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The devil's Pact - S01 E448

Story 3 months ago

The devil's Pact - S01 E448

Read Story: SEASON 1 EPISODE 448

My bed creaked as he slammed his cock into me. The angle let him drive deep, his cock rubbing down the top of my hole, brushing my G-spot. I quivered, and started cumming after just a few strokes, my little cunt rippling on his cock.

“You fucking whore!” he groaned. “You came already?”

“Your tool feels so good!” I panted.

“It's supposed to be a punishment! I think a different hole needs to be reamed!”

“Umm, I couldn't agree more!”

He spread my cheeks, pulling his cock out of my drenched pussy. I had lubed him well, and he speared into my ass with little resistance. I've had many cocks up my ass, and I thrust back against his cock, enjoying how he filled me up. His groin smacked into my pillowy cheeks, aching pain shooting through me, and I shoved my ass up into his strokes.

“Fuck my ass!” I chanted. “Fuck me! Fuck my naughty, schoolgirl ass, Grandpa!”

I wormed my right hand between me and the pillow, found my hard clit, and stroked my pleasure button. Grandfather kept pounding my ass, stirring up my pleasure as I struck sparks on my clit.

“I love your ass, Chase!” he moaned. “My beautiful granddaughter! You look so much like your mother. There's even a bit of your grandmother in your face!”

I frigged my clit, pushing hard on the sensitive nub, so close to cumming. “Fuck me harder!” I shouted. “I need to cum!

He slapped my ass, stinging pain shooting to my pussy, then hunched over me, and pistoned his cock rapidly in and out of my ass. Shivers of pleasure burst through me. I moaned wordlessly as my orgasm shot through me like electricity. My ass milked his cock, transmitting my pleasure to him. Cum erupted violently into me, flooding my ass as Grandfather pumped a few more times, then collapsed atop me.

He spooned me for a while, tracing my arm, as we caught our breath. I felt so warm, so safe, in his arms. “I love you, Grandpa,” I sighed.

“I love you, too.” The bed creaked and he sat up. I rolled over and watched him walk over and pick up a rectangular present bound in colorful paper. A book! I smiled, and eagerly took it from him.

I ripped open the package. The book was old, the pages yellowing. I've always wanted to have a new book, but none were published these days. Well, not the story ones anyway. The Living Church encouraged its worshipers to only read from the Account of the Gods, the collection of holy scriptures written by various bishops and sluts, or other officially sanctioned books used to educate children.

I glanced at the cover. 'On Liberty' by John Stuart Mill.

“Let this be our little secret,” Grandfather said. “I don't think your parents would approve of this one.”

I clutched the book to my chest, eager to have this secret with my Grandfather. The book opened my eyes, everything it said seemed to contradict the teachings of the Church and the way my parents had cultivated humanity. It taught that men should be free to act as they will, so long as their actions do not unduly harm another. The Theocracy taught that men must obey the will of the Living Gods and their earthly representatives without question or hesitation.

A month later, right after Silas married Andrea and Delilah, I embarked on a tour of various parts of the World, to let the citizens see their Goddess and know that they were loved. 'On Liberty' opened my eyes to the oppression of the World. Many cities had been destroyed, many lives lost, when the Demons escaped Hell, and much had to be rebuilt. There was a sameness to everything now. There seemed to be only a dozen different plans for houses; neighborhoods in rebuilt Paris looked the same as ones in Jerusalem. Government buildings were built to the exact same plan, laid out in squares with each building resting at the same spot in the square. The same statues dotted parks and the same fountains were the centerpieces of squares. The only things beautiful or original were the monuments and buildings that had survived the Demon Wars. The Gods had approved the new building plans, and no-one had either the daring or the desire to build something different.

Even the citizens were all the same. Sure they had different skin colors, different facial features, but they were identical. Farmers wore the same roughspun garb; miners dressed in leather jackets and orange helmets; nurses in their low-cut, white dresses. They all smiled and talked to each other politely. And they all stared at me in awe. Every last person was under my parents' powers, ordered to love their neighbors, to obey the laws, and to never harm another human. There was no culture nor diversity.

There was no humanity.

The citizens were happy and healthy, they had food and shelter. They were slaves, even if their manacles were invisible. Human nature is not a machine to be built after a model, John Stuart Mill had written almost two hundred years ago, and set to do exactly the work prescribed for it, but a tree, which requires to grow and develop itself on all sides, according to the tendency of the inward forces which make it a living thing.

I was horrified and, when I returned home, I foolishly expected my parents to see the error of their ways when I carefully explained it to them. We sat at dinner, served by scantily clad maids. Supposedly, they were all volunteers, but was that true? How could they not volunteer, when they were told to obey their Gods and love them and serve them in any way possible by the Church and my parents' weekly broadcasts?

Mother stared in disbelief when I finished my lecture on how their actions, while well-meaning, were tyrannical and robbing the people of the world of their most inalienable right—the liberty to make their own decisions.

“She's your daughter,” Father laughed and Mother glared at him.

“You have to understand, Chase, we did it for their own good,” Mother patiently explained, like I was a child, and I set my teeth.

“And why can't they make their own choices?” I demanded. “Why do they have to take the aptitude test and be assigned their jobs and their housing. Even their spouses are chosen for them. What's the harm in a little freedom?”

