Avatar of Naril

Status

Recent Statuses

6 yrs ago
To absent friends, lost loves, old gods, and the season of mists; and may each and every one of us always give the Devil his due.
7 yrs ago
And when you said hi, I forgot my dang name.
3 likes
9 yrs ago
Everything beautiful is math! Everything beautiful is a problem.
9 yrs ago
But whatever they offer you, don't feed the plants!
1 like
9 yrs ago
Do you like cyberpunk? Do you like stories? Do you like complicated characters, and conspiracies? Take a look! roleplayerguild.com/topics/1..

Bio

Hi! I'm Naril. I write, build things, and I'm incredibly busy, all the time. I'm probably older than you. I'm not interested in isekai, school settings, sandboxes, excessively grimdark settings, or invitation-only threads; I'm very picky about militaria, I don't care for A Song of Ice and Fire, Nation roleplay bores me to tears, most fandom doesn't really catch my attention, and though I prefer Advanced-level writing, I'm not going to help you write your book (Unless you feel like paying my day rate) - which almost certainly means I'm not here. Some day, maybe. Probably not, though!

I am interested in science fiction, cyberpunk, space operas, and stories of working together, uplift, and progress. You'll catch my attention with fantasy adventures in an interesting world, or with almost any modern fantasy. I have a soft spot for superhero stories, and you might find me in the occasional Star Wars or Star Trek fandom.

My standards are high for myself and mild for everyone else; I love writing dialogue and making you feel like you can taste the place I'm creating. I write in the style I like to read, which is the part I find fun. If you want an example of the authors I enjoy, look at Ann Leckie, Tamsyn Muir, N.K. Jemisin, Martha Wells, Terry Pratchett, and Neil Gaiman.

Most Recent Posts

I absolutely loved both versions of The Martian. Andy Weir is a fun writer, and the film captured everything I wanted. :3 And, I have to admit, I really enjoyed seeing Ridley Scott (who has made some of my very favourite movies, but who I've been disappointed in lately) make a...well, not to be too blunt, but a good movie again.

I also really enjoyed how there were definitely some moments in the film that stood on their own as gags, but were really there for people who read the book. That The Martian is so funny and earnest rather than (As the story so easily could have been) dour and depressing is something I absolutely loved, and that the film still had so much of that made me very happy. :3
Mm. Good morning, everyone. :3 A nice relaxed weekend so far at Château Naril. Fall is here in earnest, and the trees outside my apartment are beautiful.

How is everyone else? :)
Mm. And a lovely post you've written, too. :3

We're very nearly out of the introduction, everyone! And this is only the first chapter of quite a lot of story - I do hope everyone plans to stick around. :3


Her hands shook in the cool morning air, the blue and pink light of dawn heralding a beautiful day to come. Tired fingers, slick with grease and grime and blood fumbled with the wire, almost dropping her makeshift window-latch-pick to the flagstones below. Shay cursed under her breath, used one hand to steady the other, slipped the pick between the window frames and slid sideways, heard the latch click open inside. She sighed with relief, pocketed the pick and shoved the window up with a long, painful groan, wood scraping over wood. Her legs burned as she stepped from the roof through the window, her foot landing on a small metal tray set across high-piled, plush carpet with a soft thump. She braced herself, bent to clear the window, and sucked a breath between her teeth as the wound on her side flared with new, hot pain.

Shay kicked her shoes off onto the tray, clumps of mud and clay and moss collecting in the corners, then staggered over to the bellpull in her room, giving the rope a few sharp, hard pulls. That Herculean task accomplished, she fell heavily into a carved wooden armchair, her eyes half-focused, hair plastered to her face, breath coming in hard, fast pulls. Distantly, she fancied she could hear the bell clatter. She certainly could hear as feet hurried up the wooden steps outside her door, the almost-hesitant knock.

“Come in,” Shay said, her voice more a bark than anything else.

“Miss Haimes!” A maid, surely not yet twenty, and one whose name Shay hadn’t learned said, “My, but you’re in a state. Shall I fetch a doctor from the-“

“No, no,” Shay said, waving one hand. The other wrapped around her side, holding her shirt hard against her ribs, “I need…ah…I need several yards of boiled linen bandage and…mm…” Her eyes squeezed shut, and a fresher stain joined the ones already on that side of her shirt, “A gauze pad, and quite a lot of strong liquor, nothing expensive, but strong as you can find. And you’re not to tell…” She snapped her fingers, then waved her hand again, “Whatever the head of household’s name is, you’re not to tell them why. Make something up if he asks.”

“Miss Haimes, I really don’t think-“ the maid began.

