Gon Freecss (
freecssofnature) wrote2015-07-06 03:06 pm
Entry tags:
Inugami Application
Character Information
Name/Alias: Gon Freecss
Fandom: Hunter x Hunter
Canonpoint: Chapter 345; after returning to Whale Island post-Chairman Election arc
Gender: Male
Age:14
Physical Description: Picture here! Gon has no tattoos and no notable scars.
History: Gon Freecss @Hunterpedia
Personality: Gon grew up in a tiny, remote fishing village on a small island with few other children and no public school, raised and tutored by his second cousin, Mito, the town's barkeeper. He spent most of his childhood running off into the forests of the island, befriending and playing with wild animals: as his great-grandmother says, the mountain itself served as his father. This wild upbringing not only contributed to his unusual athleticism and ferally keen senses, it also left him with a moral sense that seems more calibrated to an animal's perspective on the world than a human one. He has no problem accepting other people following their nature, even if their nature is that of a serial killer; he willingly chooses to let a serial killer go free after training against him for weeks to improve his speed and control in a fight. The things he finds most personally offensive are the stealing of others' free will (as Illumi did to Killua, or as Pitou did more catastrophically to Kite), failure to care about one's comrades, and -- on a purely selfish level -- injury to or callousness towards Gon's friends.
Academic achievement isn't Gon's forte. It's not just because he has minimal formal education: he works on instinct and intuition, and his considerable intelligence is more active and creative than theoretical. He has an excellent memory for people, faces and details, and he loves to have experts explain their subjects to him. He's terrible with history and politics, though, and badly in need of remedial math: Gon can't multiply by two and needs to count on his fingers to add or subtract. Because he's bad at academics and tactical thinking, Gon tends to think of himself as not as smart as his friends (especially Killua and Kurapica, who are both brilliant and highly analytical.) He doesn't seem upset about that, though. Instead, he tends to use it as an excuse to wheedle them into doing the kinds of analytical thinking that he doesn't find fun.
Despite being raised by a forest full of foxbears, Gon is incredibly charismatic and conscious of social nuances. He usually puts on a facade of oblivious sincerity, but he's a clever and shameless manipulator. During the Hunter Exam, when he and his friends are trapped in a challenge that requires them to cooperate with a man whose goal is to cause them all to fail, Gon constantly breaks up arguments, redirects anger and provides other routes out of a dilemma, while pretending not to notice anything at all. He also easily derails Palm's homicidal rages by reassuring and distracting her throughout the month while he and Killua train to earn their right to participate in an attack on the Chimera Ants.
When he truly fails to understand things, it's more often because it's a dilemma he sees as straightforward than because he's failing to understand nuance. When he's not playing the wide-eyed, cute social hacker, though, he's straightforward, good-natured and polite… until he really opens up. The people he's closest to -- and especially Killua, his best and closest friend -- get the full brunt of his stubborn, bratty, abrasively determined self. With Killua, Gon goes from initially always bright and happy in the Hunter Exam arc to, by a year to a year and a half later in the Greed Island arc, frequently arguing about plans or getting mad and relying on Killua to smooth over the rough edges of his temper. It's not a sign of a deterioration in their relationship; rather, it's the opposite. When Gon is so deeply distressed and angry that he pulls away from Killua's support during the Chimera Ant arc, the clearest sign of it is that he starts pretending he's always bright and happy with Killua again.
Even with the people closest to him, though, Gon rarely explicitly shares his thoughts. He's more likely to silently think through a situation that's troubling him, silently decide on a solution, and then -- sometimes -- tell people what he's going to do. At that point, he's nearly impossible to discourage or redirect. Gon has a radically individual view of motivation: to him, everyone's desires are fundamental to their self, and are sacrosanct. While he understands and respects the ties of family and community, they're not as important to him as the call of adventure and challenge. He apologizes to Mito, but never wavers in his plan to leave her behind and strike out into the world just like his father at the age of twelve -- in fact, when he returns, he tells her that he's not good at being a son. Gon idolizes his father, who left everything behind in pursuit of his own goals, including his son. His father is amazing, he believes, and so the life he chose over being a father to Gon must be even more amazing. This belief has been shaken by the painful experiences of the last several months of his life: losing his mentor Kite to a terrible death, sacrificing the use of his nen and nearly his life, losing the companionship of his best friend Killua, and meeting his father at last only to have Ging tell him to go back to his home island to try and live a "normal" life. His goals, in being achieved, have cost him everything he's gained in the search, and at the point where he'll be coming into game he is painfully adrift.
