Nyxirtha, the Whispering Shroud
Nyxirtha, the Whispering Shroud
Aliases: The Whispering Shroud, The Veiled MotherStatus: At Large, Rumored Active
Domain: Oblivion, Memory-Erosion, Dream Manipulation
Location of Defeat: Unknown (Lost to the Dreaming)
Among the ranks of Alathor’s most insidious Harbingers stands Nyxirtha, the Whispering Shroud. Unlike her brethren who brought ruin with sword and flame, Nyxirtha struck at the mind itself—unmaking identity, erasing memories, and hollowing souls. Exiled into the Dreaming after the Great Conflict, she endures as a haunting echo of oblivion, her voice a creeping void in every whispered secret.List of Named Harbingers
Origins and Early Purpose
Nyxirtha first revealed her power during the Harbinger invasion, not with open warfare, but by infiltrating dreams and newborn minds. With a single whisper, she could steal a name; with prolonged murmurs, she unraveled histories and wills. While other Harbingers prepared Alathor for Voidaris through chaos and bloodshed, Nyxirtha pursued a subtler conquest—stripping away the very essence that defines sentience.List of Named HarbingersManifestations of Unmaking
Nyxirtha’s dread gifts take three forms:-
• The Unraveling Whisper: Those who hear her voice too often lose parts of themselves—first a name, then memories, until no self remains.
• Erosion of Meaning: Objects and places persist, but their significance vanishes—books with blank pages, blades forgotten.
• Faceless Nightmare: In the Dreaming, she mimics trusted faces; when unveiled, they dissolve into nothingness, leaving victims mute and adrift.List of Named Harbingers
Legacy and Current Threat
Nyxirtha was never bound or slain—the Stewards could not strike at shadows within minds. Across Alathor, villages awaken without a past, and ancient tomes bleed blank overnight. Diverse cultures fear her under varied guises—the Veiled Mother in Virondia, the Nameless Choir in Yeoria—yet all speak of the same creeping void. Unseen and unfought, Nyxirtha remains the greatest threat to memory, history, and the very concept of self.
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