The demon girls are loud, the trauma is louder. Expect hellfire, glitter, and emotional exorcisms.
Izuku Midoriya died first. Katsuki Bakugou followed.
Hell is not kind to children. It is not kind to anyone, but especially not to lost souls barely old enough to understand what they’ve done. Katsuki learns this the hard way—through fire, through hunger, through the hands of sinners who see him as nothing more than a commodity. But Katsuki didn’t come here to suffer. He came here for Deku.
Dragged into a den of demons, a city of sin and survival, Katsuki finds himself entangled in the strange, chaotic world of a red-eyed princess and her grinning monster of a business partner. But none of that matters—not the war they’re fighting, not the absurd concept of redemption. Because somewhere in the depths of Hell, Deku is here. He has to be.
In the sultry confines of the Hazbin Hotel’s greenhouse, Alastor, the Radio Demon, and Charlie, the princess of Hell, find themselves entangled in a dance of desire and denial. Shade, Alastor’s shadowy counterpart, seethes with impatience, a silent reminder of the longing that has simmered beneath the surface for far too long.
Yet, amidst the flickering shadows and whispered confessions, a revelation emerges—a love that defies the boundaries of Hell itself. In a moment of raw vulnerability, Alastor’s voice resonates with intensity: “My sweet Charlie… let me mark you, darling. Be my mate forever?”
God made a weapon and forgot to name it love.
Alastor was never born. He was built—a divine anomaly, crafted to fracture the balance, unleashed to break the world. A creature of perfect control, elegant horror, and deafening static. Until she sang. Until she smiled.
Charlie Morningstar, daughter of Heaven and Hell, falls in love with the very ruin her father swore would destroy them all. She dares to dream. She dares to trust. From that impossible trust comes a child: Belle. A miracle born in Hell. A beacon. A question.
Now, the monster God made must learn how to hold something soft without breaking it.
This is a story about choosing to be more than what you were made for. About rebuilding something sacred in a place meant for ruin. About demons who cry, angels who bleed, and one impossible family holding hands at the edge of Armageddon.