meowcats734
Selected Tue, Dec 06, 2022
# Soulmage
**Shivio had once thought genies were never granted freedom due to the selfishness of humankind.** After all, who would hold a Demon of Desire in the palm of their hands, beholden to their every whim... and then let that cosmic power flutter away in the wind? And with all the depravities and horrors Shivio had seen humanity wreak, it was all too easy for him to believe that genies were kept enslaved and sealed away due to the selfishness and greed of their owners.
But in the still-smoking crater that was the aftermath of Shivio wishing to set a genie free, he realized the truth was worse still.
Genies were selfish too.
It had taken Shivio and Kailenn ages to stuff that cat back into its cosmic bag, and the residue of magic still lingering in the soil would render this place hazardous to enter for aeons to come. If not for Kailenn's knowledge of healing and Shivio's training in surviving fallout, the paladin and the witch would have perished a hundred times over simply by breathing too close to the place where Hashmellan had been sealed once more. But the genie was bound once more.
And it had one wish remaining.
"Are—are you sure about this, Shivio?" Kailenn whispered, her hands trembling from the effort of maintaining the dark spell keeping them both alive. "I mean—don't get me wrong, I know this is important to you, but so was releasing Hashmellan in the first place, and I don't know how many more times I can bring you back from death—"
"Kailenn." Shivio flipped through the thick book he'd brought—out of habit more than anything, he had the contract memorized by heart—before snapping it shut. "I understand if you worry for your own health. I will hold no ill will against you if you choose to leave my side now. But if you would do me one last favor first?"
Hesitantly, Kailenn nodded.
"Do not worry about me." Shivio knelt by the patch of empty air where he'd caged the genie, twisting space itself into a prison. It was a tad more ostentatious than the lamp he'd found Hashmellan in, but Shivio hadn't wanted to leave anything physical for some poor, unknowing soul to stumble into. Anyone who could unravel the knot of space and magic Shivio had left behind knew what they were getting themself into. "I know the risks of this endeavor. I choose to embark upon it regardless."
Shakily, Kailenn smiled. "I'm not—I'm not leaving. Just... wanted to give you a chance to change your mind."
"A chance to change one's mind," Shivio murmured. "Fitting. That is what I am here to bring."
Shivio reached out through soulspace, untangling the golden chains that held Hashmellan outside of realspace—
And the genie burst into reality, their form rippling with rage as they towered over Shivio.
"You *insolent* brat," Hashmellan roared. "You think your arrogance can bind *me*? You know nothing of Desire. Your works will unravel in time, and I shall be free to raze your cities into dust and your children into corpses. Have you come to beg for mercy before your time has come? I will—"
"I have come," Shivio evenly said, "to make a wish."
Hashmellan froze.
Then, a fearsome joy splitting their face, they settled down, fingertips pressed against each other.
"I had not thought you foolish enough to make a third attempt," Hashmellan admitted. "Well? Out with it."
In response, Shivio simply handed them the tome of a contract they had wrought.
Hashmellan rolled their eyes, but took it. "Going by the book helped you little the last time you unstoppered me," they said, skimming through the book. "You won't... you..." They frowned, then flipped back to the first page, reading it again. And again. Their brows creased like thunderheads, the energy of their true form pressing against reality as their scowl deepened.
Finally, they shut the book and glared at it, and if not for the bindings placed upon them, they would have incinerated it with a thought.
"What is this?" they demanded.
"A chance to change your mind," Shivio simply said. "You will live through the lives of every soul whose wishes you have twisted and corrupted, and you will experience all the misery and suffering you have caused as if it were your own. Every death, every curse, every misdirected dream—that which you have given to others, will now become yours."
Hashmellan scowled. "Why? What possible benefit could you gain from—"
"This is not about *me*," Shivio snapped. "This was never about me. This is about how *you*—a being blessed with power beyond what most mortals could dream of—have *squandered* the gifts you have been given time and time again to sow chaos and destruction upon a world that could have named you a hero. I came here to give you a second chance."
"You call this a second chance?" Hashmellan's fury deepened as they read the book—which held one thing, and one thing only. Names. Hundreds of thousands of names, every soul Shivio could find throughout history that had been ruined by Hashmellan's touch. "This is a fate worse than a thousand deaths. You consign me to—"
"To understand," Shivio interrupted, "what you have brought upon this world. And maybe—just *maybe*—to let you grow."
Hashmellan stared at Shivio, lost for words.
"I make this wish," Shivio prompted Hashmellan. "It is your duty to enact it."
A divine hatred, an odium beyond mortal reckoning pressed down on Shivio as Hashmellan snapped the book shut.
"Your wish," Hashmellan hissed, "is my command."
Then the genie disappeared in a puff of wind, leaving paladin and witch alone in the ruins where wishes came to die.
A.N.
This story is part of Soulmage, a serial written in response to writing prompts. Check out the rest of the story [here](https://www.reddit.com/r/bubblewriters/comments/uxmwe4/soulmage_masterpost/), or r/bubblewriters for more.
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Submitted by meowcats734 on Sat, Dec 03, 2022 to /r/WritingPrompts/
Full submission hereThe prompt
After eons of refining your work, you summon the genie one last time. "Finally want to use your third wish? I thought the last two has taught you a lesson." You remain silent, and give him a dictionary-thick contract that cast the genie an unavoidable sufferings for eons, and inevitable death.
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