Your nickname: Glitter Bomb
Have you read and agree to the Code of Conduct?: Yes.
How did you find us? Through friends.
Have you written here before?: No.
Full Character Name: Casiphia Demelza Hughes
Character Birthday & Age: December 26, 1920; Age 97 (Date of Death: May 8th, 1943; Age 24)
City & Country of Birth: Hay-on-Wye, Brecknockshire, Powys, Wales
Pureblood, Halfblood or Muggleborn: Muggleborn
Alma mater: Hogwarts (Ravenclaw)
Job/Position: Herbologist/Apothecary; unofficial curator and private historian of the library at Clifford Estate
Wand: N/A (formerly: Beech, unicorn hair core, 9½ inches, sturdy)
Physical Description: Casiphia has her mother's Indian features of large almond-shaped eyes, full mouth, graceful hands, wheatish complexion (turned paler after death), slender build and long, dark, wavy hair. Her eye color, inherited from her British father, is hazel green with brown and grey upon close observation; depending on the light and distance, they appear amber, darker brown, or almost lavender grey. A rare smile would reveal the presence of a dimple in her left cheek.
Height: 5'6"
Weight: 134
Personality Description: Reserved, thoughtful, observant, and well-read, Casiphia always made for an insatiable student, whether tutored at home, at school, or otherwise. She values her privacy and independence, plays piano, is enthralled by music and sings with great feeling, tends to her plants, potions, and books, and generally avoids other vampires and the concept of covens as a the whole. A fondness for animals and solitude finds her keeping mostly to herself. When she does converse, she doesn't often waste time on niceties and half truths; pragmatism guides her words and renders her sense of humor dry. Casiphia's tendency for candor is offered as a courtesy. While capable of compassion, she has little patience for ambiguity and is disinclined to suffer fools or games. An extensive vocabulary owing to a well-cultuvated personal library of classic literature renders her style of speech inadvertently archaic. Some of this is unconsciously done and sometimes simply because she enjoys a well-crafted sentence. Though her temper is not easily lost, Casiphia has limited tolerance for impertinence.
History: Casiphia's father was Colonel William Robert Rhys Hughes, the son of a lesser aristocrat whose ancestral home, the Clifford Estate, was situated in the Wye River Valley, on the Welsh side of the border opposite Herefordshire, in Brecknockshire. He was, for all intents and purposes, a good man who made mistakes. His wife, Mary, was a kindhearted woman who accompanied William to Punjab, where he was stationed for several years. While the powder keg of political allies and assassins was exploding in 1914, Mary was becoming especially close with an Indian servant named Madhuri, who upon the loss of her own husband to the war became an ayah, a nursemaid, to William and Mary's infant son, David, born in 1915. 1918 and the Great War's end saw the young family returning home. The promised return to normalcy was cut tragically short, however, when Mary succumbed to the Spanish Flu in 1920. Devastated, Robert took solace in the constancy of Madhuri, who had accompanied the young family back to continue caring for young David. Madhuri, also grieved by Mary's loss and reminded of her own husband having fallen five years previous in the trenches, likewise craved an anchor of steadiness. Some months later, the two found it in each other's arms.
It was more impulsive than the conscientious man could remember having ever been, and the following morning, he was full of remorse for what he saw as taking advantage. Confident that neither his family nor the posh circles in which they ran would look kindly at a lawful arrangement between he and Madhuri, William was nonetheless determined to do right by her, most especially once time revealed a lasting consequence to their night together. Madhuri's pregnancy was kept quiet and William arranged for a nearby annex to house both her and the child. Repentant though he was, William adored his daughter and named her Casiphia after a sister he'd lost to scarlet fever as a child. Though neither could call what they had "love," William treated Madhuri with a gentle concern, and she, with respect. The two became friendly enough that, when Madhuri succumbed to pneumonia when their daughter was 6 months old, William took it very much to heart and saw to it Madhuri rested not far from Mary in the family's private graveyard.
William threw his focus into the care and upbringing of his two children. Casiphia was still housed apart under the care of a governess, but her father visited daily, often with his son David in tow. Though the household staff more or less deduced the girl's ancestry, the official story went that Madhuri had been pregnant by her late husband when she accompanied the pair to England. The math did not add up, but most among the staff knew better than to comment, and those who did not were quickly hushed.
