warmare: (Default)
Hayame ([personal profile] warmare) wrote2018-07-08 12:06 am

applications

PLAYER

NAME: Rizu
CONTACT: [plurk.com profile] stormcoming, PM
OVER 18? Y
CURRENT CHARACTER: n/a

CHARACTER

NAME: Hayame
CANON: JINBA
CANON POINT: part one, ch. 11
AGE: 18-20 (not specified in canon, but considered a young adult of her species, who mature around 16)
SPECIES: Jinba (Centaur)

INFORMATION: (Since this series lacks a wiki, allow me to try and summarize. First two paragraphs are the broad strokes of the series and Hayame herself, and the bullet points provide a brief timeline for her canon involvement.)

The world of JINBA is that of Japan- the difference between this setting and the historical one being the existence of jinba, (essentially centaurs). For centuries man and jinba lived in harmony, rarely meeting... until humans began to expand their territory and discovered war. Once the thought was born to harness their power, the peaceful race of jinba became nothing but tools to humanity. JINBA’s Part One takes place towards the end of the medieval Warring States period. Warlords locked in power struggles with each other over issues of land, politics, and control of key resources has led to high demand for military forces, particularly the prized jinba.

Hayame is a jinba born in the breeding stables of an outpost in Japan's northeastern region. She has survived to adulthood as a rare intact specimen by proving her loyalty to her master as a "good horse", and has been trained since childhood as a warrior, a hunter, and an overseer of the members of her own kind who are kept more like beasts, with their arms amputated to make them reliant on human masters.

In the course of the series up until the canon point she is being brought from:

◘ Hayame is introduced before Exhibition Day, a series of rituals held before the year's jinba auction at the stable
◘ Her skills are evaluated by potential buyers, who note that a "mare like her" (skilled, obedient, handsome) can fetch as much as a small fief
◘ She is noted to be "a stallion hater", and buyers remark that though she is a very skilled archer, she is unfortunately a mare, decreasing the likelihood of her being acknowledged as/bought to be a warrior
◘ Hayame is tasked by the stablemaster with leading a team to recapture the prized armless mount Kohibari and the recently captured mountain stallion Matsukaze he had been attempting to break
◘ Desperate to prove her worth, trying to ensure she's bought by a military leader for battle instead of as a broodmare or mount, Hayame, her brother Yubari, and a team of humans pursue the jinba to Mt. Tsurugi
◘ Though she does recapture them, and captures Matsukaze's sister Koume as well, Hayame finds herself taken as a prisoner on the return trip when they are attacked by young jinba from a hidden village in the mountains
◘ Though her brother survives and tracks them, Hayame commands him to leave her imprisoned and report about the village
◘ Judging herself not worthy of freedom due to her failure, she stays behind to sabotage things before her master arrives or die trying
◘ Hayame attempts to kill Matsukaze by diving into a waterfall while tied to him, but is ashamed to find that not only does he save her, she is relieved to be alive
◘ Matsukaze and Hayame discover that the leader of the young jinba village has been cannibalizing human flesh for food
◘ Despite her reservations, she allows Matsukaze to handle this, and he dissuades the young jinba away from his darker path
◘ Hayame is released, and asked to teach the younger jinba archery
◘ She gets a taste of what it is like to live without a master, to be around free members of her own kind, to form bonds...
◘ But then her master arrives with a giant hunting party in tow
◘ Matsukaze comes up with a plan to lure the hunting party below a cliff face and use gunpowder to trigger a rockslide, and in order to cleanse her dishonor/make up for her mistake of not admitting to the village earlier what had happened, Hayame volunteers to die alongside Matsukaze by bringing him the torch to spark the needed explosion while the others escape

CHARACTER PITCH: Hayame is introduced as an antagonist, a hunter of the escaped MCs, and then becomes a sort-of ally and potential friend to them after she's captured and shown that there might be another way to live. She is a character ruled by denial, refusing to see until the end that she herself a slave in a system that uses her to control weaker members of her own species, and desperation to walk the path of the warrior, destined for the auction block where the usual options for a mare are mount, broodmare, sexual "companion", or armless battle fodder.

