Post by Ain on Feb 17, 2018 22:21:56 GMT
Blackburn Home for Abandoned and Troubled Children
Personal Record Form
Name of Child, in full: Ain
Age: 14
Gender: Male
Date of Birth: Unknown
Eye Color/Hair Color: Green / Green
Height/Weight: 4'10" / 80 lb
Date of Admittance: May 31st, 128 AE
Names of Parents: Unknown
Status of Parents: (optional) Unknown
Cause(s) of death, if applicable: (optional) N/A
Psychological notes: (optional) Found near three unidentifiable corpses (two similar to the build of a child, and one similar to a woman); when inquiring about the incident, the child simply dodged around the questions and never responded with a straight answer, taking the conversation into infuriating circles. The only answer he gave was to call him Ain. Is seen constantly smiling in a facade and consistently lies without ever confirming or denying the truth, playing harmless pranks. Extremely intelligent and perceptive for his age with a dangerous curiosity for the unknown. Will act recklessly without a care for his own life and treat everything like a game.
Physicality notes: (optional) Very pallid and fragile disposition with a weak and small body. Features are extremely porcelain and doll-like, giving the impression of artificial beauty with an empty glassy-eyed gaze. Has an innocent, child-like look. Suspected to have had chains and a collar bound to his body in the past from maltreatment, though unconfirmed. Walks with a slight limp though quick to correct should anyone notice it.
Observation notes: (optional) The child showed few signs of cooperating, passively ignoring the objects placed in front of him. Still as a statue, his head lulled to the side and leaned against a wall with his breathing becoming shallow and erratic. Some commented how the image looked like a marionette from a horror film. Suspected to have fallen asleep with his eyes open, the observation was deemed to have been cut short, only for the child to dash towards the exit once everyone's guards had been dropped. Though quickly caught, he ended up fainting from exhaustion before the observation could be complete.