A Picnic in Arkham
Ars Amatoria
Ars Draconis
Ars Moriendi
Astrological Oils
Atomic Luau Lounge
Bards of Ireland
Bewitching Brews
Carnaval Diabolique
Celestials
Dark Elements
Diabolus
Doc Constantine's Pharmacopoeia
Excolo
Fifth Anniversary
Forum Scents
Great Duets in Horror
Illyria
Iteru
Limited Edition
Limited Edition: A Demon In My View
Limited Edition: A Little Lunacy
Limited Edition: Ashtanyika
Limited Edition: Carnaval Noir
Limited Edition: Halloweenie 2007
Limited Edition: Halloweenie 2008
Limited Edition: Lupercalia 2007
Limited Edition: Lupercalia 2008
Limited Edition: Maelström
Limited Edition: Oblation
Limited Edition: Springtime in Arkham
Limited Edition: Summer 2009
Limited Edition: The Order of the Dragon
Limited Edition: The Wind in the Willows
Limited Edition: Yule 2006
Limited Edition: Yule 2007
Limited Edition: Yule 2008
Mad Tea Party
Märchen
Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett: Good Omens
Neil Gaiman: Stardust
Neil Gaiman: The Carousel
Neil Gaiman: The Graveyard Book
Ode to Aphrodite
Panacea
Phoenix Steamworks And Research Facility
Rappaccini's Garden
Sephiroth
Sin & Salvation
Single Notes
Sixth Anniversary
Sleepy Hollow
Somnium
Summer Garden Miniseries
Tarot Oils
The Chakras
The Salon
Unreleased
Voodoo Blends
Wanderlust
Warrior Queens Inquest
Zodiac Blends 2007

As you pass the tiny stage, you come across a large canvas tent, illuminated within, the exterior dotted with odd splatters. In front of the tent stands a scorched wooden cart covered in a jumble of bottles, jars, vials and twisted steel implements, and an elaborate, gold-gilded sign reads: "Doc Constantine Cures What Ails Ye! Liniments, salves, potions and elixirs for every malady of the body and spirit!" A scream splits the air, jarring you. You see shadows move jaggedly within the tent, there is another scream, and all is suddenly still and silent. After a long heartbeat, the door flap opens. A man steps out wearing a crystal-eyed schnabel mask in the style of medieval plague doctors, carmine streaking his sleeves, vest, and the blonde hair that crowns him. He pulls off the mask, and you see a handsome figure, almost beatific. He rolls a cigarette, lights it, takes a deep pull, and winks at you slyly as he gestures at the multitude of concoctions he has for sale. A bent crone, her body as bowed and knotty as an ancient oak, shuffles up to the wagon with rosy-cheeked, tow-headed maiden following her at a small distance. As she approaches the doctor, the crone gestures at herself, running a gnarled hand down her body in a sweeping movement, and casting a sideways glance at her grandchild. Smiling an angel's smile, Doc Constantine hands the old woman a potion the color of cold, congealed blood. She drinks it quickly, gasping. Before your eyes her body shimmers and blurs, and a shower of dark sparks seems to engulf her. Where the crone stood, there is now a voluptuous, raven-haired vixen, vibrant, sensual, at the prime of her life and sexual vitality. Her shriek of joy is interrupted by another's scream of shock: the rigors of age have not vanished; they have moved aside, and the young woman has aged horribly, taking on the crone's burden.

Sheer musk, cedar smoke, fir needle, black amber and leather.

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