Lawyers in Hell

Read Lawyers in Hell Online

Authors: Janet Morris,Chris Morris

 

Perseid Publishing

Paradise Productions LLC

P.O. Box 312, West Hyannisport MA 02672

 

Lawyers In Hell

Copyright © 2011 by Janet Morris

First Perseid Publishing / Kerlak Publishing hardback edition, May, 2011

This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any

resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.

Please purchase only authorized editions.

Uploading and distribution by any means without permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law.

 

Book Design by Ellie Herring; Cover Design by Sonja Aghabekian

Cover Art: Sebastiano Ricci, Sturz der rebellischen Engel, 1720

Published in the United States of America

 

Acknowledgements

 

Interview with the Devil by Janet Morris and Chris Morris

Tribe of Hell by Janet Morris

The Rapture Elevator by Michael Armstrong

Out of Court Settlement by C. J. Cherryh

Revolutionary Justice by Leo Champion

Tale of a Tail by Nancy Asire

And Injustice For All by Jason Cordova

Measure of a Man by Deborah Koren

The Adjudication of Hetty Green by Allan F. Gilbreath

Plains of Hell by Bruce Durham

The Register by Michael H. Hanson

Island Out of Time by Richard Groller

Appellate Angel by Edward McKeown

With Enemies Like These by David L. Burkhead

The Dark Arts by Kimberly Richardson

Heads You Lose by Michael Z. Williamson

Check and Mate by Bradley H. Sinor

Disclaimer by John Manning

Orientation Day by Sarah Hulcy

Remember, Remember, Hell in November by Larry Atchley, Jr.

Theo Khthonios by Scott Oden

Erra and the Seven by Chris Morris

Related Works:

Heroes in Hell

The Gates of Hell

Rebels in Hell

Kings in Hell

Crusaders in Hell

Legions in Hell

Angels in Hell

Masters in Hell

The Little Helliad

War in Hell

Prophets in Hell

Explorers in Hell

Interview with
the
Devil

 

by

 

Janet Morris and Chris Morris

 

Go to Heaven for the climate, Hell for the company.

– Mark Twain

 

 

Satan was fuming, literally, when I was escorted into his office on the top floor of New Hell’s Hall of Injustice by Marilyn Monroe in a tight red knit dress.  Aside from the devil and his desk, the huge place was empty from corbeled, cobwebby rafters to filthy marble floor.  The whole office reeked of smoke.  Wisps of gray smoke curled upward from his big black leathery wings, his wide maw, and leaked between his glittering fangs.  His yellow eyes burned into whatever soul I have left, and hurt.

“Sire, this is William Safire, from the New Hell Times Sinday Magazine,” Marilyn breathed throatily.  “For your interview.”  She teetered on red patent leather heels with six-inch spikes toward the son of the morning.  “Here is the list of pre-approved questions, YSM.”

“That will be all, Marilyn,” said Satan in a cultured voice, taking the list between his diamond claws.  The list ignited as he held it, crumbling to char in his hand.

Marilyn brushed past me and swished her way out of the office as if I didn’t exist.  There was no chair for me.  I had to stand.  On my belt was my mini audio/video recorder; I tapped it.  Now we were recording video, against all the rules.  How few among the damned souls sent to hell had ever seen the notorious devil, up close and personal?  What I did, I did as a public service.

Mephistopheles sat on his desk, not behind it – looking at my crotch, it seemed.  His tail lashed.  He crossed powerful arms and said, “Safire.  I do like the name.  Just who were you, again?  Before you came here to my domain?”

“I was Richard Nixon’s speechwriter.  He was an American president, you might recall.  ‘Nattering nabobs of negativism’:  that was my work.  I wrote that line, sir – for Nixon’s vice president.  Later, of course, I was a columnist for the New York Times.  And now, for the New Hell Times….”

“‘Sire’, not ‘sir,’” said the devil.

“What does YSM stand for … Sire?”  It was difficult to call anyone ‘sire,’ but I have interviewed my share of kings and queens and self-styled tyrants.  And now, the most dastardly overlord of them all.

“‘Your Satanic Majesty.’  Can we get to your questions?  We have windows to replace in here today.”

HSM was using either the editorial ‘we,’ or the royal ‘we,’ I didn’t quite dare ask which one:  I might be the most famous etymologist of the twentieth century, but my interlocutor is
the
devil (from the Middle English
devel,
from Old English
dēofol
, an early Germanic borrowing from the Latin
diabolus
, in turn borrowed from Ancient Greek
diábolos).
  “Sire, I’ve heard those windows always need replacing….  Howard Hughes built this building from Frank Lloyd Wright’s design, correct?  My readers want to know details like that:  what your … life … is like.”