Her turning point comes when, after attempting to commit a murder-suicide, the main character not only saves her life, he points out that she was relieved not to die and offers to help her discover a new way to live, without human masters or buyers. Essentially, she gets a chance at a redemption arc in canon... But just like how she failed in her mission to capture the MCs, she ends up failing to trust them and the better future they offer her, and she becomes the instrument of their downfall when actions she set in motion her first day of capture come back to to roost. So essentially... "cruel and cold-hearted miniboss with a dark Stockolm Syndrome backstory finally starts to learn to love and hope and de-brainwash, but bc her whole life is a tragic comedy of self-sabotage failures she ruins her chance for a happy ending and has to settle for honor suicide".

POWERS: Hayame is physically very strong by virtue of her species' biology and the physical training she has undertaken since childhood. However, since none of her abilities come from magic/supernatural sources and still fall within a reasonable range, I do not believe they need nerfing at this time.

Her "powers" include:
↣ max ~40km/h+ speed on land (for short bursts)
↣ master at archery (specifically the daikyu long bow)
↣ proficient with blade and naginata polearm
↣ above human levels of physical strength (capable of lifting a grown man off his feet with one hand, crushing bones under her hooves or hands, carrying hundreds of pounds on her equine back, utilizing a bow over six feet tall with a 100+ pound draw weight with no sign of strain, etc.)

QUESTIONNAIRE

What is the worst or most malicious thing your character has ever done? How do they feel about it now? Was this sort of action typical of them?
More than one single action, Hayame's worst actions have been participating in enslaving members of her race in order to advance her own standing in human-dominated society. When she was sent out to recapture two escaped jinba, not only did she succeed in that task, but she also oversaw capture of a female relative harboring the escapees, clearly stating that the other woman could be taken back to the stables to serve as a broodmare (a fate she herself feared above all others). When she was captured and taken to a hidden village of orphaned jinba, she send her brother back to their master with the location of the village knowing full well that it would lead to the capture and enslavement of the many young children who lived there, including infants. This was the only way she saw forward for herself in a world where service to human masters seemed the only path out of her own mistreatment, but it was still undeniably cruel and callous. Now that she has lived among free jinba for a short while and seen the possibility of other paths, she doesn't... quite regret it, not yet, because at the time that was all she could do to survive, but she has began to look upon those actions as more shameful, as disgusting acts committed by a weak woman worthy of scorn.

What is the most altruistic or selfless thing your character has ever done? How do they feel about it now? Was this sort of action typical of them?
The most altruistic thing Hayame ever did was decide to commit suicide in order to help trigger a landslide that would swallow a posse of human hunters and allow for a village of jinba orphans to escape. However, as selfless and noble as that sounds... It's worth noting that her motives weren't entirely Good. In a way, it was expected, because Hayame was raised on and devoted herself to the ideals of a medieval Japanese warrior, which means that she has a lot of opinions on honor. Judging that she was the one responsible for getting the village on her master's radar in the first place, she was driven by these ideals to see her death as the only way to cleanse her dishonor and wipe away her personal failings. It also was the "better" option, when the other was returning to her master a failure and a traitor, potentially to be turned into an Armless or sold off to a crueler owner. Her could-be lover Matsukaze being the one who would carry the gunpowder and asking for a volnteer to carry the torch also had a lot to do with her volunteering, as he was the spearhead of her change towards being a better person. But as to how she feels about it... She is relieved that the jinba orphans she had come to start to feel affectionate for could live on free... but at the same time, she is also selfishly relieved for herself, that she could go out in a blaze of glory with the man she wished she'd been brave enough to love and fix her mistakes in one fell swoop.

What do they desire above all else? How far would they go to accomplish their goals or fulfill those desires? Do they have lines they wouldn't cross?
This is a tricky one, because up until maybe a month ago, Hayame had only ever desired one thing: to prove herself as a capable warrior and be sold to a warlord where she might distinguish herself in their service. However, that goal was simply the best of available options to her when she was destined for the auction block either way, and the other options were broodmare, sexual "companion", or armless fodder. There really wasn't any line she wouldn't cross to accomplish this, including enslaving members of her own race, taking orders without question from a human master, or killing people who get in her way. However, in the last days of her life, a new wish had started to form in her hearts, for a life lived free among people who actually cared for one another, and maybe, just maybe, someone who might love her. ... And then she ruined it, so!

