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Hell On Earth Box Set | Books 1-6

Page 81

by Wright, Iain Rob


  Mankind was the hunter again.

  The last remnants of the demon horde staggered in a frenzy, but they did not surrender. It seemed like something they were incapable of. Not that Mass would show mercy if they did throw their arms up. He jabbed his machete in front of him and disembowelled a primate.

  Within minutes, the battle was over and two-hundred demons lay dead. Of his thirty-six men, Mass had lost not a single one.

  Shit was getting too easy.

  “Target secured,” Mass said into his radio. “No casualties.”

  “Roger that,” came Maddy on the other end. “Good work, Mass. I'll let Wickstaff know.”

  Mass sheathed his machete and holstered his Uzi. He placed his hands up as he approached the fence around the zoo. It wouldn’t be the first time survivors had shot at him out of fear.

  A woman in her late thirties stood on the other side of the wire mesh. Her eyes were wide with fear, but the corners of her mouth lifted hopefully. “Are… are you friendly?”

  “Of course we are. We’re all in this together. How you people doing?”

  The woman huffed. “Starving. Sick. You know, not bad.”

  Mass tutted. “That sucks. How ‘bout you come with us. We have food and medicine, and about thirty thousand people all armed and ready to kick demon arse.”

  The woman frowned. “Come on!”

  Mass reached into his pocket, making the woman flinch, but when he pulled out a roll of paper, she relaxed again. He pushed it through the fence, and the woman took it and unrolled it. Her eyes went wide.

  The package Mass had given her was the same handwritten note from Wickstaff he gave all the survivors he found. It read:

  Dear friend.

  Right now, you may be in the presence of men and women you do not know. That must be frightening. Your suffering these last months has been endless and awful, but I promise you, it is ending. Humanity is fighting back, and it is winning. We have slaughtered the angels and closed dozens of gates. Great sacrifices are required in the days ahead, but the choices you make are now your own. I beg you to join us at Portsmouth, the new cradle of civilisation. There, we are rebuilding. We need teachers and carers for our children, soldiers for our cause, and experts in all fields. If you would like to help humanity thrive once again, please trust whoever gave you this note and come join us. If not, I have enclosed directions and a map to our nearest outposts. Once again, I promise you your suffering is at an end. The enemy is on the run. We have beaten our extinction and tomorrow is arriving.

  Your faithful servant,

  General Amanda Wickstaff.

  The woman inside the zoo shook her head as if she couldn’t believe it. She looked at Mass, and then at the army of lads standing in a line behind him. “This is real? Portsmouth is real?”

  Mass nodded.

  “Okay, so… who are you?”

  “We,” said Mass, waving a hand at his lads, “is the Urban Vampires.”

  The lads grinned, exposing the gold fangs that each of them had. Mass smiled too, his own gold teeth glinting in the afternoon sunlight.

  General Wickstaff

  Wickstaff was stressed, as she had been every second for the last three months. Still she waited for that beautiful moment of silence when she could take an undisturbed breath.

  Maddy approached with a satellite phone. “Chancellor Capri on the line for you, Ma’am.”

  “Oh, how splendid!” The German leader was not Wickstaff's favourite person, but he was too important to ignore. She did her best to work with the various groups they'd made contact with, but she feared the old power mongering of the past would return.

  Putting on her happy face, she took the phone from Maddy and spoke into it.

  “Chancellor Capri, how good to hear from you. Things fare well on the Continent still?”

  “We have things much in hand. I hear you are faring well also, ja?”

  “We’ve got the buggers on the run. What can I help you with, Chancellor?”

  “I’ve been getting some concerning reports.”

  “Such as?”

  “General Wickstaff, are you in possession of nuclear warheads?”

  Wickstaff looked at Maddy. To those in her council, it was no secret Portsmouth possessed eight nuclear warheads housed on their German sub. It wasn’t something she shared with anyone else though, but it was hardly surprising that the German submariners had relayed the information to their homeland.

  “Where would you get that idea, Chancellor?”

