Yorg, PM me if you find any conflicting details with this sheet. ;]
Tried to keep it brief, but that's often a struggle for me... Also, she's a bit different than my last character, non?
I have to get to bed now, but tomorrow (my one day off!) I'll try to get through those sheets. Again, start without me if you want.
Tried to keep it brief, but that's often a struggle for me... Also, she's a bit different than my last character, non?
I have to get to bed now, but tomorrow (my one day off!) I'll try to get through those sheets. Again, start without me if you want.
Name: Gladys Dubois
Appearance: Dubois is a petite woman, her back perpetually straitened in dignity. Although she is ageing in years, former beauty is evident in her features, from her slender face and pointed nose, to the softness of her skin; however, the effects of recent troubles are growing more prominent. Her lips are always drawn tightly, faced with wrinkles at their corner. Her brow is often furrowed as well, and laugh lines that once decorated her face pleasurably now only accentuate the years of building stress. Though she is 51 years old, her visual age is at least half a decade more.
As the wife and mother of a highly prosperous and influential family and corporation, her appearance is always presented neatly and professionally. She often sports a business jacket and blouse with a knee-length skirt, over skin-tone pantyhose and low work heels. Dark brown hair peppered with grey is pulled back into a comfortable bun, away from her dark solid eyes.
Powers: Dubois has been labelled as the Illusionist, a visual artist of the mind. She is able to tap into the minds of others and alter their perception of reality, essentially created hallucinations as she sees fit. This takes great emotional strain, though Dubois tries to conceal it.
Her most powerful mind inflictions occur when she has a deep insight into the mind of her target. By simple skin contact, she is able to access the memories and senses of another. A grazing touch can provide her with a year of visions; a handshake can deliver as long as an entire childhood; and a prolonged hug could give her fourty years of worthy events. By utilizing these memories, Dubois is able to reflect them unto the mind of another individual with near-perfect scents, tastes, etc.
She is unable to create any memory she has not gained, but she can bend them (by enlarging objects, brightening scenes, etc.) Her memory for her own life, however, is beginning to fade.
Biography: Gladys Dubois was born the daughter of a wealthy family in Quebec, Canada. The only child of a lawyer and a businessman, she was often left to the care of a nanny or herself. Busying herself with the family library, she taught herself complex mathematics and sciences, and declared 'gifted' by the age eight. Throughout school, she frequently associated herself with other wealthy and powerful individuals.
After graduating university at the top of her class in businesses and economics, Gladys soon caught the attention of a young businessman named Dunstan. They were soon married, the heads of a multi-million dollar corporation that bore branches from the Americas, to Europe, to even Asia. Since then, the company (which specializes in the exploration of genetic and infectious diseases) has prospered phenomenally, giving the couple the primary influence of human health research and development in the United States.
At the age of twenty-eight, Gladys gave birth to her first son, and another the next year. A month following her fourty-eighth birthday, Dunstan passed away from a long-term heart disease. Throughout his final years and following his death, she has become a more withdrawn individual, becoming increasingly absorbed in her work.
Appearance: Dubois is a petite woman, her back perpetually straitened in dignity. Although she is ageing in years, former beauty is evident in her features, from her slender face and pointed nose, to the softness of her skin; however, the effects of recent troubles are growing more prominent. Her lips are always drawn tightly, faced with wrinkles at their corner. Her brow is often furrowed as well, and laugh lines that once decorated her face pleasurably now only accentuate the years of building stress. Though she is 51 years old, her visual age is at least half a decade more.
As the wife and mother of a highly prosperous and influential family and corporation, her appearance is always presented neatly and professionally. She often sports a business jacket and blouse with a knee-length skirt, over skin-tone pantyhose and low work heels. Dark brown hair peppered with grey is pulled back into a comfortable bun, away from her dark solid eyes.
Powers: Dubois has been labelled as the Illusionist, a visual artist of the mind. She is able to tap into the minds of others and alter their perception of reality, essentially created hallucinations as she sees fit. This takes great emotional strain, though Dubois tries to conceal it.
Her most powerful mind inflictions occur when she has a deep insight into the mind of her target. By simple skin contact, she is able to access the memories and senses of another. A grazing touch can provide her with a year of visions; a handshake can deliver as long as an entire childhood; and a prolonged hug could give her fourty years of worthy events. By utilizing these memories, Dubois is able to reflect them unto the mind of another individual with near-perfect scents, tastes, etc.
She is unable to create any memory she has not gained, but she can bend them (by enlarging objects, brightening scenes, etc.) Her memory for her own life, however, is beginning to fade.
Biography: Gladys Dubois was born the daughter of a wealthy family in Quebec, Canada. The only child of a lawyer and a businessman, she was often left to the care of a nanny or herself. Busying herself with the family library, she taught herself complex mathematics and sciences, and declared 'gifted' by the age eight. Throughout school, she frequently associated herself with other wealthy and powerful individuals.
After graduating university at the top of her class in businesses and economics, Gladys soon caught the attention of a young businessman named Dunstan. They were soon married, the heads of a multi-million dollar corporation that bore branches from the Americas, to Europe, to even Asia. Since then, the company (which specializes in the exploration of genetic and infectious diseases) has prospered phenomenally, giving the couple the primary influence of human health research and development in the United States.
At the age of twenty-eight, Gladys gave birth to her first son, and another the next year. A month following her fourty-eighth birthday, Dunstan passed away from a long-term heart disease. Throughout his final years and following his death, she has become a more withdrawn individual, becoming increasingly absorbed in her work.