Demon Father Instant

The turning point came on a rain-slicked Tuesday. Kael found a hidden drawer in Malakor’s study. Inside were not contracts or cash, but letters—dozens of them, unsent. They were written by Malakor’s own father, a man Kael had been told died of a heart attack. The letters told a different story: a grandfather who had fled the family because he recognized the same demonic pattern in himself. The last letter ended: “If you ever read this, son, the curse is not blood. It is choice. And you can still choose the door.”

That night, Kael did not confront his father. He knew better. Instead, he quietly opened a bank account in a different city, using his grandmother’s maiden name. He started recording conversations—not for revenge, but for clarity. Each time Malakor twisted reality, Kael listened to the recording later to remind himself: I am not crazy. This is what manipulation sounds like. demon father

Malakor appeared human. He wore tailored suits, spoke in a soothing baritone, and ran a “consulting firm” that secretly bled people dry. At home, he called it “teaching Kael the real world.” Every gift came with a silent invoice. Every compliment was a prelude to a command. The turning point came on a rain-slicked Tuesday

When Malakor demanded Kael “volunteer” at the firm to learn “family loyalty,” Kael agreed—but he secretly contacted a legal aid clinic. He didn’t try to take down the empire. He just asked one question: How do I leave without being destroyed? They were written by Malakor’s own father, a

Kael’s hands shook. For the first time, he saw his father not as an invincible monster, but as a man who had been taught cruelty and had chosen to master it. That was worse—and better. Worse, because it meant Malakor’s evil was deliberate. Better, because it meant cruelty was not destiny.