GAME DETAILS

LEGACY: Firebrand. Though Hayame was bound very strictly by the rules of her society/traditions, and did follow many of them... this was largely to do with her having been raised and indoctrinated by her enslavers. At her core she has always chafed under those rules, resented the limits placed upon her by her race in a world dominated by humans, by her status as property, and particularly by her gender in a rather misogynistic society. In pursuit of her goals she is willing to sacrifice almost anything, even her own life if need be. To those who are not her masters in a slavery system she has never not been honest in her opinion of them, even when it makes her hated, and in order to prove herself she has always been required to make bold choices and take risks. Her capacity for the negative, for grudges and resentment and hatred, are just as strong as her drive to survive and succeed, and so to run afoul of her good graces... she will not forget, nor likely forgive.

INTRODUCTORY SECT: Hayame's intrinsic nature up until canon begins is well-suited with Kenoma, driven by negativity, desperate to prove herself to authority who might grant her recognition, and hating the world and the circumstances she was born into. However, at the near-end of the manga I am pulling her from, Hayame has just reached the climax of her redemption arc, having offered to sacrifice her life alongside her could-be love interest Matsukaze in order to save a village of orphaned jinba from human enslavement. The time she spent as a sort-of-POW in the village, influenced primarily by Matsukaze but also others of her kind born free, opened her eyes to the possibility of a better, brighter, and more hopeful world, a world in which she didn't have to suffer, serve a master, or give up her life to cleanse her dishonor. Because of this, I think her budding desire to be a better person and her feelings of obligation to Matsukaze and the others would lead her to rejecting Kenoma for Pleroma and trying to honor the hope she was offered. Emphasis on trying.

SUITABILITY: Hayame's entire story arc in her canon is about redemption and the struggle to live and hope in a world where you have every right to despair and give up. Some give up their lives, others their humanity, and Hayame does both. Since this game seems set to drive characters to choose between despair and hope/dark and light, something that Hayame struggles with a lot in the story, it seemed like an interesting place to explore her character further, especially addressing the idea of whether her swing towards becoming a better person will be sustainable long-term and without her core supporter.

Pleroma sect fits the person she wants to be, was trying to be, but failure through self-sabotage has dogged her every step in life, and I'm very interested in seeing if she will end up succeeding or failing yet again. I do not have concrete plans to change sects at this time, but I view it as a very possible outcome depending primarily on (1) if she can manage to connect in a meaningul way to any other characters and (2) what sort of "Truth" they end up discovering thoughout the course of the game story. I will be the first to admit that it is very difficult for Hayame to connect with other people. Her sense of honor and proper conduct are rigid and medieval, she's quick to be insulted and quicker to lash out, and she'll be completely out of her depth with the concept of other worlds, which will make her defensive and on edge. But I like slow burn and the long haul, so I'm most interested in playing out the arc of a woman desperately trying to be good, trying to connect with others, trying to believe in being able to help her world/the people left behind somehow... but constantly dealing with the temptation of falling back into old patterns of distrust, negativity, despair, and resignation. Whether she actually does fall into Kenoma or not... Well, what's one more failure? It would be even crazier if she managed to succeed, though...

SAMPLES:
SAMPLE 1; an attempted (failed) recruitment
SAMPLE 2; an attempted (failed) bonding








---------- old Slumscape app

PLAYER
NAME: Rizu
CONTACT: [plurk.com profile] stormcoming or PM
OVER 18? Y
CURRENT CHARACTERS: none

CHARACTER
NAME: Hayame
CANON: JINBA
CANON POINT: part one, ch. 10

BACKGROUND: The world of Jinba is that of Japan- the difference between this setting and the historical one being the existence of jinba, (essentially centaurs). For centuries man and jinba lived in harmony, rarely meeting... until humans began to expand their territory and discovered war. Once the thought was born to harness their power, the peaceful race of jinba became nothing but tools to humanity. Jinba’s Part One takes place towards the end of the Warring States period. Warlords locked in power struggles with each other over land, politics, and control of key resources has led to high demand for military forces, particularly the prized jinba.

Hayame is a jinba born in the breeding stables of an outpost in Japan's northeastern region. She has survived to adulthood intact by proving her loyalty to her master as a "good horse", and has been trained since childhood as a warrior, a hunter, and an overseer of the members of her own kind who are kept more like beasts, with their arms amputated to make them reliant on human masters.

