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Hell in a Nutshell
Author's note: I like comedy, always have. That's probably also my reasoning in the extremely lazy descriptions.
Is it possible to lower the flames a bit, Sir? They’re throwing reflections on the camera lens."
 The burning fires of Almighty Hell, so hot they could scorch the sin right out of the most murderous human heart, sunk two feet with the wave of a manicured hand. With just a ring of flames surrounding the set and crew the cameraman was able to get 
 his angle and the lighting screens were arranged. Though the place was rimmed in fire, it 
 retained the blackness of a cave. The subject sat quietly in his leather chair and waited.
 The cavern was a special place for him, a place of quiet reflection. It was clean, 
 comparatively comfortable, and without the stench that was a usual part of his day. It was 
 as welcoming as Hell got. 
 “Ashley? Are you ready, Sweetheart?”
 The director, a pudgy man with a growing bald spot, turned to watch his star leave the make-up artist's chair to navigate her way over the lighting cords. She splayed her hands out, stepping carefully in her four inch Jimmy Choos. Her butter-golden hair was held off her shoulders in a loose chignon that brushed the black leather Cavalli jacket she wore on top of a pink cashmere turtleneck.
 “Marvelous. Are you comfortable, dear? Would you like the lumbar cushion?” 
 “No thank you, Ray.”Ashley settled into her seat . Sound approached and attached a tiny clear mic to the inside of her jacket. 
 “Let’s prepare to roll, people. Are you ready, Sir? Super. Quiet, everybody! Roll tape. Five-four-three-two-one. Go ahead, Ashley.” 
 The little red light on the camera flicked on as Ashley gave her lips a final lick before turning towards the lens.
 “Good evening, and welcome to “Amazing Lives”. I’m your host, Ashley-Ann 
 Jensen, and tonight we have a once in a lifetime exclusive. Our guest has been known and 
 feared, in one form or another in nearly every country and culture that has ever existed. 
 His career is the second longest in the history of mankind, and although he will admit to 
 having had a few lean years, he has always been able to resurface with a new, stronger 
 agenda. He has numerous aliases, but he still prefers to be called by his legal name, so 
 viewers, may I introduce you to….The Devil.”
 The camera went to wide angle, revealing a being very close to a human man seated opposite Ashley. The Devil was of average height and his body was slender. He wore a designer suit of charcoal and a scarlet tie of brushed silk. At his wrists were cufflinks that might have been sapphires if not for the occasional blinking. The face showed a certain experience yet was unlined by advanced age, while the mouth was thin but a healthy pink. His hair was neatly trimmed and a rich chestnut, as was his pencil mustache. His eyes were distinctive as they were unusually large and of such a dark brown that it was impossible to determine if they contained pupils or not. He sat smiling pleasantly at the woman in front of him. He could almost pass for one of us, the director had thought during their first negotiation meeting. He has a continental look, suave like an old-time movie star. Mrs. Telly Viewer wouldn’t click the remote off on this guy. I’m willing to bet my kids that by tomorrow morning every secretary in the country would be talking about The Devil and begging HELLO! Magazine for a write up.
 The only possible problem was the tongue, which was stretched long and thin 
 with a prominent forking on the end. The Devil had a thick Irish brogue, which the 
 director knew would give some viewers enough trouble deciphering the conversation, but 
 when he pronounced the letter ‘s’, the tongue would dart out and slap against his upper 
 lip, making a noticeable “sslmpt” before retreating back in his mouth. The director 
 thought about asking if there was any way for The Devil to control it, as the sound was 
 picked up clearly by the sensitive boom, but then decided it would be unfair since he had 
 never requested any other subject to change for the sake of the camera. He just didn't 
 know how forgiving viewers were of speech impediments.
 “Let’s talk about your beginnings,” Ashley began. “You were an angel in heaven. 
 Tell me what that was like.”
 “Oh, I have to say that I was so surprised and grateful when God chose me as one 
 of the original angels,” he replied, “Up until that time I had been just one of millions of 
 souls knocking about, not really doing anything to speak of. Out of nowhere, I received a 
 summons. I was to see God.”
 “He wanted you to work for him?”
 “Yes, and as I said, I was so surprised. I couldn’t imagine why I would be among 
 those chosen.”