Now, if you please,” Shay said. She stood with another groan, unwrapped her arm from her side and started to undo the buttons on her shirt, peeling the sweat-soaked fabric away. She heard the maid dither, even as she turned away, but Shay sighed with relief as the woman stepped back through the door and down the hall.

Shay’s fingers fumbled as she finished undoing her shirt, and the fabric pulled uncomfortably around the wound in her side as she pulled the garment off. She turned to look at the wound in a mirror, dipping the corner of her shirt in her water basin and using the fabric to dab away some of the grime around the wound. She let out a small sigh of relief - small, shallow, and not very long. Bandages would do - stitches certainly would hurt nothing, but the cut wasn’t in a good position for her to do the job herself, and Shay had no interest in waking the town’s surgeon or having to explain herself. Still, superficial wounds bleed as much as their deeper counterparts and a trail of red already marked her fair skin. She folded her shirt, pressed the bundle against her side, and despite herself, started to pace back and forth across the room, her eyes focused on the middle distance, thoughts racing through her head.

The man had a genuine talent, Shay though as she paced, Why set up the tell-your-fortune-for-a-crown act in the town square? Why pretend to have a different skill? Unless…

A knock at Shay’s door pulled her mind off the tracks she’d begun to carve, and she walked over to the door, pulling it open a crack. She leaned over, one blue eye peering through, caught the worried face of the maid she’d summoned, a large wooden tray held in front of her with the things she’d asked for. With a sound of relief, Shay pulled the door open, ushered her in. The girl scurried in, and Shay closed the door behind her, the felt-lined doorframe neatly cutting off all sound from the corridor. Shay heard the girl put her tray down on the desk behind her.

“Just as you asked, Ma’am,” the maid said with a curtsy, “I also brought some pins.”

“Good thinking,” Shay said, and peeled her shirt away from the wound on her side. She tossed the bloodied fabric down onto a chair, made her way over to the tray, “Could you arrange to have that burned for me, please?”

“Of…of course,” the maid said, clearly nonplussed, “Miss Haimes, would you like some help?” She continued, as Shay nearly spilled the bottle of spirits.

“I…” Shay replied, then braced herself on the desk, shaking her head, “…Yes, I think…that’s very kind of you.”

The maid curtsied again, then walked over to the desk. Small, competent hands held the gauze pad over the bottle, upended the liquor, let the liquid soak into the fabric for a moment. She set the bottle down, stepped over to Shay.

“You’ll want to lift your arm,” the maid said, “And this isn’t going to feel very good.”

“Mm,” Shay said, doing as the maid asked, “And what is your name?”

“Anna, ma’am,” the maid replied, shifting a little so that Shay could put put the weight of her arm on her shoulder, “Take a deep breath for me.”

Shay pulled in a breath, then hissed like the mother of all angry cats as Anna pressed the liquor-soaked pad against her side. Her hiss turned into a stream of curse words first in English, then graduating to German before she ran out of breath, having to pull in another long, slow lungful of air. This made the wound stretch, and as Anna applied a second compression of liquor-soaked gauze, Shay’s cursing switched to the fluid syllables of Arabic. Anna, for her part, blushed a little, but didn’t flinch or back away. Shay decided that she might like this girl.

“That should do for now,” Anna said, then stepped away from Shay, “And it’s stopped bleeding - at least for the moment. Now, you look a fright - you’ll need to have a bath if you don’t want anyone to know what you’ve been up to this evening. And,” Anna said, forestalling Shay’s next question, “We’ll have to do this again. Now, I’ll draw you a bath, and get rid of your shirt while you’re in there, all right?”

Shay nodded, and Anna extricated herself from the older woman’s arm, making her way to the room’s attached bathroom and its huge copper tub. Shay heard water splashing a moment later, then the sound of small bottles being opened. Scents of jasmine and orange blossom drifted on wisps of steam a minute later, and she smiled to herself. Even when tending to someone with a knife wound, Ianus Manor’s staff ensured the baths would smell nice.

While the tub filled, Shay began to undress, moving carefully. She pulled her socks off, left them piled by the chair she’d sat in earlier, then wrapped one arm around her side, untucking the long strip of silk around her chest from itself, gently unwrapping first one layer, then another. Her small, high breasts had never truly been a liability without more traditional undergarments, but the nights could still be cool, and she preferred the layering. Finally, she shucked out of the trousers she’d worn that evening and noted, with a hint of displeasure, that one knee was very nearly worn through. Another set of clothes ruined, but there was no help for that. She would just have to talk to her dressmaker - and tailor - and have another set made.

The sound of water trickled, then stopped as Shay wrapped a robe around herself. Anna walked back into the room, Shay’s bloody shirt still under one arm.

