
Role: Meteorologist & Environmental Specialist, FDG Atmospheric Anomalies Division
Background:
Dr. Isla Reeve trained as a climatologist, with a focus on microclimate disruption and anomalous wind behavior. In 2015, while studying atmospheric inconsistencies across the Kent woodlands, she encountered a series of wind patterns that didn’t fit any known model—currents that twisted against terrain, circled without losing energy, and carried faint, rhythmic pulses.
She recorded them. Slowed the audio. And heard what could only be described as speech—wind whispering in fragments, in no language she recognised but felt she almost understood.
Days later, her research vanished from every system she had access to. The next morning, the Institute left a business card on her windowsill, inside a sealed flat. She was offered a place not just to continue her research—but to apply it.
Skills:
- Specialist in meteorological anomalies, geospatial pressure shifts, and boundary-layer turbulence
- Experienced in detecting fae-associated weather patterns: looping currents, unseasonal fog, static wind corridors
- Uses custom-built wind chimes, pressure traps, and analog barometers in the field
- One of few FDG staff trained to “listen” to atmospheric distortion through sonic analysis
She keeps a wind journal by her bedside, recording dreams that begin with breeze and end in storm.
Personality:
Calm, incisive, and often lost in thought. Isla processes information the way she reads weather—intuitively, through shifts and tensions others miss. She speaks softly, often trailing off mid-sentence when something catches her ear. Blends science and instinct fluidly, which unnerves more orthodox staff. Her quiet confidence rarely falters.
Motive:
To trace the voice in the wind to its source. She doesn’t believe the fae control the weather—but that something ancient may be using it to speak. She intends to answer back.
