Authors: Andrew Ball
person. He barely topped five-foot-three. He
was skin and bones, and not from lack of
trying. Even his hair was buzzed short, if
only because he hated the way it looked
when it grew out.
But Jack was more than human. He was
a contractor.
Every contract had a unique ability. His
was the power to transform himself into a
massive, silver-haired ape. On his command,
his arms, legs, or even his entire body would
surge with muscle. While the stamina of his
collected soul held out, he could run for
miles. He was strong enough to flip cars like
toys. His shaggy fur was imbued with a
magic of its own, and formed a defensive
barrier that protected him from all but the
most potent attacks
His power—his status as a contractor—
made him different. It made him better. He
didn’t have to be small. He could be big, in
every sense of the word.
But at the moment, Jack was in hell. He
was in
the
Hell, an artificial plane of
existence that drifted in the gap between the
human and demon universes. It was a prison
for the worst criminals of both worlds, the
foul, the terrible, and the unspeakable.
The men and women locked there didn’t
simply trample on humanity. That was
commonplace depravity; that got you a trial,
an extended stay on death row. The people
sent here, well—it was more as if they never
acknowledged a greater sense of humanity in
the first place.
Hell was, first and foremost, the
sarcophagus of Satan. The real Satan. Jack
was still getting his head around that. It was
real, and locked in a massive meld of
machine and magic far below where he stood
that very instant.
The room he occupied was packed
shoulder-to-shoulder with observers—and
the vast majority were not human. There
were thick-chested minotaur; freakish crow-
people, the harpies; six-legged, spidery
grazule; green, leathery-skinned goblins;
bright-red devils; and even dragons, reduced
to their humanoid forms, distinguished by the
chromatic scales emerging from their necks
and temples. A single nightmare, a small,
ink-black weasel of a demon, floated above
the heads of the crowd.
The floor and walls were solid black
steel. It was the same uniform, riveted iron
that everything in Hell was made of, when it
wasn’t made of exhaust or soot-stained
concrete.
All of them faced a thick-plated window
that stretched from floor to ceiling. The room
sloped up toward the back, giving everyone
a clear view of the arena below. Along the
curved wall of the coliseum, Jack could see
other window-rooms, just as packed as his.
The New Detainee Games were
mandatory viewing—not that they needed to
be. It was one of the few forms of
entertainment they had.
Even it if wasn’t, Jack would not have
considered skipping. He found out what
happened if you broke the rules. He decided
not to break the rules.
When Jack accepted Xik’s offer and
became a contractor, he thought he’d finally
be big. He thought he would be somebody.
He thought he’d finally become the biggest
fish in the pond. He thought the rules were
finally going to bend and break under the
weight of what he’d become.
He had no idea.
It probably didn’t help that he was
squashed between two infamous giants of
human history.
"You look like you’re out of your depth,
boy."
Jack looked to the giant at his right.
Rasputin had a heavy nose. It sat on his
face like a beetle. His scraggly beard was
long, and his wide ears were long, and his
hair was long—and his head, while small,
was distended by all the longness. To Jack, it
felt more like a wrongness.
His voice was different. His voice
coated the air with so much butter and
warmth that you hardly seemed to notice all
that stuff about his face until you took a good
look. It put you in a good mood just to hear
it. The man could insult you, and you’d be all
smiles, patiently waiting for more.
Something about the voice made his
spine shiver. Jack made it a habit to take a
good look at Rasputin’s face as often as
possible.
"Why is this one here?" Rasputin asked.
"Because being a man of the modern
era," the giant on Jack’s left said, "he may be a better judge of modern men than you."
Jack glanced at the other man. His name
was Vlad Dragwlya III, Prince of Wallachia.
His more commonly known name was
the one that Jack recognized. Dracula.
Lord Dracula was a sharp man. His chin
was narrow; his nose was small and pointed.
A mustache flared neatly to either side of his
face. His eyes were always squinting. At the
moment, he was looking out the window,
inspecting the arena below the ring of
windowed rooms.
"I think myself a better judge of
character than some fresh fool of a boy, no
matter the era."
"Perspective, Rasputin," Dracula said.
Even his voice was sharp. It cut like
obsidian. "Perspective."
"I have eyes, you know. They give me a
shocking amount of perspective."
"Jack," Dracula said.
Jack responded immediately. "Lord
Dracula?"
Dracula gestured to the arena. "Observe
carefully. The other games can be similar in
nature. You’ve been through this, but now
you’ll have a chance to see it from this side.
Take this chance and learn what you can."
Jack turned back to stare at the arena.