“You’ll want to be careful, Miss Haimes,” Anna said, “Try not to pull on the wound too much. I’ll come help you do your hair after I’ve gotten rid of this, shall I?”

“Thank you, Anna, yes,” Shay said. Anna curtsied, then made her way back through the door, closing it quietly behind her.

Shay unwrapped herself from her robe, then stepped into her bath. Steaming water, just on the knife-edge of being too hot, washed over her as she lowered herself, and for a moment she felt as though all her sins were being washed away. She leaned back, resting her head against a towel placed at exactly the right point to cradle her head, and sighed as the water filled her with warmth, stole away some of her tension, relaxed her muscles. And as good as the water felt, the steam smelled just as lovely, and in a flight of fancy Shay wondered if she might arrange to have Anna as her personal attendant.

Everything in her body protested as she sat up, but Shay knew she couldn’t simply lounge forever. Anna was right, she did look a mess - her hair plastered to her head with sweat and something sticky, her skin blotched with the moss from rooftops, grease from cartwheels, her own blood, her face dirty with ash and streaked with grime. Shay reached over to a small table beside the bath, picked up a bar of soap and a small luffa, and went about scrubbing the evening’s adventures off her body, if not her mind.

Before she could get entirely wrapped around her own thoughts, Anna knocked, then stepped back into Shay’s room. This time she brought an armload of towels. The girl stepped into Shay’s bathroom, gave a satisfactory nod.

“You look nearly human, Miss Haimes,” Anna said, “But if you want the truth, I saw Mr. Ren coming this way, and he looked like he might be on a mission. We should get you dried off and bandaged and into a nightgown before he gets here, if you want to keep him from being suspicious.” Shay noted that Anna, so far, hadn’t asked why Shay might not want to arouse the head-of-household’s suspicion, and she decided that she really did like this blonde-haired young woman.

“Are you always so accommodating to your guests?” Shay said, accepting Anna’s help to stand and wrap a dry, fluffy towel around her waist.

Anna just smiled, “Bend forward for me, Miss Haimes. Let’s get your hair drying.”

Shay did as asked, and soon the pair were back in the bedroom. After another round of alcohol-soaked gauze applied to the wound on her side, Anna declared the site satisfactorily clean, and the pair worked in occasionally-awkward movements to wrap linen bandages around the cut, a pair of bright pins holding the bandage in place. The day had brightened almost to full morning as Shay pulled a nightdress over her head and wrapped a light blue robe around herself, not an instant before a polite knock came at the door.

“Ah, Anna,” Ren said as the young woman opened the door, “I hadn’t realized you were calling on Miss Haimes this early.”

“Insomnia,” Shay said from her place a little further in the room, “Anna has been kind enough to draw a bath, bring me warm milk, and tell me fairy stories in an effort to help me sleep. Now, what can I do for you, Mr. Ren?”

The butler looked at the two women, then seemed to shrug without moving a muscle, “The Master should like your attendance at breakfast this morning in the upstairs dining room. At your convenience, but several others from the Society have been asked as well. Shall I tell him you plan to attend?”

“Yes, please,” Shay said, “I’ll be there presently.”

Ren nodded, bowed, and backed out of the door, pulling it tight shut after him. Shay sat in a chair, leaned her head back, ran her hand over her face.

“I suppose I’ll join Ben with that coffee concoction he has the kitchens brew up,” Shay said, “Whatever is in that, you certainly don’t need sleep for a few hours afterward.”

“I’m sure you’ll get a chance to rest tonight,” Anna said, “Now, let’s get you dressed. You shouldn’t keep Mr. Ware waiting.”
A pair of figures moved in velvet darkness, perfect quiet broken only the sounds of breath, the placement of feet, the slap of skin on cloth. Both moved with liquid, flawless grace, every motion balanced precisely where and how they wanted. The taller figure, lean and long-limbed, snaked an arm through the dark, her long, strong fingers closing into a grip on the smaller figure's shoulder. She shifted her feet, a brace against the ground solid as rock-old trees, felt the muscles in her legs and stomach flex to drive her partner off-balance and to the mat-covered floor. As she did, she felt her partner move, an almost-boneless twist, their entire body snapping away like a minnow between grasping fingers. Suddenly her hands were holding nothing but air, her balance gone, her other arm flying to the side to steady herself but too late, too late. Small, strong hands wrapped around her wrist, her shoulder, bent her forward, drove her to take a step that caught on something unyielding and immovable and then her entire body lifted free of the ground for a terrible, breathless second.

