For Mord: 3, 12, 39
3. How do they put themselves to bed at night (reading, singing, thinking?)
More often than not, nights are spent restlessly, disturbed by many regrets and aching memories of friends now too far to reach. Reading is one way to ease the slip into sleep, content on keeping up with her mentor’s expectations, to one day become a fully fledged witch. After all, that fatal curiosity must see some release by being invested in overflowing books the like which some deem unconquerable. The dusty scent of aged pages adds a somewhat dreamy nostalgia that lulls her. In the end however it only takes a fire to sit next to, any warmth really, and she’s out like a light.
12. How do they deal with an itch found in a place they can’t quite reach?
Flexibility is wonderful thing that Mordessa lacks. An extension of her claw or nearby helps in that search for gratification. Which may or may not get her removed from places, the loose furs proving too much for some, should the urge arise.
39. How easy is it for them to ignore flaws in other people?
She herself acknowledges her own flaws, ruinously insecure. Flaws in others are looked over with ease, and it is that acceptance of the unnatural that makes her so amiable to the friends she has. Habits and emotional outbursts do not go ignored, as she tries her best to soothe them, and comes to understand their source in time. Even her mentor’s obsession and the abomination she made Mordessa has come to accept and live with. Disloyalty on the other hand, is something she will literally explode about.













