Chapter 1 #3
On the anniversary of her tenth year in hell, Adramelech made an announcement that unbeknownst to Audrey would change everything. “Well, my sweet, I have a gift for you.”
He handed her a purple velvet bag tied with a golden cord. Audrey was shocked. The Chancellor didn’t give presents, unless a concussion could be considered a gift, and even then, it came with strings attached. Nonetheless, he was indeed handing her what appeared to be a token of some sorts.
Carefully taking the package, Audrey set it on the long mahogany dining table before very cautiously untying the ribbon.
Sweat dotted her upper lip and rolled down her spine as she prepared for any number of creepy crawly monstrosities to jump up and take at least a few fingers, if not her entire hand.
When the bag was opened and nothing had emerged, the princess chanced a glimpse at the Chancellor.
If possible, although difficult to discern, she thought the big bad demon was actually smiling.
Turning the bag upside because there was absolutely no way in all that was holy she was reaching into the dark abyss of the deep purple velvet, Audrey was shocked when what appeared to be a deep red pile of silk fell onto the tabletop.
Poking it first with one finger and then another to make sure nothing nefarious was wrapped in the beautiful material, the princess reached forward right before the sound of Adramelech’s voice caused her to jump back.
“Oh dear Hades in a handcart, pick the damned thing up. It’s a gown.
You know, a dress…you wear to a party?” He paused and opened his eyes as wide as he could, which made them look even scarier with their weird pupils and freaky color, before slamming his paw-like hands to his hips and huffing, “For you to wear this evening to the Blood Moon Ball.” To further assure Audrey that she was indeed losing her mind, the Demon Lord proceeded to raise his right hand and wave it through the air as if he was conducting an orchestra, flourishing pinky finger raised and all.
“You…you want…” She paused to clear her throat and stepped back up to the table, lifting the dress while she continued, “You want m-m-me to g-g-go with you?”
He answered with a single nod.
“And I’m…I’m t-t-to wear this dress?” Audrey knew she was stuttering, but the one thing she’d learned long ago was to trust nothing Adramelech did. He always had ulterior motives and they usually resulted in her losing a pint or two of blood.
Again, his only answer was a single nod.
Throwing caution to the wind, she asked, “But why?”
He sighed as if she’d asked him to donate a kidney instead of explain himself before pulling out his chair made of the bones of his conquests and sitting down like he was convening court.
After adjusting his robes and straightening his collar, he finally answered.
“Because, dear Audrey, I am the envy of all the other Lords and Ladies simply for having you as a slave. I must take this opportunity to flaunt my wealth in front of the masses.”
It had to be the most disgusting thing Audrey had ever heard and even more than that—the scariest. If Adramelech was envied for having her as a possession, then was there a chance someone or something would try to steal her away?
Fight him for her? She’d heard the anguished cries, seen the hellhounds carrying away the lifeless bodies, and smelled the entrails that were left lying about by the other demons who’d tortured their slaves until they were dead.
The Chancellor was a bastard to live with, but he was not the worst bastard in hell.
The princess wasn’t ready to admit she was lucky to be bound to him, but she knew there was worse to be had.
Worse she didn’t want to witness first hand.
She saw that the Demon Lord was waiting for her to say thank you and thought about ignoring him.
There was one sure way to get to stay behind and avoid being gawked at or fought over, and that was to take a beating, but her wounds from the one before were still healing, so Audrey took the path of least resistance.
Throwing up a little bit in her mouth, Audrey swallowed the bile and spoke as sweetly as she could.
“Thank you for the beautiful gown and the opportunity to accompany you to the ball.” Adramelech’s nod of approval was the last thing she saw before dashing into her quarters to escape the Demon Lord and get ready for the festivities.
After procrastinating as long as she could, Audrey made her way into the parlor.
The Demon Lord sat on a couch made of human bones, covered with human skin, and decorated with pillows fashioned from the fur of the poor animals who’d unknowingly stumbled through the gates of hell only to be dinner for the hounds.
