The transition was instantaneous and agonizing. Sarah was no longer a person; she was a liquid medium, a black ichor pulsing within the hollow of the bone-quill. Through the translucent walls of her new vessel, the world was a distorted blur of sepia and shadow. She felt Emily’s hand—massive, cold, and steady—grip the pen with a terrifying lack of sentiment.
The quill hit the parchment with a sound like a thunderclap.
*Scratch. Scratch. Scratch.*
With every stroke, Sarah felt a piece of her soul being scraped against the grain of reality. The smell of Emily’s hair? Gone, replaced by the acrid scent of drying gall. The memory of their first apartment? Smudged into a comma. She was being bled out onto the page, her essence used to bridge the gaps in a history she no longer recognized. Above her, Emily’s face remained a mask of bureaucratic indifference, her silver eyes spinning as she calculated the weight of every vowel.
"Efficiency is the only true mercy," Emily murmured, her voice vibrating through the pen. "The universe doesn't need heroes, Sarah. It needs a balanced budget. It needs a narrative that doesn't leak."
Sarah tried to fight back, to thicken herself, to clog the nib and stall the hand that guided her. But she was merely the ink, and the Editor’s grip was absolute. She watched as her own life’s work—the ten thousand souls she had fought to save—were systematically redacted. Emily moved the pen with surgical precision, drawing a single, thick line through the names of the liberated. As the black ink covered them, the distant screams of those souls echoed within Sarah’s consciousness. She wasn't just erasing them; she was absorbing them into her own darkness.
"There," Emily said, lifting the pen. She blew gently on the parchment, the air feeling like a hurricane to the remains of Sarah’s spirit. "The debt is settled. The errors are purged."
Emily tucked the quill into a pocket of her clockwork dress and turned toward the endless rows of filing cabinets. She began to walk, each step a rhythmic tick of a cosmic clock.
"Now," Emily whispered, reaching for a fresh, blank scroll at the very end of the hall. "Let’s see what we can write with what’s left of you."
As the pen hovered over the new page, Sarah felt the final tether to her identity snap. She looked up through the nib one last time and realized with a jolt of pure horror that the hand holding the pen wasn't Emily’s anymore—it was her own, translucent and grey, reaching back from the future to sign her own death warrant.