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Chapter 1 - Prologue

The wind through the charcoal-burner's woods did not carry the scent of pine or winter frost that evening. It carried the metallic tang of copper and the sickly-sweet aroma of something ancient and rotting.

For centuries, the balance had been kept. The world of man lived in the sun, while the world of monsters thrived in the shadows. But there was a third path—a path paved in silver light and obsidian shadows. Magic.

In the West, Merlin had woven it into the air like music. In the East, Abe no Seimei had commanded it like a general leading an army of spirits. They were legends not because they touched the pinnacle of power, but because they had the wisdom to stop before the edge. They used the Lesser Magic—the whispers of the elements, the protection of the hearth—to remain human. They knew the truth that the desperate often forgot: Greater Magic is not a tool; it is a predator. It grants the strength of gods, but it feeds on the soul of the wielder. To reach for the "Greater" is to invite a slow, inevitable decay of the heart until only a hollow vessel remains.

Yet, deep within a hidden cellar, tucked away from the prying eyes of both Demon Slayers and demons alike, sat a heavy, silent weight.

The Book of Void.

It was an artifact that should not exist—an indestructible, cursed grimoire bound in a hide that felt like neither leather nor paper. Within its pages lay every forbidden theory, every soul-crushing incantation, and the blueprints for a power that could rival the King of Demons himself. It had sat in the dark for generations, guarded by a family that understood the cost of its contents. A family that practiced the Lesser arts to keep the world safe, praying the Void would never need to be filled.

But the snow was falling over the mountains, and the scent of blood was getting stronger. The era of peace was bleeding out, and the silence of the cellar was about to be broken by the footsteps of the bereaved.

The balance was tipping. The Lesser Magic would no longer be enough.

******

The screech of tires and the smell of burning rubber were the final memories of a man who had lived for nothing. He had been a ghost in his own life—an office worker who moved through the world without leaving a footprint. As an orphan, he had no one to greet him at home; as a man of thirty-two, he had no friends to share a drink with. In his final moments on that cold asphalt, his only regret was the silence. He was dying exactly as he had lived: utterly alone.

Then, the world vanished into a white flash.

When the light faded, the cold was gone. It was replaced by a heavy, enveloping warmth. There was no pain, no shattered bones—only the scent of cedarwood and the soft crackle of a hearth.

A pair of faces hovered above him. They were bathed in the soft glow of a paper lantern, looking down with expressions of such profound love that the man felt a physical jolt. The woman had eyes like polished obsidian, and the man beside her wore a smile that seemed to radiate a heat of its own.

"He's so quiet," the woman whispered, her voice trembling with emotion. "He just stares, as if he's trying to memorize us."

"He has the Kurogane eyes, Shizuku," the man replied, his large, calloused hand reaching down to gently brush a finger against the infant's cheek. "Quiet, but deep."

The man who had been a salaryman tried to speak, to ask where he was, but his voice was gone. Instead, a small, high-pitched coo escaped his throat. He looked down at his hands—they were tiny, pink, and clumsy. He tried to sit up, only to realize he was nestled in a small basket woven of sturdy reeds.

The realization hit him like a thunderbolt. He had spent enough lonely nights reading manga and novels to recognize the impossible: this was a rebirth. An isekai. The life of the lonely office worker had ended, and in its place, a boy named Hayato had been born.

For the first time in his existence, he wasn't looking at a computer screen or a grey ceiling. He was looking at a mother and a father. He was part of a lineage—the Kurogane family. As he was lifted from the basket and held against his father's chest, the warmth he had craved his entire previous life finally filled the void in his chest.

He didn't know yet that he was born into a world of demons, or that his new family carried the weight of forbidden secrets. All he knew was that he was no longer alone.

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