Lytta Neyd

Lytta Neyd, also known as Coral – for the colour of her favourite lipstick, was a sorceress and one of the fourteen who were said to have fallen at Sodden Hill. Born in Skellige, her real name was Astrid Lyttneyd Ásgeirrfinnbjornsdottir. She had ginger hair and one of her hips was decorated with a detailed and fabulously colorful tattoo. It depicted a stripe-colored fish with enormous fins thanks to which the whole was triangular in shape. The species of fish was called angelfish and they were used by wealthy folk as live decorations in aquariums and pools.

The tattoo was the only thing that betrayed the sorceress' true age. She appeared young, but fish symbolism had changed over the many years and no longer represented a rarity only the few could afford. Now much more common, they were mostly associated with snobbery. Geralt assumed the tattoo itself was likely made during Lytta's "real", stormy youth, when the rich had only just begun earning their fortunes and when Skalars were affordable only by the wealthiest of wealthy. Her breasts were compared to galleon ships under full sails for which "one could search in vain all the sea routes, estuaries, ports and registers the Admiralty." Lytta often dreamed of setting sail off into the horizon just to have some time alone.

In the short story "Something More", Geralt reminisces about the time she once bad-mouthed him to King Belohun, who then threw the witcher in the dungeon for a week. Upon his release, the witcher headed over to Lytta's to find out what had motivated her to do such a thing and inexplicably found himself in the beautiful sorceress' bed for another week. This is described in more detail in the novel Season of Storms.

She has knowledge of Divination.

Coral is mentioned on several occasions during the game, though she does not actually appear. Her handiwork is cited in both The Soldier Statuette and The Nobleman Statuette quests. It would seem that both the nobleman and the soldier were compressed into artifacts by the sorceress, likely after romantic liaisons gone wrong.