Eater-of-Bears

Eater-of-Bears is a Red Talon Ragabash Guardian of the Sept of the Weeping Daughter. She is especially vicious in her attacks on humans.[1][2][3]

Biography

Eater-of-Bears was a whelp when she was taken along with two others for her Rite of Passage. She was the only one to survive; the other two were killed by a Bane-infested grizzly bear. She would have been killed had she not run away to seek the aid of her former wolf pack, made up of Kinfolk. With their aid, she slew the bear and feasted upon it, thus becoming the Eater-of-Bears. Later, she would eat all the bears within close range of the sept.

She recently became the Alpha female. The former Alpha died fighting a Black Spiral Dancer. Eater-of-Bears now leads her army of wolves in total freedom. Due to her strong tie to her Kinfolk and other wolves, she is very powerful despite her lack of personal greatness. She disliked Heart-of-Winter because he is a member of the Anti-Extinction Faction, as are the other sept members.

She enjoys pretending to be a human hitchhiker. Once she is picked up, she slays the driver and takes his valuables. She often leaves her name in blood on one of the windows so humans will know the killing was not a wolf attack.

She patronizes Storm-Chaser and tries intimidating him subtly whenever she can get away with it. She sees Stands-Like-Mountain as a potential rival, and she see Greasy-Fur as a pathetic excuse for a Garou. She wants the sept to turn from their ways of solitude to join the Red Talon fight against the Wyrm and the humans.

Appearance

Eater-of-Bears is a sleek, muscular wolf of medium-brown and black coloration. She is unusually graceful when she moves. Her Homid form is that of a 5'9", 130 pound attractive woman in her mid-twenties. She has long black hair down to her waist.

Character Sheet

Trivia

Eater-of-Bears appears in the novel, Call to Battle: The Saga of Jay No-Name, undergoing a Rite of Passage with Aaron First-born of Avram and Jay "No-Name" Caldwell. Far away from the Sept of the Weeping Daughter.[4]

References

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