The Landlord’s shriek was cut short as the ceiling groaned, a sound like a mountain’s spine snapping in two. The structural necessity she had boasted of was turning into a structural failure. Without the key, the Landlord’s body began to fray at the edges, her shadow-suit unraveling into gray ribbons of smoke.
"You fool," the Landlord gasped, clutching at her throat as her ivory-key teeth began to crack and fall like hail. "If you bring this place down, you die with it. There is nothing out there but the void!"
The girl, Elara, didn't flinch. She watched as a massive crack spidered across the marble floor, following the path of the muddy footprints she had just made. "I’ve lived in the void my whole life," she said, her voice cutting through the thunder of falling masonry. "At least out there, the silence belongs to me."
Above them, the infinite floors began to pancake. The rhythmic thudding of the Clerks was replaced by the terrifying sound of millions of filing cabinets sliding out of their niches, spilling centuries of debt and misery into the air like confetti. The translucent version of Elara on the mezzanine didn't scream; she simply dissolved into white light as the ledger she had been forced to maintain burst into violet flames.
The House was trying to compensate. The walls pulsed a desperate, bruised purple, attempting to knit themselves back together using the Landlord’s own essence. Vane felt her limbs being pulled toward the cracks—the building was finally claiming its manager as the ultimate load-bearing beam.
"No!" Vane cried, her fingers scraping against the floor as she was dragged toward the yawning dark of a foundation that was no longer secure. "I am the Landlord! I am the House!"
"You're just the insulation," Elara countered.
The girl stepped back through the threshold, the wind whipping her hair into a frenzy. She didn't look back as the grand foyer buckled. The towering wings of the infinite complex, the grid of yellow lights, and the thousand locked doors began to implode, drawn into the singular point of the girl’s torn scrap of vellum.
As the roof gave way, letting in the first true bolt of lightning the world had seen in an age, Vane saw the final truth in the girl’s eyes. The man who had entered earlier hadn't been a victim to be absorbed; he had been the bait, a trojan horse of human grief designed to overload a system that only understood math.
The Landlord reached out one last time, her hand turning to cold, gray stone just as the weight of the entire sky came crashing down to meet the floorboards.
In the sudden, deafening quiet that followed, there was no lobby. There was no desk. There was only a girl standing in a muddy field under a gray, drizzling sky, clutching a piece of paper that had turned to ash in the wind.
She turned to walk away, but stopped when she felt a familiar, heavy weight in her pocket.
**She reached in and pulled out a blackened brass key, still pulsing with a faint, expectant heat—and as her fingers closed around it, the dirt beneath her feet began to harden into a perfect, polished marble square.**