Heeyy I'm out for a day and return to a bunch of delicious characters! Numerica, absolutely brilliant -- I'll try to relate everything in mine. Also, it seems everyone's using photographs -- allow me to be the odd one out!
This turned out to be terribly long, but I wanted to include some info that might be beneficial to you, Numerica, regarding Tjasa's grandparents, etc. I tried and failed to shorten it.
Name: Chiudka Gusakov
Age: 31
Appearance:
Occupation: Healer, Babysitter, Storyteller, Liar -- but mostly she tends the house, the cabbage and the chickens
History and other things:Chiudka is no longer the shy and restrained romantic she had been before her sister died. Bronislava had been the prettier one, the smarter one, the funnier one, the popular one. She had had a doting husband and a beautiful child, and was everything their parents had ever wanted in a daughter and everything
every man had ever wanted in a wife. They had clamored at the door, written terrible sonnets and sung even worse; they only ever gave Chiudka flowers when they asked her to deliver them to their precious Bronislava. Chiudka had alternated between idolizing her sister and despising her -- until finally, Chiudka had directed so much quiet, jealous hatred toward Bronislava that the beloved wife and daughter had fallen ill and died. Chiudka has confessed this to no one but the priest of the White God, but is convinced of her guilt.
It was out of guilt, at first, that she took her motherless niece, Tjasa, under her wing, as if she were her own. The child reminded her of herself: quiet, distant and curious. It was that curiosity that Chiudka did her best to encourage: she showed Tjasa a few tricks of the healer's trade, which her own father didn't know she knew. She continued her sister's lessons in mending and cooking. She told stories about the old ways, the Witch, and the creatures that lived in the mountains. But mostly, she listened.
Her parents (Tjasa's grandparents) are Kisel and Gostiata. Kisel continues to be a great friend and trusted healer of most of the village, both human and animal, through his herbs and his surgical skill as well as his charms and prayers. Though he had never officially allowed Chiudka to learn the trade, she had from a young age taken it upon herself to learn it anyway. She has only rarely demonstrated this knowledge in public; she shouldn't know it, after all. Since Bronislava's death, Kisel has been less friendly and more dedicated to his work that ever before. Gostiata, his wife, has been forgetting things she has no business forgetting. Chiudka has been quietly picking up where her mother has begun to fail. Both Kisel and Gostiata dote upon Tjasa as if she is the sun and the moon, which Chiudka supports wholeheartedly.
Chiudka is known most of all for her habit of stories and lies. It is not done maliciously, nor does she have anything to hide -- but she speaks before she thinks, and she says things that aren't quite true or are exaggerated to a fantastic degree. She used to do this as a child when she wanted to grab attention from her sister, but it's stuck so deeply that she has learned to embrace it: she is a favorite among the children for her stories, her ridiculous answers to impossible questions, and her own childish love of adventure and whimsy. Of course, it also means she is not well-trusted among the adults, who second-guess almost everything that comes out of her mouth -- which is another reason she's hesitant to claim she has any skill beyond chasing chickens. She's afraid of being called a liar when she finally tells the truth.