I remember sitting at my desk.
My keyboard still warm.
My screen still glowing with the last paragraph I had written for my novel.
The Demon Prince Who Plays Protagonist.
I had been editing a chapter. Fixing dialogue. Debating whether Asura should smile or stay silent.
Then—
Sky.
Not a ceiling.
Not a screen.
A real sky.
Blue and endless and far too quiet.
I was lying on my back in grass that whispered when the wind passed over it. Clouds drifted slowly, as if nothing in existence had ever gone wrong.
"…So this is the Human Realm," I murmured.
The words felt strange leaving me.
At the same time… they didn't.
Inside my mind, I could still feel him.
The other me.
The one still alive in the real world.
I could feel myself taking a shower.
Eating breakfast.
Playing video games.
Reading comments.
Writing chapters.
Two perspectives overlapped like misaligned film reels.
I was here.
And I was still there.
Existing in two places at once felt wrong… and somehow perfectly natural.
I sat up slowly.
My hands came into view.
Five fingers. Pale skin. A humanoid shape.
"Human… or something close to it," I muttered.
I stood.
(ERROR)
I inhaled.
(ERROR)
I felt the grass beneath my feet.
(ERROR)
Each sensation came with a silent contradiction, like a system warning trying to interrupt reality itself.
Did I even have lungs?
Did I even have feet?
Or was this just a story pretending to be flesh?
Drawn by instinct, I walked toward the nearest reflection—a river that cut through the field like a silver blade.
I leaned over the water.
And saw… myself.
I had long flowing black hair.
Skin pale as moonlight, etched with purple-black ink markings like ritual scripture.
A partially exposed torso wrapped in black cloth that moved like liquid shadow.
An asymmetrical robe that refused symmetry.
Dark feathers and inky wings forming from one side of my back—able to vanish if I wished.
Eyes glowing red… then violet… then something in between.
Gold ritual jewelry hung at my neck, shaped like a sigil that didn't belong to any language.
Beautiful.
Unsettling.
Mythic.
Readable by mortals.
"…Wow," I whispered. "I look like a final boss."
Yet something felt wrong.
Too clean.
Too shaped.
Too designed.
I narrowed my eyes and focused.
Not on what I looked like—
But on what I was.
A skill stirred.
Not magic.
Not mana.
Something deeper.
Something narrative.
Reality peeled.
And the reflection changed.
I was no longer humanoid.
I was—
Ink.
A mass of living black ink.
Shifting calligraphy.
Broken symbols.
Moving paragraphs of unfinished sentences.
I had no face.
No limbs.
No voice.
Only presence.
The river warped like paper soaked in ink. The sky above rippled as if someone had smudged it with a brush.
I was a story given weight.
A paragraph given will.
"…So this is my true form," I thought.
A Narrative Anomaly.
I began shaping myself back into something mortal.
And then—
Voices.
Laughter.
Footsteps.
I turned.
Three humans emerged from between the trees. Rough clothes. Crude weapons. Heavy bags slung over their shoulders.
One of them laughed loudly.
"Did you see the last one? Crying the whole time. Thought I'd feel bad. Didn't."
Another snorted.
"Don't get attached. They're just merchandise. Sell them, buy ale, repeat."
The third grinned.
"Next batch should fetch more. Young ones always do."
My mind went quiet.
Not angry.
Not afraid.
Just… observant.
They spoke of slaves the way people spoke of livestock.
Of bodies like coins.
Of suffering like jokes.
I felt the ink within me ripple.
I could erase them.
With a thought.
Rewrite their existence into punctuation.
But instead…
I sighed.
"…Not my chapter," I said calmly.
Because I knew the truth they didn't.
This world.
This realm.
This cruelty.
I had written it.
Every law.
Every kingdom.
Every tragedy.
I was the author who had stepped into his own book.
And stories… needed villains.
For now, I turned away.
The ink settled.
My human shape returned.
And I walked forward into the Human Realm, carrying both a body and a manuscript inside my soul.
My name is Kaeru.
And this world thinks I am a character.
But I remember being its creator.