 Ashley tilted her blonde head. “Why were you? What made you so special?”
 The 
 Devil gave a quick smirk.
 “Apparently He saw a spark in me. He told me that I was destined for something 
 that had never been seen before. That I had an important job ahead of me. Whether He 
 anticipated the outcome, I’ll never know. We no longer speak.”
 “What did you learn from your time in heaven?” Ashley asked.
 “Oh, so much, so much. I mean, it was my big break and I wanted to use it to the 
 fullest. I had hopes of growing with the business and someday being promoted. So I 
 worked hard learning to judge others and punish or reward accordingly, and that 
 experience was indispensable. It became the basis for my later work when I struck out on 
 my own.”
 Ashley furrowed her pretty brow and pinched her face into a thoughtful expression. 
 The effort gave her a moment to remember her next question.
 “Now, this has never been clear. You had some sort of falling out with God. What was 
 that all about?” she probed, leaning her chin lightly into her hand.
 “Well,” The Devil sighed, “There were a lot of problems at the time. It was a new 
 operation then, we were working out the kinks, you see. Learning as we went. The 
 frustrations were endless. The schedule mix-ups, the policies being changed daily, 
 individuals swapping assignments to ensure leniency for their relations. It was all so 
 disorganized that I would find myself wondering if God had really thought the project 
 through. Actually, the worst part was the ‘in’ squabbling, which was constant. Everyone 
 second-guessing each other’s decisions. With such a heavy workload, it left us all a little 
 edgy.”
 “So it was an inability to get along with others that led to your departure? You 
 wanted to be in charge of things, maybe?” Ashley said with a practiced smile that 
 conveyed “gentle yet firm”.
 The Devil shifted in his chair. He had agreed to this interview, he reminded himself, 
 too late to back out now. He could control his urges, no matter how rude this woman 
 was. Should have gone with a more credible show, something more serious. Yet 
 “Amazing Lives” had the biggest weekly audience. The living must be getting thicker, 
 the Devil thought to himself. The calming words of his yoga instructor trickled through 
 his mind: “Serenity in through the nose, turmoil out through the mouth.” He performed 
 his breathing exercise, pulling in air deeply before answering.
 “It was a large portion of the reason, but not all. I suppose I felt under-appreciated 
 after a while. God wasn’t using my ideas and they were very good. Remember the flood? 
 You know, Noah and his bloody Ark?” The Devil could feel his skin flushing with anger. 
 The memories of his old workplace still put him in a rotten mood, even all these 
 millenniums later. ‘Occupational Trauma’ his shrink called it. 
 “I suggested that the flood should be of urine instead of water. I mean, what comes to mind when you think of a lot of water?” He sat forward menacingly. Ashley tilted her head and offered tentatively, “The seaside?”
 “That’s right! Either that or doing your washing, and neither of those things are very frightening, are they? People take their holidays at the sea, they sit in it. Willingly! So would you be surprised to learn that it took weeks for those bloody humans to realize that they were being annihilated? It was just rain. Nobody took any notice of that. All right, I’m not being fair. It was very stormy, thunder and darkness and all that.” He leaned his elbows on his knees in irritation. “It was scary. For rain. But now, picture great sweeping bales of urine falling out of the sky. That would have been a disgusting mess to drown in, I’ll tell you.” 
 “Right, right,” Ashley Jensen said. She sat back. And waited. Waited for
 something to come to her, anything. Anything at all to say. They both sat there saying 
 nothing and Ashley realized that seconds of dead air were passing and she started to feel 
 a little sweaty. She wondered if her face looked as frozen as it felt, because at this 
 moment she began to realize how much she liked movie stars. She was truly interested in 
 them, and supermodels, and she believed her audience was too. Movie stars knew what 
 was expected of them- a bit of chatter, a giggle. She hadn't wanted to interview The 
 Devil. Ray had twisted her arm over it, saying she needed to do some serious stuff once 
 in a while. Credibility. She wouldn’t have reason to smile much today and Ashley really 
 like seeing her teeth on camera. After enduring braces, resurfacing and laser bleaching 
 she finally had the impossibly perfect smile of her childhood fashion doll. Also, The 
 Devil’s bio had been long and tedious and now he was making her look bad. Like she 
 couldn’t carry her show.
