The crimson liquid pulsed within him, a torrent of his own essence being siphoned out. His screams, once elongated vowels, were now sharp, percussive bursts of pain, echoes of a life being bled dry. He was a conduit, a living, breathing wellspring, his very existence reduced to the raw material for a story he would never get to tell. The girl’s immense hand, a landscape of calloused skin and luminous pores, held him aloft, her grip a suffocating caress. He was an inverted chalice, his shredded body tilted precariously, a torrent of his own lifeblood spilling into the stark, unwritten expanse below.
Each drop that fell was a word, a sentence, a vivid description. He saw the crimson bloom across the white paper, coalescing into jagged lines that formed the outline of a battlefield. The air, once thick with the scent of solvent, now reeked of iron and brimstone. The girl hummed a low, discordant tune, a lullaby of destruction, as the scarlet tide spread, painting the nascent landscape with the brutal hues of conflict. His vision swam, the edges of his own form blurring as more of him was poured out. He was losing substance, his very being dissolving into the narrative he had once so carelessly controlled.
"More," the girl’s voice, now a seismic rumble, vibrated through his dissolving form. "We need more. The generals are thirsty. The soldiers are hollow."
He felt a primal terror, a desperate urge to clamp shut, to hoard the last vestiges of his being. But there was no resistance, no will left. He was a puppet on strings of crimson, his every agonizing disgorgement dictated by the whim of a creator who had long since discarded him. He saw the girl’s colossal finger, a mountain range of flesh, trace a line across the burgeoning battlefield, a gesture that brought forth armies from the spilled blood. He heard the clash of steel, the cries of the dying, all born from the agonizing exhalation of his own life.
As the last of the vital fluid drained from him, leaving him a hollow, translucent husk, the girl finally lowered him. He landed not on soft earth, but on a jagged shard of what had once been his own ambition, now sharpened by the very violence he was forced to fuel. He looked up, his now-empty sockets staring at the colossal figure who had remade him. She was no longer a girl, but a titan of creation, her face a mask of focused intensity, her eyes reflecting the bloody panorama he had so painfully birthed.
"Perfect," she breathed, and the word was a gust of wind that swept across the blood-soaked plains. "Now, let the story begin." He felt a faint, reeking warmth on his translucent skin. It wasn't the heat of life, but the lingering residue of the war he had become. And then, with a final, chilling whisper that echoed in the vast emptiness of his being, she added, "And don't worry, Architect. You'll be the first casualty."