(must be 300x300 or less)
STATS
» NAME: C.C. or C2
» FANDOM: Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion
» AGE: Looks to be in late teens. Is actually many centuries old.
» GENDER: Mentally? Older than a 100 years. So really old viewpoints, more like ancient. Physically? A very pretty eighteen year old lady.
» ORIENTATION: Heterosexual. » COLLAR: A simple black collar with a chain dangling from the side with the silver symbol of Geass dangling on it. Looking for a good image ref.
KINKS
» YES: In progress.» MAYBE: In progress» NO: » PAIRING PREFERENCES: With males, pretty please? And hm…I’m a big Lelouch x C.C. fan so …Lelouch would be on the list, even if she’d laugh at his stamina. She has a thing for long-term partners.
EXTENDED PROFILE
» APPEARANCE:
» PERSONALITY: Lelouch: You’re a very selfish woman.
“Of course. That’s because I’m C.C.”
From the beginning, C.C. is mysterious, willful to a fault, independent and seemingly selfish. Throw that in with pizza, her childish obsession with the Pizza Hut merchandise, and the fact that not even the strong-willed main character can get rid of her and you have a very stubborn woman. But what kind of person is C.C. is exactly?
For a woman who has lived five times the lifetimes that Lelouch has lived, what sort of gain does she seek to get from making a contract with him? She warns Lelouch that the power she is giving him will make him lonely, but at the same time she seems to know the outcome of his decisions. The minute she enters his life, she breaks every sort of expectation he has. And still somehow discloses herself in perfect secrecy. Even her name isn’t actually her name. Her answers are vague, and she often puts words in Lelouch’s mouth.
C.C. is very independent when it comes to what she decides to disclose and what she doesn’t. She can be dismissive almost to point-blank rudeness, and she always speaks the complete truth even when it can be as harsh as a razor-edged knife. When Lelouch’s actions as Zero kill the loved one of one of his friends Shirley, C.C.’s bluntly asks him if he regrets it, and questions why he is so confused. She even goes so far as to harshly call him weak, and even though Lelouch tries to silence her, C.C. will not stop giving her opinion, and continues.
“You’re just a boy who’s all talk with dreams of victory in his head.”
C.C. makes it perfectly clear to Lelouch that she isn’t someone who will handle the brunt of his problems and try to convince him that what he is doing is just. Instead she lingers, she watches, and she waits. Early in the first few episodes C.C. tells Lelouch with a smirk that she knew she pegged him as ‘interesting’ and she expects him to hold to it. After all, she gave him quite a gift, he better not be so childish as to waste it wallowing in his emotions, as she bluntly puts it next.
“You no longer have the right to get agitated or choose to do nothing. You shouldn’t do that if you want to live. Don’t disappoint me.”
In other words? C.C. tells Lelouch that he better not come complaining to her about the outcome of his actions, and like a well-seasoned advisor, serves as almost his harsh reminder of the choices he has made, and that it is his responsibility. Even though at first Lelouch doesn’t take it well, he realizes that as frustrating as it is, C.C. is usually always right. Which leads us to another trait of hers. C.C. is extremely intuitive. She can read between the lines, and deal out hidden meanings better than most of the cast. Which is why her rapier-wit, her sharp tongue keep Lelouch constantly in line. But that doesn’t mean she doesn’t like to tease or point out the obvious to other characters for her own gain. More particularly Kallen Kouzuki, another female lead who struggles with her feelings for both Lelouch and his alter-persona, Zero. One main point about Kallen is that she doesn’t like being left out of the loop, and is often jealous of Lelouch and C.C.’s close banter with each other. That and the fact that C.C. always seems to know everything. Which is why when C.C. switches with Lelouch’s role as Zero while he goes to school, Kallen expresses jealousy and irritation that Lelouch wouldn’t go so far as to inform her that C.C. was actually dressed as Zero on that day.
“I don’t like this. Him going so far as to keep secrets from us.”
To which C.C., who already has a clear idea of what Kallen means, and without reserve, turns to her and says, “’Us?’ You mean ‘me’, don’t you? “ C.C. always knows the right buttons to press, and somehow always manages to avoid trouble for it. Whatever scolding she does get for her sharp-mouth, she breezily blows it off, commanding Lelouch once during one of her independent excursions to ‘not be strict with her’.
While C.C. could generally care less what anyone thinks, when Tamaki questions her role as Zero’s advisor, she immediately casts him off as someone stupid, and goes so far as to call him a ‘pathetic yokel’ and says, “It’s been some time since anyone has ever spoken to me like that.” Which gives you an idea that C.C. won’t tolerate any sort of verbal abuse from anyone, even though she can dish it out without batting an eyelash. That doesn’t mean she isn’t seriously effected by it, for the most part if someone from the cast says something rude to her, she remains as calm as ever, drawing out another trait of hers, her seemingly emotionless, constantly apathetic outlook.
Of course this doesn’t always apply to the whole series, but for the most part of season one, we get an inkling of a cold-hearted witch who locks everything away and spares no mercy when speaking the truth. Not to mention she, for the most part, appears unbelievably willful and selfish, going so far as to steal Lelouch’s credit cards so she could get a bite of her obsession and constant craving, Pizza Hut.
When Lelouch angrily asks her why, she simply says things along the lines of, “Because I needed it.” As if that is the most reasonable explanation. When they actually meet, C.C. without even announcing she is staying with him, kicks off her boots, unzips her straitjacket, and slips into Lelouch’s bed right in front of him. Indignant, Lelouch interrogates her and her only response is an airy, “Persistence irritates me, “ before she turns on her side, showing that she only listens as much as she wants to listen, and more obviously, she does whatever she wants when she wants to. Since Lelouch doesn’t get the hint at first, C.C. tells him that ‘boys sleep on the floor’ and cuts off all conversation, saying “Goodnight Lelouch”.
