uu) Do they leave people on read accidentally or intentionally? // Rebecca
Most of the time it's accidental. Beck will be working on something around the farm, get a message, make sure it isn't Val or her parents in trouble and then will tell herself she's going to respond later. There have been a few times when she's been in disagreements with people and will intentionally leave them on read though.
FEMALE, SHE/HER. Hey, is that Jenna Coleman? No, that is just Rebecca “Beck” Moore around Cypress Cove. I heard they are 41 years old, and their birthday is November 11th, 1984. They rest their head in the Westside but they can mainly be found working as the owner of Moore Family Farm. Some say they are hardworking, nurturing, and resilient but can be stubborn, overprotective, and repressed. If they had a theme song, it would be “The House That Built Me” by Miranda Lambert. I hear they are native, either way Cypress Cove is home and welcomes you!
theme song: “The House That Built Me” by Miranda Lambert
PHYSICAL APPEARANCE:
face claim: Jenna Coleman
hair color: Dark Brown
eye color: Brown
height: 5’4”
weight: 124 lbs
tattoos: One small hidden tattoo on her ankle from college
piercings: Ears
scars: Faint scars along one arms and legs from years of farm work
FAMILY:
mother: Eleanor Moore
father: Thomas Moore
siblings: None
children: Valerie
Pet(s): A farm dog named Bandit, barn cats, and farm animals
significant relationship(s): Valerie's father
BIOGRAPHY:
Rebecca "Beck" Moore grew up knowing exactly what her life was supposed to look like. The Moore family farm had belonged to her family for generations, long before Cypress Cove became what it is now. Everyone expected she would inherit it one day, marry someone local, and settle into the same life every Moore before her had lived. For a little while, she thought she had escaped that future.
When she left Cypress Cove for college, it was the first time she had ever truly belonged to herself. She was young, ambitious, and finally allowed to imagine a life bigger than the farm roads and early mornings she’d always known. Then one impulsive night changed everything. By the time she figured out she was pregnant, panic had already settled in deeper than reason. Instead of telling Valerie’s father, Beck convinced herself it would be easier to disappear than risk humiliation, disappointment, or the possibility of being abandoned. So she dropped out of college and returned home to Cypress Cove carrying more fear than she would ever admit aloud. The girl who came back to the farm was not the same one who had left it.
Her parents helped her raise Valerie while Beck threw herself into the hard work hard on the farm. Somewhere along the way, survival became routine. Routine became sacrifice. Sacrifice became her entire identity. By the time her parents moved into an assisted living facility in Florida near Eleanor’s siblings, the farm had become fully Beck’s responsibility. Equipment started to break faster than it could be replaced. The bills piled up quietly in drawers. Seasons grew harsher. The farm survived mostly because Beck refused to let it die.
Valerie grew up beside her instead of behind her. The two became more like a team than simply mother and daughter, waking before sunrise to feed animals, repair fencing, and keep the farm running together. Beck loves her daughter more fiercely than anything in this world, but that love often comes tangled up with fear. She sees pieces of herself in Valerie constantly. The same restless heart. The same impulsive streak. The same tendency to love with her whole chest before stopping to think about the consequences. Which is exactly why Greyson Harper worries her so much.
Beck has known Greyson most of his life. She remembers the boy running through fields with Valerie at his heels and knows how long her daughter has cared about him. Part of her genuinely likes him. She sees the loyalty in him. The protectiveness. The softness most people overlook. But she also sees the instability in him just as clearly. His reputation, the recent arrest, the recklessness beneath the charm. To Beck, Greyson looks dangerously similar to the kind of person who can change the course of someone’s life with one bad decision. And Beck knows better than most how quickly that can happen. More than anything, she wants Valerie to have choices she never believed she had herself. Even if part of her quietly fears what will happen to both the farm and her own heart if Valerie ever decides to leave it behind.