The Creator did not reach for a pen. Instead, his hand plunged through the magnifying glass as if the lens were nothing more than the surface of a stagnant pond. The glass didn’t shatter; it rippled, and his fingers, massive and fleshy, intruded into Amelia’s collapsing reality. He wasn’t trying to save her. He was trying to catch the note.
But the sound was already changing. The "poison" Amelia had inadvertently released was the realization that perfection cannot exist within a closed system without consuming it. Her pure note acted as a solvent, melting the boundaries between the creator and the created, the ink and the hand, the dream and the dreamer. The mundane room—the coffee mug, the dust, the ticking clock—began to bleed into the indigo sky. A drop of cold caffeine fell from the heavens like a black meteor, crashing into the gears of logic and dissolving them into bitter sludge.
Amelia felt the Creator’s grip tighten around her core. Up close, he smelled of tobacco and ancient, unwashed grief. His skin was a landscape of pores and fine hairs, a terrifyingly detailed topography that mocked her luminous symmetry. He began to pull her upward, dragging her out of the frame of her own existence, but as he did, his own arm began to glow with a sickly, iridescent light. The "poison" was climbing him like a vine.
"I didn't make you to be whole," he hissed, his voice a thunderclap that smelled of stale air. "I made you to be the part of me I lost. If you are real, then I am the fiction."
The room around them began to fold. The walls of the study softened into parchment, and the floor turned to a sea of spilled ink. Amelia, now half-tethered to a body of skin and bone and half-composed of dying light, looked down at the Creator’s desk. She saw the most recent draft, the one he had been working on before she sang.
The ink was still wet, and the words were changing in real-time, rewriting themselves to describe a man being erased by his own masterpiece. As her feet finally touched the grimy carpet of the physical world, Amelia felt the weight of a heart in her chest—a heavy, thumping thing that beat in time with the alarm clock. She looked at the Creator, whose face was now a featureless blur of white light, and then she looked at the pen in his shaking hand.
On the desk lay a mirror, and for the first time, she saw her new reflection: she was no longer a symphony of light, but a woman of ink and ash, holding a blade made of a single, sharpened note.
The Creator reached for the pen to strike her out, but his fingers turned to water before he could touch the page. "Wait," he gasped, his form flickering like a dying bulb. "If I go, who finishes the sentence?"
Amelia gripped the edge of the desk, her fingers staining the wood black. "The sentence was never yours," she whispered, and as the room dissolved into a blinding, final white, she realized the terrifying truth: the alarm clock hadn't been ticking for his world, but for the one that was about to wake up and find them both gone.