As part and parcel of his determined commitment to individual achievement, Gon is often unwilling to cooperate in order to overcome challenges, instead insisting on facing them on his own, no matter how much longer it might take. He's deeply offended during the Hunter Exam when Hisoka, impressed by his efforts, offers him a passing score he thinks he hasn't earned -- and later, when his opponent Hanzo gives up a fight he's winning because he can't force Gon to surrender, it annoys Gon so much that he demands that they work together to find a fair way for him to win instead. Both Hisoka and Hanzo have to knock him unconscious to force him to accept his "unearned" victory.
Gon never tries to talk someone out of wanting something, because his own goals have been such a fundamental -- if not always positive -- driving force in his life. Still, if someone's goals might result in a thing Gon doesn't want to happen, he's not above lying to them to keep them running in the wrong direction. Gon's a surprisingly expert liar for someone who maintains such a convincing portrayal of innocence and honesty. When his friend Kurapica collapses with a high fever, Gon pretends that the group of criminals he's pursuing have already left the city in order to keep Kurapica from going after them while ill and winding up injured or dead. He promises another Hunter Exam contestant that he'll give her a prize she needs to win if she works with him and his friends to escape a trap… but he doesn't tell her that he's going to take her prize and give the win to his friend instead. The innocent naivete is a trap that's fooled his friends as well as his opponents.
Gon's devotion to his goals is a reflection of his general, intense determination. He's determined to a fault and refuses to accept defeat, no matter the consequences of his stubbornness. Even when he's forced to redirect his attention, he never gives up on the original goal. He fails to master a technique in time for a battle in the Greed Island arc, argues about being forced to change his plans, but -- even though he appears to give in and let himself lose the argument -- he's mastered the technique a few months later in the following arc. Gon never really gives in. If he faces a battle he can't win, he redefines winning until it's something he can achieve. For instance, he loses several of his battles during the Heavens Arena arc, but he emerges satisfied from every one. In the first, he wanted to test his abilities and discover a way to evade his opponent's attacks. Even though he wasn't able to land a blow, he managed to draw the battle out over two hours, and he's content. In the second, he wants to land a clean punch on Hisoka in order to redeem the unearned win that Hisoka gave him during the Hunter's Exam, and so he's happy to land one blow even though Hisoka still thoroughly defeats him.
It's when he can't achieve success by his own standards that his boundless determination turns toxic. Gon's unable to let go of failure, and he'll become obsessed with making it right. He imposes punishments on himself, often in the form of letting himself be seriously injured (he says that he can't feel better unless he's made up for it when he does something wrong). He'll also come up with and dedicate himself to ways to make the failure okay, even when they're based on the slimmest threads of hope: he represses his anger and upset over the terrible fate of his mentor Kite until he is forced to confront the reality of Kite's death, and then he has a complete rage-fueled breakdown and brutally beats Kite's murderer to death at the cost of his nen and very nearly of his life.
Gon has a temper that's slow to ignite but unstoppable. He often starts fights out slow, even taking serious injury, before he gets angry enough to attack his opponent seriously. Once he does get angry, though, he loses all inhibitions; he'll challenge vastly superior opponents (like the Phantom Brigade, any of whom could easily kill him at the time, and who he berates and threatens while captive), threaten innocent bystanders (he coerces Neferpitou into agreeing to help Kite by threatening to kill the helpless, badly injured young woman she's trying to heal on her King's orders), kill without hesitation (when dueling Chimera Ants, Gon keeps trying to talk until his opponent angers him, and then he picks the Ant up and crushes him to death with his bare hands), and sacrifice anything in service to his anger. Even without his nen -- which grows stronger with his rage in a way capable of scaring adult experts -- Gon's rage is a formidable force.
Abilities: At the canon point I'm taking him from, Gon has lost his ability to sense nen, the manifestation of a sentient creature's aura to create physical effects by reinforcing bodies or physical objects, manifesting in tangible form, taking on different physical qualities, or transforming into other forms of energy. He still has the learned focus and discipline that allowed him to manipulate it, but can't create any effects by using nen or detect others' use of it. The following abilities that he retains are all considered "natural" in his own canon, but are nonetheless beyond plausible human norms.
