Hi! If you got the reference in the title, let’s talk so we can be the best of friends.
I’m lady h, a neurotic 27-year-old cat-lover, tea enthusiast, and champion marathoner (of TV, that is). It’s nice to meet you! I'm once again returning to the Guild after a bit of an absence, and as always, it's a bit nerve-wracking. (To any old partners that stumble across this: I'm so sorry for disappearing, and please don't hesitate to message me if I haven't already reached out to you first.)
I'm not looking to take on too much too fast, so if I manage to hit if off with a partner or two, I'll probably close up shop again for a bit, at least to see how I manage before expanding my horizons. That said, I'm always down to make more friends around these parts, even if we don't start something at the moment!
I’ve tried to make this interest check as organized and user-friendly as possible, so you can easily check out the sections most relevant or important to you. I’m sure, just like the title says, that I’ll tinker with it endlessly anyway—and in the mean time, if you have any questions that I didn’t cover, please don’t hesitate to hit me up!
I’m very friendly and love to chat in OOC. :)
I’m better at character development than plot, and I tend to enjoy character-driven stories.
I usually have one main POV character in a roleplay (and I tend to default to ladies), but I also like to juggle a few secondary characters. I’m particularly fond of guy/girl best-friend or sibling duos.
My favorite genre is urban fantasy (fantasy set in some version of the “real” world), but I also have a fondness for post-apocalyptic, dystopian, steampunk, and soft sci-fi settings. Sometimes I'll do a bit of historical, but almost always with fantasy elements.
I also delight in borrowing fandom plots, scenarios, or settings and sticking in our own characters! A list of some of my favorite fandoms and other ideas can be found below.
I love romance—fluffy or angsty or both! both is good—but it’s totally not required and should never be forced. I’m also a sucker for unrequited crushes, so even if one of my characters develops a tendre for one of yours, by no means do you have to follow suit!
I’m cool with mature themes, be they language or violence or ~sexytimes~, but everything in moderation. (i.e., I’m mostly a fade-to-black-kind of girl. If you ask me to write something too detailed in the bedroom, I’m afraid I’ll just end up embarrassing both of us.)
I’m an English nerd, and I like to write my posts the same way I’d write a story—with a care for spelling, grammar, and the way things sound. I would never nitpick your posts or be snotty about it—I swear!—but I do like writing with partners who also like that kind of thing.
On that note, I prefer quality over quantity, every time. I can ramble with the best of them, but sometimes, a long post just isn’t called for, and might even get in the way. It makes more sense to play it by ear.
If we chat and hit it off, I’d prefer to start a roleplay in PMs. We can always change it up later.
Buffy/Angelverse - probably my most comfortable fandom
The Hunger Games
Harry Potter
Firefly
The October Daye novels (though I am behind by a few)
Merlin (though, again, not fully caught up on the BBC series--I haven't seen S5, so no spoilers, please!)
Watch this space—more to come as I think of them! I'm currently leaning toward fandom-inspired or original stuff, rather than direct-from-fandom content, but never hesitate to ask if you've got an idea, a question, or a craving.
Creatures of the night/paranormal nonsense
Faeries
Mutants/metahumans
Generic “magical boarding school”
Cities with supernatural underbellies
Stories about ~THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP~
Arranged marriages or marriages of convenience
Reluctant heroes
Stories where hope prevails, even if things get terribly angsty in the interim
Again, this list is incomplete, and I am always down for suggestions!
Every nerve in her body was screaming—and then it wasn’t. The pain didn’t just fade; it disappeared so surely that it could have been a dream. She might have been dreaming for a while, her self somewhere else while the rest of her figured out what to do about a body.
Alex came back to herself like waking up, like opening her eyes—the world was gone, and then it wasn’t. Making sense of it took slightly longer. It began with the feel of gravel digging into her side, the weight of her body against the asphalt. Next came heat against her back, out of place in the cool November air. Finally, the sounds of disaster: the cacophony of screaming and sirens.
Now that she’d taken stock of her surroundings, it was time to look closer to home. Alex eased her way, slowly, so slowly, into a sitting position. Heavy curls slid over her shoulders, familiar and comforting.
Her body looked just as she remembered it should, not a single limb out of place, no cuts or broken bones. The brown skin of her arms and legs was smooth and unmarked, save for the expected scattering of freckles. Though it felt like she shouldn’t be, she was whole.
Alex remembered, belatedly, that she’d skinned her knee last week, running late to an audition downtown. The scrapes on her palms had been superficial and were already healed, but she’d come down hard enough on one leg to draw blood. There should still be a scab there.
The moment she thought it, there was.
Alex stared. I’m in shock, she thought, and then, It’s too loud.
Immediately, the noise lowered, as muffled as if she’d closed a door between herself and the rest of the world.
Alex swallowed.
There were people nearby. The ones who were screaming, or the ones who hadn’t gotten up. There was a fire raging. And all she could focus on was the way the world dimmed when she wanted it to, the way bile climbed her throat when she spotted a man holding up a charred skull, or the unavoidable fact that not too long ago, she'd been inside that husk of a vehicle, sitting right behind the driver.
