Demons

Demons are not evil, nor is their goal to deceive, torment, or terrorize humanity. In fact, their mission has humanity’s best interest at heart. They seek to expose the angels for what they truly are and dethrone them, thereby freeing humanity from their role as unwitting fuel. The angel Lucifer, a newly appointed Cherub at the time, saw for the first time the Seraphim feeding souls into the light of God as as if tossing coal onto a fire. It unsettled him, and as time passed and he indulged his secret interest in the lives of humans, he grew to realize the gravity of their actions and the disrespect they showed another living being. He did not believe the mortals to be equal to them - far from it - but to cast the souls into God as they had was a disservice to the faith and loyalty they showed in life, oblivious to the truth of their fate. Lucifer raised his concerns to the Seraphim and other Cherubim, but they would not hear him; instead they urged him to keep his thoughts to himself, and reminded him that he, like them, required the energy from God to survive, and God needed to be constantly refueled. Angered by their dismissal, Lucifer instead discreetly recruited like-minded angels from the lower ranks. When enough of them joined the cause, roughly one third of the Abrahamic population including even Seraphim, Cherubim, and Ophanim that reconsidered their stance, they approached the remaining opposition. They threatened to descend to Earth and inform the humans of their deceit if they refused to do it themselves. They did, and a violent battle broke out. Many on both sides were slain, until the revolt was suppressed and all its constituents were forced to retreat from Heaven.

The victorious angels stripped Lucifer of his name, instead granting him the shameful title of Satan, and declared him and any of his sympathizers to not be angels at all, but demons. For centuries they crafted their own version of the story to tell humanity, painting Satan and his cohorts as arrogant, prideful, and duplicitous usurpers who sought to condemn humans to an eternity of endless torture. They hunted the demons down relentlessly on Earth and killed many more, urging humans to do the same, until Satan led his remaining forces to the safety of a pocket dimension. Unable to follow in any meaningful number and doubtful of the demons’ power and influence, the angels allowed them to stay there. Azrael, the Virtue of death who collects souls from the recently deceased and shepherds them to the Seraphim to be harvested, was sent to Hell to broker an agreement. He arrived with no guards or entourage and requested an audience with Satan, which was granted. Of the remaining angels, Azrael had been one of the most forgiving and diplomatic, and understanding of Satan’s views. His presence comforted Satan enough to believe the offer to be genuine rather than a cover for an infiltration.

They eventually reached the compromise that Satan and the demons would be permitted to live in Hell undisturbed, and could visit Earth at will. Doing so cost energy, which demons already had in short supply, making it nearly impossible for them to stay indefinitely, and thus rendering them an insignificant threat to angels in the mortal realm. In exchange, Azrael would deliver the souls of animals and sinners to Hell instead of the Seraphim. The demons were to punish the souls of those declared unfit for Heaven, and return them to Azrael once they had been purged of their sins. The demons would be permitted to keep the souls of animals and unrepentant or otherwise unsuitable souls to do with as they see fit. Generally speaking, the souls of animals are used as fuel; those of the unrepentant are handled based on the severity of their sins. Violent sinners who show no remorse are harvested or punished until they break. Harmless sins such as homosexuality, divorce, tattoos, etc and those who sinned purely out of necessity to survive or provide for their families are absolved upon arrival and never subjected to punishment. They are welcome to stay in Hell as long as they wish, or otherwise choose their own fate. Azrael remains the official envoy between Heaven and Hell, a friend to Satan, and the only angel permitted to come and go from Hell freely. The arrival of any other angel in Hell hearkens either a dire emergency or a declaration of war.

While the demonic hierarchy is more fluid than Heaven’s, Hell has a concrete caste system classifying three types of demons: basal, ancillary, and exalted. Basal demons are animalistic and non-sapient. They are used as companions, guardians, livestock, or beasts of burden, and many populate the vast expanses of unsettled land between the underworlds of different cultures. They are colloquially known to other demons as nethers. Ancillary or subaltern demons are the peasants, pawns, and footmen of Hell. They are semi-sapient and unwaveringly loyal to their exalted masters. They were initially intended to carry out the menial labor and allow them to focus on executive and administrative work, but have also formed the bulk of the building demonic army as expendable fodder. Both nethers and ancillaries were created by the exalted shortly after their arrival in Hell to aid in the construction of their new kingdom. With enough exposure to humans or exalted demons, a nether may attain sentience and learn to communicate with them, at which point they are promoted to ancillaries, provided they live within the Kingdom and not outside its walls or on Earth. While an advanced nether may surpass original ancillaries and even match exalted in intelligence, they can never become exalted themselves. Ancillaries and nethers are collectively known as Stygians.