Superhuman strength: Without using nen, Gon has a push strength well over four tons, can easily lift and carry four people larger than he is, and can jump up or down distances three or four times his height.
Superhuman endurance: He's capable of running for over thirty hours, including uphill stretches and several miles through a swamp, without becoming fatigued.
Quick recovery: His injuries heal unusually fast. Broken bones knit in less than a month with enough strength to bear full weight.
Keen senses: Gon has a sense of smell as good as a dog's and can track by scent. He's able to visually follow movements too fast for most people to see and can pick up on extremely quiet sounds.
Samples
Dialogue: Top-level; Alma Karma; Zidane Tribal; Souma Kyo
Exposition/Introspection: The wind chime swayed in a tiny breeze that brushed by Gon's open window. Balanced on his chair, he waited, holding his breath, until it stilled.
Very, very carefully, he slid one finger into the loop holding it on its nail, and lifted with infinite care. The chime swung, just a little. It didn't sound.
Gon lowered it onto his neatly made bed with equal care, and, as the quilt took the last of the weight, inhaled. It hadn't made a single sound. And he could put it back up the same way! A glance at the bedroom door confirmed he'd locked it, and Mito had given him enough distance learning worksheets (now scattered over his desk and the floor) to take him at least five hours.
Freedom, he thought, and stuck his head out of the window, breathing deeply of the sea and forest scents. Freedom at last.
He checked the yard (empty, like he'd thought, because Mito was tending bar in front and Grandma was doing the shopping in town) and dove out headfirst, flipping to land on his feet and pelt towards the forest. It'd been nothing but homework since he'd returned to Whale Island last week. He hadn't even had time to get to the mountain. Okay, he did have two years of work to catch up on, but math worksheets all day long was, Gon was pretty sure, a fate way worse than death.
He just needed one afternoon to get the taste of homework out of his mouth. As long as Mito didn't know about it she couldn't yell. And he'd worked extra hard this morning, so he'd earned it, and she wouldn't notice he hadn't done as much work, he assured himself, and leapt up a tumbledown heap of mossy boulders, dodging the slippery spots where tiny rills wound down their sides.
Not everything was the same here, either. It had been over a year since he'd visited with Killua. A few tall trees had been lightning-struck or blown down by gales and a few banks reshaped by heavy rains. Every little change gave him a funny feeling, like a little cramp in his chest, as it reminded him of the time he'd been away. He felt older, too, he guessed. Anyway he was a little taller and a little bigger: Mito had measured him to replace his shorts and the jacket he'd lost on Greed Island, so he knew that much for sure. Nothing stayed the same.
He ducked under a drooping branch, glanced up at the crosshatched claw marks scoring its bark, then cupped his hands around his mouth and yodeled.
A few minutes later, the bushes rustled violently, and eight hundred pounds of muscle and shaggy red fur rose out of them to stand three times Gon's height.
Gon threw his arms wide. Gonta threw his forelegs wide and fell forward onto him, stubby tail wagging joyfully as he licked Gon's face.
Laughing, Gon dodged the worst of the spit and got an arm around to scratch in the spot the foxbear liked best, right behind one of his long, pointed ears. Gonta's ear canted all the way forward in appreciation.
"I missed you," Gon said into his ear. Gonta whuffed hot breath over his face, and sat back, paws in his lap in a nearly human pose. Gon sat up, smiling, and blinked a couple of times against a weird stinging in his eyes. It'd be okay, he thought, and bounced back to his feet to go over and scratch Gonta's ears properly. He'd done a lot of things that were hard. He'd done a lot of things that were awful.
Gonta yawned, baring a mouthful of inch-long white teeth, and Gon said, "Let's go catch some fish!"
If he tried, he could be good at a normal life, too.
Name/Alias: Gon Freecss
Fandom: Hunter x Hunter
Canonpoint: Chapter 345; after returning to Whale Island post-Chairman Election arc
Gender: Male
Age:14
Physical Description: Picture here! Gon has no tattoos and no notable scars.
