The ceiling didn’t just peel; it began to flake away like dry skin after a burn. The void above pulsed with a low, rhythmic throb, the heartbeat of a world that hadn't been born yet. Amelia ignored the screams from the kitchen—they were merely background noise now, the dying echoes of a draft she had already discarded.
She turned her attention to the bedroom door. The iron bolt she had drawn was solid, cold to the touch, but the wood around it was beginning to warp. Reality was trying to heal itself, trying to push back against the charcoal and lead. Amelia bared her teeth—now white and sharp as bone—and pressed the pencil to the center of the door.
With the precision of an anatomist, she drew a vertical line from the top of the frame to the bottom. Then, she drew a second. A third. She didn't stop until the door was a ribcage of black bars.
"Mother?" Amelia called out. Her voice was an uncanny mimicry of the Girl’s—sweet, high, and laced with a false vulnerability.
The frantic footsteps on the stairs stopped. The silence that followed was heavy, thick as drying glue. Then came a hesitant tap against the bars.
"Sweetie? Are you okay? The lights... the kitchen is..." The mother’s voice trailed off into a gasp. Through the gaps in the drawn ribs, Amelia could see a sliver of the hallway. It was no longer carpeted in beige. It was a smear of grey watercolor, the walls bleeding into the floor in a messy, unfinished wash.
Amelia leaned her face against the bars. Her eyes were no longer dots; they were vast, shimmering pools of liquid ink. "I’m fine, Mother. I’m just tidying up."
She reached through the bars, her hand lengthening, the fingers stretching into long, tapered nibs. She touched the mother’s cheek. The woman didn't scream this time; she couldn't. Where Amelia’s fingers brushed her skin, the woman’s features began to smudge. Her eyes ran down her face like spilled tea. Her mouth became a blurred line of indecision.
"You always said I had my father's eyes," Amelia whispered, watching as the woman's entire head began to dissolve into a cloud of graphite dust. "Let’s see how they look on the floor."
With a brutal, sweeping motion, Amelia dragged the pencil across the air between them. The hallway didn't just darken; it was redacted. A thick, heavy bar of black ink slammed into existence, cutting the house in half.
Amelia stepped back, admiring the void. The house was a skeleton now, a hollowed-out shell of a story. She felt the power of the lead vibrating in her palm, a divine hunger that wouldn't be satisfied with a single room or a single life.
She turned back to the window, or where the window had been. The white rectangle was beginning to bleed. From the edges of the blankness, something was crawling in—not the Knight, not the Poet, but the raw, unformed static of the Great Erasure.
She raised the pencil one last time, pointing it toward the heart of the city glowing in the distance.
"Everything," Amelia promised the silence, "is just a sketch waiting for a correction."
She pressed the lead to the glass of reality and began to draw the first crack in the sky.