Contrary to legend, Ingrid does not lead armies. She leads a quarterly review. Her actual job—damning souls, overseeing torments—is handled by a legion of lesser imps who fear her more than they fear the Abyss itself. She appears in her office (a soundproof room wallpapered in the shrieks of her enemies, now silent) for exactly two hours. She signs scrolls with a quill made from her own shed fingernail. She fires one imp per day, at random, for “poor vibes.”
Ingrid’s quarters are not a dungeon but a penthouse carved into the obsidian cliffs of the Seventh Ring. Its windows are enchanted crystal, showing not the red wastes but a live feed of a stolen Swiss sunrise—a loop she paid three minor dukes to acquire. She wakes at noon, her long, coal-black hair fanned across pillows stuffed with the feathers of angelic songbirds (plucked, not killed; she is cruel, not wasteful). Hell Knight Ingrid Uncensored
At the stroke of what would be midnight, Ingrid retires to her balcony overlooking the Styx. She lights a single cigarette—tobacco soaked in honey and despair—and exhales smoke rings that briefly form the faces of her favorite deceased humans. She does not miss them. She misses the idea of missing them. Contrary to legend, Ingrid does not lead armies
She also hosts a weekly book club. Members include a former pope, a vampire lord who owes her money, and a sentient suit of armor that only speaks in limericks. They read romance novels—specifically, the worst ones. The current pick is Burned by Your Love , a paranormal romance about a firefighter who falls for a salamander. Ingrid finds the prose “deliciously tragic.” She appears in her office (a soundproof room