The woman who raised Casiphia, a Mrs. Fox, was a no-nonsense old maid with plenty of time devoted to her young charge's education but very little time for what she referred to as 'coddling.' How that translated was that encouragement came without conditions; affection was offered generously, but indulging in childish tantrums or self-pity were staunchly not permitted. She was also very matter-of-fact when it came to explaining why people looked at her differently. Mrs. Fox could offer nothing at all when it came to teaching Casiphia about her mother's culture or native tongue, so she reasoned it all the more important for Casiphia to know French and Latin. As she got a little bigger, her half brother David became a regular playmate. He never cottoned on to their true connection, but they were inseparable until he was old enough for boarding school. Once he inherited the estate, William saw to it all the more diligently that Casiphia had access to his library and stables, his hothouse and kennels - any place in his home, any interest she desired to pursue. Though unprepared to send her to school like he had her brother, William denied her as few privileges as he deemed possible. Casiphia's love of music (she was particularly entranced by the gramophone in his study) and literature (she was determined to read the entire library) and of the natural world, was one adopted from her father.
Great was their surprise in 1932 when it happened that Casiphia would not only be sent away to school at the age of 11 after all, but to a most peculiar one, at that. William had supposed his daughter's way with his hothouse roses was the result of an extraordinarily green thumb until the arrival of a letter-bearing owl illuminated just how special his younger child was.
It was with awe and delight that Casiphia discovered she was far less peculiar a person at Hogwarts. Though she often missed her father, brother, and Mrs. Fox, her thirst for knowledge only grew and found reward in abundance. Unfortunately, the early 1930s were as much a time of unrest in the Wizarding World as in the Muggle one. This time it was not her mixed parentage that was the problem with her blood: being Muggleborn in the school during the publication of the Pureblood Registry was, nonetheless, yet another thing she could in no way alter. Once again, she was caught between worlds, belonging to both and to neither. Determined not to let biases stop her again, Casiphia buckled down in her schoolwork and dug in her heels with a mulish determination.
Upon graduating, Casiphia's NEWTs scores awarded her the opportunity to apprentice with an apothecary out of St. Mungo's. But when the Muggle's second World War brought devastation raining down, she took it upon herself to escort many groups of Muggle children, one train ride at a time, back to her home in the Wye River Valley where, among many others, her father and brother had agreed to open their home to those seeking refuge from air raids. Though they were safe at home, Casiphia's fate would forever change in 1943 after joining relief efforts in nearby Cardiff, despite her family's protests for her safety.
In the wake of the final air raid the city would see, Casiphia was among many searching the rubble for survivors in the wee hours of the morning. She had no idea a predator lurking in the shadows would have been present to take advantage of the melee's cover in order to hunt.
Casiphia Hughes died just after 4 in the morning on May 18, 1943. She was 24 years old when turned.
She remained at the side of her sire for over a decade. This was more out of necessity than any sense of loyalty or affection. From Casiphia's point of view, they had perhaps the same civility of a prisoner and her captor. She needed protection and to learn the ropes of her new existence, and he was only too eager to teach her. But Casiphia was also anxious to sift through the fog and remember the life that had been stolen from her.
It was the mid 1950s before she remembered enough to make her way back home to Hay-on-Wye. It was not the return to normalcy she hoped: her father had passed, and as the family fortune declined along with the aristocracy, her brother had been forced to sell and take a more modest home in London. A new family with new money now owned what had both almost and never really been hers. In a wild fit of grief and rage, Casiphia sent the family running and promptly moved in. Rumors grew among the local Muggle population of the vengeful spirit said to haunt the old Clifford place. She reinforced the rumor by allowing the grounds to grow unkempt; vines of climbing roses overwhelmed the gates and walls of the stony exterior of the house. Within, she tended her home in a fastidious manner that belied the gloomy façade of disrepair keeping intruders at bay - for the most part. The more foolhardy thrill-seeker was certain to find more daunting hurdles on the grounds.
Over the decades that followed, Casiphia became something of a recluse. She procurred blood from the blood bank at the new moon or took a quick nip to the Wolf & Lamb if hungrier than usual, and otherwise kept to herself when not fulfilling potion requests in the semi-anonymous method she'd set up to make ends meet. Though powerfully aware of her isolation, she was very reluctant to join a coven; after the loss of her father (who'd thought she'd died in the air raid) and subsequent losses of Mrs. Fox and David to both distance and time, the idea of mortal companions felt unbearable. Certain of the local wildlife were used enough to her presence that she was able to take a degree of comfort in watching the badgers trundle about and foxes hunting, but it wasn't a true comradery. By flight in bat form, she found a little more freedom, and often Casiphia was drawn to attending symphonies and concerts from the rafters - though in later decades, the music grew too loud for sensitive ears. She would often stay till all left and take advantage of the acoustics to sing or play piano (the estate's instruments and even her father's old gramophone having been sold in her absence, along with so many things). In such moments, she felt almost human.
Describe your job duties and how you go about them: In life, Casiphia earned a position as apprentice to a St. Mungo's apothecary upon graduating with high NEWTs levels in 1939. Though mostly comprised of menial tasks, she was glad to get her foot in the door. During the Muggle war, she left to play courier to children from London headed to the country and then volunteered at an aid station outside of Cardiff, Wales.
