Ines French The Rabbit Girl |top| Instant
Inès is skittish but fierce. She startles at loud noises, but she'll step between a bully and a friend without hesitation. She loves gardening, not because she's good at it (she often eats the carrots before they're ripe), but because the earth doesn't judge. She writes poetry in a tiny notebook she keeps in her overalls pocket—all about moonrise, escape, and the quiet joy of finding a safe burrow.
When a new student arrives at school who can hear her heartbeat—really hear it—Inès realizes she might not be the only one hiding in plain sight. But trusting someone means lowering her defenses. And in a town where kids with animal traits keep disappearing, lowering your ears might be the last thing you ever do. Would you like a version of this adapted for a comic profile, RPG character sheet, or a short story opening? ines french the rabbit girl
Inès French isn't your average girl with a pair of rabbit ears tucked under a beanie. She was born that way—soft, cream-colored fur lining the insides of her long ears, a little cotton tail that peeks out when she wears skirts, and eyes the color of warm hazelnut coffee, always scanning for danger. Inès is skittish but fierce
Behind the twitching nose and velvet ears lies a girl who learned to listen before she learned to speak—and to run before she learned to trust. She writes poetry in a tiny notebook she
Inès dresses in oversized sweaters and thrift-store corduroys. Her ears are her most expressive feature—perked up when curious, drooping when sad, one flopped over when she's tired. She never wears hair ties; they pull at the fur. Her shoes are always silent—old ballet flats or thick socks indoors. She moves like a whisper.