The father’s hand didn't just tremble; it began to fray at the edges, his very silhouette blurring into the static of a forgotten radio frequency. With a final, agonizing jerk of his wrist, he completed the flourish of his name.
The moment the ink dried, the air in the office curdled.
The Auditor slammed the ledger shut, the sound echoing like a coffin lid. Instantly, the man’s physical form collapsed inward, not into bone or blood, but into a swirling vortex of golden light—the distilled essence of every birthday, every lullaby, and every "I love you" he had ever uttered. The light was sucked upward into the Auditor’s waiting quill, leaving behind nothing but a profound, hollow silence.
Sarah watched the space where he had stood. She felt a phantom itch in her mind, a ghost of a memory of what it felt like to be loved, but the obsidian garden pulsed, and the feeling withered. A new bud on the black vines erupted into a violent, velvet bloom, its petals the exact shade of the man’s vanished eyes.
"The debt is recorded," the Auditor announced, her porcelain mask tilting toward the far wall.
The white expanse of the office wall began to ripple, turning translucent like a thinning veil. Beyond it, a sterile hospital room materialized. A small girl lay beneath a thin sheet, her face a mask of waxen stillness. Beside her, a heart monitor emitted a flat, unending tone that pierced the silence of the office.
Then, the tone broke. *Beep. Beep. Beep.*
The girl’s chest rose in a sharp, ragged gasp. Her small hands flinched, clutching at the air, but her father was not there to catch them. He was not anywhere.
Slowly, the girl sat up. She ignored the frantic nurses rushing into the frame; her gaze was fixed forward, cutting through the veil of the worlds to stare directly at Sarah. Her eyes were no longer the warm brown of the man’s memories. They were two bottomless pits of polished obsidian, reflecting the Auditor’s cold, clockwork light.
The girl didn’t cry. She didn't call for her father. Instead, she tilted her head, and a sound vibrated from her throat—a dry, rhythmic *click-tick* that matched the Auditor’s own heartbeat.
Sarah felt a thrill of cold recognition. She stepped toward the veil, pressing her hand against the shimmering boundary. On the other side, the child mirrored the movement, placing her tiny palm against Sarah’s.
"She is hungry," Sarah whispered, her voice a mixture of awe and hunger.
"Of course," the Auditor replied, already opening a fresh page in the ledger. "She has a lifetime of debt to inherit. Look closely, Gardener."
Sarah peered through the glass-like wall and realized with a jolt of horror that the girl wasn't looking at her. She was looking past her—at the door that was even now beginning to reform for the next desperate soul.
**"She isn't waiting for her father," Sarah realized, her voice trembling. "She's waiting for her first client."**