Kiara understood after a while that the girl named Sophia Pasha suffered from obsessive fantasy disorder, incessantly thinking about various ways she might die, beyond her control.
It was the same type of illness as Kiara's hand washing compulsion, except that Sophia's obsession lay in her thoughts, while Kiara's manifested in her actions.
Such problems couldn't be cured in a short time, so Kiara wasn't surprised that Eldest Brother hadn't cured her at once, because it required repeated treatments.
Akatenango truly pursued a different approach from her sister, Akatris. Akatris was straightforward, seemingly competent yet tenderhearted, whereas Akatenango appeared gentle but was quite the opposite of her sister—very efficient and even cold-blooded. Kiara watched as she gradually led the little girl into revealing her death fantasies, while the financiers behind her callously discussed how the brutal realities and painful disorders of others greatly amused them.