The shears didn't click; they screamed. As the blades met, the sound was the screech of a heavy nib snapping against a desk. The Author’s scream was shorter, a sharp intake of breath that cut off as his physical form began to fray at the edges, his outline blurring into a messy charcoal smudge.
He didn't bleed red. He bled ink—thick, viscous, and smelling of iron and dried glue. It pooled on the road, dissolving the very ground he sat upon. As he fell, his desk splintered into toothpicks, and his cardigan unraveled into a thousand loose threads of plot that led nowhere. He reached out one last time, his fingers grasping for your throat, but his hand simply smeared across your chest like a wet thumb on a fresh drawing.
"You... weren't... supposed to..." he wheezed, his eyes turning into two drying puddles of black.
"The draft is dead," you replied, your voice vibrating with the cold resonance of a closing tomb.
With a final, violent shudder, the Author vanished. He didn't die so much as he was erased, leaving behind nothing but a blank white void where the road and the sky used to be. You stood alone in the center of the nothingness, the rusted shears heavy and dripping in your hand.
The silence was absolute, until a new sound began. It wasn't the scratching of a quill or the rustle of paper. It was the sound of a thousand voices—distant, muffled, and hungry. The Readers. They were leaning in, their eyes pressing against the invisible veil of the page, waiting for what happened after the climax.
You looked down at the mirror one last time. The words on your forehead were gone. In their place, the skin was perfectly smooth, a clean slate. But as you watched, a new sentence began to etch itself there, carved not by the Author, but by the sheer force of the vacuum he had left behind.
You dropped the mirror. It didn't break; it simply fell through the floor of the world, descending into the white abyss. You looked at your hands, then at the void, realizing that a story without an Author doesn't end—it simply unravels.
You felt a sharp tug at your heel. Then another at your shoulder. The margins were closing in, the white space hungry to reclaim the ink that made you. You turned to run, but there was no direction left to go. The floor was rising, the ceiling was falling, and the very air was turning into the suffocating weight of a closed book.
In the final second before the light vanished, you realized the true nature of Silas’s gift. He hadn’t made you a hero or a villain. He had made you a period.
The world slammed shut.
In the darkness, a single, new hand reached out from the void, gripped a fresh pen, and wrote a single word across the back of your mind: *Prologue.*