Well, if there's water nearby then Nixa's ready.

Still, the dragoness has never had an audience to her changes before. As such, she finds herself reluctant to take even the first step in the change. But to back down now would be cowardly. She's already decided.

She stands side on to Saer. Takes a deep breath. Reaches up and begins to unzip her dress down the back. She tries to move slowly, tries to stretch this bit out, but there's only so long she can make it last.

So she rushes the next stage.

She steps out of her clothes, tosses them to the side, over by Saer. She's not looking at him, but he'll almost certainly see the furious blush across her face as she stands before him. Too quickly she begins the change, her skin heating and heating till it's glowing red, and her wings arcing out from her back.

Spurts of blood spray in every direction as the scales begin to push through her skin, opening cut after cut until she's so red it's near impossible to tell what is scale and what is blood.

It's not a neat change. At all. The scales stick from her body, overlapping and at odd angles. It's immediately clear that there are too many and they don't really fit her humanoid shape.

Which is around the time that her bone structure begins to change. With loud cracks and popping sounds, they stretch and alter, growing and twisting, a tail spurting and her jaw extending into a muzzle until...

Until a red dragon stands before him, it's scales flattening into place around it's body, her wings settling back into place. It's nowhere near as large as Draaxar had been, but she's still the size of a large grizzly bear, and probably not a creature you'd want to come across. The scales glint and glitter in the moonlight. Rough and hard, she looks exactly like a smaller, feminine version of her old master, thin and built for speed as well.

It's a moment before her eyes flick open again and she curls around to look at Saer, the hint of a smile on her red muzzle. The entire transformation took no more than thirty seconds, and it's something she is truly proud of.