User blog comment:EtherealNyx/Concept Generator 2.0/@comment-26959117-20160707152153/@comment-25954732-20160712090913

Wow, the version you gave me is actually quite dark since it implies a large famine and a period of vast death every retelling. Man...

Anyway, let me get started!

(name pending)

A spirit of misfortune, he had the bad luck of being raised by a family of very important woodcutters, which led to him getting a role in Hansel and Gretel, much to his distaste. After a few terrible years in his home, he left and began to roam, knowing that he could never stay in one place for long due to his powers. If he stayed in an area, there would be natural disasters, sudden deaths, robberies, rapes and even a multitude of murders and successful suicides. It made him positively miserable, but he was unable to stop these things from happening.

The years he stayed at Ever After High was regarded as the darkest moment in Ever After High's history, especially considering the other prolific students attending at the time. He went into theatre, but accidentally contributed to the accident that permanently crippled Dolores Rosa (mentioned below). He was mostly known as despondent and didn't make much efforts to socialize because of this. People stereotyped him as a sad theatre kid, something he carried with him until graduation.

When he stayed at Ever After High, there was a lot of fights and friends quickly became enemies. Storms damaged the infrastructure of the buildings and even the woods felt foreboding and held new dangers. Many attempted suicide cases were reported and there was a multitude of unresolved assaults. Eventually, the problem came to a head when a witch tried to kill and eat the spirit responsible for this. While she failed, she also vowed to eat his children, her ultimate failing.

He eventually lived alone until a spirit of fortune found him. They realized they canceled each other out and fell deeply in love, producing twins that would eventually go into the business of pushing witches into ovens.