Quote: Hexane (Infamous - nin/dark MM)
Heir to a branch of a small family of ninja, Hexane was born and raised in Sacramento California. She was promised in marriage to the son of a powerful
Yakuza, but tragedy struck on her wedding night when her husband stabbed himself in the back more than twenty times. Hexane was so distraught she fled to
the Rogue Isles to escape her pain. The disappearance of her dowry, and the contents of every bank account she or her husband had access to is, as she
maintains, a strange coincidence.
- Sarcastic and generally amused by the eccentricities of her teammates and opponents. Unless they nearly get her
killed.
- Enjoys teasing people, especially Minuet Heisman nee MacHine, tough she's been threatened into stopping
that.
- Mercenary at heart, doesn't care about Recluse's plots, in so far as they don't prevent her from retiring
to her own tropical island.
- When she works with someone from the Infamous it's usually Lady Nogitsune or the kunoichi trio.
- Can and will switch from vapid valley girl (around TechHead) to relatively proper Nihongo woman (around
Nogi).
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HE-AT (Paragon Special Investigations - NRG/EM blapper)
The Heuristic Engramic Autonomous Tactical unit is a prototype developed to
help with PPD manpower shortages during the Rikti war. The prototype was
delivered late, and over budget after the war ended. After spending some
time in the PPDs traffic department she was transferred to the newly formed
Special Investigations division.
- Statement: Stuck in a testbed mode so her speech is a little odd. Query: This isn't annoying is it?
- While she has trouble understanding human reactions, as she tends to rationality not emotion, she isn't as
robotic as she appears.
- Deliberately misunderstands basic physiological and psychological differences between herself and humans, mostly as a
way of getting back at them for assuming she's just a piece of furniture.
- Claims that her chassis and voice are female because her design team did not get out often enough.
"We all agree that your theory is crazy, but is
it crazy enough?"
- Niels Bohr (1885-1962)