  “We have brought our Intelligence systems back on line. The tracking unit for one of our nuclear submarines is firing off the coast of Portsmouth. I have tried many times to raise the submarine’s crew via radio, but they refuse all calls. Did you dispose of them and take possession of the vessel yourself? If so, that sub is the property of the Sovereign nation of Germany, and it must be returned.”

  Maddy tutted. Wickstaff waved at her to keep quiet. “Chancellor, I assure you the crew on that submarine are the original German men and women it belonged to. That they haven't answered your calls is the decision of Commander Klein. I was unaware you'd tried to get in touch.” She let a grin escape. Sounded like the German submariners were happy right where they were. Their loyalty would not go unrewarded.

  “Nonetheless, General. That sub must be returned.”

  “I’m afraid not, Chancellor. You see, the idea of possession, or even sovereignty, is a concept of no import to me. That submarine is part of my naval fleet—the biggest fleet in the world, I would wager—and it will remain so. The crew are not German, they are men and women of Portsmouth, and they will remain where they wish. You will not make demands of them or me, and we shall make none of you. I think that would be best, don't you?”

  “Be careful, General.”

  “Be careful of what, Chancellor? Are you threatening war? Are you seriously making threats against your fellow human beings after what we have all been through? Do you think that is what your people need right now? Be a leader, Chancellor, and fight for peace, not war. And keep your bloody eyes off my toys because you’re not having any of them.”

  “General—”

  She ended the call and almost threw down the phone. “Bloody imbecile. Can you believe him? Nothing’s changed.”

  “It’s just a submarine,” said Maddy. “What does he even want it for?”

  “It’s not the sub, it’s the warheads. We might have the only armed nuclear weapons in the world, and that makes us undeniably powerful—something the Chancellor does not like in the slightest.”

  Maddy folded her arms and seemed to shiver. “You would never use them, would you?”

  “Seeing as how Commander Klein and I have already discussed dropping them into the ocean, you may rest assured that they are not in any of my future plans.”

  Maddy lifted her dark eyebrows. “You want to chuck them in the sea?”

  “With men like Chancellor Capri, I feel it best they were lost altogether. He won't make a fuss about something we don't have. Commander Klein agrees with me, and after he hears what his Sovereign leader has been demanding, I imagine he will make his way to the middle of the Atlantic very soon.”

  “Do you really think the Chancellor would start trouble with us?”

  Wickstaff sat down at her desk and rubbed her forehead. “No, not yet. His land forces in Central Europe are larger than ours, but they also have war against the demons on a dozen fronts. The German Federation will be occupied for years to come. But while men might gain power slowly, they can abuse it in a second. I worry about our future, Maddy. Will it be any different from our past? If so, then I ask, what are we even fighting for? Humanity is a bird with a broken wing, and there's no point healing if we end up flying sideways.”

  “It won’t be the same,” said Maddy. “We won’t let it. We fight for each other here at Portsmouth, and we will build a world people deserve. Chancellor Capri can suck our dicks.”

  Wickstaff smirked and got up fro
m her chair. “He most certainly can. I’m going for a coffee. You want one?”

  “I wouldn't say no.”

  They exited the Command tent set up at the docks and headed for the coffee shop. While the city itself was in ruins, the docks had become a small settlement, full of canvas roofs and lean-tos housing families and loners alike. This was the seed from which a nation would once again grow.

  People milled about everywhere, shoving past one another, but always nodding politely. They didn't curse or anger one another, not anymore. They were forever bonded. Family. One man, however, marched stiffly towards Wickstaff without stopping to apologise to the people he shoved. People hopped out of his way, confused by what would make him push so rudely.

  Wickstaff stopped her walk and reached out to grab Maddy’s arm.

  The man wore a grimy hoody, and he pulled back the hood to reveal his face. The snarling jaws of a demon opened. A handgun emerged from the hoodie's pocket and pointed at Wickstaff. An assassin.

  The creature hissed with delight as it sighted a clear shot at Wickstaff. She could do nothing but throw her arms up vainly. Maddy cried out and tried to leap in front of her. But she was too slow. Too many steps required.

