The stillness after the wish hung like a breath never exhaled.
Alira stood at the center of the enchantment circle — arms at her sides, her expression blank, but not lifeless. Shadows slithered around her feet like loyal hounds returning to their master. The fractured remnants of the twelve Darknesses that Kurai had yet to fully assimilate hovered above her, spinning slowly like dying stars, each a knot of raw power, stripped of will.
Helios didn't speak.
He simply watched.
The moment had weight. Finality.
Genie aimed his finger at the still Alira and a beam of yellow magic stuck to the girl's chest and the real magic began.
A ripple of energy expanded outward from the circle—first a hum, then a pulse, then a chorus of overlapping vibrations that shook the stone floor and cracked the runes Helios had drawn. The air smelled of ozone and smoke. This was a scene of creation and sacrifice.
The light dimmed.
The lamp flared, then Genie was sucked into the lamp unable to even say any final words. Soon, the lamp crumbled into dust in Helios' hand and fell to the ground, most likely a countermeasure to stop the lamp from being passed to the hands of others continuously.
Alira stepped forward. But the being in front of Helios was no longer Alira.
Her skin shimmered, the rich bronze hue paling rapidly—like her soul itself was being rewritten. Her hair, once black as obsidian, shifted hue—white strands blooming at the roots and cascading outward like frost racing across a window. It flowed longer, looser, spectral. Her fingers twitched, clawing slightly at the air, and her body leaned as though straining to hold together what was coming apart.
Helios took a step forward instinctively—but stopped.
She wasn't in pain.
She was… just changing.
A storm of shadows coalesced behind her—the miasmic body of Kurai drawn in like ink to water. And from the other side, a flash of silver light—Hoder's essence, pure and new, pulsing once like a heartbeat before dissolving into the new Alira's chest.
Then—
Her eyes opened.
Not brown like Alira's. Not silver like Hoder's. But a blinding void rimmed in burning white.
And the enchantment circle cracked down the middle.
"No…" Helios breathed. "She broke it. No more like her mere presence broke that powerful enchantment."
The sigils around her feet shattered like glass under a hammer. One by one, the containment glyphs failed, burned out, and flickered to ruin. The warded chains dissolved to nothing.
The chamber trembled as though the very world had inhaled in awe.
Kurai had arrived.
The girl—no, the being that now stood in Alira's place—blinked slowly. She looked down at her fingers, now longer, more delicate, white with silvery veins beneath the skin. Her body was taller, not by much, but unmistakably older—elevated beyond the child she had once been. She now looked to be about fifteen or sixteen years old. The silver feather pendant still hung at her chest, and her tribal gear remained.
The Nobody sigil on her arm pulsed, now fused with a red-black variation Helios recognized as something similar to the heartless emblem.
Her eyes met his.
Helios felt it—the chill of ancient darkness paired with the memory of a heart too old for this world. She wasn't hostile. She wasn't grateful.
She simply was.
She tilted her head as the glow in her eyes faded, revealing a pair of silver eyes like those of Hoder. "Helios," she said softly. Her voice was layered—young and eternal, human and not.
He answered, barely able to speak. "Alira…?"
The being smiled faintly.
"No," she said with a cold look unlike that of Alira's. "But thank you for carrying me this far. You kept your word."
Helios felt something in his chest—tight, searing, then hollow.
The silence between them was immense. In it, he thought of everything: the day he first found the little girl broken and voiceless; the way she'd slowly begun to respond; the way she took his hand in the ruins and never looked back. The tiny signs of trust. The child-like loyalty. The quiet presence that asked nothing, gave everything.
Alira was now gone, never to return.
"Feeling sad, or do you feel guilty?" Kurai whispered, as if reading his thoughts. "She was never meant to last. I don't understand why you feel anything for the broken doll."
Helios lowered his gaze.
A moment passed.
"…Did she think anything in her last moments?"
Kurai stepped forward—barefoot across broken symbols—and knelt to where the last shimmer of Alira's aura lingered like morning mist.
"She trusted you," Kurai said. "Even as she faded, she didn't resent you."
She rose, brushing off her hands. "Which is… quite strange. The sentiment is a flaw. She was a fool."
Helios's fists clenched.
"You really don't understand, do you?"
Kurai stared back at him.
"I understand what matters," she said. "That broken girl was never meant to last. She was a placeholder — a vessel waiting to be claimed. You gave her purpose, and in return, she gave you blind devotion. But now?"
Her silver eyes coldly bore into him.
"She is nothing."
A pause. Heavy. Cold.
"…Did she know that she was dying?" Helios asked again. "In her final moments?"
Kurai blinked. A quiet flicker of thought passed through her expression.
"She trusted you," she repeated. "Even as her mind was overwritten. Her final thought was… faith. In you."
Helios turned away.
That hurt more than it should have.
A child who trusted him more than he deserved… was now gone. And in her place stood something the world would define as Evil. Terrible. Alien.
Kurai stepped forward. She stood before him now, taller, silent. The shadows curled at her feet, eager, obedient. The room trembled under her presence.
"You mourn her," she observed. "Even now."
Helios gave a bitter smile.
"I'm not mourning," he said. "I'm remembering. There's a difference."
Kurai tilted her head. "Perhaps. I don't care either way."
She turned.
The chamber lights flickered and dimmed again. The shadows responded to her every breath.
"I'll need time," she said. "To calibrate. My existence is… larger than this vessel. I require alignment."
"Fine," Helios said. "Take what time you need."
But he didn't move.
He felt, for the first time in a long while, like a piece of him had been hollowed out. The last time he felt this way was when his mother and father died for him.