
GENERAL
Full Name: Siranush Reda
Nicknames, Epithets: Siran, Reedsinger
Gender: Female
Age: 31
Race: Human, Peri heritage
Sexuality: Bisexual
Occupation: Pharoah’s Wife (one of them), Co-Captain of the Desert Stars (WIP), High Priestess of Nyere, the Sun Goddess.
PHYSICAL INFORMATION
There is a mystical quality to Siran’s features, from her petite stature to the length of her thick, dark, earthy green hair — there’s a spritely lightness of being that she owes from her Peri heritage. Parts of her hair appear illuminated by constant light, even in darkness; like the sun shining through fresh green leaves. Her upturned eyes burn and glow like fire, her skin is warm and tawny, contours clinging to dancers’ curves of her honed body. Her skin is host to reddish ink tattoos. Though they may seem decorative, they are a conduit to her magical techniques.
In her Pharoah’s court, Siran displays these tattoos proudly, opting for dark undergarments, with straps of pliable and fine deerskin adorned with gold. She wears a diaphanous shawl over her shoulders, adorned with gold finery, coins and tassels that rattles generously whenever she moves with force. Most of all, she wears two wings on either side of her head, a representation of her devotion to the Sun God. Her attire outside of court is more conservative, though she is wont to show her navel, legs and chest in many of her outfits.
DOSSIER
HEIGHT: 5’3
WEIGHT: 124lbs
DESIRES: To foster new and exciting challenges for the Desert Stars. To bring a smile to everyone’s faces.
LIKES: massages, pressed paper, Pharaoh, Bab’el, Desert Stars, long walks, cats and birds.
DISLIKES: disrespectful and rude people, humidity, jackals, disorder, violence
HOBBIES: dancing; playing double reed instruments, especially the mizmar and duduk; stationery-collecting; birdwatching; and scrapbooking
GENERAL ATTITUDE
Siranush is eloquent, discerning, and seems to radiate warm and inviting energy, alive and vibrant like the Sun. She commands attention not through dominance or boisterousness—she uplifts others with charm and grace. Often a friend to those who find it hard to speak, she’s attentive to the needs of others and often becomes the advocate or voice that speaks for them, inspiring or rallying others with her natural charisma that she learned as a dancer.
Do not take her smiles and laughter lightly, however—of all the performers in the Desert Stars, Siranush is by far the most disciplined and focused of her peers, perfecting much of her techniques and muscle isolations to strive for excellence. She is often the one to pick apart the choreography, adapting it for the level of her peers or to change sequences if necessary. Siranush is often the one that instructs and guides other dancers to perfect their craft, not because of a desire to be renowned or famous, but simply because she loves dance, rhythm, music—believing that it is synonymous with the gift of life. To her, anyone can be allowed the freedom of dance, but there is a distinction from moving your body, as opposed to striving to become a kinetic inspiration.
As the Co-Captain of the Desert Stars, Siranush often prepares for a response to conflict. As a dancer would prepare to move her body before a measure in order to arrive before the music, Siran prefers to be prepared rather than to respond to violence with violence. She anticipates and responds with defence, preferring to protect her allies and enfeeble her foes with a sound strategy.
SKILLS
Siran’s primary skill lies in worship, dance, and music, having trained to dance all her life. She can sight-read music, can keep a beat and a rhythm. She’s not necessarily a tinkerer, but she considers herself crafty. While folding origami is not so exciting, she likes to use mundane objects in unique ways.
NSFW INFO
ABILITY INFORMATION
WEAPON: MONDO
BACKSTORY
Siran’s devotion to Nyere’s name started with her first festival. It was a kaleidoscope of colour and sound, the young girl enchanted by the revelry. She wished to be like the performers upon the stage. Her parents, humble labourers, were at first hesitant to the idea of their daughter offering her life to the service of the gods. However, money was of no import, only a trueness of heart. To be an entertainer in Nyrri was a high honour, for you dedicate your life and craft for something sacred. The young girl was sequestered away in the grand temple of Nyere, after demonstrating her passion and interest.
Making such a transition was not easy: dancers on stage make all their movements seem effortless, though the training is anything but. In her childhood and early adolescence, Siranush was volatile, fickle, a troublemaker, and prone to bursts of anger. She had a tongue like spitfire and a competitive streak that refused to surrender. Even then, she was a wonderful dancer, full of energy and vivacity—so her elders prayed that she would grow to be more dignified and restrained with the years.
If it were not for such a tempestuous nature in her youth, she would have never met Bab’el. On her thirteenth summer, Siran witnessed the coronation of the Pharaoh. She was only instructed to observe and watch for most of the coronation, a role that was shared with another girl from the Temple of Tullam, Bab’el. Upon seeing Nadine, Siran orchestrated a plan to steal away when the time was right. When she learned that Bab’el harboured the same desire, Siran cast aside her competitiveness in order to gain an accomplice. She could worry about who would be in favour when they reached the Pharaoh.
So Siran used all her skills for troublemaking for good, slipping away unseen in elaborate corridors, hiding from guards, causing distractions, until she finally saw the Pharaoh enter the grand bathhouse. The two girls made their way inside, excitement pounding in their hearts at the anticipation for meeting the Pharaoh. So bickering and wrestling along the way, the two knelt before the Pharaoh… and declared their desire to be married to her.
She would never forget when the Pharaoh pinched their cheeks and kissed their heads before telling them that she’d see them when they were older. This answer did not disappoint Siran. In fact, it gave her a goal. So she and Bab’el initiated a friendly rivalry to continue down the path of nuns, to become head priestess of their respective temples. The first one to do so would have the right to propose to Pharaoh.
After that fated meeting, Siran began to work on herself. She pushed herself even harder in dance, challenging herself daily to the point of aching calves and a tender core. Her volatile nature had been tempered with discipline, though in order to become head priestess of Nyere, she would have to genuinely be at peace with herself.
The former Head Priestess at the time knew of this. The elderly woman could see Siran’s spark and passion as being earnest. She handed Siran a duduk, and taught her how to use the double-reed to produce such a beautiful, plaintive sound. Siran started to contemplate, pause, and think. Her breath as one with the instrument, she learned to channel her strong emotions into music.
The same priestess also taught her the art of specialised phytokinesis, a seldom-learned skill that was difficult and precise. She passed on the techniques of the Mondo to Siran, so that she could learn to use the paper dolls to cleanse, purify, and protect others. Whenever her paths would cross with Bab’el, that impish, competitive desire to have the Pharaoh had faded, and she had come to fall in love with the other woman with each continued meeting.
At age twenty, Siran and Bab’el were both set to inherit the title of head priestess of their respective temples. When the Pharaoh reminded them of their visit in the bathhouse, she was both surprised and delighted that the Pharaoh would remember her promise. Even though Siran and Bab’el had promised themselves to each other on the Feast of Daephine in the year prior, she had no hesitations or objections to having three join the union. They were married in the springtime, the festivities brighter and gayer than the memories of her very first festival — undoubtedly, one of the happiest days of Siran’s life.
While Siran was devoted to her temple in the early years of her marriage, she would have her duties converge closer to the Pharaoh ere long. As she grew into her role, Siran was able to balance both being the Head Priestess of Nyere and the Pharaoh’s wife. Perhaps a part of her troublemaking streak still remained, as she was the one who petitioned for some clever structural reorganisation for both temples.
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