The spell of identity-displacement faded. The nush nush abated.
Nimruil was, at last, himself again.
He looked down.
What. Was he wearing?
Cold, grating fear cut into his spine like bone-saws. The roar of the crowd engulfed him, a forest of arms raised in the air, all to thunderous hooting, whistling, applause and shouts of congratulations. This was it. Everyone would see the archmage rendered into a fool; finally, one intoxicant too far for sanity.
He would rather have faced a horde of
orcs than this level of shame. Certainly, mocking laughter would envelop him, before inevitable condemnation, demotion, and eventually, execution.
But as he looked, hardly anyone paid any heed. Despite his ridiculous attire, only a young
drow or two were snickering briefly at his clothes, before all eyes were fixed on the plaza. His gaze followed them.
Squelch. Spatter.
Vyx'aria was cutting down traitors. Gradually, as he watched their lives expire one by one, Nimruil's nerves steadily calmed and his gaze cooled. He was not to become one of them, after all. Not today.
Vyx’aria straightened, blade still in hand, and turned her gaze back to the masses. “The old sins end today,” she proclaimed. “The era that follows will not be gentle. But it will be clean.”
Nimruil gazed down upon his own hands, and pondered. What sins had they committed? Plenty. Which ones would count under this new reign?
None, if he could help it.
“THY NAME IS VYX’ARIA? LAST KNOWN DAUGHTER OF HOUSE TOR’RAHEL, CLAIMER OF THE ONYX THRONE, WIELDER OF THE CHAPTER SWORD, TWICE RISEN CHILD OF ZAR’AHAL, CONQUEROR OF DHUNBOR, MISTRESS OF SHAY TIRLOC, SLAYER OF TRAITORS, BREAKER OF EXILES, SHE WHO WOULD WISH TO WEAR THE CROWN ONCE MORE.”
As the Voice of Maelzafan spoke, that icy dread from before shuddered down through the rest of him. Her presence felt oppressive, yet strangely comforting. A toxic blanket of faux security, of meaning.
He sought to touch his outrageous clothes, but his fingers went clean through. Aha. A simple illusion. He
almost went to dispel it, but then thought twice about it.
A link of concentration could lead him to the caster of this visual absurdity. He could discover who had decided to play games with him today. An instructive and -- perhaps -- an ultimately satisfying exercise.
One whispered word,
Ssiks, and a wisp slithered out from his collar, primed for the illusion spell, causing his eyes to flare the same murk-green, and then the archmage followed the trail. Pushing past shoulders and ecstatic, flailing arms.
At last, he found her, thin shoulders drawn near together, a single braid of white hair resting languidly on them.
A moment of puzzlement struck him. A jalil weaving arcane magic? Even so low a school as that of an illusionist? An oxymoron, at best. The hesitation only lasted so long. He couldn't quite determine whether she was a commoner or low nobility from behind, but regardless, she didn't appear to have an entourage.
A snap of his fingers, and he dispelled the illusion, once again draped in the interlinked layers of his robe. That snap might serve to draw her attention, but if not, his words certainly would:
"You have a most interesting taste in fashion," Nimruil said, voice hoarse and somewhat hissing.
"At least when you dress others."
Vel'duith