 “Anyway,” The Devil continued, “After about a week of rain, I came undone. I threw 
 open his door and yelled at God, ‘Why couldn’t we have done it my way? Am I stupid? 
 Maybe I’m invisible!’” The Devil clenched his thin hands and twisted his body away 
 from Ashley. “Gobshite”, he muttered, “Buck Eejit”. 
 The cameraman zoomed in to show the subject’s face was red and his lips pulled 
 thin over his teeth. The director leaned over and whispered, “Keep the camera off her,” as 
 the former winner of the Miss Bigglestone beauty pageant and third-runner up in county, 
 looked as stiff and shiny as a plastic mannequin. Her kohl-smudged eyes were round, 
 straining in their sockets as she watched the tongue of her guest lashing about. Why is he 
 angry?, she wondered, he’s on telly. Everybody's happy to be on telly. I shouldn't have let 
 Ray talk me into this crappy interview, she thought. No clever quips or seductive teasing 
 to toss in, as it wouldn’t look right to get on well with The Devil. She gave a smile, the 
 small, mysterious one she like to call “The Mona Lisa”, as she chirped out her next 
 question.
 “So you became your own boss. Tell me about some of your success stories. Who 
 has worked under your influence?”
 The Devil’s black orbs glistened. The greedy businessman, hungry for free 
 publicity, took over. He crossed his legs and let a modest smile appear on his lips.
 “Well, there are the obvious ones, the blights of humanity, the monsters, you know. 
 Caligula, Attila, the guy who thought up middle-management work retreats. They were 
 all major players. A lot of people think that the Marquis de Sade was one of my guys, but 
 he wasn’t. That one was just a lunatic, he was off doing his own thing and I’d get reports 
 about him. All I could do was laugh. He was a complete nutter,” he chuckled.
 “And Hitler?”
 “Sure, sure. With Adolph, I developed the closest working relationship I’ve ever 
 experienced. More of a partnership, really, in that I started with a “to do” list for him and 
 he just ran with it. He was a wonderful little organizer.”
 “But his Nazi regime was eventually crushed. Was that because of some 
 miscalculations on your part?”
 “No! No it wasn’t!” The Devil puffed out his lips at Ashley. She was rude. Rude 
 and taunting and he didn’t like looking at her. He didn’t care for her over-processed hair 
 or her drawn-on eyebrows or her staring cow eyes. She was a bony, rude stickwoman and 
 he hated her. Luckily, he had done some homework of his own.
 “Adolph was overpowered when I became distracted with something else. I let my attention slide to that ridiculous morals and ethics business in Hollywood. Just a little something on the side and it wound up costing me. I felt like I had really bished it for him, so I plucked Adolph.”
 “What do you mean by ‘plucked’?” Ashley asked.
 The Devil’s temple began to pulse. He clenched the arms of his chair and breathed deeply through his nose. Plucked. She thinks she can question me when she doesn’t even know the whole premise of my business? 
 “Plucking is how I acquire my inventory. My product is souls, so I must pluck a 
 soul from the targeted living being. The soul is then transported here, to Hell, and 
 processed according to the severity and volume of evilness contained in said soul. That is 
 my whole purpose, that is how I make my living, Miss Abigail Eugenia Jezenowicz.” 
 'Oh, so that's how you want play it', Ashley conveyed with a lift of the brow, a look she called The Downtown Smack. He’d be sorry for taking that tone with her on her own program. He’d be the one looking a git once she was done.
 “So you have all the murderers and muggers? Collected all the dirty little bits 
 down here, have you?” Her most guiltless smile, The Ingenue, appeared on Ashley’s lips 
 as she waited for his answer. The Devil smiled back, forcing a relaxed pose as he slowly 
 spoke.
 “Yes, all those souls are here. But the majority is made up of less dramatic stuff, 
 really. People who lied under oath in court, stole exam answers in school. People who 
 cheat to win.”
 “Oh,” Ashley said. She opened her eyes wider and gave him a blank stare, The 
 Guileless Child. She had spent years in front of a mirror perfecting such an innocent, 
 vacant look. It got her out of spots plenty of times, and it was slowly occurring to her that 
 she might be in one now.
 “You see, Ashley, I’ll pluck anybody who has done something wrong out of evilness, 
 no matter how small that evilness is. It may be something that just shows the spark of sin. 