The Chancellor’s castle was eclectic in its décor.
Some rooms looked as if they had been taken right out of Architectural Digest and others had most definitely come from Better Dungeons and Grave Yards.
Adramelech signaled with the raise of his hand for her to stop and stand still.
Audrey held her breath as the Chancellor casually strolled around her several times, tapping his chin with his forefinger and mumbling under his breath.
When he finally spoke, she was light-headed from lack of air and gasped as his huge scale-covered paw slid along the underside of her arm, stopping when her hand was atop his.
“You look as beautiful as a human can.” Turning them towards the door, he escorted Audrey out into the scorching heat beyond the Chancellor’s castle and down the path to the Hall of Iniquities.
The Demon Lord was walking with more pomp and circumstance than usual, which was saying something since he always made a production out of the simplest things.
It only took a few moments for Audrey to realize the way every creature they passed stopped, bowed, and complimented Adramelech.
If she could have, the princess would’ve laughed aloud as one after another, the inhabitants of the Chancellor’s region of hell all but pawed the ground the Demon Lord walked on.
“You are looking fine this evening, Your Honor.”
“Nice to see you looking so well, Chancellor.”
“Your slave is of the highest quality, Lord Adramelech.”
Audrey had to admit to herself that the ones about her ruffled more than her feathers, even if they were meant as a compliment.
It was not the first time the princess was forced to realize that she was simply an object to all of these things, and that her sole existence depended on the very entity that had doomed her to hell.
It was truly a no win situation that would last forever.
As they walked, and in between accolades, Adramelech explained the importance of the Blood Moon Ball and his part in it.
“You see, my dear, tonight is the fourth lunar eclipse in a matter of eighteen human months. It is the night before Samhain and the night when the moon will appear as a blood-red sphere of fire in the sky. Tonight is the night our Hunter Demons will venture topside and take advantage of the change in the energy of the earth to seek out the souls ready to do hell’s bidding.
The veil between hell and the human realm is but a whisper between the worlds, making the presence of our scavengers undetectable to only the most sensitive.
But then those people are considered the quacks and the mentally incompetent in your world, so very easily dismissed.
” He chuckled and added, “This will be the final harvest of souls before the long cold darker half of the year commences. These are the fodder that will keep hell’s fires burning bright and hot. ”
After what seemed like forever, they reached the ball and entered the hall. If she could’ve thrown up where she stood without being beaten to within an inch of her life for embarrassing her master, Audrey would have. It was the most grotesque display she’d ever seen.
The guests included creatures out of every child’s worst nightmare and some that hadn’t even been dreamed up yet. They were the things parents threatened their children with to get them to eat their vegetables or go to bed on time.
She saw two and three-headed ghouls with green skin and blood red lips wearing tuxedos and sipping red bubbling liquid from champagne flutes.
There were horned beasts and scaled beings of every size, shape, and configuration anyone could imagine.
Some she knew would haunt her dreams for years to come.
These guests doused various skewered body parts, mostly of unknown origin, into a steaming blood concoction she knew was meant to resemble chocolate.
The dark, viscous fluid poured from huge silver fountains adorning the ends and middle of every banquet table.
There were displays made of wine glasses strategically placed throughout the room to catch what she now knew was bubbling blood and could only assume was hell’s version of champagne.
Bodies in various stages of decomposition decorated the walls, while part human, part animal, part reptilian beings served as targets for the demon’s game of darts.
Shrunken skulls painted with various body fluids clanked together as ghouls struck them with pool cues made of human long bones on a billiards table constructed of brimstone.
Luckily, Adramelech was too busy fawning for his fans and showing off to offer Audrey anything to eat or drink, because it was all she could do to remain standing as one atrocity after another came into view.
A loud gong echoed off the tall rock walls drawing everyone’s attention to the front of the room, where an incredibly unassuming six-foot-three-inch red-skinned man impatiently waited.