Everything is set.
After his
previous attempts, and Harrowheart’s advice, Viatorus had taken a little time to consider his next plan. It wasn’t that he thought Loki would demand perfection, but everyone else in his life did. Trying to adhere to that standard was a nigh impossible habit to break. So he had taken a few days to research, ponder, and set everything in order. Now was the time. Nemesis have mercy on his soul.
He’s in his sister’s apartment. A large, immaculate London apartment of perfectly defined rooms that are all the epitome of modernity. The decor consists mainly of sharp corners, furniture blocked out in rectangular shapes in blacks, whites and golds. This is the apartment of someone who holds order in the highest regard. Except that now… Now everything is in the wrong place. Not in a
mess, but misplaced. The kettle, microwave, and all the food is in the bathroom. The kitchen table has been replaced by a desk, and the cupboards now find themselves bursting with books, a few ornaments laid out on the counter. There is a luxurious looking bed in the livingroom that doesn’t look like it could get through the doors. Clothes and shoes fill the shelves in place of books or statues. In short, it is an elaborate mix up.
Isidor is going to hate it.
For now, however, she remains blissfully unaware, and Viatorus is left to consider his handiwork as he stands in the living-room-now-bedroom. One piece of Harrowheart’s advice stuck particularly close with him: Whatever the consequences, he must be able to laugh or it’s not a prank, it’s not mischief, and Loki will know. So, with a deep inhale, he prepares to laugh through his sister’s inevitable fury.
Raising his hands, palms upwards, and bowing his head he starts to pray the only way he knows how. Thoughts of Loki, of chaos and a meditation of its virtues had filled his mind as he worked. Now is the easy part. The part he knows. He grounds himself, raises his voice and sends his message into the ether. “I call upon the sly god, the trickster Loki Odinson of Asgard and offer up this act of mischief to you.”