  An almighty gunshot echoed off the parade square.

  The demon slumped to the ground. Its mushed head splatted its grimy hoodie.

  Diane stood over the corpse with a smoking shotgun. “Fucking bastard! That’s the third one the guards have missed this week.” She looked up at Wickstaff. “I’m so sorry, Ma’am. They just keep coming. Dozens each day. They want you dead. I almost let them get you this time.”

  Wickstaff waved her hand. “Better late than never, Diane. We’re going for a coffee. Fancy coming?”

  Diane nodded. “Best stay close to you until we get a handle on all these assassins.”

  “Don’t worry so much, Diane. It takes a lot to keep a good woman down, and with you two watching my back, the demons have no hope. Now, let’s go get that coffee before the next crisis begins. I swear, a woman’s work is never done.”

  Lucas

  “Hello, Danny Boy.”

  Daniel slumped in the corner of his cell, maggots festering in his flesh. His golden hair was filthy, and the stumps of his wings were sore. It hurt Lucas to see. It had been his actions that led Daniel here. When the Fallen Angel looked out through his bars and saw Lucas, he began to weep. “Lucifer? Are you here to torment me?”

  “Behave, lad! You been locked away a long time, brother, and for that, I'll be eternally sorry. But much has changed. Name’s Lucas now, if you don’t mind. Gave my former mantel to some no mark from the Pits. This whole war on God thing is partly my fault. The new Lucifer turned out to be a bit of a wet fish, as it turns out. He let that bloody eejit, the Red Lord, get his hooks into the place.”

  Daniel nodded. “I heard you’d changed. Wasn’t sure I believed it.”

  Lucas waved his hands, and the iron bars melted away into nothingness. Then he blinked, and the maggots disappeared from Daniel’s flesh.

  “Come here, brother. It has been too long.”

  Daniel rubbed at his now-healed flesh, then crept apprehensively towards Lucas. As soon as he was near, Lucas reached out and pulled him into a hug.

  Daniel sobbed loudly.

  Lucas held him tight, trying to absorb his suffering. “I am sorry, brother, for leading you to your downfall. All of your sins, I own fully, and one day, I am sure Father will let you back into paradise. But that can only happen if he remains in power.”

  “I tried to help,” said Daniel thickly. “The humans.”

  “Aye, you did at that. Your actions made all the difference, lad. You did good.”

  “Good?”

  Lucas chuckled. “Takes a while to sink in at first, doesn't it? Yes, you did good, and can continue to do so. For a long time, I owned what I was, acted the Devil I was named, but one day I came to a remarkably simple revelation. I realised that what we were yesterday is set in stone, but what we are tomorrow is up to us. We were angels once, Daniel, and we can be again.”

  Daniel glanced over his shoulder at the burnt stumps where his wings had been.

  Lucas touched his face and got his full attention again. “Wings do not make an angel, Daniel. It’s more than that, and you know it.”

  Daniel nodded. “I want to help.”

  “Then come with me. We have a king to usurp.”

  “You want to regain control of Hell?”

  “It's the last thing I bloody want, but I need to take charge until I can figure something out. I need to get the place sealed up again. Hell’s leaking like an old dear's bladder.”

  Daniel stopped walking and squinted at Lucas as if something suddenly occurred to him. “You kept me locked up for millennia, Lucifer. Why keep me prisoner if you turned back towards the light?”

  Lucas sighed. “Because once you start opening cages in Hell, you never know what will get out. It was best your cage remained closed, but now that the patients are running the asylum, it doesn't matter. You are free. I can never give you back what I took, brother, but I hope to have eternity to make it up to you. Please, Daniel, forgive me.”

  Daniel flinched, as if the very notion was absurd. It was. Lucas had locked Daniel up for thousands of years.

  Slowly, the Fallen angel nodded. “God would have me forgive you, Lucifer, so forgive you I will. I love you brother.”

  “And I you. Seriously though, it's Lucas now.”

  Footsteps.