In the course of the series up until the canon point she is being brought from:

◘ Hayame is introduced before Exhibition Day, a series of rituals held before the year's jinba auction at the stable
◘ Her skills are evaluated by potential buyers, who note that a "mare like her" (skilled, obedient, handsome) can fetch as much as a small fief
◘ She is noted to be "a stallion hater", and buyers remark that though she is a very skilled archer, she is unfortunately a mare, decreasing the likelihood of her being acknowledged as/bought to be a warrior
◘ Hayame is tasked by the stablemaster with leading a team to recapture escaped armless Kohibari and the mountain stallion Matsukaze he had been attempting to break
◘ Desperate to prove her worth, trying to ensure she's bought by a military leader for battle instead of as a broodmare or mount, she, her brother Yubari, and a team of humans pursue them to Mt. Tsurugi
◘ Though she does recapture them, as well as captures Matsukaze's sister Koume, Hayame finds herself taken as a prisoner on the return trip when they are attacked by young jinba from a hidden village in the mountains
◘ Though her brother survives and tracks them, Hayame commands him to leave her and report about the village
◘ Judging herself not worthy of freedom due to her failure, she stays behind to sabotage things before her master arrives, or die trying
◘ Hayame attempts to kill Matsukaze by diving into a waterfall while tied to him, but is ashamed to find that not only does he save her, she is relieved to be alive
◘ Matsukaze and Hayame discover that the leader of the young jinba village has been cannibalizing human flesh for food
◘ Despite her reservations, she allows Matsukaze to handle this, and he dissuades the young jinba away from his darker path
◘ Hayame is released, and asked to teach the younger jinba archery
◘ She gets a taste of what it is like to live without a master, to be around free members of her own kind, to form bonds...
◘ But then her master arrives with a giant hunting party in tow

SUITABILITY: Hayame has a very rigid sense of right and wrong that is heavily influenced by the ideals of strength and honor, but she has already had her worldview turned upside down in canon with the recent realization that the way she's been living her life may have been wrong all along. Though this does leave her in a somewhat fragile, emotional place, it at least means that she's now slightly more inclined to try and see things from others' point of view than she used to be. (Slightly, she's still inclined towards snap judgements and rigidity.) When it comes to handling horror elements in game, Hayame has been raised since childhood to be a warrior by those who treated her as less than human, as merchandise to be sold. She is well used to the idea of doing violence, and to the idea of an unfair and cruel world. She also comes from a version of medieval Japan, so she is very familiar with stories of youkai and is superstitious enough to believe they could possibly really exist. The biggest detriment to Hayame's suitability in game is the fact that she comes from a canonpoint in which she is feeling crushed by the weight of her failures and betrayals, and is haunted by suicidal ideation fueled by a cultural emphasis on suicide as a method of cleansing one's honor. However, I plan to use the youkai element of the game to keep any suicidal urges in check/prevent it from happening, since the youkai in the characters' bodies require them to stay alive. Even though she may think of it or attempt it, even though she's willing to do it... Hayame doesn't want to die. She just needs to figure out how to live. ... Even if it's in Slumscape.

QUESTIONNAIRE:

Your character finds an injured okami deep in the woods. Its leg is broken, trapped under a fallen tree, but it’s clearly in good health otherwise. They know this type of youkai is able to discern the morality of their past actions, and can turn hostile to them based off that judgment. What do they do?

A: Hayame steers clear of the injured youkai. Even if its a youkai and not technically the animal she's more familiar with, wolves are one of the few predators that pose a risk to jinba, so she isn't keen on going near a wolf that might have a pack nearby. In addition, it's leg is broken, and to her that means that even if she tried to free it, how is it supposed to survive in the wild properly? It will just be a burden until likely being abandoned by its pack or starving slowly because of an inability to compete for resources. That thought would tempt her to kill the creature to put it out of future misery (and then net herself a useful pelt to use to keep warm) but if it can sense the morality of what she's done in her life... She's had to face the fact that she helped consign members of her own race to human subjugation, amputation, and abuse, betrayed the only people who offered her actual love and freedom... so it seems wiser not to get close enough for it to judge her. She's already judging herself.

Your character's worst enemy asks to meet alone by moonlight in a remote location, to discuss temporarily banding together against a larger threat. How do they respond to the invitation?

