Name: Deidre
Age: 24
Species: Tri-Species Hybrid
Appearance:
Deidre is five foot six inches tall with curly brown hair and bright brown eyes. A friendly, trusting young woman, she is always smiling. She is also an incessant talker and often talks to herself when left alone between procedures. She has fairly acute hearing, so she is kept far from other subjects in a heavily insulated room. Outside the corridor leading to her enclosure is a sign: “Keep all sound to a minimum. Subject #47-PH4 is extremely sensitive.”
Taken right after birth, Deidre has never been outside of the research compound. While she can hear the footsteps of her doctors coming to and from her room (even muffled by special footwear) she can’t hear anything beyond that. The only assistants allowed near her have been briefed on her condition and the danger she poses if she even changes—should she enter her hybrid form while conscious, the , vampires might not be able to stop her from escaping. Therefore, every care is taken to prevent her from discovering her true nature; to this end, all personnel involved in her care are expected to hide vampiric traits.
History: Deidre was born to a Lycan mother, directly related to the first Immortal, and a vampire father. Despite all efforts to the contrary, the pregnancy had been discovered by both factions early on and came to term under intense scientific scrutiny. To prevent a repeat, both parents were then disposed of. Deidre, as a combination of three different bloodlines, bore the weaknesses of none. Her usefulness was obvious, so she was taken to a facility to be studied. The past twenty-four years have been devoted to the use of her blood as a catalyst to remove the vampires’ weakness to sunlight and the lycans’ silver allergy.
Deidre rarely speaks to other people; she knows that Doctor Sado is the head of the program and that he is in charge of all of the other doctors. She has been told she has a type of tuberculosis that prevents her interacting with other people without exposing them. This also explains, quite conveniently, why she is never allowed to leave her room or go outside: it would be disastrous to her fragile health.
Other: Deidre has never been taught to read, but she tells herself stories.