"Just because I'm prey doesn't mean I won't fight. It just means I'll hear you coming first."
Despite her timid exterior, Inès has a rebellious streak. She once organized a silent school walkout by tapping Morse code with her foot—a rhythm only the other "outsider kids" could hear. She doesn't want to be a hero. She just wants to exist without being stared at. But the world keeps staring—so she's learning to stare back. ines french the rabbit girl
Nicknamed "The Rabbit Girl" by her classmates (first as a taunt, later as a term of quiet endearment), Inès lives in a world of heightened senses. She can hear a lie from three rooms away, feel a footstep before it lands, and smell rain before the clouds even form. But what makes her extraordinary isn't just her biology—it's her heart. "Just because I'm prey doesn't mean I won't fight
Here’s a creative write-up for Inès French, the Rabbit Girl , written in a style suitable for a short story blurb, character profile, or roleplay introduction. Inès French – The Rabbit Girl She doesn't want to be a hero
Inès dresses in oversized sweaters and thrift-store corduroys. Her ears are her most expressive feature—perked up when curious, drooping when sad, one flopped over when she's tired. She never wears hair ties; they pull at the fur. Her shoes are always silent—old ballet flats or thick socks indoors. She moves like a whisper.
Behind the twitching nose and velvet ears lies a girl who learned to listen before she learned to speak—and to run before she learned to trust.
Inès French isn't your average girl with a pair of rabbit ears tucked under a beanie. She was born that way—soft, cream-colored fur lining the insides of her long ears, a little cotton tail that peeks out when she wears skirts, and eyes the color of warm hazelnut coffee, always scanning for danger.