  A newcomer's voice. “What the...? Hey, man. I know you!”

  Lucas turned to see the most unexpected thing. The young thug on which he'd bestowed Daniel’s sword now stood in Hell's hallways, bumping into him as if they were old friends at a bar. “Jamal?”

  “Vamps, man. Enough with the Jamal bullshit.” He waved his flaming sword. “Thanks for this, by the way.”

  Daniel’s eyes went wide. “Hey! Is that my sword?”

  Lucas blushed. “Yeah, erm, about that... I kind of gave it to this fella.”

  Daniel glared at Lucas, and then at Vamps. Vamps pulled the sword closer to him like a child protecting his favourite toy. Then Daniel’s eyes moved to one of Vamp’s companions, of which there were two. “R-Rick, is that you?”

  Rick beamed and went over to Daniel, giving him a hug even harder than the one Lucas had given him.

  “Daniel, you’re okay! What you gave to me… your gift...”

  “Is gone,” said Daniel. “If you are here in Hell, my power has left you.”

  “I know. As soon as I arrived, I could tell I was my old normal self again. It’s made surviving in this place a little tougher, but luckily I had help.”

  “I have been here before,” said Aymun. “The place has not gotten any nicer.”

  “We’re going to change that,” said Lucas. “Hey, who you got back there with you?”

  Vamps yanked a chain he was holding. On his hands and knees, a naked, dirty man scurried towards them. “Prime Minister Windsor,” Vamps explained. “If you can believe it. He told us a group of soldiers caught up to him and tossed him through a gate. Lucky, we found him first.”

  “He’s been helping the enemy,” said Lucas.

  “We know,” said Rick. “We figure he’ll learn his lesson eventually, but for now he gets to play doggie.”

  Windsor was broken but unharmed. Lucas could tell no one had beaten the man. A little humiliation, however, was the least the arrogant fool deserved.

  “What are you doing here?” Lucas asked the three men.

  “We came to end this,” said Rick. “But we’ve been lost in Hell for what feels like forever. This place is empty.”

  “Haven’t eaten or drank anything in weeks,” said Vamps. “But…”

  Lucas nodded. “You don’t need those things here. The damned are all back in their cages for now, and Hell is vast, which is why you haven't seen anyone. As for being lost, it's because you are still living. Only the damned may navigate the hallways. L
uckily, you’re talking to the damnedest of them all.”

  Rick nodded. “You can lead us to the Red Lord?”

  “Aye! It just so happens to be the very place I’m heading. You fellas want to tag along?”

  They all did.

  So, Lucas strolled through Hell with a force far larger than he expected, yet smaller than he needed. He re-joined Damien, who waited sullenly for his return and gathered the dozen or so Fallen Angels wishing to fight for mankind's future. Lucas knew each of them ultimately hoped for God’s forgiveness, but it was not something he could promise them. It was frightening to admit he hoped the same thing for himself.

  They gathered outside a giant set of gates, forged from the thickest iron. They were so tall that one could barely see the top while standing at the bottom. Lucas knew the gates well.

  “I can’t touch the iron,” said Lucas. “Not since I gave up the throne.”

  Damien stepped forward and placed his hands against the doors. They began to open of their own volition. The throne room lay inside. Lucas led the way.

  “Can’t say I like what you’ve done with the place, Red,” he said, walking down the centre aisle. Human skulls covering the walls and ceiling were part of the new refurb, but what worried Lucas more were the Creator’s Crystals. In the centre of the throne room stood the Grand Repository. Inside were the ancient crystals. Each one represented a world. Each one allowed the reigning King of Hell to watch the lives of every man and woman on every world. Lucifer had spent millennia witnessing the acts of mankind, and it had been scenes of love, sacrifice, and devotion that had eventually led him to give up the throne and leave. A vast majority of the crystals were cloudy or black. The worlds were fading away, dying as the Red Lord laid siege to each one in turn. Only a handful still shone with their rightful vitality. One, he saw, was brightening by the second. A world the three humans by his side had recently departed. That world was healing. But the rest…

 

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