“Immaterial.  No unapproved questions.  Get on with it, Safire, or I’ll call in some demons to string you from my flagpole and eat your liver for a few hundred years.”  The devil stretched out his arms and unfurled his black wings.  His form suddenly shimmered and shifted and a handsome, steely-eyed man with brush-cut gray hair in a pinstriped suit sat before me.  The smell of smoke abated.

“Yes, all right.  Well, this interview will be available on Gurgle and every other browser, so your subjects can read it on their phones and PDAs.  But no video or audio, as your staff stipulated:  just print.  I’m required to tell you that.  And that I’m recording this conversation – only for accuracy, of course.”

“Read it on their what?”

“On their hellphones and Pernicious Demonic Avatars, Sire.”

The devil reached behind him and pulled something out of his nether regions:  a black-furred winged thing, part cat, part bat, with shiny white fangs.  It yowled, swiped at the Father of Lies, sprang to the floor and launched itself straight at me.

Satan lifted a finger and pointed at the leaping bat/cat/leather-winged thing.  It burst into a ball of flames in midair and disappeared, leaving only a few ashes drifting to the floor.

“Michael doesn’t like you.  One wonders why.”  Steely eyes looked me up and down once more.  “Your questions, Safire.  I have a hell of a lot to do.”

“Yes, well.  Ah ... Prince of Darkness, will you please tell me what it means to the citizens of New Hell that you and all the other lords of hell are being audited by emissaries from on high, coming here to determine whether or not injustice is being fairly dispensed…?”

“‘Administered.’  Not ‘dispensed,’” Satan corrected me.  “It means that some in the manifold hells of creation have existences far too cushy.  That some of my Devil’s Children and my Insecurity Service have been lax.  That Nero and Caligula and Sartre and Saddam Hussein and bin Laden and the rest of those perverts will get what’s coming to them.  That all the hells are about to become more hellish.”

 “I see.  And is there any truth to the rumors that there will be new appeals possible, hearings for those damned who feel they’re in hell unjustly?”

“Un
just
ly?  You jest.”  The devil waved a hand toward me and my mini-recorder pinged insistently and began to overheat.  I turned it off, foiled in my clever plan to podcast video of Satan in the flesh.

“Sire, what about the story that there’s a ‘Get Out of Hell Free Card’ here somewhere, if one can just find it?”

“It’s up my bum,” said the Devil.  “Do you want to have a look?  Come right over here….”

“No, no; that’s fine, Sire,” I soothed.  “Next question:  What about the relics:  the shrouds and chalices and spears and vials of holy water?  Are they real?  Can they save a soul?  And if they’re not, what is your administration going to do about those perpetrating theses hoaxes on so many gullible souls?  We’ve heard the money made on those supposed relics goes straight into your administration’s coffers.”

“I am not a crook,” said the devil, standing abruptly and shimmering again.

I’d heard those words before.  I’d written those words before.  “Yes, Sire, but I’m certain our readers are anxious to learn how your government proposes to deal with these supposed relics and with the auditors coming from on high.  Can you tell us about the auditors?  And what, if any, charges have been lodged against you or your various departments?  Who will be the counsels defending your administration from accusations of incompetence?”

“‘De
fend
ing?’  ‘In
com
petence?’”
 Now the devil changed his shape:  gone was the handsome bureaucrat.  In its place came no winged demonic form:  Satan was now a spinning whirlwind of inky blackness that tugged at me as if it would suck me within itself.  If you die in hell, you revive in the Mortuary, on the Undertaker’s table, usually worse off than you’d been before. 
“I
need no defense,” came HSM’s voice, ringing like hell’s bells. 
“I
am lord of the greatest hell in human history.”

“Yes, of course you don’t, YSM,” I said hurriedly.  “But we have heard that punishments will be meted out to the guilty and innocent alike by these auditors from the higher heavens.”

From the lightless void came Satan’s voice again:  “In hell, Safire, all punishments fit the sins.”

“You mean punishments such as George Washington having endless dental implants that don’t heal and infect his whole system?”

“Never mind Washington.  He got off easy.  Cow’s teeth and hippopotamus-ivory dentures should have been good enough for him.”  The spinning black vortex was expanding, the voice ringing excruciatingly in my ears.  “I know who you are now, what you’re trying to do.  You have your interview.  And you shall have a new punishment, more appropriate to your crimes.  Your life here has been far too easy:  you and your subscribers need to learn a thing or two about penance.”

The black maw whirled around me and sucked me up and put me down far from the devil’s office, far from New Hell itself, among the cactus and the tumbleweeds, in this tattoo parlor from which I’m logging my report.  I’ll be here quite some time, the Hell’s Angels tell me, strapped to this table until the entire Constitution of the United States, including all amendments, is inked into my skin.

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