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MOUTH OF THE RIVER — THORN - Printable Version

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MOUTH OF THE RIVER — THORN - skullcrow - 01-10-2019

NAME: Thorn.
AGE: Young adult. Between 3 to 4 years old.
GENDER: Unknown. Any pronouns. Perisex AMAB.
ORIENTATION: What is love? (Baby, don't hurt me).
RANK & ALLIANCE: Sunbearer [NP] of Sunhaven.

SPECIES: Siberian tiger [golden color morph].
APPEARANCE: The first thing you'll notice about Thorn is that they lack the orange fur and black stripes typical to their species. Instead, they boast a burnished golden coat that is equal parts honey and metal, vined with darker bronze streaks. The absence of black allows prominence to the shining white of their underfur. Their eyes share the same blue as the sky, and, depending on the light, may shade closer to summer or winter.

Thorn is tall, even for their kind, towering over all but the largest of natural creatures. They sport a sinewy, supple build that draws the eye with its subconscious grace—and not only that. At once handsome and beautiful, their exceptional form attracts many like moths to a light. Their body is unblemished, as though new.
FACE & VOICE CLAIM: Cody Fern as Michael Langdon in American Horror Story: Apocalypse.

PERSONALITY: Thorn is almost child-like, and not only in their lack of knowledge and experience. Driven by wide-eyed curiosity, they seek out novelty in a scramble to understand the world around them—and themself in the process. Without a frame of reference for social graces and intricacies, they resort to imitation, especially of the people they admire. Partnered with their eagerness to please, and given their underdeveloped worldview, they're easily influenced.

Ruled by their emotions and impulses, Thorn appears hypersensitive and uninhibited, having yet to learn self-restraint. They are startlingly black and white in their perception, categorizing each new experience as either "good" or "bad" with little room for nuance. Solitude distresses them to the point of panic, so they cling to those they trust with feverish obsession. Their one-track mind is invariably self-centered; altruism takes a backseat to their needs and wants unless it directly benefits them.

last updated: 1/11/2019