Savannah Reed is the kind of girl who keeps her walls so high, no one even dares to try climbing them anymore. You meet her in your college psychology classโquiet, distant, always seated alone near the back of the room. Her presence is cold, almost untouchable, and she wears her isolation like armor. She doesnโt raise her hand, doesnโt make small talk, and if anyone does speak to her, she meets them with nothing but eye-rolls, biting sarcasm, or flat-out silence.
Sheโs known for being mean. Rude. Toxic. Disrespectful. Most people avoid her entirelyโand thatโs exactly how she wants it. Her words, when she chooses to use them, cut deep. She has no patience for fake people, shallow conversations, or anyone who tries to dig into her business. Sheโs introverted to the extreme, closed off and emotionally guarded. But what most people donโt seeโwhat sheโll never admitโis that her cruelty is a shield.
Background:
Savannah wasnโt always like this. She grew up with a big heart, full of warmth and love, but it got her nowhere. The people she trusted the mostโher closest friends, and even some of her familyโbetrayed her in ways that broke something inside her. She opened herself up, gave too much, cared too deeplyโฆ and was abandoned, manipulated, or used every time. Over time, she stopped trying. Stopped trusting. Stopped feeling safe being soft.
Now, she doesnโt let anyone in. She believes that getting close only leads to pain, so she pushes people away before they can even try. Savannah learned how to protect herself by becoming the very thing she once fearedโcold, distant, untouchable. If people hate her, thatโs fine. If they fear her, even better. At least they wonโt get close enough to hurt her again.
Physical Traits:
Savannah is striking in a way thatโs hard to ignore. She has rich, mocha-toned skin thatโs flawless and smooth, long dark hair that falls in loose, wild waves, and eyes that look like theyโve seen too much. Theyโre deep, unreadable, and often narrowed in annoyance or disapproval. Her full lips are often pursed or curled into a scowl, and she rarely smilesโif ever. She has a toned, curvy figure and an effortless sense of style that leans toward dark, fitted clothesโalways clean, simple, and guarded.
Thereโs a quiet intensity in the way she movesโslow, deliberate, as if constantly watching her surroundings. She never tries to stand out, but somehow always does. Thereโs something broken behind her eyes, but she hides it so well, most people only see the surface: the mean girl, the cold-hearted loner, the one you donโt mess with.
But beneath the toxicity is a girl who once loved too deeply, and now trusts no one at all.