The one he’d participated in was a little
more tame. It didn’t have the suspended steel
catwalks, or the whizzing metal discs that
looked like they would slice right through
you if you looked at them funny. And it
definitely didn’t have a floor made out of
seething hot magma. Geysers of the stuff
erupted at random, spraying the walkways
with flecks of superheated rock. Jack felt
sweat beading on his forehead just looking at
it.
The game started suddenly—there was
no warning for mere prisoners.
"Ladies and gentlemeeeen!" The
announcer carried on the last syllable, as if
welcoming them to a three-ring circus rather
than a vicious deathtrap. It was the same
voice the other rooms would be hearing, the
same voice broadcast over PrisonWatch—
Beelzebub’s revenue-generating television
station that cashed in on cold hard brutality.
Best of all, it was guilt-free—everyone in
Hell deserved what happened to them.
"Grab your drinks and plop a seat,
because the New Detainee Games are about
to begin! Today’s arena is inspired by the
Mining facilities found on Omicron-8! A
quick thanks to today’s sponsor, Omicron
Mining Corporation! OMC: Constructing a
better future!"
Jack winced away from the room’s
loudspeaker. The announcer could’ve given
Billy Mays a run for his money.
"And now, today’s unlucky new
inmates!"
A blue spotlight—contrast to the orange-
red tint of iron-backed lava—alighted on a
long, flat platform at the far end of the arena.
For a moment, there was nothing—and then a
sprinkle of white light heralded the
teleportation spell.
A body warped into existence; a devil.
Its blood-red skin was stained purple by the
lighting. Two white horns stuck out from its
skull. It had claws like razor blades.
"Today’s first inmate is Zelunix!
Zelunix’s main crime was serial
decapitation, followed by removing and
consuming the brains of his victims! You
may remember him from our earlier
courtside specials—Zelunix was infamously
unrepentant, telling the judge ‘don’t knock it
till you’ve tried it!’ His innate lack of smell
gave him away, as his neighbors couldn’t
stand the scent of the rotting corpses still
decorating his home!"
Zelunix enthusiastically raised his long
arms and waved, as if to greet the viewers at
home. If Jack hadn’t been down there,
before, he might have thought it was almost
cartoonish.
One by one, new inmates were warped
in, followed by a brief summary of their
deeds. Most were more of the same—
vicious, and usually shameless, criminals.
Some had used forbidden magic Jack wasn’t
familiar with. They were all demons, of
various species.
Their reactions came in two flavors.
About half of them looked almost happy to
be in attendance. Others were more subdued,
standing in place with distant, confused
looks.
Jackson risked speaking. "Lord
Dracula?"
"Yes?"
"That last one didn’t seem so bad," he
said, pointing at the platform. The latest
criminal had been announced as a thief.
"Why is he here?"
"He stole from the wrong person,"
Dracula said.
"So he got sent to Hell? Seems kinda
harsh."
"Use your head, boy," Rasputin said.
"This is an exile. A vengeful, excruciating
exile. Humanity uses a sentence here as a
message. Demons use it as a tool."
"…to do what?"
"To control," Dracula said.
"And now!" the announcer shouted,
"Today’s last inmate! We’ve got a human
today, folks, and we all know how feisty
those can be! Give the young man a helping
hand, won’t you?"
Light flickered and sparked at the end of
the platform. A new person warped into
view—it was a young man, as advertised.
The blue light washed him out, but Jack
knew him instantly. His hair was somewhere
between brown and blonde, slightly curly. A
thick lock of it always drooped down right
between his eyes. His gaze faced forward,
quiet, cold.
Jack was surprised—less to see him,
and more at the look on his face. When he’d
first met the man that would become his best
friend, he had that same coldness. It was a
look that said he’d seen the world, and he
was disappointed.
But it had gone away. It fell off his face
as he’d gotten to know Jack, and then, with
time, vanished altogether.
Now, that old expression was back.
Something must have happened. Something
bad.
Jack felt the sad smile on his face. He’d
been sentenced to Hell. It didn’t get much
worse than that.
Jack tried to warn him, but he knew it
would go unheeded. He wasn’t good at
taking advice. And now he was here.
"Back on Earth," the announcer
continued, "he was found guilty of using the
vampiric enchantment, and we all know what
that means! A life sentence in Hell! Who
knows—maybe this one will be the key to
moving another human faction up to the next
level! A big welcome to: Daniel
Fitzgeraaald!"
"Another one like you," Rasputin said.
"…no. Not like me."
Estimated Date of Release: Fall 2015