Here the Devil functions as a mirror. He reflects the compromises the Nightmaretaker makes: lying to a mother about the permanence of her child’s smile, cutting a deal that trades someone else’s comfort for the same mother’s, telling himself that the ends — sleep, safety, sanity — justify the means. The Devil is not a separate actor so much as the rationalizations that allow his work to continue. Possession is the narrative device that externalizes those rationalizations, making them visible and monstrous.