She could hear her mother scolding, Alexandra Denali, never take one thing in this life for granted, and her father saying, gently, Alex, don’t just look for the helpers; follow them. And still, she couldn’t make herself move. Jericho would say she was in shock; Ravi would say it was her underused sense of self-preservation kicking in.
Her grandma would say she was being self-absorbed, and that was probably closest to the truth.
Chasing the voices from her head, Alex took a deep breath, forcing herself to focus on the way the air filled her lungs. (Clean air, because she coughed once on smoke and willed it to go away.) She exhaled just as carefully, feeling a little more at home in her body as she did so.
In a moment. She’d deal with it all in a moment.
Mandy took a breath. She was familiar with all of the aspects of grief: the sound of it, screamingly loud or soft and subdued; the look of it, all wasting sickness or puffy eyes; the shape of it inside her own chest—something separate and foreign, but impossible to remove.
But the worst part was the smell.
The thick, heavy scent of tears had permeated the rooms in an old, oddball orphanage full of children who didn’t want anyone to know when they cried in the dark. It soaked into the sheets and clotted in the air. If you were the sort of child who could sense such things, you ignored them out of courtesy. But there was no hiding Cat’s tears—not her noisy sniffles or her red-rimmed eyes, or the way she wore her grief like her sweatshirt: something heavy and too large, hanging limply from her shoulders.
Almost as soon as Emmaline started speaking, Mandy got to her feet—not because she wasn’t interested in what the woman had to say, but because it was most likely to hold everyone’s attention. Emmaline’s elegantly clipped accent made her sound calm and capable, its edges softened, but still distinct. It was a very reassuring voice, and Mandy liked that about her.
She slipped unobtrusively from the room and ghosted back in a few moments later, pausing behind Cat’s chair to set something at the woman’s elbow.
A glass of water wasn’t much, as gifts went, but Mandy didn’t know the woman well enough to do more. And she did know this much: it was nearly impossible to drink something and cry at the same time.
She resumed her seat just as Emmaline finished, flitting a glance around the table before dropping her eyes, waiting for the next person to speak.
I think the most important thing to remember up front is that finding a new writing partner is a trial-and-error process for everybody. I’d love for us to go into this with the understanding that either of us is free to say, “Hey, sorry, I don’t think I’m the guy/girl for you,” at any time, with no hard feelings. Then we can tip our hats, wish each other luck, and keep looking.
If you’d like to get in touch and see if we are roleplay-compatible, please shoot me a PM or a @mention so I’m sure to see it!
I'm embarrassed by how long I've been gone--life got unexpectedly overwhelming for a while--but I'm back and hoping a few friendly people might be interested in starting something! So, without further ado: Bump!
Hello, I have a character I've been wanting to throw into a magical school. -nods- If you'd be interested in hearing about him please PM me. -waves- Thanks!
Sorry, don't recognize the reference. Interested in quite a few of your general interests though (mutants/metahumans, magic boarding school, POWER OF FRIENDSHIP particularly). Still looking?
@RBYDark Thank you for responding to my interest check! I realllllly want to say yes, but a few nice people already sent me messages, and I don't want to accidentally leave any of you guys hanging while I try to filter through potential partners. (I have been down that path, and that way lies me losing track of my PM threads.)
I'm going to temporarily close up shop right now while I get caught up, but I'll bump up the thread again if it looks like I can take on another partner. Thank you again, and I hope you find a few good RPs in the mean time!
I do want to update this interest check (probably, as it says, in the morning), but I've been looking to dip my toes back into the Guild for a while, and I'm an impatient creature, so....bump!
Grammar Bunker piqued my interest due to our shared love of the semicolon so I figured we might be compatible despite different levels of descriptive detail, but I must ask you an important question before we proceed.
Have you heard about our lord and savior, the almighty em dash, today?
also see my interest check for more in depth bullshit
No, but seriously, I cannot tell you how genuinely tickled I am that, while my actual interest check failed to get any takers, I may have just made a new friend because we are both punctuation nerds. Our styles may be different, but our semicolon-loving hearts are true. *fist-bump*
Would you like to start a PM and toss some ideas around? Was there anything above that caught your interest? (And, even if we don't manage to start anything, I hope we can still be friends and wave hi to each other around the guild.)
Dipping my toes back into the Guild and would love to start a thing or two! Please do reach out if you're interested, and please understand if I turn you down, it's probably less about what I think of you as a writer and more about me trying not to over-commit—that way lies madness and me retreating like a weird little hermit crab because I'm too embarrassed to admit I overbooked myself.
This is by no means a must, but I would really, really love to do something either with Mandy (my skittish, half-blood Cait Sidhe research assistant) or a character I developed for a medieval low-fantasy setting where the old king is dead and his usurper son is absolutely awful, so please let me know if either of those things in particular sparks an idea for you!
@lady horatio "For three years she said that. Good night, interest check. Sleep well. I'll most likely edit you in the morning. It was a fine time for me. I was learning to fence, to fight. Anything anyone was willing to teach me." "I inherited the thread from Gowi just as you will inherit it from me. The real Lady Horatio had been retired 15 years and living like a king in Patagonia."
-Couldn't resist! I waited three years to say, "As you wiiiiiiiiiiiiiish."