Jane Hook

"A pirate must swear, for it is the nature of pirates to do so, sir, but with respect to the perameters of the class, I shall endevour to do so in such a ladylike fashion one would be forgiven for mistaking it for the charming chatter of well bred ladies on an outing."

- Jane, In regards to using foul language in class

Jane Hook is the daughter of Captain James Hook, main antagonist from the play "Peter Pan", the children's novel "Peter Pan and Wendy" by J.M.Barrie.

She is a rebel more by attitude than Legacy choice, although she is more interested in pillaging, looting and generally bolstering her reputation as scourge of the seven seas than chasing after an annoying, flying, petulant little girl, no matter how much Pan's cockiness irritates her.

Personality
Jane is equally aloof, black hearted and melancholic as her father, treating her peers and crew as little more than dogs and despising most forms of socialization. She's dangerously inclined to knee jerk violence, so sitting next to her in class is a bit of a roulette, and passing her in the halls can lead to serious gouges.

She's vain and takes quite some pride and time in her appearance, believing presentation is truly good form, but will, on occasion, become so deeply melancholy she will become a tangle of snarled hair, smudged makeup and rumpled clothing. These occasions she is at her most dangerous and prone to spontanious gutting.

Appearance
Jane is taller than average height with fair, British skin and curly black hair that varies from ringlets to snarls, depending on the level of care, highlighted with intenesely red streaks. It usually sits in relatively bushy curls, swept over her left eye.

Her eyes are the same forget-me-not blue as her father and she inherits the odd trait of a spark of red in them when she is about to kill.

She has a curvacious figure and is heavily tattooed [Images pending]. Her right hand is severed at the wrist and scarred along her forearm. She straps a cap onto it which she usually fits a hook to, but the apparatus can vary from a claw to a dirk depending on her needs.

The Work
Peter Pan was a play written by the Scottish Playwrite J.M. Barrie in 1904. It was later adapted into the novel form in 1911. Although not a true fairytale, as it's considered a children's story, but in the perameters of Ever After High, which accepts the other famous childen's story "Alice in Wonderland" and the nursery Rhyme "Little Bo Peep" it qualifies her for a place at the school.

In 2006, by Geraldine McCaughrean won a competition to write the official sequel and came out with [Pan in Scarlet], which is also part of Jane's Legacy.

The Tale
Peter Pan is the tale of the throughly ordinary Victorian children Wendy, John and Michael Darling, living at number 14 in London with their Mother Mary and their father George. Throught he conniving of the eternal spirit of youth, Peter Pan and their very own childish whims, the Darling Children get spirited away to a place that exists in the minds of all children and on the Second Star to the Right and Straight on Till Morning- Neverland

There they encounter a whole number of trials and tribulations, from saving a princess to eating imaginary meals. Neverland is beset with dangers, from man eating animals to mermaids who want to drown you, but worst of all is Captain Jas. Hook, the only man the Sea-Cookever feared. He as a deep hatered of Pan, not just for cutting off his hand and feeding it to a crocodile, but for his irritating and infuriating smugness.

The story climaxes with Hook and his Pirates kidnapping the children and poisoning Pan. However, the plan fails and Tinker Bell is poisoned instead, but revived with the belief of children around the world.

Pan swears "Either Hook or Pan" and fights the Captain, until bereft of his swods, he jumps overboard, straight into the jaws of the waiting crocodile.

Later, in Peter Pan in Scarlet, it's revealled he does not die, as nothing ever truly dies in Neverland. Instead, he is wasted down to a ragged thing by the stomatch acid of the crocodile. Managing to keep his strength up by eating the crocodile's eggs, he slices her open and escapes, becoming Ravello, and taking over a circus.

When John, Wendy and the Lost Boys return to Neverland to repair the damage done from the Great War, Ravello joins them on the treasure hunt Peter takes them on. He gradually tricks and grooms Peter into becoming a young version of himself, but is thwarted in the end and attacked by the Darling's dog.

Wendy covers him in his pirate coat and gives him a goodnight kiss. He wakes much later as Hook once more, desiring revenge on Peter. There is no Neverland withour Peter Pan, but there is no Neverland without Captain Hook, either.

How does Jane come into it?
In the story, Captain Hook's first moment of galvanized hatred towards Peter is when he severs his hand and feeds it to the crocodile. Unfortunately, things happened differently, and although Jane finds Peta, Peter Pan's daughter, highly annoying, she doesn't have quite the same level of black hearted hatred her father had, finding more appeal in sacking and burning towns and general pirating activites. Chasing Pan is more of a chore than an obsession.

Family
She loves her father in the way only a pirate can. With cannon fire, hair raising insults, the occasional gratuitious over gifting of chests full of dubloons or pearls, spreading rumours in taverns about how awful the other is and copious amounts of rum

Friends
She's cautious friends with the wily Joan Silver, daughter of Long John Silver. Althrough they have a great deal in common, they are both wary of the other, being so full of trechery themselves, they know exactly what the other is capable of.

