The Devil Like Me is a confession written at the intersection of timelines-where the illusions of the past, the grace of the present, and the promises of the future collide.
It is the story of three cousins bound by inheritance, betrayal, and fragile hope, each carrying the names the devil gave them and searching for the voices that might rename them. It is the story of a man who once hid behind masks-on the football pitch, in the bar, in the underground ring-and of the woman who tore those masks away with nothing more than her silence, her listening, her love.
Through broken faith and fractured words, through the paradox of reward before trial, he discovers the grammar of grace: that to be incomplete is not failure, but redemption. And as visions of fatherhood rise on the horizon, he vows that his child will not inherit his sin, for the scales will be balanced, not by him, but by her-the woman who names differently, who brings equilibrium, who redeems even the devil himself.
At once a story of ruin and renewal, of lies collapsing into truth, and of love remaking language itself, The Devil Like Meis not merely an ending. It is a beginning.
Related Subjects
Philosophy