He wasn’t a boy. He was a doll. A perfect, living automaton crafted by the original Jack Vessalius—the hero who sealed the Abyss a century ago. Jack, desperate and grieving, had not been able to save the girl he loved, the first Alice. So he had done the unthinkable. He had wound back the gears of time, broken the original Alice into pieces, and used her soul as a core to create a new child—Oz. A perfect, immortal vessel. A living key to the Abyss.
“Contractor?” Oz’s voice was a rusted thing.
And standing over him, a rain-soaked, bewildered boy with a golden eye and a shaking hand, was Gilbert. Older. Warier. A gun in his hand and a chain-smoked grief clinging to him like a shroud. pandora heart oz
It pointed a dissolving claw at Oz.
“Maybe I was never meant to exist,” he said, his voice steady. “But I’m here. And I’m not a key. I’m not a doll. I’m Oz. And I’ll decide my own ending.” He wasn’t a boy
“I’ve found you,” she said, her voice flat and devoid of emotion. “My lost contractor.”
Their first real test was a town plagued by a Chimera—a broken Chain devouring the minds of the living. Alice, golden scythe flashing, tore through its illusory world. But as the monster died, it laughed. Jack, desperate and grieving, had not been able
Oz looked at her, then at Gilbert, who was weeping silently, his cigarette falling from his lips. He felt the cold metal of his own truth, the empty echo where a heart should be. But he also felt the warmth of Gil’s hand on his shoulder. He felt Alice’s fury on his behalf. He felt Ada’s letters, filled with love he didn’t deserve.
The ceremony was a gilded cage of nobility and forced smiles. His father, Duke Vessalius, watched him with eyes that held not pride, but a weary verdict, as if Oz was a document he’d long since stamped Insufficient . Oz, ever the performer, masked his loneliness with a charming grin. He had his loyal servant, Gilbert, at his side and the bubbly Ada a few steps away. For a fleeting moment, the illusion of happiness felt real.