Arabella
Anemic
Info
Profile
About
The beloved youngest daughter of a crime family who is trying to find her place in the world. Recently, she has become the owner of the Wayward House, an old-fashioned boarding house that serves as a haven for a peculiar group of individuals.
Although she tries her best to appear strong and unflappable, a deep unease seems to be plaguing her. Could it have something to do with why she gave up her original dream of becoming an artist?
Details
Likes
- Retro games
- Cryptids
- Sweet things
- Fashion
Traits
- Warmhearted
- Unexpressive
- Creative
- Impostor Syndrome
Trivia
- Hasn't had the desire to paint anything in months. It's a shame, the way she encapsulates emotion makes one have goosebumps.
- A couple of times a year she will order a cake at Clem's pastry shop to celebrate very specific days, such as World Snail Day and Sailor Moon's anniversary, that the entire house will sit down and eat together.
- Tends to hyperfixate on her interests.
- The rent is dirt cheap so that anyone can afford it, but whether they will be accepted depends on how well they would get along with the others. Arabella has a good sense for that.
- The house originally belonged to someone who inherited it from their grandmother and didn't want it, so Arabella stepped in and bought it to ensure that the lodgers could keep living there.
- Secret:
Painting was always something that was just hers, something that was independent from her family. But after an exhibition of her art, she found out that her family had secretly paid off people to get her a place there, which ruined the achivement for her—and the pride she took in her art. She thinks it must not have been that great to begin with, since she apparently couldn't manage to do this on her own. Of course, she realizes that her family was just trying to be helpful in their own way, but why couldn't they trust her and let her try even this on her own? Why do they have involve themselves in everything she does, as if she were a child who can't fend for herself, doomed to fail without them? Painting just isn't freedom anymore.
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