The boy hauled himself over the mahogany precipice of the celestial desk, his form no longer a child’s but a towering silhouette of ink and static. The desk was a continent of scarred wood, littered with the wreckage of a billion discarded lives. Before him, the protagonist cowered, the broken bone-quill clattering from his trembling fingers. The man who had played god now looked like nothing more than a frayed tether, a puppet whose strings had been cut by the very ink he had sought to harvest.
"You don't understand," the protagonist stammered, backing toward the edge of the desk where the void waited to swallow the failed. "The Board... they’ll just delete this entire branch. They won't let a character seize the pen."
"I am not a character," the boy replied, his voice a landslide of grinding tectonic plates. "And you are no longer the author."
He reached out a hand that had become a jagged claw of violet light and gripped the protagonist by the throat. The man didn't choke; he began to blur, his features smudging like charcoal under a wet thumb. The boy inhaled, and the protagonist’s history—his crimes, his clever metaphors, his secret fears—poured into the boy’s open maw. The protagonist’s body grew translucent, then papery, until he was nothing more than a single, crumpled page of notes.
The boy turned to Sarah. She stood amidst the flickering lamps, her eyes wide with a mixture of awe and dawning horror. She reached out, perhaps hoping to find the brother she had tried to save, but her hand passed through his chest like smoke.
"Leo?" she whispered, her voice a fading signal from a lost world.
"Leo is a draft," he said, and with a flick of his wrist, the room downstairs—the house, the street, the weeping mannequin that had been his father—collapsed into a singular, dense point of ink.
He sat in the protagonist’s chair. It was cold, carved from the fossilized remains of every story that had ever ended in tragedy. He picked up a fresh quill, one carved from the Inquisitor’s obsidian blade, and dipped it into the boiling violet well of his own heart.
The boy looked out over the infinite expanse of blank white pages that stretched toward the horizon of the multiverse. He didn't think of the life he had lost; he thought of the Board, sitting in their high, windowless offices. He pressed the nib to the paper, the friction sparking a fire that threatened to consume the stars.
*“In the beginning,”* he wrote, his handwriting a jagged, vengeful scrawl, *“there was a boy who learned that the only way to escape a monster is to become the one who writes the nightmare.”*
On the far side of the desk, a telephone began to ring—a sharp, mechanical scream. The boy didn't flinch. He picked up the receiver, his eyes glowing with the cold, predatory light of a new and terrible beginning.
"This is the New Architect," he said into the mouthpiece, his smile spreading wide enough to tear his face in two. "I’m calling to discuss a revision."