Gaunt is hanging out in his bar, Munden's, when a fancy-looking woman walks in. She used to be married to William Honesworth, Cynosure's finance minister. Their daughter Marcie recently killed herself, and she wants Gaunt to find the daughter's diary so she can learn why.
No backup feature.
A kid wants to hire Gaunt for one decicred, the smallest coin in Cynosure. Gaunt takes the job because, he says, "nobody'd ever offered their entire bankroll before". The kid's father is going to fight in "Blood Sport", an illegal bare-knuckle deathmatch, to make some money. The kid wants Gaunt to stop him so he doesn't get killed. Gaunt takes the father's place in a match against a huge mutant called Butcherboy.
Blood Sport reminds Gaunt of his days as a slave in the Arena. There's some background info on the Dancer, who Gaunt knew in the Arena, and Dancer's lieutenant Mac Cabre appears as Blood Sport's ringmaster.
Munden's Bar: Jeffy the Silesian slug tries out a tourbot.
Gaunt visits with BlacJacMac, to tell him his father Mac Cabre is still alive. The two of them go check out Cabre's old headquarters, and find it has been re-occupied and now holds, among other things, a dozen womb tanks each holding a clone of the Butcherboy thing that Gaunt fought in issue #2. Then a bunch of little werewolves in Santa Claus costumes attack them.
Munden's Bar: Murray's DTs.
Gaunt is hired to protect a comeback rock star from a psycho fan.
Munden's bar: The bar is infested by drincubi.
Gaunt's old TDP partner Roscoe wants his help in investigating the theft of some Portable Reality Generators, one of the TDP's secret edges in fighting trans-dimensional crime. The trail leads out Eternity Road to TDP biker cop Jericho Noleski, who rescues Gaunt from a shootout at Dead End Station.
Munden's Bar: Bob the lizard tells his story.
It's election time in Cynosure.
Munden's Bar: Closing time.
The Grimjack graphic novel. It's an addendum to the Demon Wars #66-#69
sequence, hinted at on the last page of #69. Flint Henry is the artist.
Jim Twilley is Grimjack. There's an intro by Roger Zelazny.