When she landed, Seris made an explosive sound as the air drove out of her in a sudden, painful rush, her head ringing as her skull cracked against the thin mat. She lost track of her surroundings for a moment while she pulled in a coughing, gasping breath, one arm raised toward where she thought her partner was, her hand in a gesture of submission. Slowly, the world returned to her, flows of energy and will marking rooms, doors, walls, carved signs and painted directions. Seris pulled in another breath, less shaky now but not completely without pain and turned her head, her attention falling on the architect of her most recent misfortune. The girl, no more than fifteen, blazed in the Force, her presence filling the space near her with coruscating fire. Seris saw her smile, small flares of emotion flickering around and within her, satisfaction but still tinged with worry. The girl took a step forward, offered a hand. Seris groaned, closed her eyes for a moment, then swallowed down her pride and slapped her own hand into the girl's strong grip, pulled herself to her feet.

"You're getting better," came another voice from the far end of the room, "Both of you."

Seris made a noise somewhere between a grunt of pain and a murmur of acknowledgement, one hand brushing the front of her shirt, the other pressed against the small of her back.

"I think that will do for now," the voice said, "Bring the lights up, please."

Seris felt the room's lamps come on, a gentle change in the ambient flow of energy around her - though nothing that altered the sharpness of her perceptions. When pressed, she had once described the sensation of light and dark like the feeling of walking from a cool room into a warm one, though, of course, not precisely. She turned to watch the girl as she reached up, pulled away her blindfold, large eyes blinking in the sudden brightness. Behind her, with a presence comforting and reassuring as a sun-warmed boulder in a favourite stream, an older Zabrak man stood, gently pleased.

"Are you all right?" The girl said, turning to look at Seris, still massaging her lower back.

"I will be," Seris said, "My pride, on the other hand, has seen better days."

"You went best-of-three with our little Tarin here," the Zabrak man said, walking forward to clap the girl on her shoulders, "I'd say you should be quite pleased with yourself. Your form was nearly perfect, you just made an error of timing and judgement. Besides, she'll be wearing that bruise you gave her for a week, if I'm not mistaken."

The girl, Tarin, rubbed her jaw with a thumb and winced, "I keep forgetting how fast you are. People outside the Order almost never move so quickly."

Seris grinned, "Well, that's something at least," she said, and let her hands fall to her side with a groan, "Day after tomorrow, the same time?"

Tarin nodded and bent in a small bow, her robes rustling while she made her way out of the small sparring chamber. Her Master, still smiling, made a slightly deeper bow and followed, his own steps making small creaking sounds on the mat. Seris turned to watch them go, saw the way they left wakes and eddies in the Force that took quite some time to completely disappear. Alone now, she let out another gusty sigh, stretched her arms over her head, winced again at a lance of discomfort through her back, and made her own way back out into the Temple proper.

As she walked, she relaxed the way she always did, the Temple's energies, students, masters, philosophers and thinkers lending serenity and harmony to the Force all about her. Her arms swung easily at her side, and she returned the nods and greetings of people she passed - almost all either Jedi or those training to become Knights of the Republic. Everywhere she looked, Seris saw brilliance and strength, fierceness and nobility. Even after a decade of working and, occasionally, living in the Temple, Seris had yet to get used to the feeling, and she felt glad of that. The Jedi Temple on Coruscant was, she felt, something that should be humbling and awesome, something that should give visitors pause. Not out of malice or menace, but out of simple recognition of the thousand generations of the Jedi Order, and their service to the Republic.

But as Seris made her way to the Archives, something else touched the world, like a symphony with one instrument out of tune. A sensation that made her twitch and grated on her awareness, something she couldn't ignore. She quickened her pace, breaking into at first a jog, then a full run, her long legs eating up distance with surprising speed, every stride taking her closer and closer to the Archives. All the while, that sensation built in her mind, resolving from formless dread to needle-hot, inescapable worry.

Her boots skidded around the corner as she pounded into the Archives, racing between Knights and Archivists, making her way back to the office she'd borrowed. Her maps were there, the control keys to her ship, everything important and portable, neatly packed into a leather bag that she suddenly was certain she would need. As she ran, cool Archives air flowing over her face, Seris heard a pair familiar voices, each murmuring in the kind of alarmed intensity she felt pounding through her own heart.

Seris stopped, using a tall shelf to arrest her forward motion and peered in at a familiar pair - a blue-skinned Twi'lek girl and her dark-haired companion. She listened for a moment, her skin glistening with sweat, her breath coming in long, even pulls.

"You two, you can't back up the Archives - there's too much here," she said, then shook her head, clearing thoughts away, "Besides, the Vaults are as secure as anywhere on this planet. You two need to let the Archivists worry about what's going on in here and go find your Masters - something bad is coming, or...or might already be here. You can't afford to waste time like this, now go!" Seris flung one arm to the side, pointing at the Archives entrances. All around, other voices murmured, a ripple of foreboding flickering through the air.