History: Gon Freecss @Hunterpedia
Personality: Gon grew up in a tiny, remote fishing village on a small island with few other children and no public school, raised and tutored by his second cousin, Mito, the town's barkeeper. He spent most of his childhood running off into the forests of the island, befriending and playing with wild animals: as his great-grandmother says, the mountain itself served as his father. This wild upbringing not only contributed to his unusual athleticism and ferally keen senses, it also left him with a moral sense that seems more calibrated to an animal's perspective on the world than a human one. He has no problem accepting other people following their nature, even if their nature is that of a serial killer; he willingly chooses to let a serial killer go free after training against him for weeks to improve his speed and control in a fight. The things he finds most personally offensive are the stealing of others' free will (as Illumi did to Killua, or as Pitou did more catastrophically to Kite), failure to care about one's comrades, and -- on a purely selfish level -- injury to or callousness towards Gon's friends.
Academic achievement isn't Gon's forte. It's not just because he has minimal formal education: he works on instinct and intuition, and his considerable intelligence is more active and creative than theoretical. He has an excellent memory for people, faces and details, and he loves to have experts explain their subjects to him. He's terrible with history and politics, though, and badly in need of remedial math: Gon can't multiply by two and needs to count on his fingers to add or subtract. Because he's bad at academics and tactical thinking, Gon tends to think of himself as not as smart as his friends (especially Killua and Kurapica, who are both brilliant and highly analytical.) He doesn't seem upset about that, though. Instead, he tends to use it as an excuse to wheedle them into doing the kinds of analytical thinking that he doesn't find fun.
Despite being raised by a forest full of foxbears, Gon is incredibly charismatic and conscious of social nuances. He usually puts on a facade of oblivious sincerity, but he's a clever and shameless manipulator. During the Hunter Exam, when he and his friends are trapped in a challenge that requires them to cooperate with a man whose goal is to cause them all to fail, Gon constantly breaks up arguments, redirects anger and provides other routes out of a dilemma, while pretending not to notice anything at all. He also easily derails Palm's homicidal rages by reassuring and distracting her throughout the month while he and Killua train to earn their right to participate in an attack on the Chimera Ants.
When he truly fails to understand things, it's more often because it's a dilemma he sees as straightforward than because he's failing to understand nuance. When he's not playing the wide-eyed, cute social hacker, though, he's straightforward, good-natured and polite… until he really opens up. The people he's closest to -- and especially Killua, his best and closest friend -- get the full brunt of his stubborn, bratty, abrasively determined self. With Killua, Gon goes from initially always bright and happy in the Hunter Exam arc to, by a year to a year and a half later in the Greed Island arc, frequently arguing about plans or getting mad and relying on Killua to smooth over the rough edges of his temper. It's not a sign of a deterioration in their relationship; rather, it's the opposite. When Gon is so deeply distressed and angry that he pulls away from Killua's support during the Chimera Ant arc, the clearest sign of it is that he starts pretending he's always bright and happy with Killua again.
Even with the people closest to him, though, Gon rarely explicitly shares his thoughts. He's more likely to silently think through a situation that's troubling him, silently decide on a solution, and then -- sometimes -- tell people what he's going to do. At that point, he's nearly impossible to discourage or redirect. Gon has a radically individual view of motivation: to him, everyone's desires are fundamental to their self, and are sacrosanct. While he understands and respects the ties of family and community, they're not as important to him as the call of adventure and challenge. He apologizes to Mito, but never wavers in his plan to leave her behind and strike out into the world just like his father at the age of twelve -- in fact, when he returns, he tells her that he's not good at being a son. Gon idolizes his father, who left everything behind in pursuit of his own goals, including his son. His father is amazing, he believes, and so the life he chose over being a father to Gon must be even more amazing. This belief has been shaken by the painful experiences of the last several months of his life: losing his mentor Kite to a terrible death, sacrificing the use of his nen and nearly his life, losing the companionship of his best friend Killua, and meeting his father at last only to have Ging tell him to go back to his home island to try and live a "normal" life. His goals, in being achieved, have cost him everything he's gained in the search, and at the point where he'll be coming into game he is painfully adrift.
As part and parcel of his determined commitment to individual achievement, Gon is often unwilling to cooperate in order to overcome challenges, instead insisting on facing them on his own, no matter how much longer it might take. He's deeply offended during the Hunter Exam when Hisoka, impressed by his efforts, offers him a passing score he thinks he hasn't earned -- and later, when his opponent Hanzo gives up a fight he's winning because he can't force Gon to surrender, it annoys Gon so much that he demands that they work together to find a fair way for him to win instead. Both Hisoka and Hanzo have to knock him unconscious to force him to accept his "unearned" victory.
