
Sold to the Devil I Loved
Chapter 4
Hell watched me wake up.
I felt it before I opened my eyes—the pressure, the awareness, the sense that the air itself was waiting. When my lashes fluttered open, the crimson light beyond the tall windows pulsed brighter, as if responding to my consciousness.
I was not alone.
Not physically—but in Hell, that hardly mattered.
I sat up slowly, clutching the dark silk sheets around me. My chest felt… different. Lighter and heavier at the same time. Something inside me hummed faintly, like a heartbeat that didn’t belong solely to me.
The bond.
It pulsed once, sharply, as if answering a silent call.
Lucien.
I swung my legs over the side of the bed just as the doors opened.
He stepped inside, dressed in black armor that glinted faintly with red runes. Power rolled off him in waves, no longer restrained, no longer softened for my sake. This was the ruler of Hell—not the man who had stood inches from touching me the night before.
“You’re awake,” he said.
“I didn’t sleep,” I replied.
His gaze lingered on my face for a moment longer than necessary. “Neither did I.”
The admission tightened something in my chest.
“What’s happening?” I asked. “Why does it feel like something’s coming?”
“Because it is,” Lucien said. “Today, Hell acknowledges you.”
A chill slid down my spine. “That doesn’t sound optional.”
“It isn’t.”
I stood. “Acknowledges me how?”
He hesitated, just briefly. “By testing whether you belong.”
My pulse spiked. “I already sold my soul.”
“Yes,” he said quietly. “But Hell doesn’t accept ownership without proof.”
Before I could respond, the floor beneath us shimmered.
The room dissolved.
---
We stood in a vast circular hall carved entirely from obsidian, its ceiling so high it disappeared into shadow. Flames burned in tall braziers around the perimeter, casting flickering light over hundreds of figures gathered in the darkness.
Demons.
Some stood openly, horns curved and eyes glowing. Others remained half-hidden, their forms shifting, their gazes sharp and predatory. Every single one of them was watching me.
Judging me.
Fear coiled in my stomach, but beneath it—something else stirred. Heat. Power. Awareness.
“You brought a human,” a voice drawled.
A tall figure stepped forward from the shadows. He was beautiful in a cruel way—silver hair, sharp smile, eyes glowing a molten gold. His gaze swept over me slowly, possessively.
“Correction,” Lucien said coldly. “I brought what is mine.”
The temperature in the hall dropped.
The demon laughed softly. “So this is her. The soul you traded half the underworld’s balance for.”
My breath caught. Half the underworld?
Lucien didn’t deny it.
“And she’s so… fragile,” the demon continued, circling me. “Are you sure she’ll survive us?”
“Touch her,” Lucien warned, “and I will end you.”
The demon stopped inches from me, amusement dancing in his eyes. “Relax, my king. I wouldn’t dare.”
He bowed mockingly. “Amon,” he introduced himself. “Prince of Temptation.”
I swallowed hard.
“What is this?” I demanded. “Why am I here?”
Amon smiled wider. “Because, little soul, Hell wants to know whether you’re worth keeping.”
Lucien turned to me, his expression hard but eyes dark with something dangerously close to concern. “Stand still,” he said softly. “Do not show fear.”
“That’s easy for you to say,” I muttered.
Amon raised a hand. The flames flared higher.
“Let the trial begin.”
The world shifted.
---
I was no longer in the hall.
I stood in a familiar room—small, dim, painfully human.
My childhood bedroom.
My breath hitched. “No…”
The bed. The cracked mirror. The old posters on the wall. Every detail was perfect.
“This isn’t real,” I whispered.
A voice answered from behind me. “Isn’t it?”
I turned.
My mother stood there.
Healthy. Smiling.
“Mom?” My heart slammed painfully against my ribs.
She stepped closer, eyes warm. “Why did you do it, Seraphina?”
Tears welled instantly. “I had to. You were dying.”
“And now?” she asked gently. “What did it cost you?”
My chest tightened. “Everything.”
Her smile faded. “Then come home.”
The word shattered me.
“I can’t,” I whispered.
“Why not?” she asked, holding out her arms. “Let go of him. Let go of Hell. Choose yourself.”
My knees buckled.
I wanted to. God, I wanted to.
The bond screamed in protest, burning hot beneath my skin. Lucien’s presence flared at the edge of my awareness—restrained, furious, afraid.
Choose me, something inside me urged.
I squeezed my eyes shut, sobbing. “I don’t know how.”
The illusion shattered violently.
---
I collapsed to my knees in the hall, gasping for breath.
The demons murmured, interest sharpening.
Lucien was instantly at my side, kneeling, one hand hovering near my shoulder but not touching. His restraint was agony.
“She didn’t break,” Amon observed. “Interesting.”
Lucien’s voice was deadly calm. “You’re finished.”
Amon smirked. “Oh no, my king. Just curious.”
He leaned closer, lowering his voice. “You’re already losing control.”
Lucien rose slowly, power radiating from him in suffocating waves. “Leave. Now.”
Amon straightened, chuckling. “Very well. The soul holds—for now.”
The demons began to disperse, shadows swallowing them one by one.
Lucien turned back to me, his composure cracking.
“You should never have been shown that,” he said.
“I saw her,” I whispered. “She asked me to leave you.”
His jaw tightened painfully.
“Do you want to?” he asked quietly.
I looked up at him, heart aching. “I don’t know if I can.”
Something dark and dangerous flickered across his face—not anger.
Fear.
“Then Hell has already marked you,” he said.
“For what?”
“For becoming mine in more ways than the contract intended.”
He reached out then—finally touching me. His hand cupped my cheek, warm and steady, grounding me.
The bond surged violently, lighting every nerve in my body.
Lucien inhaled sharply, eyes darkening. “This changes everything.”
“Why?” I whispered.
“Because Hell just realized,” he said softly, “that you’re no longer just my possession.”
His thumb brushed my skin, reverent and restrained.
“You’re my weakness.”
And in Hell, weakness was a death sentence.
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