> "Tingly..."
> Eirin does not respond.
>
>"Ooh"
->Try putting putting our hand into out chest like the doctor without hurting ourself
>Check for any residue of the glowing substance
> You attempt to emulate Eirin, but your hand just dinks against your chest.
> It appears Eirin has been efficient enough with her usage of the substance that there is no residue.
> Eirin removes her hands, and thinks.
> "Well; I think I found the problem. The problem is finding a solution. It's not my area of expertise."
> She looks at you.
> "It appears that to create you; Alice splintered a part of her own soul and placed it within your shell. Logical. Souls can heal, souls can grow. It's the same logic as a single-celled organism splitting into two. I'm not sure how she went about shearing a piece of her own soul off..."
> Eirin paused.
> "But the problem is she made some sort of mistake. Instead of simply chipping off a splinter, she's managed to crack her soul. She's damaged it. My medication can fix the body, it can even enhance it. But I can't fix a soul."
> Eirin adds, after a moment, "And it's not as simple as putting her soul back together. The moment you came alive, the fragment of Alice's soul became it's own thing, your soul; and started to change. It's not even the right shape to piece back together anymore."
> At this point, Undonge arrives, followed by a short girl in a shirt and skirt that both seem a bit too big for her. Despite this; she seems quite elegant.
>
> Kaguya Houraisan
> Personification of the Moment that lasts an Eternity
> "I cannot fix her, but there is a way to buy her time until a way is found to mend her splintered soul." Eirin says, before she looks towards the new figure. "Lady Kaguya, if you would please suspend Miss Margetroid using your Power of Eternity."
> The 'Lady Kaguya' seems unsure. "What point is there for me suspending out this moment of suffering for an eternity if even you do not know how to fix it?" she asks, before adding, "Surely, if this patient is suffering such that you cannot cure them, rather than drawing out a moment of suffering to an eternity, yearning for a cure that may not exist, I should make eternity pass in a moment, so her suffering ceases?"