Seris pulled herself around, pushed off with one leg, resumed her run toward her office, her boots thumping against ancient stone and plasteel. She felt the concern in the air now, passing from person to person like lightning following a path to earth. An eternity later, she came around another corner, bouncing hard off the wall, and spun into her office, the door barely sliding open fast enough to let her through. Seris moved quickly, not quite panicked, gathering papers, a datapad, a pen, other odds and ends, sliding each into her bag, thick leather making soft sounds in the Archive's quiet. After several long moments, Seris tossed her jacket on, then pulled the bag over her head, cinching the strap tight across her body.

For the first time in her life, she wished she had a weapon.

She looked around the small room for a moment, thoughts chasing one another through her head - there would be other initiates and learners in the Archives, sent here by Masters who needed a moment of peace, or who thought the study would do their charges good. Still, they couldnt' be oblivious to the miasma creeping through the Temple, the foreboding touching almost every mind. Seris stood for a moment, briefly unsure - what if she were having some kind of nervous breakdown? Still...better safe than sorry. She leaned over the desk, tapped the comm console on, entered a holonet address.

"Keran?" Seris said into the screen, her voice shaky, "Keran, it's me. I don't know when you're going to get this, but something's happening on Coruscant. I don't know what, but I'm at the Temple and...something feels wrong, like something terrible is coming. I...I hope you're not on your way here, but if you are, stop somewhere. Don't come here. I know this sounds really vague but I don't know what else to say and...I think something's going to go wrong. We can't both be here if that happens. Please. I'll let you know if I find anything more out, or...well. I love you, Keran. I hope I'll see you soon."

She slapped the communicator panel off, snugged her bag tighter against her body, and took a deep, slow breath, tried to let calm fill her mind. If something was coming, being alone would be dangerous. She turned, and broke into a run, heading toward another of the Archives' exits, this one closer to the Council Chambers.
I'm a little giddy that you like my ridiculous, ridiculous character, @Astarael42. :3 I'll do some editing and put the sheet up in the Character tab when I get home. I can't wait to get started. :3
@lady horatio - Oh my goodness, you've nothing to apologise to me for. :3 I'm just always happy to see posts, whenever they come up!

@Austronaut - I'm also really happy that there are really great comic book stores springing up all over the world. When I moved here, I fell in love with mine immediately - they suggested several excellent comics as soon as we got talking (including Sex Criminals and Rat Queens, both of which are amazing), and they've never made me have that "omg girl!" feel that I did when I was younger. Also, I think I love them forever because they pointed me at The Wicked and the Divine which is holy crap you guys so good.

Ahem. Back to your regularly scheduled calm, erudite, articulate Naril now. :3
Oooookay.

This is still a little rough, but I am, as ever, terribly busy. I may edit some more (In fact I certainly will) but for now, I think this needs to go up or I'll lose my mind and our GM will lose their patience. I still kind of can't believe I went with this, but...well. I made myself smile, which is really my test. *laughs*

----

Birth Name: Shearra Whitlock Statholme Haimes

Other Names: Virtually everyone who knows her, including her parents, calls her Shay.

Gender: Female

Age: 30

Rank/Titles/Social Class:

Shay comes from a line of minor English nobility, though being the youngest daughter of the family, has no titles or expectation to such of her own. Her family, through shrewd investments, careful guidance, and the good luck to avoid having an uncle who drank the family’s fortunes away, has remained quietly prosperous. Through their lands and business dealings, the family provides quite a comfortable life for even the most wayward of their children. Despite the burden on her to appear publicly, Shay rarely does - though her family are adept at providing reasons as to why. Most of Society understands that she very likely does something that’s not entirely ladylike, but as those same people both have no idea what that might be, and have never gotten word of any verifiable scandal, few aspersions are cast on the missing daughter. In a roundabout and almost underground way, however, Shay’s talents have made quiet inroads, and those who know how to find her, do - or, at least, they have a need, and they find their way to the one person who can help them. They very often don’t know who that person is until she opens the door. Thus far, none of those stories have percolated into the gossip-driven taffeta-and-lace crowd - but that day may be coming.

