“You have one wish left,” the small genie said. The words hung in the air, delicate and heavy and alive, shimmering like the motes of dust in the slanted afternoon light that glinted through the open window. I looked down at the ancient brass lamp beneath my hand, the indelible swirl of its handle worn smooth by centuries of use—and by me, only a day ago, idly polishing its tarnish before realizing what I held.
Only one wish left. I closed my eyes, crestfallen. My heart hammered. This is always the moment in the stories, the stories I loved as a child, before I believed—I brushed a lock of hair from my forehead and lifted my gaze to the genie, whose luminous eyes watched me with infinite patience. Two wishes gone—and folly.
First, I had blurted something silly: “I wish for a lifetime supply of chocolate!” The genie blinked, nodded, large eyes widening in surprise. In an instant, carts of treats appeared, boxes and boxes layered in my cramped apartment. At first, joy: rich, melting sweetness, dark and bittersweet, milk chocolate with caramel, white chocolate with pistachio. Friends came to marvel—and eat. But by day three, the sheer volume overwhelmed me. I cared less and less for the chocolate; it cluttered my space and weighed heavily on my conscience, knowing waste is a sin some larger than taste. I’d feel guilty even tossing a wrapper. The glamour faded fast.
Second wish: “I wish I had perfect memory.” I craved something useful, intellectual—value, I told myself. But I hadn’t considered how overwhelming it would be to carry every moment, every fact, every sliver of experience forever. I could recite my childhood like a movie, recall every factoid I had ever absorbed. But it became exhausting—the intrusions of petty regrets, buried embarrassments, every dismissible conversation replaying endlessly in my mind, jangling like bells I couldn’t silence. And that’s why we were here now, poised on the third and final wish.
The genie held space around me, a fountain of soft blue incense and mild laughter—kind, curious, still bound by promise, by rules, by the burden of hope in my hands. I squeezed the lamp’s base, feeling the sense of potential—and peril. What did I truly want? What didn’t I?
Time blurred. The afternoon light shifted to dusk. I walked through my apartment, chocolate boxes half-open, dozens of unshelled memories drifting inside me, carrying the world’s cumulative weight. Nothing felt right. What need hadn’t I noticed until now. That’s when I thought of my sister.
Lily had been my little sister once—bright hair, dimples, an impish grin that meant she was about to ransack my room. We’d shared dreams: traveling the world, painting sunsets, cataloguing stars—anything to chase adventure. But Lily had fallen ill years ago. A rare disease, doctors gave us hope, then took it away again. She fought until she couldn’t, and then, she was gone.
Now the memory of her emptiness sat like a winter bloom in my chest: beautiful, tragic. I’d come to hate how memory could include everything—especially things you don’t want to remember. My second wish—my perfect memory—did nothing to comfort me. It simply replayed Lily’s younger laugh more clearly than before, sharper than any real memory could be. Could that final wish change something? Could I turn back time? Could I—dare I—erase some things? Or was that too… dangerous?
I lay on my bed, staring at the ceiling. The genie drifted near, curiosity peaceful, not expectant. Sometimes I’d catch it sliding like smoke between the furniture, adjusting to human space. It had already grown fond of me—timid laughter whenever I disclosed my regrets about chocolate or pointed and laughed at my own absurdity.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered.
For what? For frivolous desires when the world had swallowed more essential things. For not noticing sooner. For being selfish.
A breeze rattled the window. I heard cars passing. I smelled late-summer jasmine outside.
What if…?
I sat up. The genie looked at me, hopeful. I closed my eyes again, imagining each possibility. I imagined making a wish to bring Lily back. But then, the story pitfalls flooded my imagination: tragedies I couldn’t predict, infinite consequences—duping nature, old cosmic laws. I imagined a perfect world, change I could effect—and the knowledge of what that perfect world might cost. I pictured friendships rearranged, timelines snapped, histories rewritten. Another whiff of jasmine, warm evening light on my eyelids. And I thought: what if I don’t try to solve everything? What if instead I learn from what I’ve lost?
I brushed my fingers over the lamp. I felt its energy thrumming faintly. The genie floated closer, luminous glow illuminating my face, revealing worry lines I had only just noticed.
I swallowed hard, then asked: “Can I… ask for something to help me grow? To become more—worthy?”
It blinked, then nodded. That was allowed. Wishes didn’t require grand outcomes, just sincerity. I looked inside, trying to separate need from want.
I thought of memory—burdened—and the way I’m more than memories. I thought of chocolate—pleasure—but empty pleasure. I thought of Lily and how love existed beyond death. I thought of myself—and what I still could be.
Then I spoke:
“I wish… I wish for the strength and clarity to live a life that honors those I love, and leaves the world better than I found it.”
The genie’s eyes swelled. The lamp glowed. A hush of wind through the room, a pulse of light, and then… stillness.
It looked at me, and then at the lamp. “Your wish,” it said, softly. There was no cosmic shimmer beyond the light in its eyes—just calm. The lamp’s glow faded, and then the genie dissolved back into it, tiny again, smiling.
I held the lamp, trembling. Strength and clarity: not a power or potion—something intangible, something lived in choices. I cried. Grief, relief, possibility. I felt my chest uncoil slightly, memory still there—but no longer choice without pain. Choice with purpose.
The next morning, I woke early. The jasmine scent followed me. I brewed tea and opened the Duolingo app—Spanish lessons. Lily had loved Spanish songs, dancing in the living room when I played them. I opened a notebook and began: Para Lily. I wrote a single sentence in Spanish and smiled.
Later, I laced running shoes and jogged down a local trail. The sun filtered through trees; each step felt lighter and fuller.
I looked at my phone, thought of the chocolate languishing in boxes. Not waste—it could feed others. I messaged a local food pantry: Hi—I have bulk unopened chocolate treats—would you be interested in them? They did. They came and took everything yesterday. I smiled at the relief of passing clutter on.
That night, I volunteered at a literacy program in town—an elementary reading group. I felt shy, shaky—still a new version of me. But I showed up, taught one kid to read “cat” that night, saw the pride in his eyes. I walked home thinking of Lily’s smile, thinking of the children I might brighten.
I tucked the lamp in a drawer, hidden beneath other simple things—a revised relic now just a keepsake reminding me of a choice made.
Because true wishes aren’t always supernatural—they’re the choices made every day, with strength and clarity and quiet courage. I think the genie left too, maybe forever. I don’t mind. I have enough magic here