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Played by a verified adult

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MARGOT
French | "pearl". |
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ELOISE
French | "famous warrior" |
☽ |
SULLIVAN
Irish | "hawk-eyed" . . . |
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◖Birthname◗ She was born under the name Margot Eloise Sullivan ◖Nicknames◗ She goes by several names depending on who she’s around, but she mostly goes by Margot or on rare accassions as M ◖Age◗ She is 26 years of age ◖Birthplace◗ She was born in Portland, Oregon, USA ◖Nationality◗ American ◖Residence◗ She lives in a quite city apartment in Portland, Oregon, USA |
◖Occupation◗ She currently a student and studies literature ◖Build◗ Lean, understated, graceful ◖Height◗ She stands at 5 ft 7 in (170 cm) ◖Eyes◗ She has brown, observant eyes. ◖Hair◗ Ash-brown, medium-long, usually loose or tucked behind ears. ◖Complexion◗ She has a fair, muted, natural flush when flustered |
◖Features◗ Margot has soft cheekbones, subtle jawline, piercing gaze, hands often occupied with books or papers ◖Style◗ Her style is muted, minimalist wardrobe—sweaters, coats, worn jeans, simple boots; textures prioritized over style ◖Zodiac◗ She was born under the astrology sign of the Gemini ◖Sexuality◗ Heterosexual but a quietly romantic ◖Relationship Status◗ She is currently single ◖Faceclaim◗ Her appearance is often compared to Kristen Stewart. |
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| ☽ Reserved▪ Margot does not offer more of herself than necessary. She speaks when appropriate, contributes when required, but rarely extends beyond that without reason. Her presence is steady and unobtrusive, shaped by an instinct to observe rather than engage. This makes her easy to be around, but difficult to fully know. |
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| ☽ Deliberate▪ Very little in Margot’s behavior is unconsidered. Her words are chosen with care, her actions measured before they are taken. Even small decisions carry a sense of quiet intention. This allows her to move through situations with precision, but often slows her when immediacy or spontaneity is required. |
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| ☽ Detached ▪ Margot maintains a subtle emotional distance from her surroundings. Not out of indifference, but as a way of preserving clarity and control. She experiences things fully, but rarely allows herself to be outwardly affected in the moment. This makes her appear calm and composed, though it can create a sense of separation between her and others. |
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| ☽ Introspective ▪ Much of Margot’s life takes place internally. She reflects, revisits, and reexamines her thoughts with quiet persistence, often seeking a deeper understanding of herself and others. This gives her emotional depth and awareness, but can also lead her to become caught within her own patterns of thought. |
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Margot Eloise Sullivan is known, in most spaces, as someone reserved. Not in a way that invites speculation, nor in a way that fully disappears—but in the quieter sense. Observant. Polite. Easy to accommodate. She listens more than she speaks, responds when prompted, and rarely interrupts the natural rhythm of a conversation. It is the kind of presence people register without needing to define. Her restraint is no accident. Margot was raised in an environment where expression was neither discouraged nor encouraged—it was simply unnecessary. Conversation existed, but rarely extended beyond function. Questions were practical. Responses were sufficient. There were no raised voices, no overt conflicts, nothing that required emotional navigation. In its place, there was a steady, unspoken understanding: that things were easier when left uncomplicated. She learned quickly how to exist within that simplicity. Books entered her life not as an escape, but as a supplement. They offered something her environment did not—clarity. Emotions articulated with precision. Conversations that reached resolution. Meaning that unfolded deliberately, rather than remaining implied. Where real interactions felt uncertain or incomplete, stories provided structure. She grew accustomed to that structure. There was a time when she attempted to extend that same clarity outward. A conversation, small and easily forgettable, where she spoke more freely than usual. The response was not unkind, only mismatched—her words carrying more weight than the moment could hold. A pause followed. A slight shift. The conversation moved on, but something in it remained unresolved. It was enough to recalibrate. From that point forward, Margot adjusted—not dramatically, but precisely. She began to measure her words before offering them. To anticipate reactions before speaking. To refine, reduce, and, when necessary, withhold. It became instinct. In social settings, she occupies space without altering it. She is present, attentive, and consistently agreeable. Others tend to find her easy to be around—not because she is particularly expressive, but because she is not disruptive. She follows the natural flow of interaction, rarely redirecting it, never demanding attention. It is a role she fulfills with quiet consistency. |
![]() ![]() "I understand, I'm a liability Get you wild, make you leave" ![]() ![]() |
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| ☽ Perceptive▪ Margot notices what goes unspoken—shifts in tone, pauses that linger too long, the quiet inconsistencies between words and intent. She rarely takes things at face value, instead piecing together meaning from what others overlook. This makes her difficult to mislead, but it also leaves her hesitant to accept things as they are, often searching for something beneath the surface. |
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| ☽ Controlled▪ Emotion does not dictate Margot’s outward behavior. She maintains a composed, measured presence, even in moments that call for reaction, choosing restraint over impulse. This control allows her to navigate situations without disruption, but it often comes at the cost of withholding what she truly feels, leaving much of her internal world unexpressed. |
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| ☽ Obsessive▪ Margot does not let things settle easily. Thoughts linger, moments replay, and small details take on lasting significance long after they have passed. Her curiosity is persistent rather than casual—once something captures her attention, she returns to it repeatedly, searching for clarity. This gives her depth of understanding, but also makes it difficult for her to let go of what remains unresolved. |
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| ☽ Guarded▪ Margot reveals herself in careful, deliberate fragments. Personal thoughts and emotions are not shared freely, but filtered, measured, and often withheld entirely. This is not simply privacy, but protection—an instinct to avoid being misunderstood or exposed too quickly. While this makes her difficult to truly know, it ensures that anything she does choose to reveal is intentional. |
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![]() ![]() "So they pull back, make other plans I understand, I'm a liability" ![]() ![]() |
She notices more than she contributes. Small inconsistencies in tone. The way conversations shift when certain topics arise. The subtle hesitations people leave unacknowledged. She understands these patterns with a kind of passive accuracy. What she does not do is insert herself into them.
Her habits reinforce the pattern. She carries a book, often as a point of familiarity rather than necessity. Conversations are rehearsed internally, refined before they occur, and revisited after they end. Words are chosen carefully, sometimes to the point of absence. It is not hesitation. It is consideration, extended to its furthest limit. There is a steadiness to the way she moves through life. Conflict is avoided not out of fear, but out of preference. Silence, when used deliberately, prevents misinterpretation. Distance, when maintained, preserves balance. It is a system that functions—efficient, unobtrusive, rarely challenged. And, like any system, it carries a cost. What remains less visible is the accumulation of what goes unexpressed. Thoughts refined to the point of omission. Feelings acknowledged internally, but rarely externalized. Moments where she might speak—and does not. Each instance is minor, easily overlooked. Together, they form a quiet absence that defines the edges of her presence. She is understood, to a degree. But never in full. Those around her rarely question this. Margot is, after all, uncomplicated in the ways that matter to others. Polite. Attentive. Easy to include, easier still to overlook. The kind of person who integrates seamlessly into existing spaces without requiring adjustment. It makes her reliable. It also makes her indistinct. It is not that Margot Eloise Sullivan lacks depth, or feeling, or the capacity to be known. Those things exist—fully formed, carefully maintained, and consistently deferred. Expression, for her, has never been impossible. Only measured. Only restrained. Only… postponed. Until now, she has simply found it easier to remain within the structure of observation than risk the imprecision of being fully seen. |