Pet
She considers Esmee her pet, and poor Esmee doesn't know any better, as she was raised where everyone is treated like Hook Snr or Hook Jnr's dogs.

Romance
Her standoffish nature and general inclination to slicing throats open has made her one of the hardest catches in the sea. Naturually, the nefarious pirating folk and various blackguards, bounders and scoundels often send her gifts of jewels, silks, furs, heavy weaponry and love letters lavishly written in crocodile blood on human skin. She rarely responds, but always keeps the gifts.

Basic
Her basic Outfit consists of a heavy red pirate coat with broad collars, a pair of deep pockets and a fanciful golden trim with triple drop shapes and a heart motif cut out on the corners and peaks. It has heavy, upturned sleeve cuffs, inset with a single sapphire on each side. It's topped with a matching broad brimmed pirate hat, curved up on both sides and decorated with a blue Ostritch feather.

She wears a simple grey blue undershirt with a white, laced V neck pirate shirt over the top and a triple buttoned, double breasted corseted skirt of a bright naval blue that comes under her bustline and flates out to a petticoated half circle, mid thigh.

Her gloves, gold buckled belt and boots are black leather, the boots are folded top with silver hook heels, gold toes matching her coat motif set with a sapphire at the top and a string of white pearls dangling from it, looping around the back of the boots.

She wears Robin Egg blue and black tights, and is accessorized with a sapphire on a gold choker band, and a pair of matching Hook earrings with a Sapphire sitting in the curve.

Legacy Day
She wears a multi layered dress with the blood red base colouring forming a scalloped bell skirt reaching mid calf, trimmed in gold and embellished with a gold clock hand point, set with a Sapphire at the base. It's layered by a front split bustle cut black over skirt, descorated with a string of white pearls following the drape. The blood red theme returns with a bustled jacket, skirted at the back and plumped with layers of white under lace. It has a wide, pointed collar, trimmed in gold with the reoccuing clock hand points on the V groove. The V is carried over to the turned cuffs, which are also ebellished. The buttons down the front are extended to the length of the dress.

A white, Lace cuffed shirt is covered with a simple, black corsetted vest with three gold military style bars along the front. She wears a white cravat fastened with a oval cut sapphire.

Her hat is a broad brimmed number, tipped up at the front with scalloped trim and reoccuring embellishment. There is a heart shaped sapphire at the peak, and it's decorated with many white, burgandy and blue feathers.

The gloves are black leather, as are the ? hook shaped heel ankle boots, set with sapphires at the ankles and a double string of pearls over the front.

Black and red thin striped stockings, a red hair ribbon and triple pearl set hook earrings, and an especially curled and fine hook finish the ensamble.

Triva

 * Her gold blood is in reference to the little known fact that Captain Hook has very thick, yellow blood. In the novel, it's referenced only as "Unusual" but J.M. Barrie revealed the colour as yellow in his lectures on Hook at Eton in 1927
 * Unlike her father, Pan was not to blame for the loss of her hand, rather, it was lost when the beast grabbed her while she and a group of pirates were hunting it. Her hand was severed to free her from its grasp. None of the pirates will own up to doing the deed for fear her gratitude might be shown by hooking out their intestines.
 * Her most prized possession is a pair of matching pistols her father gifted her on her ninth birthday. She shot three crew members to celebrate.
 * Her colour choice of red is to reflect the fact that it is the colour of "the blood of angry men". Jane is clearly also a fan of the arts.
 * The Crocodile that pursues Jane is not the same one as the one in her father's tale. The fate of that one was revealled in Peter Pan in Scarlet. This one is a decendant who inherited the taste for Hook's flesh, both his own and his progeny's
 * Jane took her own ship after a screaming battle with her father over his habit of smoking his twin cigars in the captain's cabin. Her ship is called "Lady Luck" and has performed some amazing pirating manouvers in tandem with "Jolly Roger" that either ship alone could not do. Both father and daughers find this arrangement pleasing.
 * Since the original crocodile incident, all the residents of Neverland have seen the wisdom of having ticking crocodiles, and habitually feed them clocks as soon as they are old enough to open their mouths wide enough.
 * There are no Mothers in Neverland outside of the Maze of Regrets, so there is some debate over Jane's parentage. All anyone knows for certain is Captain Hook reclaimed the Jolly Roger some time after the events of "Peter Pan in Scarlet" and had with him a babe, barely able to walk. The pirates that returned to his banner dared not ask, and the Captain was disinclined to speak. There is rumour he found her washed ashore, tied up in a sack that had been thrown out to sea, but no one knows how much truth there is to that.
 * Jane was named after Wendy's daughter, who appeared in the epilogue of the novel.
 * Her luggage is crocodile skin. It's the hide of a greatly loved Uncle of her current torment. She takes great delight in taunting her foe with this fact.