I'm The Devil

Chapter 374: The New God



Chapter 374: The New God

Centuries passed, and the first strange thing about it was how quickly shock became structure.

At the start, every realm was confused. Heaven had a new God. Hell still answered to the same name it always had. And the one sitting above both of them was Lucifer. For a long time, that truth did not settle neatly anywhere.

Angels had to relearn the way they spoke in prayer. Demons had to relearn the way they bowed. Gods from other pantheons had to decide whether to resist, test, or accept it. Mortals suffered the strangest whiplash of all. Humans had built stories for thousands of years. They had built fear around one name and worship around another. Then one day history bent, the heavens shifted, and both names sat on the same throne.

At first, people on earth thought it was deception. Then punishment. Then a sign of the end. Then a joke. Then a test. Then, after enough miracles, enough appearances, enough divine pressure pressing down on the world in a way no lie could imitate, most stopped pretending it was something temporary.

Lucifer was God. Not becoming. Not rising. Not trying. He was.

And once enough centuries passed, children were born into that truth and found it less strange than their ancestors ever could. Their parents still whispered over it. Their grandparents still argued over it. But children accepted the sky faster than adults ever accepted change. They learned the prayers with his name in them. They learned the stories again.

Not rewritten cleanly. That was the part Lucifer refused. He did not erase what he had been. He did not whitewash rebellion and put a halo over memory until it became safe. The records remained. The fall remained. The exile remained. The war remained. The hatred remained. The trial remained. And above all of it remained the truth that no one on earth had expected to hear from heaven: He won.

That did something to religion. It shattered some people. Freed some people. Made others angry in a way they could not put language to. The old churches split again and again at the beginning. Some called it blasphemy even while miracles fell in front of them. Some called it revelation. Some said the old world had misunderstood the entire story from the start. Some cried during prayer because they did not know whether they were being tested or forgiven.

The strangest group of all was the church of Satan. For about three short years, men in black suits and silver symbols walked around speaking like they had won some private argument with history. They smiled too much. They talked too loudly. They tried to use Lucifer's ascent as a banner to spread influence on earth. They made speeches. They opened hidden circles openly. They started calling themselves the first true faithful of the new age.

It lasted right up until Michael came down.

No one had seen him on earth in recorded history for so long that when it happened, people did not understand what they were looking at. There was no army. No trumpet for the first few seconds. No elaborate warning. Just a pressure that fell on the city so hard everyone stopped where they stood. Cars stalled. Voices died. Phones cut out. The men on the stage stopped smiling before they even looked up.

Michael descended in white and gold, bloodless and calm, with six wings folded behind him and a sword at his side that no camera could hold properly without the image tearing. People watched from the streets, from apartments, from screens, from rooftops, from inside their fear. And for the first time since the old days written in scripture, the Archangel spoke openly to the human world.

"You speak his name," Michael said, "with no understanding of what stands behind it."

No one on that stage answered him. None of them could. Their knees had already hit the ground.

Michael looked down at them with cold that did not need rage. "You celebrated what you thought was your victory. They were never your sins to claim. You wanted the devil." He stopped in front of them and his gaze sharpened. "What sits above you now is God."

That was the sentence people remembered. It spread through the whole world in hours. Michael did not massacre them. He stripped them of pretension. The symbols burned off their bodies. False contracts broke. Hidden altars collapsed. Demons tied to their circles were dragged screaming back where they belonged. Every lie they had wrapped around Lucifer's name was exposed in public. Some of them went mad from the shame alone. Some repented. Some disappeared from public life and never used that name loosely again.

Michael said one last thing before he left. "He needs no street preacher to validate Him." Then he was gone.

That one descent changed earth. Because now humanity knew something else too. Heaven had changed. Hell had changed. And the beings they once thought would remain fixed in eternal roles had moved. Michael was still Michael, but no longer the fixed blade against Lucifer's throat. Gabriel still carried word and witness. Ariel still spoke sharply even in heaven. Exousia still watched more than she spoke.

But at the center of it all sat Lucifer. Not loud. Not theatrical every second. That surprised people. A lot of them expected chaos. What they got was order with teeth.

Lucifer ruled the multiverse the way only someone like him could. He did not demand fake purity. He did not pretend desire did not exist. He did not pretend rage had no place. He did not promise a soft universe. He did not tell people that pain had meaning just because it hurt. He ruled honestly. Rewards were rewards. Punishment was punishment. Mercy existed, but it was never cheap. And fear never had to guess where it stood.

That made devotion to him different from the old way people imagined devotion should look. It was not blind. It was heavy. Real. Some loved him. Some feared him. Most did both.

Hell did not vanish under his rule. That would have been a lie. Lucifer remained its ruler, but he no longer sat there the way he once had. His throne stretched across more than hell now. So the daily affairs of the infernal realms fell to Bariel. That decision caused problems for about ten centuries. Bariel took charge properly, sharply, without humor. Hell became more efficient under him than most demons liked. Records were kept. Punishments were timed. Boundaries between sections were reinforced. Lesser lords were crushed the moment they tried to grow too wild. Soul routes were mapped better than ever before.

