Name: Alessandra Delilah Rossier
Age: Perpetually 17, officially 167
Gender: Female
Appearance: Media
Persona: Quiet, observant, when she gets angry, she's truly angry. She's waiting for the right guy to save her. No one ever notices her and actually pays her any attention, which discourages her greatly, but she still tries. Every once and a while, she disappears for a few days, lost in her heartbreak and sorrow.
Species/race: Ghost
Ethnicity: British-great grand parents migrated from England to America
Sexuality: Straight
Lover: -
Relationship Status: Single
Likes: Rain storms, the ocean, dramatics, plays, traveling by train, horses, when someone actually pays attention to her. Ales also likes clocks on military time, not short hand, letters, food she can actually taste (every once and a while she can actually taste the food she eats.)
Dislikes: The fact that she cannot find anyone to love. Her curse. Her body (though males that notice her love it-she's sexy, but she doesn't realize this.) People who don't take responsibility for what they do. Liars. She hates when she follows someone around for a day and she catches them doing something awful like cheating.
Allergies: -
Fears: She'll never find someone to love.
Background: No one knows how Ales died. There are two stories. One is that she drowned herself after her lover was killed in the civil war. Another was that she was murdered. Her curse is that she cannot taste or feel. When she finds one she loves that loves her back, she'll be able to feel and taste again. She can also disappear and reappear when she likes. Alessandra was born in 1847. She was raised in a large manor and as she grew up, she blossomed into a happy, gorgeous teenager. She fell in love with a boy named Henry. When the civil war started, her own brothers Alexander and Amery as well as Henry went off to fight in the war. Every so often, she got letters from him and kept them tied with ribbon all together. Henry died. That is the last she remembers. Then she died. She's never told anyone her story.