Appearance:

Shay is tall for a woman, though still not six feet even in quite striking heels. While she is slender, very little about her build, even with what little can be seen beneath traditional Victorian attire, suggests the sort of willowy, consumptive waifness so in fashion in some parts of the world. She moves with a quickness and surety that occasionally finds her at odds with societal expectation, though her every motion still carries the grace a lady is expected to have. Like many Britons, Shay has fair skin, but with none of the pallor associated with spending all of one’s time indoors. Her hair falls in a rich, dark tumble just below her shoulders, with most of her locks tied, pinned, or braided behind her and a few left loose to frame her face. Large, intelligent, and bright blue eyes look out at the world from beneath long lashes, constantly flickering from place to place, absorbing detail in the tiniest fraction of a moment before moving on. Despite her best efforts, Shay’s hands are often stained with ink or some other pigment, and she will sometimes wears gloves to avoid having to explain herself. Beneath those gloves, he hands are long, quick, delicate, with surprising strength. She has no visible scars and no tattoos, though she wears a certain amount of jewelry.

When in public, or in society’s view (The two are not always the same), Shay will comport herself as expected, dressed fashionably and in colors that flatter her. She doesn’t even really mind, as her dressmaker is impeccable and has discovered how to incorporate subtle seams and reliefs to allow comparative freedom of movement, even when wearing half a dozen layers of clothing. In private, or when on an adventure where petticoats have no place, that same dressmaker has furnished her with shirts, trousers, boots, coats, gloves, and belts of hard-wearing material, close-fitting and expertly tailored. She has some choice words for those who appear surprised at the fact that, indeed, under all those layers, women have legs.

Personality:

Ferociously intelligent, almost pathologically analytical, occasionally obsessive, and, perhaps most importantly, deeply self-aware of these facets of her own personality, Shay is a study in contrasts, camouflage, and restraint. There are times - most often in private, though with some of Ianus Manor’s other inhabitants - where her pacing, loquacious, nearly frenzied examinations are appropriate, but for the most part, she’s very aware of the truth of things. She is curious about virtually everything, with an understanding of the world around her to one level or another marked with deep wells of devoted, meticulous, systematic study. One could say, and not be terribly far off the mark, that Shay is something of an intellectual magpie, though there is some method to her curious pattern of study. She doesn’t exactly disdain high society, but very often finds the gatherings intensely dull, free of intellectual challenge and being uninterested in the social gauntlet beyond ensuring her peers find nothing of interest. With those she finds vapid and empty-headed, Shay is pleasant but forgettable company; with those of more advanced intellects she is brilliant, challenging, articulate, forthright, and perhaps more than a little bit of a show-off.

Shay also possesses a streak of nearly-fearless practicality, engaging in moonlight chases, subterranean adventures, and horseback shooting matches, knowing that not only does she know how to do all of these things, but that in many cases she’s the only one around who does. She has a wide streak of belief in justice and fairness, and believes strongly in the Society’s drive to unmask and discredit those charlatans who would prey on people with false psychic talents. All the same, she retains a certain exasperation with how regularly people are taken in by even the simplest schemes. While she certainly is aware of societal norms and requirements, she uses them only as method of camouflage - for herself, Shay has no time for what ladies should or should not do, instead being vastly more interested in what she can do.

Psychic Talent:

When you look into someone’s eyes, you feel a connection, maybe for a second, or maybe for the rest of your life. For Shay, that contact opens a pathway for her abilities as a Mesmerist - not in the orgiastic ecstasies of Franz Mesmer, but of imprinting colour and texture to another’s perception and memory, from the subtle to the extreme. She can cause another to pull long-locked memories from their deepest, darkest wells, or put subtle spin on others’ perception of her, making Shay seem the way she wants a person to see her.

For example, if Shay were at a party, and one of the other guests - let’s assume a busybody or gossiper - had heard something about Shay’s exploits either on her own or with the Society, during the course of their conversation Shay could steer not just the conversation, but her partner’s very perception of the conversation. Without anything meaningful having been discussed, that person might walk away completely satisfied in Shay’s utter innocence of any untoward behavior - and, perhaps, even defend her should the subject arise later. She might also use this talent to manipulate the master of a college who, under other circumstances, might believe a woman had no place in the chemistry lab, and certainly not in anatomy theatre. There are very likely other extreme Mesmeric suggestions she could make to a person, or even place them entirely under her spell - but that is not something she’s ever tried, nor does she want to.

Skills:

Observation and Deduction - Shay is adept at gathering, organizing, and synthesizing vast quantities of information rapidly. This is most obvious in a party trick that she sometimes acquiesces to perform, but is useful for a dizzying array of tasks. Her only problem is that in many cases she can’t avoid collecting that information, even when the inevitable conclusions aren’t things she wants to know.

Scientific Achievement - As a dedicated student of various scientific disciplines (Including chemistry, anatomy, and poisons), Shay has developed a keen scientific mind. She believes strongly in experimentation, data recording, and tries to keep as many of her own biases away from her work. When appropriate, she’s even published several papers and monographs - though under a thorough pseudonym.

