Subject: You are not alone
Author:
Posted on: 2013-05-08 15:30:00 UTC

I'm going to name-replace for the sake of clarity here.

Hmmm... lets see, out of the main characters in just one story-world, we have:

1) The Narrator, a girl whose childhood wandering around the country with her (probably bipolar) single mother resulted in her not having any friends until the age of seventeen, after which she blamed herself for not being there when her mother attempted to commit suicide. Her mother survived, but was critically brain damaged from the amount of time that she spent without oxygen. She does not remember her daughter. The Narrator feels simultaneously guilty that she hadn't gotten home sooner and guilty that she sometimes wishes that she'd gotten there later, because her mother as she knew her is gone. The Narrator flees her problems by running away with The Wizard.

2) The Wizard had a happy childhood with her sisters, the Knight and The Genius. However, while she was staying with her aunt and her childhood friend The Inventor during a middle-school break, she and The Inventor decide to have a look around one of the local abandoned houses. It turns out that The Inventor's ancestors managed to create not only one immortal, Frankenstein-type monster, but four of them, three of which are completely loyal to the fourth. None of them have any conception of the real world, having been locked in the house for decades following the death of their original creator, and they hold both children captive and cook up a scheme to get their "father" back, which involves sacrificing the children. When the children try to escape, The Inventor suffers an extremely nasty concussion and The Wiizard is injured as well, leading her to panic and kill all four of the constructs with fire. (This leads to her parents taking her home and to her eventually traveling far away to the school where she meets The Narrator.)

3) The Inventor, in addition to the above, was severely injured by the blow to the head (and the hours and hours before anybody found them,) and now, even in adulthood, suffers from intermittent, crippling migraines and loss of motor function on his left side. Despite this, he managed to recover enough in the four years after the injury that he could go to college and live a somewhat normal life... until his mother died while he was away at school and his inventions were dismissed as being impossible to create. Eventually, he got desperate enough to test one of his devices on himself...

4) The Knight still doesn't know what happened to her twin sister, The Wizard, and is perfectly ready to fight her older sister, The Genius, if she ever implies again that the fire might have been The Wizard's fault. Since neither of her sisters are fit to inherit the family's responsibilities (namely, negotiating with other families that have wizards or land,) she becomes the default heir and has to take up all the responsibilities that The Wizard abandons when she runs away with The Narrator. (Other than that, though, The Knight has had it relatively easy until the story actually starts.)

5) The Genius lost her best (and almost her only) friend when her younger sister, The Wizard, nearly died. The two have not spoken since The Wizard's fateful run-in with the Frankenstein creatures, almost a decade ago when the story starts. The Wizard, however, does not know that her big sister investigated the scene of the incident and was able to determine that she started the fire herself, but not why. This puts a lot of strain on The Genius, because she doesn't want to admit that her sister could kill, especially at age thirteen... but all available evidence suggests that she did.

Okay, that's enough to be getting on with, I think, but the secondary characters certainly get enough grief. Let's see, I have a soldier from the mages'-war who became a cop so that she could recapture the adrenaline, a necromanceress who was wrongfully accused of using black magic and who was condemned without a trial to a slow death by having her magic removed (she clearly lived, but yeah, enduring any of that process wasn't fun,) a guy who was forcibly suspended in time for fifteen years and who can't ever go home even after he avenged his father's death, because he's fifteen years younger than he should be, and another guy who is currently watching his elderly father succumb to Alzheimers, being daily mistaken by his dad for his dead, decade-older war hero brother.

And this group right here? They're some of my favorite characters ever, and I've had them for nearly four years now. I'm not even going to go into the ones that I got this year. (Also, I'm aware that all gets confusing, but there are multiple stories in this world, so it fits together better with more information, I promise.)

So, what's the worst thing anybody here has ever done to a character?

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