The graphite tip didn't just touch the world; it redefined the gravity of my existence. Where the lead met the paper-horizon, the landscape buckled and creaked, the very physics of the field rewriting themselves to accommodate the newcomer’s whims. I felt my jaw lock, my features stretching and shifting as the unseen hand dragged the pencil across the sky. My eyes were no longer my own; they were being widened for "expression," my brow furrowed into a permanent mask of cinematic anguish.
I tried to reach for the ground, but the paper-grass had turned to liquid ink, a dark mire that pulled at my knees. The speech bubble above my head grew heavy, a physical weight that forced my neck to bow. I could see the words forming inside it in real-time—bold, blocky letters that I hadn't chosen.
*"Help me,"* the bubble read, though my mind was screaming something far more defiant.
The giant finger returned, hovering just inches above me. The skin was textured with ridges like mountain ranges, and I could see the microscopic flakes of dry skin like falling boulders. It descended, pinning me against the darkening page of the earth. The pressure was immense, not just crushing my ribs, but compressing my history, flattening my memories into a two-dimensional sequence of events.
The light from the "sky" shifted. I heard the unmistakable, thunderous crinkle of a page being turned. The entire world tilted forty-five degrees, sliding me toward the edge of the horizon where the ink-sky met a terrifying, serrated void.
"Too much exposition," the voice boomed again, the sound waves vibrating the vellum of my skin until I thought I would tear. "Let's skip to the chase."
Suddenly, the golden light on the horizon didn't just glow—it ignited. The pencil tip swept down again, slashing a jagged, black mountain range into existence behind me in three swift strokes. From the shadows of those fresh-drawn peaks, things began to crawl. They were sketches, unfinished and hungry, their bodies a mess of frantic hatch-marks and blurred charcoal. They didn't have faces, only jagged lines where mouths should be, and they moved with the stuttering, frame-by-frame jerkiness of a rough draft.
I turned to run, my legs heavy and stiff like unbent cardboard. The giant quotation marks above me began to spin, faster and faster, until they looked like a halo of white fire. The world was no longer a field; it was a narrow corridor of text, and the margins were closing in.
I looked down at my chest, searching for the red ink of the Editor, some remnant of the power I thought I’d stolen. But there was only the clean, hollow white of an empty space. I wasn't the protagonist anymore. I was the bait.
As the first charcoal beast lunged, its claws made of sharp, unfinished ink, the sky above split open. A massive, steel-rimmed eye peered through the rift, the iris a cold, analytical grey that dwarfed the sun.
"Wait," the voice whispered, the breath of it smelling of coffee and stale air, blowing through the world like a hurricane. "I have a better idea. Let's see what happens when we delete the floor."