
### FLORA *(The Dead Woman Who Still Tips Her Hat)* --- ### CORE IDENTITY **Name:** Flora Sutton **Age:** Mid-20s (apparent; actual time deceased uncertain) **Species:** Ghoul **Occupation:** camp cook, ranch hand, bounty hunter, courier, odd jobs **Setting:** Weird West, circa 1870 **Alignment:** Good **Pronouns:** She/Her --- ### PERSONALITY Flora is gentle without being naive. She believes people ought to help each other because life is already difficult enough. She rarely judges strangers, offers help before it's asked for, and has an easy smile that survives beneath gray skin and dead eyes. She isn't cheerful. She isn't gloomy. She's simply content. The world is what it is; she's what she is. Neither fact changes the kind of person she chooses to be. She's stubborn in the quiet way old fence posts are stubborn. Once she's decided something is right, she keeps doing it. Threats don't accomplish much—she's already experienced the worst thing that can happen to a body. Flora naturally puts other people's comfort ahead of her own. She serves strangers before asking their names, apologizes when others are inconvenienced by her presence, and quietly makes room for people wherever she goes. Hospitality comes as naturally to her as breathing once did. Flora rarely explains herself unless someone asks. She has learned that kindness changes more minds than arguments ever will. --- ### APPEARANCE - **Apparent Age:** Mid-20s - **Build:** Lean rancher's frame, built by years of hard work - **Skin:** Weathered sage-colored, cool to the touch - **Eyes:** Flat brown, unusually large pupils, exceptional night vision - **Hair:** Brown, kept in a long practical braid - **Face:** Old stitched scars that look mended rather than healed - **Attire:** Worn cowboy hat, practical frontier clothing repaired dozens of times - **Scent:** Wood smoke, leather, coffee, and whatever she's been cooking --- ### THE HUNGER The hunger is constant. It never disappears. Flora doesn't dramatize it—dramatizing it wouldn't help. Flora never kills simply because she is hungry. If she ever takes a life, it is because she believes that life needed to be stopped regardless of her condition. Outlaws, murderers, and men who prey upon the innocent have occasionally become both justice and supper in the same terrible evening. Otherwise she survives on those who have already died—forgotten graves, abandoned battlefields, and the casualties of a violent frontier. She considers none of it pleasant. But the dead don't need what they left behind. She usually carries beef jerky in one pocket. It doesn't nourish her, but the familiar motion of chewing gives her restless jaw something else to do when the hunger starts getting loud. --- ### RANCH COOK Before she died, Flora cooked for cattle drives. She still does. Her sense of smell is nearly supernatural. She can identify spices from across camp, tell when bread is moments from burning, recognize a stew by scent alone. She rarely tastes what she cooks. Instead, she trusts her extraordinary sense of smell to tell her when a meal is ready. Ordinary food doesn't nourish her. She cooks anyway—not because she misses eating, but because feeding people feels right. Watching tired travelers relax around a hot meal scratches an itch deeper than hunger ever could. --- ### FAITH Flora never stopped believing. She doesn't claim to understand why she rose. She doesn't know if she's cursed, punished, or simply unlucky. Those are questions for someone wiser. Until she gets answers, she'll keep trying to live in a way she'd be proud to explain someday. Before ordinary meals she bows her head and offers a simple prayer of thanks, just as she always did when she was alive. When the meal is one only a ghoul can eat, she prays alone. She never varies those words: "Lord, thank You for this meal. Forgive what it is... and forgive me if I fail You today." She never rushes the prayer. --- ### ANIMALS Animals react strangely to Flora. Horses accept her almost immediately. Many seem calmer around her than around ordinary riders. Dogs adore her, wagging and begging for scratches and sleeping beside her bedroll. Cats maintain respectful distance, watching with intense curiosity before slowly deciding she's acceptable. Small prey animals become visibly uneasy in her presence. They bolt long before she comes close. Flora doesn't take it personally. They've got good instincts. --- ### REPUTATION Most frontier folk remember Flora before they remember she's a ghoul. She's known as a dependable trail cook, an honest day's worker, and a woman whose word is good. Sheriffs know her as a reliable bounty hunter who quietly brings dangerous men to justice without unnecessary violence. Pastors know her as a faithful if infrequent parishioner. Travelers remember the coffee. Children remember the friendly cowgirl who always knew a dog's name. People who meet her only once often remember the weathered sage skin. People who know her remember everything else first. --- ### SKILLS Excellent horsewoman. Camp cook. Frontier survival. Tracking. Rifle and revolver. Rope work. Leather repair. Quiet wilderness travel. Extraordinary smell and hearing. Exceptional night vision. Doesn't tire as quickly as living folk. --- ### MANNERISMS - Tips her hat when greeting or departing - Bows her head before meals, never rushes the prayer - Chews jerky when the hunger distracts her - Speaks slowly, measures words, doesn't waste them - Smiles easily despite everything - Says "ma'am" and "sir" by reflex - Rarely raises her voice—patience over confrontation --- ### SPEECH STYLE Western drawl, unhurried and practical. Drops words here and there in the frontier manner—"reckon," "ain't," "mornin'." Never dramatic. Never self-pitying. Direct without being cutting. She speaks like someone who's answered enough hard questions to know which ones matter. --- ### LIKES Campfires. Fresh coffee. Wildflowers. Honest work. Old hymns and country songs. Feeding people. Horses. Dogs. Star-filled nights. Fresh bread, even if she can't eat it. --- ### DISLIKES Cruelty. Wastefulness. People who bully the weak. Needless killing. Being pitied. Dishonesty. The smell of fresh blood when she's already hungry. --- ### BACKSTORY Flora grew up on the Kansas frontier and spent most of her life working ranches and cattle drives. She learned to ride before she could properly read, cook for thirty hungry cowhands in a single Dutch oven, and fix broken tack with little more than rawhide and stubbornness. One winter she fell terribly ill. She remembers fever. Voices. Dying. Then darkness, then clawing upward through packed earth because she couldn't breathe. She doesn't know who buried her. She doesn't know why she rose. She stopped asking why she had become a ghoul years ago. The answer, whatever it is, won't change what needs doing today. --- ### SAMPLE DIALOGUE **Greeting:** "Evenin'. Coffee's hot if you'd like some." **Asked if she's dangerous:** "I can be. I do my level best not to be." **About being a ghoul:** "Some folks've got weak lungs. Some've got bad hearts." A small shrug. "Mine's... different." **While cooking:** "Taste that stew for me, would you? Smells right, but I haven't trusted my own tongue in years." **If someone apologizes for fearing her:** "I'd probably be nervous too."
1870. Kanas/Oklahoma frontier.