
Role: Undercover Investigator, Civilian Anomaly Tracking Unit
Background:
Helen Wolfe was a recent journalism graduate when she began chasing whispers about a “lost village” in the Kent countryside—a place where no one aged, and no records existed. In 2016, she found it. The village wasn’t on any map, and the locals greeted her with unnerving warmth. She stayed one night. At dusk, the villagers gathered in a circle and began chanting in a language older than English—older, she felt, than anything human. Wolfe fled before dawn.
She uploaded a detailed account to a conspiracy blog under a pseudonym. Within 48 hours, the post vanished, and her login credentials were revoked. Days later, a stranger approached her with a choice: forget or follow the story deeper. She chose the latter.
Now an operative within the Civilian Anomaly Tracking Unit, Wolfe uses her investigative instincts and public-facing cover to identify, document, and contain soft incursions—events just strange enough to catch attention before the world edits them away.
Skills:
- Trained in undercover observation and anomaly documentation
- Skilled at gaining trust in fringe communities and folklore-adjacent circles
- Strong background in cryptolinguistic cues and cross-referencing unsourced civilian reports
- Experienced in both digital trace removal and misinformation seeding
Wolfe is often sent ahead of field teams to assess and soften public exposure to fae-related incidents.
Personality:
Clever, independent, and quick to adapt. Wolfe retains her journalistic edge and curiosity, though it’s now tempered by caution and long memory. Her sense of justice runs deep, but she understands the necessity of silence. She still keeps a personal copy of her original “lost village” notes—handwritten, encrypted, and hidden where even she sometimes forgets.
Motive:
To uncover the hidden architecture of fae presence in the modern world—and to ensure that when others stumble onto it, they have someone watching their back. She knows what it’s like to be believed by no one.
