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Ghada

She’s a beautiful female Antelope, tall, slender and charming, and she’s the personal slave of the Divine Prince Siptha. Like all other Antelopes for two generations now Ghada too was born in servitude, and she doesn’t know what freedom is: she belongs to the Lions of Kemethiron. Behind her facade of resignation and submission, she's a Herald who hides high courage, tenacity and a swashbuckling strength of personality. Something that allowed her to enter into Prince Siptha graces.

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Ghada took over the Prince's care after her mother, who was baby Siptha’s nanny, died of hardship and old age. After a few years as his personal slave, Siptha learned to know her bravery and heart, and appointed her as his handmaid, with the task of assisting him in royal tasks. Moreover, Siptha even appointed her as ambassador of Antelope people at the Pharaoh’s court, a fictitious title that is always ignored by everyone - especially from the Pharaoh -, except Siptha who, on the contrary, cares much for her advice and opinion.

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Like any Antelope, and even more so as a court slave, Ghada is forbidden to own anything of non-Leonine made, but she proudly refuses to remove an earring created by her great-grandmother, a simple object that has now remained among few and rare trinkets of their original culture. Siptha fiercely defends this courage of hers in private, but in front of Pharaoh's court he treats that earring carelessly, diminishing the importance that others attribute to it. Despite this demeaning and humiliating situation, Ghada considers herself deeply lucky for the opportunity to live a good life, and even to advise the Prince who will one day rule them.
Ghada feels a deep and endless love for Siptha, but it's not a true love, what she feels is love for the idealized figure of the Prince, a loyalty to his precepts and a faith in that person who, without doubt, will one day lift her people from the dust and filth: a love that will lead her to die, sacrificing her life to save her Prince.

As an assistant to the Divine Prince, Ghada was required to learn to defend herself with weapons, or rather to defend him, and has become a skilled archer and a good swordswoman, but she also had the opportunity to learn to read and write, and above all to learn the basics of magic, which she uses in the form of Metamagic tricks of fascination.

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