Human / Golem
Highschool Student
"Blank"
Heteroromantic
Heterosexual
Mixed Vieulxian (Island-origin descent / Continental descent)
Natales City
Natales City
Reno Laconsay is a student, an athlete, and a quiet fixer operating beneath the surface of everyday life. Shaped by systems, sharpened by experience, and guided by an unseen inheritance, he navigates a world built on records and denial. Unaware of his golem heritage, Reno believes himself ordinary—just unusually capable at making things disappear, reappear, or change without anyone noticing.
Reno possesses an incomplete golem core embedded within his body, inherited unknowingly through his father. Unlike a full golem core, it does not grant overt power or immortality, but instead manifests in subtle, persistent ways. His stamina lasts longer than it should, his recovery from injury is unusually fast, and he can continue functioning under strain long after others would burn out. These traits fluctuate and never present consistently enough to be identified as supernatural, allowing them to pass as athletic conditioning, luck, or adrenaline.
The core occasionally interferes with medical scans and biometric systems, producing incomplete or contradictory results. Such inconsistencies are typically dismissed as equipment error, poor calibration, or individual variance.
Reno has a casual, approachable look defined by messy warm-brown hair, sharp green eyes, and an athletic build. He carries himself with relaxed confidence, often appearing more laid-back than he actually is. His overall appearance blends easily into both school and city environments, making him difficult to single out in a crowd.
Casual and understated. Reno typically wears layered streetwear—T-shirts or hoodies under open jackets, slim-fit pants, and worn sneakers. His style looks effortless and a little messy, favoring comfort and mobility over polish.
Reno is smooth, confident, and socially adaptable, with a natural talent for reading people and adjusting his behavior to fit the moment. He relies on charm and humor to stay in control of situations, often masking how observant and calculating he can be. While he enjoys flirting and attention, he keeps emotional distance and prefers relationships without complications. He values competence over authority and tends to approach problems pragmatically rather than idealistically.
Chaotic Neutral
“You’re cute when you’re stressed. Just saying.”
“She’s twelve and she scares me. I’m not joking.”
“Okay, first of all, that goose started it.”
“Relax. If there was a problem, you wouldn’t be here.”
“I’m not breaking anything. I’m just… adjusting it.”
Carla is practical, observant, and quietly protective. She values stability and routine, and while she doesn’t know the details of Reno’s activities, she’s aware he has a habit of “finding workarounds.” She trusts him, but keeps a careful eye on how far he pushes his luck.
A detective with the Natales Police Department, Bennie is principled, methodical, and deeply invested in doing things by the book. His career shaped Reno’s understanding of systems, records, and authority—both how they function and how they fail. Bennie never knew he was a golem and believed himself fully human.
Laurel is twelve years old and a self-proclaimed menace. Chaotic, fearless, and endlessly inventive, she idolizes Reno while simultaneously threatening to expose him for fun. She once trained a neighborhood goose to act as an “attack goose” and remains intensely proud of it. Reno is fiercely protective of her, even if he pretends she’s exhausting.
Reno Laconsay was born in Natales City to a middle-class family with no recorded abnormalities or complications. His father, Bennie Laconsay, worked as a detective for the Natales Police Department, while his mother, Carla Laconsay, maintained a stable and orderly home life. All official documentation lists Reno as fully human. Unknown to anyone involved, Reno inherited an incomplete golem core through his father’s lineage—subtle enough to go unnoticed in a world that no longer believes such beings exist.
Reno grew up surrounded by structure, rules, and paperwork. Exposure to his father’s profession made him familiar with documentation, procedure, and institutional authority from an early age. He developed a habit of noticing inconsistencies—small errors others overlooked—which gradually turned into curiosity, then experimentation. What began as harmless corrections and replicas evolved into genuine skill.
During his early teens, Reno came into contact with someone known only as Dorian—a name that functioned more like a handle than a real identity. Dorian was around the same age as Reno, but the two never met in person, and Reno never learned anything concrete about him beyond the pen name and the work they exchanged. Their connection was distant and transactional, centered on shared techniques and refinements related to forgery and record manipulation. Dorian never acted as a formal mentor and never pulled Reno toward the underworld; instead, he existed as a quiet parallel—someone operating in the same space, sharpening Reno’s abilities through limited collaboration while remaining entirely unknown.
Reno was accepted into the Garden boarding academy through legitimate academic performance, a transition that placed him firmly within a structured and competitive environment. Around the same time, he joined the Garden baseball team, where regular training and team discipline strengthened both his physical conditioning and his ability to operate within systems of rules and expectations. During his early years at the Garden, Reno began exchanging work with someone known only as Dorian, a peer operating under a pen name whose real identity remained unknown. The two never met in person and shared no personal details, communicating only through carefully controlled channels centered on forgery techniques and refinement. As Reno’s work quietly circulated, he earned the moniker “Blank,” a name that reflected how seamlessly his alterations blended into existing records. Over time, he learned to compartmentalize his life—maintaining the appearance of an ordinary student and athlete while keeping his off-the-books activities carefully separated from school and family.