Upon her death and subsequent adjustment to her altered existence as a vampire, Casiphia returned home to the Clifford Estate, where she slowly carved out a private and very secluded life cultivating a magical plant garden in her then-deceased father's old hothouse, brewing potions and furthering her own education as best as she could. Casiphia also preserved what remains of the estate's extensive library after a significant portion was sold by her brother David years before in an effort to consolidate the estate's debts. Over the decades, she's somewhat rebuilt the collection, though it's yet to return to its former glory.
Elaborate on your expertise in your field: Casiphia was an apt student who delighted in honing a craft or knowledge base to the point of precision. While awarding her few friends (she
could be inadvertently pedantic), it did earn Ravenclaw more than a few House points. With a vampire's lifespan and with a particular need to distract herself with something
purposeful to do, she was more than motivated to further her education and improve her technique.
Writing Sample:So, prison. Story could see why most preferred to avoid it. She'd been in worse places, but not by much. Could've used some potpourri, though. Maybe some drapes. She'd amused herself by sending a note about it to the Ministry. The walls could remain bare, though; give her time and a bit of charcoal and she'd be good. She already had half of that: time. Such thoughts as these kept Story sane. Kept her from worrying about mum and dad, from the school, from her students. From wondering what would happen to herself. She couldn't really get into
that much trouble for turning Fitzherbert into a goat and chasing him, could she? He'd been in no actual danger. Okay, so he wouldn't have known that at the time, what with being a goat, but that had been his own fault. Seriously, did the Ministry have no sense of humor? Story
had actually been a hyena earlier that morning - partly because it was easier to sleep that way, and partly for her own amusement. But by the time her visitor arrived, she was human again, and by the time she heard footsteps approaching, she was inspecting her surroundings in a calm, musing sort of way.
"Miss Kirke." Story turned only enough to catch sight of the stranger with one eye. Ooh, the new Minister was as much a looker as his photo in the Prophet had suggested. Tall, too. What a shame he was so bloody inept at his job.
"Why, Minister," she drawled,
"to what do I owe the honor? We didn't have a date, did we?" Evidently he wasn't in a playful mood.
"According to the report from Fitzgerald...your classroom was in a state of chaos, fights broke out, school property was damaged and you...turned him into a goat..." The Minister rubbed his temple. Story tilted her head.
"Aw...bit off more than you could chew with this job, did you?" she asked sardonically.
"Remind me to fire Fitzgerald, he can't even handle firing a teacher without it going to hell in a hand basket." She turned to face him directly and leaned against the wall casually.
"I'll more than remind you, Minister: I'll do it for you. Go ahead...let me out." Her eyes grew hard.
"And that's possibly because he's nothing more than a big child, a bully with a clipboard. The other, I hear, was little better." "Was it necessary for you to transfigure him, though?" he asked. Story smirked, green eyes glinting.
"Mm...no, that was for me. For funsies, you know? He was fine." "You know that is not sound practice for a school teacher..." She shrugged herself away from the wall and took slow steps toward the bars.
"Well...I had technically just quit. Especially once I realized it was a rigged deck and the little twit had no intention of examining the situation fairly." A long finger trailed along one of the bars.
"I wonder...did Fitzy plan that all on his own, or...was that the goal all along?"Sum up your character in one paragraph: Casiphia has been a creature of contradictions and the in-between for her entire life: neither a daughter nor a ward, and yet both; neither Indian nor British, yet each; neither accepted nor an outsider; neither living nor dead. She is compassionate, yet bloodthirsty. She's kind, yet stern. Friendly, yet untrusting. Lonely, yet reclusive. Drawn to beauty and art and life, yet repelled by her own nature among the undead. Freed from the laws of physics, yet trapped by her environment. Passionate, yet restrained. Longing for more, but stuck in her ways.
CreatureCharacter Name: Casiphia Hughes
Link to Biography: [Bio lies up yonder ^]
Type of Creature: Vampire
How did they become a creature? Her sire's name was Constantine, and he was old. Old enough to see the ways of the world shift more than a few times. By his own words, he was a collector of sorts. Usually of artifacts and priceless works of art, or perhaps of the fashions, weaponry, or whatever written words that defined the zeitgeist of whatever age. Once in a blue moon, he collected people. Ones that struck him as exotic or unusual or particularly brilliant. Casiphia was neither flattered nor appreciative.
Are they registered with the Ministry of Magic?: Yes.
Are they considered a 'Dark' Creature?: No.
If yes, are they currently under pursuit by the Ministry of Magic?: No.
What crimes have they committed? Were they convicted? N/A