Arthur stared at the fresh page. The white was no longer the sterile, frozen void of his godhood; it was a hungry, expectant silence. He felt the phantom pull of his old power, the urge to reach out and flatten the world back into a manageable, painless geometry. It would be so easy to slip back into the cold.
But her hand was still on his shoulder—a heavy, warm anchor of bone and pulse.
"Start at the beginning," she murmured, her thumb tracing the line of his collarbone. "Before the stars went out. Before you decided that being alone was the same thing as being safe."
Arthur took a breath. It was a shallow, human thing that tasted of dust and the metallic tang of his own fear. He pressed the broken pen to the paper. The ink didn't flow smoothly; it stuttered and spat, leaving a jagged, ugly blotch. He didn't erase it. He didn't smooth it away with a divine thought. He let the mistake stand.
*Once upon a time,* he wrote, his handwriting a frantic, shaky scrawl, *there was a man who grew so tired of the ending that he tried to destroy the book.*
The lamp flickered. Outside, a car splashed through a puddle, the sound echoing up the alleyway. It was a small sound, a temporary sound, and it was more terrifying than the roar of a collapsing nebula because it meant that time was moving. It meant that every second he spent writing brought him closer to the moment the ink would run dry, the moment her hand would eventually pull away, the moment he would have to face the dark without a throne.
He wrote about the kitchen table. He wrote about the smell of rain on hot asphalt. He wrote about the day he had looked into her eyes and seen a universe he couldn't control, and how that terror had been the seed of his God-King’s crown. He was confessing his divinity like it was a crime.
"You're crying," she said, her voice a soft friction in the quiet room.
Arthur touched his cheek. His fingers came away wet. He looked at the moisture, then back at the page where the ink was beginning to run, blurring the words into a gray, illegible smear. The Work was being ruined. The perfect architecture was drowning in salt.
He looked up at her, his eyes searching the familiar map of her face for a mercy he didn't deserve. "What if I can't finish it? What if the mess is all there is?"
She leaned down, her hair falling like a curtain around them, sealing them into the small circle of the lamp’s glow. She took the pen from his hand and set it down on the desk.
"The mess isn't the story, Artie," she whispered, her eyes locking onto his with a fierce, mortal clarity. "The mess is the price you pay for the privilege of being in it."
She reached for the lamp's pull-string. As she did, Arthur felt a final, violent shudder in the floorboards—not the tectonic shift of a dying world, but the simple, rhythmic thud of his own heart. The God-King was dead. The man was drowning. And for the first time in an eternity, he wasn't afraid to go under.
The light clicked off, plunging the room into a darkness that smelled of home.
"Now," she said in the shadows, her voice closer than his own thoughts. "Tell me the part where you stay."