A. Hayame refuses. How is she supposed to trust that her worst enemy, someone who has likely insulted her, potentially tried to hurt or kill her in the past, would meet her alone and then let her leave unscathed? How is she even supposed to trust that they wouldn't stab her in the back while they worked together, or the second teamwork was no longer needed? If a large threat has appeared, she would much rather cast her lot in with people she trusts... and she trusts almost no one. Becoming her friend is extremely difficult, but surely there will be people she grudgingly respects or can tolerate who she could team up with instead.

Your character has the option to lead a rampaging oni away from path where it would find and attack a lone, inhabited farmhouse. However, the only road they can distract it down leads to the city, where it will inevitably do more damage. What do they choose to do?

A. Hayame leads the oni into the city. She would argue that it isn't out of concern for the farmhouse inhabitants per se, merely the fact that the city is more likely to have fighters and guards capable of taking down the rampaging spirit. She would attempt to take it down herself before even making this choice, but if it became obvious that she was no match for it alone then she would attempt to bait it into following her somewhere it could be surrounded or confronted with multiple enemies.

A shrine of a powerful god offers your character a unique boon crafted to overcome the biggest challenge they’re currently facing. In return, it only asks to be able to possess your character for a 24 hour span of its choosing, which they will not necessarily get warning for. How do they feel about the exchange, and more importantly, do they accept it?

A. Hayame refuses. There is no honor nor merit in overcoming a challenge if she doesn't do it under her own power, and there is no telling what a god could or wants to do with her while possessed. Her sense of responsibility would not absolve her of any actions committed in her body, with her face, even if they weren't done of her will. There's only one thing a god could offer her to make her consider saying "yes" to that sort of deal, and they would have to promise to directly intervene in the world and save the village of orphaned jinba that she regrets betraying in her own world. Even then, she would still be hesitant, afraid that the possession could become some sort of monkey's paw situation where she ends up ruining what she tried to help, but. Just the offer of overcoming a personal challenge isn't enough for her to risk giving up bodily autonomy, something she's only recently gained since leaving behind her life in the stables.

YOUKAI: Okami

INVENTORY:
[1] bow (daikyu, non-magical)
[1] quiver
[3] sets of arrows
[1] dagger (tanto, non-magical)

SAMPLES:

SAMPLE 1 (Slumscape TDM)
SAMPLE 2 (Slumscape TDM)

* If these more recent TDM threads are not long enough, please consider referencing threads from when I played her in games previously, here or here.







---------- old El Nysa app

OOC


Handle: Rizu
Contact: stormcoming (plurk), DM
Over 18? Y
Characters Played: N/A

THE CHARACTER


Character Name: Hayame
Series: Jinba
Canon Point: part one, ch. 10
Character Age: 18-20 (estimated, not stated clearly in canon)

Background: The world of Jinba is that of Japan- the difference between this setting and the historical being the existence of jinba, (essentially centaurs). For centuries man and jinba lived in harmony, rarely meeting... until humans discovered war. Once the thought was born to harness their power... the peaceful race of jinba became nothing but tools to humanity.

Jinba’s Part One takes place towards the end of the Warring States period. Warlords locked in power struggles with each other over land, politics, and control of key resources has led to high demand for military forces, particularly the prized jinba.

Hayame is a jinba born in the stables of an outpost in Japan's northeastern region. She has survived to adulthood by proving her loyalty to her master as a "good horse", introduced during the rituals held before the year's auction. A "mare like her" (loyal, obedient, handsome) fetches as much as a small fief, but proving herself an excellent archer does not change the fact that buyers seem to view it as a pity that she is female.

When the newly-captured Matsukaze and the armless Kohibari escape, it is Hayame who is tasked with leading a team to pursue them. She views this as her opportunity to show off her skills and worth, trying to ensure she's bought by a military leader as a warrior instead of as a broodmare or mount. Though she does recapture them, Hayame finds herself taken as a prisoner when they are attacked by young jinba from a hidden village in the mountains. Though her brother survives and tracks them, Hayame commands him to leave her and report about the village. Judging herself not worthy of freedom due to her failure, she stays behind to sabotage things before her master arrives, or die trying.

Though Hayame attempts to kill Matsukaze by diving into a waterfall while tied to him, she is ashamed to find that not only does he save her, but she is relieved to be alive. Hayame's life begins to change. She gets a taste of what it is like to live without a master, to be around free members of her own kind, to form bonds. She’s given hope that perhaps there might be a life out there that she never could have imagined for herself.

Until her master arrives with an army in tow… and so does the Storm.