Gon never tries to talk someone out of wanting something, because his own goals have been such a fundamental -- if not always positive -- driving force in his life. Still, if someone's goals might result in a thing Gon doesn't want to happen, he's not above lying to them to keep them running in the wrong direction. Gon's a surprisingly expert liar for someone who maintains such a convincing portrayal of innocence and honesty. When his friend Kurapica collapses with a high fever, Gon pretends that the group of criminals he's pursuing have already left the city in order to keep Kurapica from going after them while ill and winding up injured or dead. He promises another Hunter Exam contestant that he'll give her a prize she needs to win if she works with him and his friends to escape a trap… but he doesn't tell her that he's going to take her prize and give the win to his friend instead. The innocent naivete is a trap that's fooled his friends as well as his opponents.
Gon's devotion to his goals is a reflection of his general, intense determination. He's determined to a fault and refuses to accept defeat, no matter the consequences of his stubbornness. Even when he's forced to redirect his attention, he never gives up on the original goal. He fails to master a technique in time for a battle in the Greed Island arc, argues about being forced to change his plans, but -- even though he appears to give in and let himself lose the argument -- he's mastered the technique a few months later in the following arc. Gon never really gives in. If he faces a battle he can't win, he redefines winning until it's something he can achieve. For instance, he loses several of his battles during the Heavens Arena arc, but he emerges satisfied from every one. In the first, he wanted to test his abilities and discover a way to evade his opponent's attacks. Even though he wasn't able to land a blow, he managed to draw the battle out over two hours, and he's content. In the second, he wants to land a clean punch on Hisoka in order to redeem the unearned win that Hisoka gave him during the Hunter's Exam, and so he's happy to land one blow even though Hisoka still thoroughly defeats him.
It's when he can't achieve success by his own standards that his boundless determination turns toxic. Gon's unable to let go of failure, and he'll become obsessed with making it right. He imposes punishments on himself, often in the form of letting himself be seriously injured (he says that he can't feel better unless he's made up for it when he does something wrong). He'll also come up with and dedicate himself to ways to make the failure okay, even when they're based on the slimmest threads of hope: he represses his anger and upset over the terrible fate of his mentor Kite until he is forced to confront the reality of Kite's death, and then he has a complete rage-fueled breakdown and brutally beats Kite's murderer to death at the cost of his nen and very nearly of his life.
Gon has a temper that's slow to ignite but unstoppable. He often starts fights out slow, even taking serious injury, before he gets angry enough to attack his opponent seriously. Once he does get angry, though, he loses all inhibitions; he'll challenge vastly superior opponents (like the Phantom Brigade, any of whom could easily kill him at the time, and who he berates and threatens while captive), threaten innocent bystanders (he coerces Neferpitou into agreeing to help Kite by threatening to kill the helpless, badly injured young woman she's trying to heal on her King's orders), kill without hesitation (when dueling Chimera Ants, Gon keeps trying to talk until his opponent angers him, and then he picks the Ant up and crushes him to death with his bare hands), and sacrifice anything in service to his anger. Even without his nen -- which grows stronger with his rage in a way capable of scaring adult experts -- Gon's rage is a formidable force.
Abilities: At the canon point I'm taking him from, Gon has lost his ability to sense nen, the manifestation of a sentient creature's aura to create physical effects by reinforcing bodies or physical objects, manifesting in tangible form, taking on different physical qualities, or transforming into other forms of energy. He still has the learned focus and discipline that allowed him to manipulate it, but can't create any effects by using nen or detect others' use of it. The following abilities that he retains are all considered "natural" in his own canon, but are nonetheless beyond plausible human norms.
Superhuman strength: Without using nen, Gon has a push strength well over four tons, can easily lift and carry four people larger than he is, and can jump up or down distances three or four times his height.
Superhuman endurance: He's capable of running for over thirty hours, including uphill stretches and several miles through a swamp, without becoming fatigued.
Quick recovery: His injuries heal unusually fast. Broken bones knit in less than a month with enough strength to bear full weight.
Keen senses: Gon has a sense of smell as good as a dog's and can track by scent. He's able to visually follow movements too fast for most people to see and can pick up on extremely quiet sounds.
