rejected Hell to live as an ordinary human. When an ancient war threatens both worlds, the only one who can stop it is the heir everyone fears. To save those he loves, he must become the very monster he has spent his life trying to escape.

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Chapter 1

Chapter One: The First Hunt

Elias Crowe stood at the narrow window of his third-floor apartment, a half-empty mug of coffee cooling in his hand. Dawn painted the city in muted grays and soft oranges, but the street below was anything but peaceful. Armored trucks idled along the curb, their engines rumbling like distant thunder. Special Demon Suppression Officers in matte-black tactical gear moved with crisp efficiency, checking weapons and adjusting helmets. Helicopters thumped overhead, their rotors slicing the early morning air.

It had been years since the SDS mounted an operation this large. Elias watched as officers formed neat ranks in the middle of the street. Civilians had gathered on sidewalks and fire escapes, murmuring excitedly, phones held high to record the moment.

A tall figure stepped forward—the commander. Even from this distance, his voice carried through a portable speaker, amplified and steady.

“Today, we remind the world that humanity does not bow to monsters,” he declared. “We hunt them. We destroy them. No matter the cost.”

The officers roared in response, a single, unified sound that rolled up between the buildings like a wave. Fists pumped. Rifles were raised. Then, with practiced discipline, they loaded into the trucks. Engines growled louder. The convoy began to roll out, followed by the choppers peeling away toward the horizon.

Elias didn’t cheer. He didn’t even smile. A strange unease twisted in his gut, the kind that felt too deep to be simple nerves. Something inside him—something he had spent years trying to ignore—stirred in warning. He took a slow sip of coffee, but it tasted like ash.

He turned away from the window and moved through the small apartment. It was modest: one bedroom, a kitchenette that doubled as a dining area, and a living room dominated by a worn couch and bookshelves crammed with dog-eared paperbacks. No photos on the walls. No family mementos. Just a handful of secondhand furniture and the faint smell of old paper and instant coffee. Ordinary. Exactly how he liked it.

He set the mug in the sink and caught his reflection in the small mirror above it. Dark hair, a little too long. Sharp green eyes that always seemed a shade too bright in certain light. A faint scar along his left collarbone that he couldn’t remember earning. He looked like any other twenty-seven-year-old trying to make rent in a city that never slept. Except he wasn’t.

Elias had always been different. Small things at first—objects shifting when he was angry, lights flickering when he was tired. He’d learned to control it, or at least hide it. He kept his head down, worked odd jobs at a local bookstore and as a night delivery driver, and never let anyone get too close. Relationships ended quickly. Friends drifted away. It was safer that way.

Last night’s nightmare still lingered at the edges of his mind. Flames roaring across a vast obsidian plain. A towering black throne carved with screaming faces. And that voice—deep, ancient, almost affectionate—whispering through the inferno.

*My son.*

He shook his head, splashing cold water on his face. Just nightmares. Everyone had them. He toweled off and pulled on a plain gray hoodie. Time to pretend today was normal.

By mid-morning the city had settled back into its rhythm. Traffic flowed again. Street vendors shouted about fresh pretzels and strong coffee. News screens on building sides broadcast glowing reports of the SDS operation. “Historic Offensive Underway,” one headline read. Analysts praised the commander’s leadership and the new anti-demon ordnance.

Elias walked to the bookstore where he worked part-time, hands in his pockets. The unease from dawn hadn’t faded. If anything, it had sharpened. He told himself it was nothing. The SDS knew what they were doing. Demons were the enemy—monsters from the rifts that had plagued the world for decades. Humanity was finally pushing back.

He spent the afternoon shelving new arrivals and helping the occasional customer. Mrs. Alvarez, a regular, chatted about her grandchildren while he rang up her mystery novel. He smiled at the right moments, but his mind kept drifting to the convoy rolling out of the city. To that commander’s words. *No matter the cost.*

The lights in the store flickered once. Then again.

Elias paused, hand on a stack of books. Outside, a dog began barking frantically. Another joined it, then another. A flock of pigeons exploded from a nearby rooftop, scattering into the sky in a panicked cloud.

A strange pressure filled the air—like the moment before a thunderstorm, but heavier. Deeper. It pressed against his chest, making his pulse quicken. Customers glanced around, confused. Someone laughed nervously.

“Power surge?” the store owner called from the back.

Elias didn’t answer. His skin prickled. That inner something—the thing he buried deep—shifted again, restless.

He stepped outside under the pretense of a break. The sky was still clear, but the light felt wrong. Too flat. Too still.

Far beyond the city limits, the SDS convoy had reached the designated engagement zone—an abandoned industrial sprawl where rift activity had spiked in recent weeks. Radio chatter filled the command vehicle.

“Eyes open,” the commander said into his mic. “We end this today.”

Then—static.

Every channel cut to silence at once. No screams. No explosions. Just the sudden, absolute absence of communication.

Back in the city, the pressure grew. Elias stood on the sidewalk as the first unnatural shadow fell across the street. The sky above the skyline began to darken, not with clouds, but with something thicker. Something alive. A low vibration hummed through the pavement, rattling windows and car alarms.

People stopped. Phones came out again, but this time no one was smiling.

A crack split the air—like reality tearing at the seams. High above the tallest buildings, a jagged rift of crimson and black ripped open. It widened with a sound like shattering glass amplified a thousand times. Wind howled through the streets, carrying the stench of sulfur and scorched earth.

From the portal emerged a towering demon. It was easily thirty feet tall, skin like blackened iron, muscles corded beneath jagged plates of natural armor. Four massive horns curved from its skull, and its eyes burned with malevolent intelligence. Leathery wings stretched wide, casting the street below into deeper shadow. It hovered for a moment, surveying the city like a king inspecting new territory.

Citizens screamed. Cars swerved and crashed. People ran in every direction.

Elias stood frozen on the sidewalk, heart hammering. The pressure inside him surged, almost painful now, as if answering some unspoken call.

The demon’s gaze swept across the skyline. Its lips peeled back in a grotesque smile, revealing rows of serrated teeth.

“So…” Its voice rolled like thunder, deep and amused, echoing between the buildings. “This is where the heir has been hiding.”

Elias’s blood turned to ice. The demon raised one clawed hand. Hellfire gathered in its palm, swirling and bright. With a casual flick, it unleashed the blast downward.

BOOM!

The explosion engulfed an entire city block in roaring flames. Glass shattered. Concrete melted. Screams tore through the air as buildings groaned and began to collapse.

Elias stumbled back, the heat washing over him even from this distance. People shoved past him in blind panic. Sirens wailed. But he barely heard them.

*The heir.*

The words echoed in his skull, mixing with the nightmares, the voice, the fire. For the first time in years, he didn’t dismiss the feeling rising inside him. He couldn’t.

Because something ancient and hungry had just looked straight at his city—and called for him by name.

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