Personality: Hayame has lived her life consumed with the goal of surviving with her arms intact to reach a point where she might be sold as a warrior and not be condemned to life as mount or broodmare. To this end, the tenets of a Japanese warrior have been the most important thing for her to live by. Chief among these are strength, honor, pride, and loyalty, traits that she has cultivated ever since she was old enough to realize they were what would give her the best chance in the slavery system jinba live in amongst humans.

Hayame is not a nice person. Or rather, she certainly doesn't come off that way. As part of her goal she has cultivated a cold, stoic exterior, and in battle or on missions is capable of ruthlessness and cruelty, having seen no problem at all in not only recapturing escaped jinba, but in capturing new ones and condemning them to a life of slavery and perhaps amputation or death in order to advance her own standing with her masters. Having been hand-raised by humans (and not with a gentle hand, either, when she tries to teach her own students she yells and hits them after it's suggested she just "teach how you were taught"), she has absorbed a lot of their way of thinking, and that includes jinba inferiority and a certain justification for their use.

She is not a talkative person, tending to keep to short, to-the-point speech, and also has a temper she struggles to keep in check at times. When she is in control of her situation she appears aloof and icy, but when she isn't, she has a bad habit of lashing out and not being able to reign in her words or actions.

Hayame is capable of kindness, if given time. Still learning to allow herself to form bonds or appear soft/weak, Hayame can be somewhat frustrating to deal with in the interim as she struggles through trying to figure out what to do with a "normal" life. In the compound she had a reputation as a "stallion hater", likely stemming from her distaste at the idea of being sold as a broodmare and her jealousy over the fact that male jinba have more opportunities than females, but she is slowly overcoming her general distrust and harsh judgement of men. She has also proven herself capable of some degree of naivety, caught off guard and shocked by simple things like a couple who have only known each other a short while becoming intimate, a far cry from the highly ritualized and affection-less environment she grew up in.

Above all else, Hayame is determined. Once she's dedicated herself to something she serves it unwavering... or at least, she did. It was easy to be a "warrior" when she was the strongest in the pack, and easy to be cold and aloof when you are surrounded by people who you know would lop off your arms at the slightest sign of weakness, but she begins to undergo a bit of a shift when taken prisoner in the jinba village.

Most recently, she's discovered that she isn't nearly as strong as she thought she was. Having failed in her mission, having disgraced herself and her masters, the code of the warrior demands her death, either by suicide or in a battle for the sake of regaining her honor. But Hayame is absolutely shattered by the realization, hanging off the edge of a raging waterfall by a single rope, that she is afraid. That when she is saved, she is relieved. Though she is disgusted by this weakness, it's a new discovery about herself she's having to deal with.

That doesn't mean, however, that she isn't still looking to die. Hayame is torn between two worlds, the enslavement she has always known, and the freedom and acceptance she's been offered that seems too good to be true. It is difficult for her to trust, unable to after her upbringing, and so she does not know how to accept it or give it- not really. But with recent canon events, facing the fact that she is about to be responsible for the destruction of something she's growing to love, is once again feeling the pull of death to cleanse her dishonor and make her apologies for her actions.

In fact, in later events, she will manage to find her chance, committing suicide in order to cause an explosion that will block the mountain pass and let the villagers escape. Dying for a cause and to absolve herself through sacrifice is not a passing fancy for her, and will likely cause problems in El Nysa unless she finds a reason to live.

Powers/Abilities:
↣ 40km/h+ speed on land
↣ proficient with sword, spear
↣ master at archery
↣ physical strength (capable of lifting a man off his feet with one hand, carrying hundreds of pounds on her equine back, utilizing a bow over six feet tall with a 100+ pound draw weight with no sign of strain, etc.)

Power Nerfs (if applicable): N/A

Inventory:
[1] bow (non-magical)
[1] quiver
[1] set of arrows
[1] shirt
[1] animal hide wrap

Incentives: The only thing Hayame would be interested in is the safety of the jinba in the village she was plucked from. If the powers that be in El Nysa guarantee their safety and imply that it could be possible to save them from death, then that will be enough to keep Hayame in line. She doesn't care about wealth, personal happiness, her own safety, or other motivations at this point, so while it won't exactly leave her thinking well of the Orbiters... she will serve them devotedly with her very life as long as they're her only option to regain her honor and save the people she betrayed.


SAMPLES


TDM Toplevel