"Confessions of a Villain"
In Arpeggio’s most haunting admission, the mask doesn’t slip — it shatters.
He stands alone in the echo of his own destruction,
realizing the monster he feared was always wearing his face.
Every verse bleeds with remorse and revelation,
a slow burn of guilt beneath the glow of fading glory.
He confesses not to the world, but to his own conscience —
that somewhere along the chase for power, pleasure, and perfection,
he traded his soul for applause.
Now he stares into the mirror and calls himself by name,
not as hero, not as savior,
but as the villain who finally wants to change.