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I love my brother's girl

REDMOON
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Synopsis
For a thousand years, the Kingdom of Valemont has never fallen. The crown has always belonged to House Valemont, a royal family believed to be blessed by God. Some say divine blood flows through their veins. Some whisper they can summon angels. Others call it myth. Truth does not matter. What matters is that the throne still stands. The kingdom survives because of four great Duke Houses, known as the Four Pillars. Among them, House Blackthorne is the most feared—rich enough to buy empires, powerful enough to crush kings, yet loyal enough to never take the crown. Until loyalty is tested. House Blackthorne carries a divine curse: The firstborn shall die. To save his eldest son, Magnus Blackthorne makes a forbidden pact with a demon—sacrificing his younger son instead. The curse is broken, but the price is unforgivable. Both brothers are turned into demons, not born as monsters, but made so by a father’s love and fear. To hide them from a world that would execute them on sight, Magnus creates the Umbral Cradle—a secret realm beyond divine reach where time flows unnaturally fast, allowing his sons to grow strong in silence. Now, in 1425 AD, the world believes demons are nothing more than myths. But the seal that once protected the brothers is breaking. One brother clings to restraint and fading humanity. The other awakens violently, embracing the power he was never meant to have. When the truth finally emerges, the gods will watch, the kingdom will bleed, and the world will learn a terrifying lesson— Monsters are not born. They are created.
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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE

Year 1425 AD

For one thousand years, the Kingdom of Valemont had never fallen.

Kings were born.

Kings died.

Yet the crown never left House Valemont.

People believed there was only one reason.

They were blessed by God.

Some said divine blood flowed through their veins.

Some whispered that the gods had granted them the power to summon angels into the mortal realm.

Others laughed and called it myth.

It did not matter.

Truth or lie—

House Valemont still ruled.

They were the absolute monarchs of the realm.

But the crown did not stand alone.

The kingdom rested upon four great Duke Houses, known throughout the land as—

The Four Pillars of the Kingdom

House Blackthorne

House Ironvale

House Ravenfall

House Goldreach

For centuries, these houses upheld the throne.

Among them, House Blackthorne was different.

There was an old saying, whispered only in quiet halls:

> If three pillars fall, Blackthorne alone can carry the kingdom.

But if Blackthorne falls… even the crown will shatter.

House Blackthorne was ancient.

A thousand-year-old bloodline.

The richest house in the empire.

The most powerful.

They commanded the strongest army.

The finest spies.

The deadliest assassins.

House Goldreach controlled forty percent of the empire's wealth.

House Blackthorne controlled the remaining sixty.

If they wished, they could seize the throne in a single night.

They never did.

Because even power fears what the gods may protect.

The world remembers the Demon War.

A thousand years ago, demons clashed with humanity.

Cities burned.

Empires collapsed.

History calls it The Divine War.

Humanity believes it won.

What history does not know—

the strongest demons never fought.

Only lesser demons died.

Only Sires bled.

Those who were truly ancient were never recorded.

And so, they were forgotten.

At the heart of House Blackthorne stood a man feared by kings.

Magnus Blackthorne

The greatest swordsman the kingdom had ever known.

A mage without equal.

A man whose very name carried weight.

Magnus had two sons:

Maekel, his firstborn

Kael, five years younger, born to another woman

They were half-brothers.

Magnus loved them both.

House Blackthorne carried a curse older than memory.

A divine punishment written into blood.

> The firstborn shall die.

Not by sickness.

Not by chance.

By fate.

Magnus had seen it claim heirs for centuries.

When it reached Maekel, something inside him broke.

Magnus prayed.

He begged.

He knelt before altars until his knees bled.

The gods never answered.

And when the silence became unbearable, love turned into desperation.

Magnus no longer saw right or wrong.

He saw only one truth:

> My son must live.

Blinded by that love, he summoned a demon.

Its name was Azrathael, the Oath-Binder.

Magnus did not ask for power.

He did not ask for dominion.

He begged for his son's life.

Azrathael listened.

And smiled.

"I cannot break a curse placed by gods."

Magnus offered everything.

His power.

His soul.

His life.

Azrathael's smile widened.

"I cannot remove the curse," the demon said softly.

"But I can divide it."

The price was blood.

Young blood.

Blackthorne blood.

Without hesitation—

Magnus brought Kael.

The curse was split.

Its power halved.

Maekel, who was meant to die at twelve, would now live until twenty-four.

Kael, who was five, would die at ten.

Magnus realized the truth too late.

He had saved one son—

by killing the other.

Magnus Blackthorne was not a cruel man.

He was a father.

A father who had already buried too many heirs.

A father who knew exactly how the curse ended—because he had seen it claim firstborns for centuries.

When Azrathael demanded blood—

young blood, Blackthorne blood—

Magnus hesitated.

Only for a moment.

Kael was standing there.

Five years old.

Looking up at him with trusting eyes.

Magnus told himself a lie he would repeat for the rest of his life:

I am not killing him.

I am saving his brother.

He had been tricked.

The strongest man in the kingdom collapsed to his knees.

Azrathael offered one final solution.

"Turn them into demons."

Demons were not bound by human age or time.

If they became demons, the curse would no longer kill them.

Magnus had no choice.

When Kael reached ten years old, Magnus turned both of his sons into demons.

The Rite of Severance and Binding

This was not possession.

This was not corruption.

It was rewriting their existence.

Severing Them from the Gods

Every human is born under divine law.

Before demon law could replace it, Magnus had to cut the connection.

He carved ancient sigils beneath Blackthorne Keep—symbols that:

Repelled divine observation

Muted heavenly influence

Temporarily erased fate's hold

For three nights, Maekel and Kael remained inside the circle.

Magnus told them the truth.

"This will hurt," he said.

"But pain means you are still alive."

Kael cried.

Maekel stood still.

Death Without Escape

On the final night, Magnus performed the Severing.

He cut his palm and pressed his blood to his sons' chests.

Then he spoke words Azrathael had taught him—

words no human should know.

Their hearts stopped.

Not metaphorically.

They died.

Their souls began to drift—

free from the gods,

free from fate.

Magnus held their bodies as they grew cold.

And begged them to forgive him.

Binding Them to Demon Law

Azrathael did not fully enter the world.

Instead, he released fragments of infernal essence, bound by contract.

This essence:

Anchored their souls back into their bodies

Replaced divine law with demonic law

Preserved their free will

They were not possessed.

They were rebuilt.

The Seal of Delay

Children could not survive full demon awakening.

So Magnus placed a blood seal upon their hearts.

The seal:

Delayed demon instincts

Suppressed bloodlust

Allowed their minds to mature first

This is why:

Kael awakens later—and violently

Maekel awakens slowly—with restraint

The seal protected them.

And it also trapped their emotions.

They would live.

But they would never feel the world the same way again.

Thus began the tragedy of House Blackthorne.

Not born from ambition.

Not born from cruelty.

But from a father who loved too deeply—

and chose wrong.