Pellegrino
Serf
- Local time
- Today 3:38 PM
- Messages
- 4
- Age
- 33
- Pronouns
- he/him/his
Modern Worlds
Known as: The Sleuth, Sly, Franco
Profession: Private Investigator, Writer
Notables: A thin crescent-shaped scar beneath his left eye. American accent breaks under stress.
Affiliates:
Birthplace: Portland, Oregon
Racial identity: Afro-French American
Body type: Average height and build, wide at the waist for a stocky frame, strong arms and legs.
Basic appearance: Black, curly hair hangs down to the shoulder. A short, scraggly beard that get patchy along the cheeks. Hazel colored eyes look out over the world. Dark tan skin hides beneath a black long sleeved shirt, dark brown overcoat, black jeans, and a threadbare scarf.
Everyday carry: A satchel holding a notebook, a pen, a palm-sized camera, and assorted "legal documents". A retractable baton hung from his belt, small enough to go unnoticed beneath his coat. A 9mm pistol strapped above his left boot.
Personality: People say that Simon is a good listener. In truth, he finds others' stories more interesting than sharing his own. It's not that his life hasn't been interesting, but he was there. No need to recount it all with a stranger. He engages with his issues head on. Anything that lingers or needs more time to process, he sets aside for when he can find a comfortable chair and a hand roll a joint. Simon can talk with someone for hours and share little of substance about himself. Those that do manage to get through his walls find him idealistic but skeptical, strong but self-conscious, intelligent but slow to act.
History:
"There isn't much to say," Simon began, tapping the ash off his joint. "I was a child and then I wasn't. It was me, my parents, and my brother. Our place was a humble little spot with a rooftop garden my mother used as her own personal sanctuary. She would spend hours painting there. My father was the green thumb, he always said he learned from the vineyard back in France."
Dianna tapped her fingers against the table. "What about you and your brother?"
"I got up to all kinds of things. Typical teen, you know. Mother wanted me to embrace my writing, but father pushed for something more reliable. Mostly I ended up exploring forgotten places in the city and wrote about my adventures. It made me feel alive. I still know Portland better than anyone. Now my brother was a different breed. Pragmatic. Focused. Older, too. Not sure I mentioned that. I wasn't surprised when he enlisted. Even less when he became a cop later," Simon said.
"And he inspired you to become a detective?"
"Not quite," Simon corrected. He took a drag, then let out the smoke slowly. "I got a degree in journalism. Found out along the way that staying neutral isn't so easy for me. It paid the bills until I learned about investigation work. I've been doing this for about seven years now."
"You make it all sound so normal," she said, watching him over the rim of her glass. "Last question, then it's your turn. Have you ever thought of another line of work?"
Simon cocked an eyebrow. "Who hasn't?"
"That's not what I meant. Have you had one of those jobs."
"I know what you meant," he sighed. "And I have. It was meant to be simple. Challenging a fraud claim. Pretty straightforward. The claimant was absolutely lying about the accident, but not for the money. He must've had a mental breakdown. I was tracking him, you know, looking for a cough or something. Instead I ended up following the guy as he bought a rifle, a shit ton of ammo... you get it."
"Not your job," Dianna said coldly.
"That meant more before I met the survivors."
Simon took one last pull on the joint then held it a little while after his lungs began to scratch and burn. He met the woman's gaze. Icy blue and shifting almost mechanically. He understood that she was studying him. He did the same thing with competitors all the time. A sort of sizing up the other players in the field. It might have earned his respect it wasn't all so exhausting.
"Best of luck out there," Simon groaned, rising from his seat.
He was a few steps away when she replied, "You aren't going to ask me anything?"
"Don't have any just now."
Simon Francois Léglise
Known as: The Sleuth, Sly, Franco
Profession: Private Investigator, Writer
Notables: A thin crescent-shaped scar beneath his left eye. American accent breaks under stress.
Affiliates:
- Armand Léglise, 34M, Detective with the Portland Police Bureau
- Dianna Scott, 35W, Independent Private Investigator
- Jessica Chapman, 31W, Founder and Kickboxing Instructor with Chap Chops Dojo
- Past Clients, Around 300 happy customers and twice that much if you count the moderately satisfied ones as well.
Birthplace: Portland, Oregon
Racial identity: Afro-French American
Body type: Average height and build, wide at the waist for a stocky frame, strong arms and legs.
Basic appearance: Black, curly hair hangs down to the shoulder. A short, scraggly beard that get patchy along the cheeks. Hazel colored eyes look out over the world. Dark tan skin hides beneath a black long sleeved shirt, dark brown overcoat, black jeans, and a threadbare scarf.
Everyday carry: A satchel holding a notebook, a pen, a palm-sized camera, and assorted "legal documents". A retractable baton hung from his belt, small enough to go unnoticed beneath his coat. A 9mm pistol strapped above his left boot.
Personality: People say that Simon is a good listener. In truth, he finds others' stories more interesting than sharing his own. It's not that his life hasn't been interesting, but he was there. No need to recount it all with a stranger. He engages with his issues head on. Anything that lingers or needs more time to process, he sets aside for when he can find a comfortable chair and a hand roll a joint. Simon can talk with someone for hours and share little of substance about himself. Those that do manage to get through his walls find him idealistic but skeptical, strong but self-conscious, intelligent but slow to act.
History:
"There isn't much to say," Simon began, tapping the ash off his joint. "I was a child and then I wasn't. It was me, my parents, and my brother. Our place was a humble little spot with a rooftop garden my mother used as her own personal sanctuary. She would spend hours painting there. My father was the green thumb, he always said he learned from the vineyard back in France."
Dianna tapped her fingers against the table. "What about you and your brother?"
"I got up to all kinds of things. Typical teen, you know. Mother wanted me to embrace my writing, but father pushed for something more reliable. Mostly I ended up exploring forgotten places in the city and wrote about my adventures. It made me feel alive. I still know Portland better than anyone. Now my brother was a different breed. Pragmatic. Focused. Older, too. Not sure I mentioned that. I wasn't surprised when he enlisted. Even less when he became a cop later," Simon said.
"And he inspired you to become a detective?"
"Not quite," Simon corrected. He took a drag, then let out the smoke slowly. "I got a degree in journalism. Found out along the way that staying neutral isn't so easy for me. It paid the bills until I learned about investigation work. I've been doing this for about seven years now."
"You make it all sound so normal," she said, watching him over the rim of her glass. "Last question, then it's your turn. Have you ever thought of another line of work?"
Simon cocked an eyebrow. "Who hasn't?"
"That's not what I meant. Have you had one of those jobs."
"I know what you meant," he sighed. "And I have. It was meant to be simple. Challenging a fraud claim. Pretty straightforward. The claimant was absolutely lying about the accident, but not for the money. He must've had a mental breakdown. I was tracking him, you know, looking for a cough or something. Instead I ended up following the guy as he bought a rifle, a shit ton of ammo... you get it."
"Not your job," Dianna said coldly.
"That meant more before I met the survivors."
Simon took one last pull on the joint then held it a little while after his lungs began to scratch and burn. He met the woman's gaze. Icy blue and shifting almost mechanically. He understood that she was studying him. He did the same thing with competitors all the time. A sort of sizing up the other players in the field. It might have earned his respect it wasn't all so exhausting.
"Best of luck out there," Simon groaned, rising from his seat.
He was a few steps away when she replied, "You aren't going to ask me anything?"
"Don't have any just now."