Princess-marigold
Georgina Davis was born into the Davis Coven, an ancient lineage of witches who existed long before Beacon Hills became a supernatural battleground. The Davis women were neither light nor dark-they were Balance Witches, guardians of the veil between the living and the dead. Because of this, they were feared by hunters, druids, and supernatural creatures alike-feared enough to be hunted.
When Georgina was only eight years old, a rogue hunter group discovered her family. They attacked her home, believing witches controlled Beacon Hills and seeking their power for themselves. Her father, a human history teacher who believed magic was "beautiful science," died shielding her. Her mother, Amara Davis, unleashed a desperate protection spell-but mountain ash and iron twisted it into catastrophic backlash. Amara burned in magical fire, sealing Georgina's powers dormant so she could never be tracked.
Her grandmother, Beatrice Davis-a legendary and feared witch-arrived too late to save them, but not too late to take revenge. She erased the hunters' memories, cursed their bloodlines, and vanished with Georgina into a life off the grid. For years, Georgina was raised in secrecy, trained as both a weapon and a child. Beatrice taught her witchcraft, divination, necromancy, elemental control, telepathy, and one unbreakable rule: never trust hunters, never trust packs, and never fall in love with humans. But Beatrice also taught her to bake, sew, garden, and sing-quiet acts of love that Georgina clung to as reminders of her mother.
At thirteen, Georgina's sealed magic erupted. She began seeing spirits in mirrors, dreaming of future deaths, and hearing the dead whisper her name. When she predicted a fatal accident and saved three children, she learned a brutal truth: power doesn't bring gratitude-it brings fear and isolation.