"Zeltiva," the other Nuit mused, with a dreamy voice that was anything but sincere. Aelobius wore his bodies longer than most on the Citadel. This one, too, was pretty much used up, an old human male with drooping flesh, thinning limbs and bulging eyes. "I am told it is very romantic this time of year. I am all for taking a vacation every once in a while, you know? A nice, long vacation some place where nobody can ever find you…" his eyes widened suggestively as he finished the sentence "… like Zeltiva!"
Aelobius' hands were laced behind his back as he walked leisurely towards Jilitse. He smiled grandfatherly, paying no heed to her backstopping away from him. If she expected him to insult her, she would be mistaken. The Voider merely pursed his wizened mouth at her excuses. "Oh my, it must be urgent indeed, if you even forgot to return several books to the restricted library. Never mind that you were not supposed to take any of them out in the first place. Apprentices these days, ever so forgetful. No wonder they all vanish on me like that."
The wizard stopped, mock shock on his face as Jilitse mentioned telling him a story. "Now, now," he said, "you are sounding like my second wife. She always had a story to tell me - the story of how she'd spent my hard-earned money, the story of what she did when I wasn't around and the story of who were the younger men who visited our house. There was a story for everything, my dear Jilitse. She was quite impressive as a storyteller, I must admit. But in the end, I did not like her last one."
His hand sank in the folds of his decay-stained robe and he pulled out what looked like a long bead necklace. Each bead was a slightly different color and most of them were marked in some way so as to be easily distinguished. Interestingly enough, some of the beads were unmarked, as if still unused. Aelobius quickly found the bead he needed and held it between his fingers as he extended his arm to the side. Suddenly, a Void portal opened up slightly behind him, to his right. It had no suction force, though; while a wave of freezing cold slapped across Jilitse's face, she did not feel pulled towards the portal. Instead, something slowly slid out of the swirling black hole.
It was a rectangular slab of marble. A frozen corpse - a mummy - was strapped upon its surface. It was a woman, emerging head first from the portal. "Jilitse, meet my second wife Therea. Therea, this is Jilitse." After this proper introduction, the portal sucked the frozen mummy back in and shut itself closed. "So, let us hear this story, Jilitse," Aelobius smiled, "but it better tell me where you hid the damn books, or I might get bored, you know. My attention span is fleeting…"