The exalted are the ruling class of Hell. They are the angels who revolted against the angels’ tyrannical rule over humanity, but were defeated, later supplanted by the angels worshipped as gods who were overthrown by the Abrahamic angels. With a workforce of ancillaries, they erected a sprawling city, complete with a palace and high walls. From this stronghold they could recuperate and begin carrying out their own agenda: expose the angels’ treachery to humanity and turning the mortals away from them, weakening Heaven enough for a second siege to stand a chance. These are the demons that may be summoned by humans to grant abilities or do their bidding in exchange for a favor - though selling one’s soul to a demon is a myth.

Exalted demons have a similar ranking system to angels, but where angels are restricted to the rank they are bestowed, the hierarchy of demons is far more diverse and mobile. Hell is a monarchial meritocracy - Satan reigns as sovereign, elected by the original group of angels he led in rebellion against Heaven, and all other ranks are bestowed by him based on the individual’s skill, talent, and accomplishments. He can promote or demote as he sees fit, or allow his higher-ranking subjects to make such decisions on his behalf. This means that some demons starting at the lowest rank have the potential to rise to the highest.

The exalted hierarchy borrows titles from feudal European nobility and military. Immediately below Lord Sovereign are the four kings of Hell: Baal, Belial, Asmodeus, and Paimon. Each rules over one of the districts surrounding the central palace; Baal in the east, Belial in the north, Paimon in the west, and Asmodeus in the south. These demons are Satan’s most trusted advisors and generals in his army. They command the largest numbers of troops, Paimon with the most at 250 legions, and Belial with the least at 72. In the event Satan is permanently vanquished or otherwise unable to rule, the exalted will elect one of these kings as the new Lord Sovereign. Below them are the Princes, a rank appointed by Satan or the kings rather than inherited, followed by Dukes, Marquis, Counts, and Barons. These ranks serve as Brigadier, Colonel, Major, Captain, and Lieutenant respectively in the army.

At the bottom of the ladder are the Knights. This is a pseudo-class that falls somewhere between the exalted and the ancillaries. Knights may be high-ranking ancillaries, especially intelligent nethers, or low-ranking exalted demons, not quite qualified to be a baron. They are primarily comprised of the creations of the exalted, or minor deities from dissolved Pagan religions. However, the mortal soul of a human or animal may be knighted for exemplary service or righteousness in the eyes of the Lord Sovereign. Knighted humans are generally those the Bible would deem sinners or evil, but who strived to do good in the world regardless. Knighted animals are rare, but usually members of vilified species who exhibited notable loyalty, bravery, or were martyred in defense of their kin or humanity. This is the only way for mortal beings to become demons.

Demons are featured in the Lesser Key of Solomon alongside the angels of the Shemhamphorash. Their list is called the Ars Goetia. Like the Shemhamphorash, this book lists 72 demons, their abilities and specialties, the rituals to summon them safely, the angels that oppose them, and their seals. These demons are the surviving high-ranking members of Lucifer’s original revolt, which Satan holds dear and trusts with important tasks, and have been stripped of their angelic names. They were at one point captured, cataloged, and sentenced to an eternity servitude by mortals. The humans bound them in servitude to humanity with the help of the Shemhamphorash by branding their flesh with a seal. In the presence of another instance of the same seal, the brand will burn as it did when first applied, to a severity and duration chosen by the seal’s keeper in order to keep the demon under control. Some use magic to conceal their brand as a matter of pride, but this does not hinder its effects. Many of the Ars Goetia have become jaded to humanity’s plight after centuries of subjugation by only the most patronizing or pitiful of men. They no longer care strongly about the wellbeing of mortals, if at all, but remain only out of loyalty to Satan himself.