Samples
Dialogue: Top-level; Alma Karma; Zidane Tribal; Souma Kyo
Exposition/Introspection: The wind chime swayed in a tiny breeze that brushed by Gon's open window. Balanced on his chair, he waited, holding his breath, until it stilled.
Very, very carefully, he slid one finger into the loop holding it on its nail, and lifted with infinite care. The chime swung, just a little. It didn't sound.
Gon lowered it onto his neatly made bed with equal care, and, as the quilt took the last of the weight, inhaled. It hadn't made a single sound. And he could put it back up the same way! A glance at the bedroom door confirmed he'd locked it, and Mito had given him enough distance learning worksheets (now scattered over his desk and the floor) to take him at least five hours.
Freedom, he thought, and stuck his head out of the window, breathing deeply of the sea and forest scents. Freedom at last.
He checked the yard (empty, like he'd thought, because Mito was tending bar in front and Grandma was doing the shopping in town) and dove out headfirst, flipping to land on his feet and pelt towards the forest. It'd been nothing but homework since he'd returned to Whale Island last week. He hadn't even had time to get to the mountain. Okay, he did have two years of work to catch up on, but math worksheets all day long was, Gon was pretty sure, a fate way worse than death.
He just needed one afternoon to get the taste of homework out of his mouth. As long as Mito didn't know about it she couldn't yell. And he'd worked extra hard this morning, so he'd earned it, and she wouldn't notice he hadn't done as much work, he assured himself, and leapt up a tumbledown heap of mossy boulders, dodging the slippery spots where tiny rills wound down their sides.
Not everything was the same here, either. It had been over a year since he'd visited with Killua. A few tall trees had been lightning-struck or blown down by gales and a few banks reshaped by heavy rains. Every little change gave him a funny feeling, like a little cramp in his chest, as it reminded him of the time he'd been away. He felt older, too, he guessed. Anyway he was a little taller and a little bigger: Mito had measured him to replace his shorts and the jacket he'd lost on Greed Island, so he knew that much for sure. Nothing stayed the same.
He ducked under a drooping branch, glanced up at the crosshatched claw marks scoring its bark, then cupped his hands around his mouth and yodeled.
A few minutes later, the bushes rustled violently, and eight hundred pounds of muscle and shaggy red fur rose out of them to stand three times Gon's height.
Gon threw his arms wide. Gonta threw his forelegs wide and fell forward onto him, stubby tail wagging joyfully as he licked Gon's face.
Laughing, Gon dodged the worst of the spit and got an arm around to scratch in the spot the foxbear liked best, right behind one of his long, pointed ears. Gonta's ear canted all the way forward in appreciation.
"I missed you," Gon said into his ear. Gonta whuffed hot breath over his face, and sat back, paws in his lap in a nearly human pose. Gon sat up, smiling, and blinked a couple of times against a weird stinging in his eyes. It'd be okay, he thought, and bounced back to his feet to go over and scratch Gonta's ears properly. He'd done a lot of things that were hard. He'd done a lot of things that were awful.
Gonta yawned, baring a mouthful of inch-long white teeth, and Gon said, "Let's go catch some fish!"
If he tried, he could be good at a normal life, too.

Acceptance Notice (for my reference)
Congratulations on being accepted to our p̸̱͖̦r̷͍̦̼e̵͕̹̱s̵̡̫͓t̸̳̺̝i̷̜̭̲g̶̥̥̝i̵̺̼̟o̶̢̫̭u̵͈͇ͅs̷̜̘̲ Inugami Academy, Gon Freecss. We received your application and were absolutely thrilled to see such dedicated enthusiasm to the cause of learning that you showed in it. Here at Inugami Academy we dedicate ourselves to blood and rust and care about there is an ocean in your mind we search out the qualities of deathlifedeathlife that make an education so important to we're watching you begins at 38596NED92I2 ą̶̜̥f̵̨͕̺t̴̼̱̬e̵̝̞̪r̸̤͕͈ ̵̡̬̫ṱ̷̣͙h̵̹̹͜e̵͖̗͉e̷̜͕͇ bell.
But there's more to a good education than just trying hard, and providing the correct facilities to learn in, something that we take pride in at Inugami. And don't worry, you're guaranteed to fit right in with helpme the rest of the students. Everyone who graduates here comes out at their very best, and we're prepared to make the same experience for you as well.
Your homeroom is 1-A, and your locker is 198. We hope your enjoy your time here!
✿