Appearing outside of his room without any respect for boundaries, she goes so far as to verbally press his limits by showing up in places where she puts herself in jeopardy which not only adds questions to Lelouch’s identity, but makes all his friends wonder if he has a girlfriend. She even flat-out states to Nunnally, while not altogether lying, but not exactly in the right wording, that she and Lelouch are promised to each other. For a time poor Nunnally believes that C.C. is marrying Lelouch.
So most of the time C.C. leaves a trail of things Lelouch constantly has to cover up for, making you wonder what exactly is so useful about her. For the most part? She seems like nothing more than a nuisance. However that doesn't mean C.C. doesn't have her instances of showing actual human emotions. But first, one has to wonder what sort of life C.C. has lived that made her shut herself out from the world.
While she appears to be cold and heartless, she in reality seems more likely to be a lonely, almost outcasted individual; and considering her long existence, C.C. questions her own humanity at times. In a rare scene of vulnerability, Lelouch questions what her real name is, and she tearfully asks what purpose there is for someone like her to have a name. For Lelouch, who is quite possibly one of the first to show her genuine kindness, she wants to know what it sounds like. What it feels like. She asks him after his curious question that if he really appreciates her saving his life, if he would say her real name in an intimate way. "Say it gently. Like my lover would." Of course after that brief moment of when Lelouch says her name, C.C. instead of being sentimental and thanking him like most normal girls do, she does the unthinkable and instead, laughs at him and tells him: "It sounded terrible." Causing Lelouch to exasperatedly tell her how difficult she is, which only leads her to smile and remind him that is exactly the reason she is who she is.
While she tells Lelouch that he is no longer in a position to do nothing with his sins, she is also the one who is there to help him get through the burden of them. After killing his beloved half-sister out of necessity, C.C. is the one who speaks to him quietly, softly in a private room. She is the one who sees through his false bravado, his arrogance, and finds the fragility and vulnerability underneath. She is both intuitive, and frighteningly observant. Ironically? It's just what Lelouch needs. Someone who can keep up with him on equal terms. It is C.C. who takes him into her arms and gently assures him that she will never forsake him. She even promises that she will "stay by your side until the very end". Why? Because they are accomplices. Her rare moments of compassion give the viewer a faint glimpse that there is still humanity behind her cold exterior.
But what else makes up C.C.? How does she view life? At the start, she is cynical. She doesn't feel much for humans and says that she can't remember being one.
While it's obvious being with Lelouch has wakened some dormant parts of her, thoughts sealed away by her lonely existence, is it enough to change her viewpoint?
"It's just pointless accumulation. You can't call that a life. Lelouch, my wish is to die. To end my existence."
For C.C., who has suffered by human hands countless times, has a bitter outlook on the concept of love, friendship or time itself. To someone who has lived hundreds of years, she is easily bored, and easily unaffected by the countless events of the world. After all, she's seen it all before. Perhaps her curiosity in how Lelouch changes the world causes her to re-evaluate if human kind can truly alter fate .Maybe she is just bored, wanting to find something to do? Or perhaps she wants to have faith in humankind once again. Whatever the reason, she isn't at all comfortable sharing her painful history, and when Lelouch gets a brief glimpse due to her powers, C.C. appears visibly distraught, going so far as to shed tears as she tells him that he is 'unveiling' her, and begs him to stop.
"I can't remember being human, or who has loved or who has hated me. All that is left are the memories of a witch."
Now these words capture the core of C.C. Like the wish her Geass granted her, C.C. longs to know what love, kindness, and human affection feels like. She is a rather isolated and lonely person that deep down, doesn't want to admit she still longs for the sort of love she was falsely given in her youth. The years of being without this, She was used in the past, for her gift to give contracts, her Geass that invoked forced love, but Lelouch, Lelouch shows her how it feels to be treated as a human.
By the end of Code Geass C.C. is still her snarky, seemingly apathetic self, but deep inside there is a warmth that wasn't there before. She is quicker to smile in the last few episodes. In the end, we have a C.C. who is finally deciding her life has value all because of the impact of a single act of kindness brought on by Lelouch.» BACKGROUND: A mysterious witch who gave the main character a power that altered the fate of the world, her name is lost to time. Instead? They call her ‘C.C.’. She says rather proudly that this is a name for a Witch, and not a human. But why are her eyes so lonely? She lingers behind Lelouch as a shadow, watching each and every move he makes. Altering his fate, the witch makes sure he grants her deepest wish.
‘What, you thought I saved you? Don’t be stupid! You and I have a contract. I’ll keep you alive no matter what. No matter how much it takes me. No matter what I have to do.” - Altered quote from the Manga : Code Geass;
Her contract ended up turning the witch into a human, all because of a simple act of kindness from the boy, Lelouch. Now he is gone, but the warm memories remain. No longer wanting to die, the witch is free, and she travels across the country, a nomad on a haywagon, wanting to see the changes in the new world that has been made. Or maybe, just maybe, she is merely bored. The second seems more likely…
» OTHER: Um…she’s immortal? So anything except the collar will not kill her. Oh and she’s obsessed with pizza. C: Literally. Obsessed. Her hair is naturally green. Don’t touch the Cheese-kun. It’s her sacred baby.
MORE IMAGES
Lala sleepware:
Geass sigil/ closeup
Current outfit.
CONTACT
» OOC JOURNAL:
ohlizzie» AIM: Example; ..Don’t really have one. X’)
» EMAIL: thosebrighteyes@gmail.com