In The Devil’s Call: A Journey Through the Abyss and Hell, the follow-up to My Friendship with the Devil: A Story and The Devil’s Redemption: Reclaim the Narrative, the journey does not end with survival. Instead, it begins with an unsettling realization—escaping the flames is only part of the story. The greater challenge lies in confronting what remains in the aftermath of suffering.
Torn between the weight of his past and the uncertainty of his future, the protagonist steps beyond Hell and into the Abyss, a vast and unshaped space that forces him to question everything he once believed about pain, healing, and identity. No longer shackled by suffering, he must now decide what to do with the life that stretches ahead of him. But moving forward is not as simple as leaving the past behind. The echoes of everything he has endured still linger, and in the silence of the Abyss, he is faced with the hardest question of all: What now?
As he navigates this unfamiliar space, he is no longer guided by the presence of Samael, the enigmatic figure who once forced him to confront his deepest fears. Instead, he must come to terms with the truth that was always waiting for him—no one else can shape what comes next. The Abyss does not dictate his path. It only reflects what he brings into it. And for the first time, he is the one who must decide what that will be.
This is a book about transformation, not through revelation, but through choice. It is about learning to carry the past differently, about understanding that healing is not the erasure of suffering but the act of building something new from it. Through deeply personal reflections, raw honesty, and unfiltered introspection, the protagonist explores the complexities of what it means to live after loss, to reclaim a voice that was once silenced, and to offer his story to those who might need it the most.
As messages begin to arrive from people who have read his words—strangers who see themselves in his story, who have stood at the same edge, who have carried the same unbearable weight—he comes to a final realization. His journey does not end with personal redemption. His survival is not just for himself.
Because healing is not a solitary act. It is something that spreads.
And now, it is his turn to guide others through the fire.
For those who have faced their own darkness and wondered what comes next, The Devil’s Call is an answer—a powerful testament that survival is not the final destination, but the first step toward something greater.