Pacto Infernal ⭐ No Ads

In the dim, neon-choked alleys of modern Madrid, , a failed concert pianist with trembling hands, found the "Pacto Infernal" not in a dusty grimoire, but in a spam email that bypassed every filter.

Elias signed. That night, his fingers moved with a supernatural fluidity, rediscovering the genius he had lost. He became a sensation overnight, his performances described by critics at the Teatro Real as "divinely inspired." But the "unheard note" was the catch. Pacto infernal

Every time Elias reached the climax of a piece, he felt a sudden, agonizing silence—a note he struck that produced no sound to human ears, but caused someone he loved to forget him entirely. First, it was an old mentor. Then, his sister. Finally, as he stood before a sold-out crowd for his magnum opus, he realized the final "unheard note" would be for himself. In the dim, neon-choked alleys of modern Madrid,

As he struck the final key, the music was perfect, but Elias looked at his own hands and didn't recognize them. He walked off stage a stranger to his own soul, leaving behind a legacy he could no longer claim, bound to the charcoal-suited man forever as a silent, nameless shadow in the back of the club. He became a sensation overnight, his performances described

Driven by desperation and the ghost of a career, he followed the link to a basement jazz club that didn't exist on any map. There, a man in a sharp charcoal suit—smelling faintly of ozone and old parchment—offered him a deal: