A Short History of Bargains Disguised as Wishes
Folklore and fiction have long understood that every granted wish asks a better question: what did you mean?
Wish stories are rarely about receiving. They are about interpretation. A wish compresses desire into a sentence, and sentences are full of trapdoors.
The oldest bargain tales know this well. The granted wish exposes the speaker's assumptions: who counts as safe, what counts as love, how much of a life can be rearranged before it stops being yours.
Girigo keeps the bargain symbolic. The price is attention. Once you say the wish, you cannot pretend it was never there.