 Say, for example, that there’s a girl and she wants something badly. To win a beauty 
 contest, or something equally intellectual, but she has nothing to offer beyond just a 
 passably pretty face and a body that will widen with age. I might provide the opportunity 
 to cheat, but it is ultimately the human who decides whether to act on that opportunity. I 
 could make sure that the prize at this backwoods gala was something important to her. A 
 train ticket to get her out of the pathetic little town she grew up in would be an interesting 
 prize for a girl like that. She would want to get to London, where the real action is.”
 Ashley found herself trying to push her weight through the back of her chair, wishing 
 her guest would shut up right now. The heat in the cave had become unbearable, causing 
 perspiration to bubble up through her sweat-proof make-up. The Devil continued.
 “So with very little incentive, this girl might lie on her contest application or 
 sabotage the more deserving contestants by spreading dirty rumors about open sores and 
 gender surgery. Then to clinch it, she could show up on the doorstep of a lonely judge, or 
 even two. That’s the kind of soul I pluck, Ashley. A soul like that belongs here.”
 Ashley felt the hot sweat sliding between her shoulder blades. She was frightened, 
 yet not defeated. Ashley-Ann Jensen was a cagey sort, and when backed into a corner she 
 tended to come out with claws and teeth snapping. She knew things about life. Her mind 
 spun through the biggies: 
 1.Anyone who makes it a point to tell you they are your friend, isn't.
 2.Never do it on tape. 
 3.The one with the most to lose will confess first. 
 4. Everything has a loophole- That's the one!
 “ But you can’t take a soul until someone dies, can you? And only then if the person 
 doesn’t repent, right? People can ask for forgiveness and be saved from you, can’t they? 
 That’s an out,” she breathed.
 The Devil’s reply was a noncommittal, “Mmm,” as he casually raised his eyes toward 
 the ceiling. 
 Out of the corner of her eye Ashley saw the director rolling his arms, the sign to 
 wrap it up. She was relieved. It had been a difficult day, but she also felt rather satisfied 
 with herself. She had the goods. She had gotten The Devil to show his hand, and in his 
 arrogance, he had stumbled. Now she would wriggle right out of his grasp. By tonight she 
 would be in a church, she would confess to what she had done. She would truly repent 
 and find some charity for underprivileged starving children to throw a huge wad of cash 
 at. She could change.
 “Our time is up, I’m afraid. Thank you so much for being here,” she said, giving The 
 Devil her Professional Smile. “You’re amazing.” Turning towards the camera, she added, 
 “And thank you for joining us. See you next time.”
 “And cut,” the director called out. “That’s it. Perfect, Ashley. Really great stuff. Alright, that's it. Let’s go, people.” The lights switched off and cables were reeled in as Ashley and The Devil rose from their seats. She didn’t need anymore from him, and so turned without a word, already on a mental path out the door, to the crew van, which would take her back to the production studio. From there, she would drive her Porsche about London until she spotted a church in a suitably wretched yet photogenic neighborhood. Can anybody just walk in or do you call ahead for an appointment? she wondered.
 The Devil knew her tricks, the cheating little tart. He had repressed his urges long enough; by opening her mouth she had offered hope to millions that they could escape The Devil. She was threatening his livelihood. On the other hand, she had also given millions of people sweet, false hope, for the Devil didn’t need to wait for death to snatch the goods and often didn’t. Evil Was Evil, was the Devil’s motto, why wait? Ever so quietly in his glossy wingtips, the Devil padded up behind Ashley and pressed his thumb and index finger into the small of her spine, then jerked his hand back to expose the milky, squirming product that was now his possession.
 Ashley was suddenly freezing in the hot cave, as if all her internal organs had 
 shut down. She shivered, completely unaware that she had been robbed. All she knew 
 was that she didn’t feel such a rush to find religion at the moment. What she really 
 wanted now, in the most desperate way, was worldwide fame encompassing an 
 international talk show, a design label and multiple perfumes. She wanted a line of 
 organic Thai-inspired soups in the supermarket.. She wanted to record a dance album and 
 go on MTV Request. She wanted to be photographed with Bono, to befriend Posh. 
 Ashley-Ann Jensen wanted everything. And she was willing to do anything to get it.
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