“Give man an inch, and he'll take a foot,” Father answered. “Humans do poorly with freedom.”

“And that's why you won't let them choose their own spouses? What about love? About finding that special someone and choosing to be with them?”

“They're free to love,” Mother answered. “They're assigned spouses based on personality and suitable genetic traits. They're free to take any lover they want.”

“And what if they hate their spouse?” I demanded.

“They won't,” Father answered. “When assigned, they're told that they will always love each other. We care about our followers, and only want the best for them.”

I threw my hands up. “That's what I mean. You're taking away even the most intimate decision they can make!”

“What's the harm, they're happy,” Mother answered. “Our system makes all the decisions for them, leaving them free to enjoy their lives as they make the world a better place.”

“But they don't live, they just exist! You've robbed them of free will, of what makes them human! Why not give them just a little freedom? What is so wrong about that?”

Father stared at me. “Do you know what the world was like before the Theocracy?”

“I've watched your movies.”

“Those were fiction!” he snapped. “Like the books that have poisoned your mind. Before we imposed our Utopia, men had all the freedom they wanted, and what did they do with it?”

I shrugged, wilting beneath my Father's anger.

“Men were brutal beasts. Every day, thousands were murdered, raped, and brutalized. Mothers drowned their children because they inconvenienced their love lives, husbands murdered their wives for insurance payouts, and children killed their parents for drug money. Companies sold products that killed and maimed, covering up their crimes to keep their profit margins. Dictators starved their people, while religious extremists butchered those that disagreed on how to worship the same god. There is no depth to the evil and depravity that men and women can sink to.”

“Thanks to us, people only die from accidents, old age, and illness,” Mother added. “And your Father and I try our best to stop illnesses.”

“That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant,” I quoted from 'On Liberty'. “Just because someone might do something, or because you think you know better, is not a good enough reason to impose your will on them!” I slammed my fist into the table. “What gives you the right to make slaves of mankind?”

“We are Gods, Chase,” Father answered. “That gives us all the right.”

I didn't have an answer to that. 'On Liberty' didn't cover the ethics of an actual God, only temporal governments. Suddenly, I felt unsure. Father sounded so certain, so commanding, that I felt foolish for even challenging him.

“There has to be something better,” I lamely answered.

“There isn't,” Mother said, reaching out and taking my hand. “Trust us, baby-girl. Humans are children, and we're their loving parents. We know what's best for them.”

“Okay,” I whispered. She hugged me, and I sighed, savoring her motherly affections.

For several years I dropped my objections, letting them fester in the back of my mind. I could find no answer to my parents' assertion. My parents were Gods; I was a Goddess. We were better than all those other humans, so maybe it was only right that we reshape mankind into something better. That was the point of religion, to extort mankind to be better than their base urges. My parents were just more successful at it than the false religions of the past.

It was a chance comment I overheard that changed everything.

I needed something from Sam. I don't remember what it was, something inconsequential, so I walked into her quarters to retrieve it. I didn't knock. After all, I was a Goddess, and I could go where I pleased.

“If they're Gods, why did we have to figure out their miracles,” Candy complained to Sam. The TV was turned up loud, and they hadn't heard me enter.

They were sitting on their couch, watching some documentary about Mother and Father; television was the only form of culture allowed in the Theocracy, and it was mostly bland stuff compared to the entertainments that had come before. Mother and Father had quite the collection of movies and TV shows, things banned by their Theocracy, and we'd often watch them together.

Sam answered patiently, like this was an answer she was used to giving, “Great men and women have always stood on the shoulders of their intellectual betters. Why would Mark and Mary be any different than the thousands of petty tyrants that have come before?”

I was shocked. Never had I heard anyone impugn my parents before. I was intrigued. Did Sam and Candy not believe in our Godhood? A few days later, I tripped Candy into my bed, and after some vigorous fucking, we cuddled, and I asked her bluntly what she meant by her comment that day in front of the TV.

Candy tensed. “You heard that?”

I nodded. “It sounded like you two don't think we're Gods.”

She gave me a considering look, fingering a lock of her honey-blonde hair. I knew from pictures she used to dye it garishly, half-pink and half-blue. “Have you ever read the Magicks of the Witch of Endor?”

I frowned, that sounded familiar, but I was sure I hadn't read it.

“I'll email you Sam's translation,” she told me.

It destroyed my world. My parents weren't Gods, they just made deals with the very Demons that had ravaged the world during my childhood. And some of the deals in there were vile. What sort of monsters were my parents? All their justifications for enslaving mankind rang hollow in my ears. They weren't better than the humans—they were humans. Subject to the same flawed hearts they claimed could not be trusted.

The same flawed heart that beat in my chest.

I couldn't look at my parents without feeling sick, imagining Father sacrificing a woman to Molech, or Mother strangling a girl for power to Ashtoreth. I felt suffocated in the mansion, surrounded by evidence of my parents' abhorrent excess. Even Candy, who seemed so critical of my parents, wasn't disturbed by their powers, just jealous of them.

I had to leave.

At the age of twenty-three, I walked down the driveway of the mansion and out onto the roads. I had never walked any great distance, but I was young and I adapted. I walked for hours, leaving the large compound that made up the Theocracy's Capital of South Hill. I didn't know where I was going, what I was doing. I just had to escape.

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