Elsewhere in hell, things remained more natural. Coriel continued enjoying sleep like it was a sacred art. Whole sections under her rule were quiet in the strange way only infernal places could be quiet. Curses slowed there. Thoughts softened. Time dragged its feet. Asmodeus lived exactly as everyone expected him to. He ruled over pleasure, appetite, flesh, temptation, indulgence, and everything that came with them. His section of hell was full every century no matter how many wars ended or started above. Music never really stopped there. Neither did laughter. Neither did screaming.

Morunuel remained a thief in spirit no matter how much authority Lucifer handed around. Artifacts vanished around him. Jewels disappeared from beings who thought they were too powerful to be touched. Once, an entire minor crown from a dead god's collection was taken mid-ceremony, and Morunuel wore it for a month just because he thought it suited him. When Lucifer found out, he only said, "Did you need that much attention?" Morunuel smiled. "No. But it looked lonely."

Nezha's case was stranger. No one expected Lucifer to hand him a hell to rule, but he did. When he gave Nezha the sin of wrath, the reaction across realms lasted years. Not because people thought Nezha was too weak. It was because wrath under Nezha became something sharp and disciplined. Nezha did not turn his section into mindless slaughter. He turned it into flame, motion, pressure, and war held on a leash so tight it made everyone watching uncomfortable. His domain burned always. His soldiers trained always. His punishments were direct. His anger never felt sloppy.

Lucifer watched all of it from above and between. Heaven. Hell. Worlds beyond counting. Pantheons old and new. Mortal civilizations rising, collapsing, rising again. Galaxies becoming prayer-fields. Species learning his name in tongues that had never touched earth. Kings bowing. Monsters bargaining. Saints trembling. Sinners begging. Lovers praying. Soldiers dying with his name on their mouths. He became not just God of a world. Not just God of a people. God of the multiverse. And with time, even that stopped sounding too large to those who lived under it.

His wives changed with that rise too.

Aphrodite moved first. She said Devil's Peak was beautiful in its way, but if her husband was now seated above heaven itself, she would not keep pretending she preferred old cliffs and infernal luxury to divine height. Amaterasu followed with much more grace and much less commentary. Bast made the move seem like she had chosen it three centuries before she actually did. Hestia settled into heaven with the quiet ease of someone who could make anywhere feel like a place worth returning to. Medusa took longer, mostly because she enjoyed watching other people react to the move before she made it herself. Khaos went where she pleased as always, and when she finally settled there more fully no one dared ask whether it meant she approved or simply found the arrangement useful.

Athena joined them later. She had watched from Olympus for centuries after Lucifer's ascent, measuring, calculating, refusing to move on impulse. When she finally came to heaven, she did not arrive with fanfare. She simply appeared in the great hall one day, grey-eyed and calm, carrying no gift but her own sharp mind. Aphrodite had raised an eyebrow and asked, "Took you long enough." Athena had answered, "I do not step into new arrangements without understanding them first." Lucifer had looked at her then, and for a long moment neither spoke. Finally he said, "And now you understand?" Athena met his red eyes without flinching. "Enough to stay." That was all. She became his wife not through passion but through recognition—two strategists who saw no advantage in pretending otherwise.

They were not just wives of the devil now. They were wives of God. Even after centuries, some found that funny. Some found it intoxicating. Some found it a burden heavier than jewels and titles. Aphrodite enjoyed it openly. Amaterasu carried it with calm pride. Bast treated it like a thing the universe should have accepted sooner. Hestia made it feel almost normal when she spoke of him. Medusa liked the look on people's faces too much to ever pretend humility. Khaos gave no one enough certainty to know what she felt, though Lucifer always seemed to know. And Athena sat among them like a blade wrapped in silk—quiet, dangerous, and never out of place.

As for Lucifer, centuries did not soften him into something unrecognizable. That mattered. He was still sharp. Still proud. Still able to cut with a sentence. Still dangerous in a way no amount of worship could tame. But he grew larger in the quiet ways. He listened more than people expected. Spoke less than they feared. Punished carefully. Loved strangely but truly. Remembered everything.

He never let heaven become smug. He never let hell become lazy. He never let the multiverse forget that order without truth was weakness wearing clean clothes.

And sometimes, in the far reaches of eternity, when Michael stood beside him looking out over worlds that no longer questioned who sat above them, there would be long stretches of silence between the two of them that no longer felt like war waiting to happen. One day Michael said, "Earth still finds you strange." Lucifer looked down at a world praying in a hundred thousand buildings at once. "Earth found me strange when I was under it too." Michael almost smiled. "That is true." Lucifer glanced at him. "And you? Do you still find it strange?" Michael thought about that longer than he needed to. Then he said, "No."

That answer stayed with Lucifer for a while.

Far below, hell turned. Far above, heaven shone. Between and beyond, creation moved under new ownership. And at the center of it all sat the one no scripture had expected to finish the story this way. Lucifer. The fallen son. The old rebel. The ruler of hell. The God of the multiverse.

Humans still struggled with it. Angels had long since accepted it. Demons adapted the way demons always did. The old gods watched him carefully. The new beings born under his era knew no other sky. And when they prayed now, they no longer prayed in confusion. They prayed upward. To the black-haired God with red eyes and a throne that did not ask to be understood before it was obeyed.

They prayed to Lucifer.

And he answered.


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