Turning back to the task at hand, Kaeson looked around the small house for a place to start the animation process. Realizing he could potentially start anywhere, he began to slowly trace one circle, roughly a foot across, and placed the iron lock inside the circle once he had finished. Three feet away, he drew an almost identical circle, if not slightly bigger so the circle would be able to accommodate himself in a seated position. Finally, he drew a line connecting the smaller circle to the larger circle and proceeded to take a step back to examine his work thus far. Happy with what he had done, Kaeson carefully stepped inside the larger circle so as to not to disturb the chalk drawing. Any breaks in what he had drawn would effictively ruin the animation, and could possibly corrupt the lock resulting in it being unusable.
Already having decided to use himself as the template, Kaeson proceeded to sit down and focus on what he was about to do. Having created multiple soul cores before, Kaeson had always found it best to focus on the object he was animating. Thinking about what made a lock a lock, how it should be, and how it would be more like himself with the creation of it's soul core, Kaeson pricked his finger and let his blood fall directly on to the circle in which he was seated. It took several seconds, but his drawing began to slowly change color from the chalky white to a deep ruby red, letting Kaeson know that he could now begin creating the soul core.
Focusing on the iron lock, Kaeson thinking only about how the lock should be and giving it the identity a lock should have. Kaeson then repeated a mantra his first master had taught him, "Viicthe poure mim"*. Kaeson spent the next several minutes repeating the mantra again and again, focusing only on how the lock should see itself. Finally, a warm feeling, not unlike slowly being submerged in a warm bath overcame him.
He had given the lock a soul.
<OOC> :