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Chapter 4 - The Kennel of Hell Hall

Carlos De Vil didn't look like a villain; he looked like a survivor of a long-term siege.

He sat in the back of the "Selfishness" classroom, his fingers stained with grease and copper as he soldered a mess of frayed wires. He was the youngest in the room, but his mind moved with a frantic, twitching speed a byproduct of living with a mother whose moods were as sharp as a skinning knife.

​"Don't mind her," Carlos whispered to Evie, not looking up. "Mal creates a vacuum. You either fill it with fear, or she fills it with teeth."

​"And you?" Evie asked, her blue hair shadowed by the flickering, weak fluorescent lights of the mausoleum.

​"I'm the friction," Carlos muttered. "I get used until I'm smooth, and then I get replaced."

​He was an AP student (Advanced Psychosis.) It was a requirement for anyone living in Hell Hall. His mother, Cruella, hadn't been a fashion icon in twenty years. Now, she was a skeletal wreck fueled by "Metabolic Fury." She didn't eat; she screamed. She didn't sleep; she paced. Her "Rage Diet" consisted of thin broth and the psychological flaying of her only son.

​"I'm Carlos," he said, finally looking up. His eyes were wide, darting toward the door as if expecting a blow. "We met at your birthday. Before the world ended."

​"I remember the screaming," Evie said softly.

​"I live down the street from you," Carlos said. "In the ruins."

​"I thought only the crazy woman lived there," Evie said, her voice dropping. "With her… dogs?"

​Carlos went rigid. The soldering iron hissed against a wire. "Don't say that word."

​"Dogs? But she's always calling you her-"

​"Don't." Carlos's voice cracked. His forehead was slick with cold sweat. Cruella had raised him on a steady diet of horror stories: pack animals that tore out throats, creatures of pure malice that hunted boys who didn't fluff their mother's furs. To Carlos, a "dog" wasn't a pet; it was a demonic executioner. "That word is a death sentence in my house."

Their teacher, Mother Gothel, finally swept in forty minutes late. She was a woman obsessed with the slow rot of her own beauty, surrounding herself with decaying Polaroids of her own face.

​The lesson was Portraits of Evil. On the screen flickered a grainy image of Cruella De Vil from twenty years ago eyes wild, draped in the pelts of a hundred dead things. Carlos stared at the floor. He knew that face. He saw it every night when she made him iron her moth-eaten undergarments or polish the chrome on a car that hadn't moved since the Reagan administration.

​As class ended, the shadows in the hallway seemed to lengthen. Mal and Jay were waiting.

​"Carlos," Mal purred. It was the sound of a landslide starting. "Your mother is at the 'Spa' this weekend, isn't she?"

​The "Spa" was a hole in the basement where volcanic steam seeped through the rock. It was the only place Cruella felt at home surrounded by heat and sulfur.

​"Y-yes," Carlos stammered.

​"Good. I need a venue," Mal said, stepping into his personal space. "My mother hates noise. Jay's father is busy trying to hypnotize the rats. So, we're using Hell Hall."

​"I can't," Carlos gasped, his heart hammering against his ribs. "If she finds out if a single fur is out of place she'll skin me. Literally, Mal. She has the knives."

​Mal ignored him, turning to the hallway. "Spread the word. The Twilight Bark is active. Party at the De Vil morgue tonight. Everyone's invited." She paused, looking at Evie with a look of pure, calculated ice. "Well... everyone who matters. You didn't get an invitation twenty years ago, Princess. Why would tonight be any different?"

After Mal and Jay vanished, leaving a wake of terror in the hall, Carlos collapsed back into his seat.

​"She's going to kill me," he whispered.

​"I'm sorry," Evie said. She looked at the black box Carlos had been building. "What is that?"

​Carlos pulled the device closer. It was a jagged collection of copper coils, a scavenged power core, and a tip made from a snapped, powerless wand.

​"It's a needle," Carlos whispered. "I'm trying to puncture the dome. Not for magic for a signal."

​"To call for help?"

​"To see," Carlos corrected. "I want to see the world where mothers don't scream. I want to catch the radio waves from Auradon. I've heard they have a 'digital' world. No one can hit you in a videogame, Evie. No one can make you iron furs in a virtual forest."

​Evie looked at the flickering barrier through the high, barred window. "I just want to see the princes."

​"I just want to disappear," Carlos said.

​He looked at his machine. He had six hours to figure out how to host a "hell-raiser" for the island's most dangerous teenagers without ending up as a rug on his mother's floor.

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