Crack Shot - Shay is an excellent shot with a variety of firearms, and would put her own skills against any of William Cody’s trick shooters any day of the week.

Polyglot - For reasons of her own, Shay speaks Arabic and German in addition to her native tongue, but struggles with the local Czech.

Violin - Shay plays the violin. Rather well, too!

Weapons/Fighting:

As mentioned above, Shay is an excellent shot, though this does not necessarily always translate into being a useful gunfighter or, indeed, that firearms are the correct tool for all situations. She has a certain skill with simple hand to hand combat, but any formal student of a martial art would be likely to best her two out of three. She has no skill at, or interest in, fencing.

History:

London, 1887
——

Snow fell in bright, fluffy puffs out of an iron-grey sky, already grubby with ash by the time they melted on cobblestones. The British Empire may have conquered half the world, but it had no control over the endless, greasy grime that coated every structure in sight. Shay Haimes trudged through the slush, her steps quick despite the uncertain footing, her back straight, fists clenched, each step splashing down through half-frozen slurry like a tiny cannonball. She looked up at a building number and turned sharply, yanking the door open, the heels of her boots banging up a flight of stairs. A door stood closed but unlocked at the landing, and she pulled it open with enough force to make it recoil off the wall as she stepped through, bumping into her back. Undaunted, she strode forward, pulling something out of her bag.

“What the hell is this? Shay said, slapping a magazine down on the man’s desk. Across the top, in black letters on a yellow banner, read “Beeton’s Christmas Annual.”

“And a merry Christmas to you as well, Miss Haimes,” the man said, picking the magazine up and looking at the cover, “And as for that, it’s twenty-five pounds I didn’t have before. Now sit down and shut the door, you’ll let worse things than the cold in. I’ll get us some tea, shall I?”

“Art,” Shay said, spinning the magazine back toward herself, then glowering at the man’s retreating back, “I told you these things in confidence. I didn’t expect you to remember them, let alone write them down. What if someone traces them back to me? To my family? My god, my sister would-”

“I’m sure I’ve no idea what you mean,” the man, Art, said, as he came back in with two mugs of steaming tea, perfuming the air with bergamot and oranges, “Here. A lovely blend from a new shop on the Queensway.”

“You’ll not distract me with tea,” Shay said, taking a sip, “…Though this may come close.”

“I thought it might,” Art said, taking a sip of his own, “Now, about the stories - they’re fluff, penny dreadfuls, something for the masses to enjoy while they shirk more productive tasks. There’s no substance there, an evening’s entertainment, nothing more.” He smiled, his voice jovial, playful.

Shay’s eyes narrowed.

“Come now, Miss Haines,” Art said, “I admit, I may have taken some liberties-“

“Couldn’t you have at least based the character on me?” Shay said with a sigh, “That would have at least been flattering.”

“A woman?” Art said, “Miss Haimes, you are aware I am trying to be paid for this work. Besides,” he said, forestalling a volcanic response, “I did.”

“You did no such thing!” Shay replied, “Unless you mean that he’s tall and thin and has dark hair, like every third person on the street. And the man is simply dreadful. He’s arrogant, condescending, has no care for the opinions of others, and insults those who think he’s remarkable. And this other fellow, he simply follow along like some sort of lost puppy. And these things he does, that he knows, they’re poppycock.”

“Miss Haimes,” Art said, his voice careful, “Do you recall the anatomists’ conference a couple of years ago?”

“Of course,” Shay said, confused.

“I seem to recall,” Art continued, “That a certain young lady, who had not been invited but nevertheless everyone was utterly convinced should be there, got into a rather heated debate with the keynote speaker on the subject of cyanide detection in cadavers or some such. I further recall that young lady being escorted from the premises, though no official censures ever appeared in the broadsheets.”

“His position was utter nonsense,” Shay said, leaning forward, setting her tea on the desk, “He had no real science, nothing but skill with a pointing stick. And he argued with me about whether or not it was going to rain.”

“His theories sounded perfectly sensible to me,” Art said mildly.

“That’s because you wouldn’t know methanol from marmalade,” Shay said, her tone a quick, harsh snap.

Art opened his mouth, then swallowed down is reply as a thoughtful look stole over him, “Wait, how did you know it would rain later that day?”

“Two men in the audience had new-ish boots,” Shay said.

“Boots.” Art said, “I see.”

