The dim firelight that lined the corridor flickered as Helios walked away from the battlefield. With every step, the shadows receded from his body, curling inward until his golden eyes dulled back to his calm sky-blue shade. His Dark Form dissolved like mist in wind, leaving only himself—whole, quiet, and composed.
He returned to the last chamber.
Aladdin was still there, pressed against the far wall, scimitar drawn with both hands. His eyes darted to Helios immediately—wide, uncertain, afraid. The boy didn't say a word, but his posture was that of someone cornered by something he couldn't understand. This led to him feeling an immense amount of fear.
Alira didn't hesitate. The moment she saw him, she stepped forward with her arms raised.
Helios smiled slightly and bent to pick her up, cradling her in a gentle princess-carry. She said nothing, simply nestled into his arms as if that was where she was always meant to be. Helios found the girl cute like a cat but this would not deter him from doing what he needed to do.
Aladdin stayed at a distance but followed. Though the fear hadn't left his eyes, he still moved to do his job—carefully, silently—disarming traps, calling out subtle dangers, ensuring their path remained clear.
They continued forward, deeper into the Cave of Wonders.
The traps became more cunning. Plates of enchanted stone that responded to pressure shifts. Veins of gold along the walls that were filled with poison needles. A corridor of reflective mirrors that nearly looped them back—until Aladdin threw a stone and noticed it vanished into the mirrored wall. He had an instinct for these things.
And Helios let him lead.
Eventually, the air shifted. It became warmer, thicker, and humming with unseen power.
They reached it—the heart of the cave.
The corridor opened into a colossal chamber carved from stone that glowed with the warmth of ancient magic. The walls were a rich blend of red and deep terracotta, aged and smoothed by centuries of silence. Massive columns flanked either side of the room, etched with spiraling inscriptions in a forgotten tongue. They rose into darkness, disappearing beyond the reach of the torchlight.
Above, emerald crystals jutted from the ceiling, and upper walls held by what seemed to be either stone monkeys or men. The crystal cast an eerie green shimmer across everything below. Their glow refracted off the central feature of the room — a wide, circular basin of perfectly still water, polished like obsidian, reflecting the room upside down like a mirror into another world.
From the center of this mystical pool rose a stone pedestal that looked almost grown, not carved — a living vein of the cave's magic. Ornate steps coiled around the stone tower like a spiral staircase, each one adorned with silver filigree and tiny gemstones inset like stars. The air buzzed faintly with old enchantments.
Atop the stone pedestal, resting on a small, intricately woven pillow, sat the lamp.
The lamp was not large, but it commanded attention like a king seated on a throne as a beam of light shone on it.
It gleamed a deep, burnished gold, the kind of gold that looked almost alive — glowing faintly within was a pillar of light. The surface was etched with curling designs that looped around its body like vines, forming ancient patterns that shimmered when viewed from the corner of one's eye. Its spout was slender and slightly upturned, ending in a sharp, graceful point. The handle was wide and twisted into an elegant arc, thick at the base and thinning to a delicate swirl.
The lid was crowned with a teardrop-shaped finial, carved to resemble a flame eternally frozen in metal. A series of runes were engraved around the lid's circumference — the script of the old genie tongue, long since forgotten by mortals.
Though small, the lamp radiated a gravity that pulled the eye, as though something vast and slumbering lay just beneath its surface, waiting.
Helios didn't speak. He approached with deliberate steps, Alira still in his arms. His eyes never left the relic.
Beyond the lamp, carved into the back wall of the chamber, stood an elevated stone platform adorned with an arch and a shallow pedestal. There was where the Keyhole of this world was located. The one tied to this world's heart. The one Sora would deal with one day. Not his concern so he ignored it.
The lamp, though—that was his.
Helios stopped at the edge of the pool.
He raised his free hand.
A stream of dark energy coiled out of his palm like a serpent, slithering through the air and gently wrapping around the lamp. The golden relic lifted from its place on the pillar with reverence, rising into the air on a spiral of shadow.
The magic didn't disturb the chamber. It didn't ripple the water or stir the dust.
The lamp simply floated to him.
He caught it with a single hand.
Aladdin stepped closer, mouth open in awe. But before he could speak, Helios turned toward him and whispered a single word incantation beneath his breath.
A sleep spell.
Subtle. Quiet.
Aladdin blinked once.
Then his eyelids fluttered, and he dropped where he stood, scimitar falling beside him with a soft clatter.
Helios lowered his hand, satisfied.
Alira looked at the sleeping boy, then up at Helios.
He smiled at her and gently lowered her to the ground.
"Now let's get down to business," he said softly.
She nodded, unsure of what he meant, but she trusted the person before her.
The chamber remained silent.
But in that silence, the real work was about to begin.