The Artist nodded.
Iris was pleasantly surprised to find Sacha still had a fairly strong imagination and sense of self. Iris had, at times, had to sacrifice small parts of herself to finish the working. She wouldn't have to do so here...as the connection between them improved, helped in no small part by the meditative effect the canvas induced, Iris began to see a rough outline of Sacha appear on her side...without context, color, or dimension, this figure was (to most observers) uniquely horrifying. A skeleton wrapped in shadows. It was a fragment of a spirit without thought or will, only instinct and desire. Little different than a hollow was, in fact. Her job was to take this fragment and make it in something beautiful...something she had mastered long ago...the final work would be no mere facsimile or mimicry, it would be a true piece of Sacha, through and through-it was much like a cache of rubies could be chipped from the depths of the Earth, brought up to the light, cleaned, polished, cut, and fashioned into a beautiful necklace.
Her delicate hands went into a blur of motion upon the canvas as she added color and life-the light on her hands trailing away in embers and sparks. Her movements were graceful and measured, an artwork in themselves, if you thought her a dancer.
In but ten minutes, Iris had finished. Exactly ten minutes by the second, a mark of her expertise that had neither slowed nor diminished, even in these times.
...
With a snap, the front of the easel quite literally burst into flames-though flames without heat. When the heat and light faded away, what was left was a simple sheet of parchment. Iris fashioned the shape of the magical easel around the finished work as a scroll-case, now resembling the item she had pulled from her belt earlier. With a final touch of her hand, she sealed it, whereby it turned back into a tube of hardened material resembling wood, though it was not. Interestingly, the seal itself seems to still be made of the same light/dark magic that formed the easel-the icon adorning the seal would have meant something to Sacha...just like the picture would be her true self, in every small detail.
"A brilliant working..." Iris said, promptly handing the tube to Sacha.
Her next words had an air of old and much loved formality.
"I now verify this Working is done. I have done the best a humble artist can, and so I now present it to you. It is your own true self, and all those who gaze upon it will know you for who you really are. This I vow, before the one pantheon of True Gods. Be careful who you show it to.
I hope my Working brings you peace and happiness, and a greater understanding of yourself." The part about being careful who you showed it to was often ignored, but it had been an important part of Irises order that absolute privacy had to be offered. No one but the subject could be the first to look upon the finished work, for there was nothing more private or sacred than a living soul. What they did with it afterwards, of course, was up to them...and of course, the last part was not always guaranteed. Looking into your own self could be shocking, to put it lightly. There was no guarantee of happiness, peace, or understanding. Often the best workings could only begin to put you on that road.