Shay sighed, “They were older men sitting in the aisle across from me, both with slightly reddened knuckles. One kept rubbing his knee, and both were wearing boots - not completely new, but the leather hadn’t been stressed enough to be broken in. Rarely worn, then, but not kept in a closet and forgotten. Not fancy enough to be for special occasions, and listening to a lecture isn’t that kind of occasion to begin with. So, why would they have boots with little wear but still be on their mind enough to put them on? They were made by a very high-end manufacturer, lots of padding and hidden bracing, very comfortable for people who have sore joints, but also very expensive - not the kind of boots you would wear every day unless you were expansively wealthy. So now we know that the men were wearing those boots because their feet hurt, and we also know that pain isn’t constant because if it were, the boots would be more worn-in. So, what would make two different men’s feet and knees hurt in the same way at the same time? Clearly, the answer has to be dropping barometric pressure brought on by rain coming in, aggravating the men’s chronic arthritis, making their joints hurt and having them pull those boots out of the closet. Perfectly sensible.”

Art looked at Shay over his mug, took a long, slow sip. “Perfectly.”

Shay cleared her throat, “And that doesn’t change the fact that…” She rummaged on the table, flipped the magazine open, “Look, this one even takes place in Lauriston Gardens.”

“Nobody from Scotland Yard was involved with that, though,” Art said, “That was a purely private matter. A consultation, you could say.”

Shay sighed, “Why didn’t you at least tell me, Art?”

“I rather expected you would have, in your own eloquent and scathing way, told me not to,” Art replied, “Besides, look on the bright side of this. People are finally being interested in science, in the truth of things. They want hard reality, not fairy stories or folk cures. They want to believe in justice, to know that we can catch people who prey on those weaker than they are. These stories let them have that, make them believe that the world isn’t as dark and mysterious as they were raised to think. They want to believe, and things like this,” he tapped the magazine, “Are how they’ll get there.”

“So you’re taking the stories I told you and…giving people hope?” Shay said, “I don’t think you’re quite so high-minded as that.”

“Of course not,” Art said, “I’m also being well-compensated. They’ve already commissioned another of these, apparently this is selling quite well.”

“Surely you don’t mean to continue this,” Shay said, arching one eyebrow.

“I believe I’ve made my position sufficiently clear,” Art said, “Besides, I really don’t know why you’re so concerned about someone tracing these things back. As far as anyone knows, these are pure fiction. By the time I’m done with them, that’s damn close to the truth.”

“Art,” Shay said, her voice flat, “You put my name on the first page of the story.”

“I did no such thing,” Art said, and laid his hand over his heart.

Shay watched Art for a moment, then reached inside her jacket and pulled out a small, silver calling-card case. With a few deft motions, she withdrew a card, snapped the case closed, returned it to her pocket. She picked up one of Art’s pencils, underlined a few letters on the card, then slid the stiff paper rectangle over to him.

Art picked the card up, looked at the underlining, “Miss Haimes, do you have any idea what it’s like not to be as smart as you?” He leaned forward, “I’m reasonably clever, and you’re something else, something far beyond all the people who are going to read these stories. Nobody knows your connection. Nobody ever will. These will just be thrilling stories about a man and his chronicler,” Art paused, “Making people safer. And that reminds me.”

“Reminds you?” Shay said, suddenly nonplussed.

“I have a contact, over in Prague, by the name of Ware. He heads an…unorthodox collection of like-minded individuals who…how to put this delicately, investigate the paranormal. Root out fraudsters, find what the read dangers are. They…keep people safe. I was going to tell you over Christmas puddings, but I expect now is as good a time as any.”

“And what does that have to do with me?” Shay said.

“Well,” Art said, “They’re always on the lookout for new people to induct into their ranks. We both know the world is getting a little more strange, a little less civilized than we’d like it to be. They want to help with that. They want to solve the mysteries. Ah, here we are.” He pulled a letter out of a drawer, handed it over to Shay.

She pulled thick vellum out of a heavy, wax-sealed envelope, her eye running over heavy-lettered words.

“They want to meet you, Ms. Haimes,” Art said, “And I think that you’d do much for one another. Go, be part of something bigger, something important. Let him solve the little mysteries” and Art tapped the magazine, “And you’ll solve the ones that matter.”

Random:

I’m using “Mesmerism” in the same broad usage as “hypnotism,” though I think that usage really came about in the early 20th century. Still, I love the way “Mesmerism” looks, as a word. :3
I, as well, have fallen victim to this unusual practice. In fact, I only recently "woke up," which I believe is what you call the recovery process! :3

I'm finally done travelling. You'll hear from me soon. :3
@Cyrania - You'll have to forgive me, I've been extraordinarily busy today, so I may have missed something - but what, precisely, do you mean for Seris to have told T'ish? You can PM me to avoid cluttering up the OOC, but I'm about to get on a plane so I probably won't be able to reply for the next several hours.
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