MICAIAH FALKOV
Character Name: Micaiah Falkov
Faceclaim: Ben Barnes
Age: 39
Gender: Bigender
Pronouns: They/He
City/country/place of origin: A commune called St. George in Texas
Date of arrival: December 2012
Profession, if any: Gardener/Priest
Bio: Micaiahâs entire life happened within the confines of the Texas commune of St. George. The commune, created by Micaiahâs father Abraham Falkov, was the base of operations for the religious cult called âEyes of Edenâ. Abraham, the leader, and self-declared prophet, claimed to have foreseen Micaiahâs birth and declared the child to be his heir.
Micaiahâs childhood consisted mostly of studying the scripture and learning the teachings of the cult. Being revered by the larger community as the prophesied child, expectations were placed on them from a young age to one day be the communities leader, to be the one to fulfill their goal of returning to the Garden of Eden. Micaiah is open about the things that were done to them in the name of faith, though they are honest that they donât remember all of it. They remember the services and sermons, they remember people looking upon them with pure bliss and reverence. Other things they canât properly recall - such as the self-flagellation or the times they would be isolated in a dark room for hours on end, so they could pray and receive godâs message. How they lost one of their eyes and their legs is completely dark in their mind either - they canât recall the weeks that led up to those events, or what exactly came after. They just know that losing their legs was an accident - they know that losing their eye wasnât. Micaiah remembers having doubts as they got older - doubts both about the teachings of the Eyes of Eden and their fatherâs leadership. But, unable to really voice these doubts, the years of indoctrination weighing heavily on them, they remained quiet. It was then, that they were pulled onto Panopticon Island. They remember being at a sermon in one moment and on the Island in the next. Years of living on Panopticon Island have, in a way, disillusioned them. They are still involved in their faith, trying to be a spiritual guide, but even though they wish to remain loyal to those who raised them, they cannot deny the damage they endured. They have a lot to unlearn as well as a lot to learn.














