Follow TV Tropes

Following

Characters / The Witcher - Geralt's Hanse

Go To

Geralt's Hanse
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_fallen_by_justanor_d8qgdhu.jpg

"What a nice little company I've collected here!" moaned Geralt shaking his head. "Comrades in arms! A real party of heroes! Why, we've nothing else to do but to ring hands! A rhymester with a lute. A wild and saucy half-dryad, half-woman. A nearly five hundred year old vampire. And a fucking Nilfgaardian who says he is not a Nilfgaardian."
"And at the forefront of this party - a witcher suffering from qualms of conscience, powerlessness and not being able to make one single decision." finished Regis calmly. "Really, I propose that we should travel incognito, so as not to cause sensation."
"And laughter." added Milva.
"Damn you all!" spat Geralt at last, hiding a spoon in the top of his knee-boot. "God damn you all, you cooperating group of idiots united by a goal, which none of you shares with me, let alone understands... And god damn me too."
This time the others, taking Cahir's example, kept silent. Dandelion, Maria Barring, also called Milva, and Emiel Regis Rohellec Terzieff-Godefroy.
Andrzej Sapkowski, (Baptism of Fire)

In his search for Ciri, Geralt gathered around himself a small party. Whether these people joined him out of old friendship, romantic confusion, or other reasons, it was perhaps best described by Angouleme: "you just can't not follow him". In the end, they stood by him for good and for bad.


    open/close all folders 

    Milva 

Milva / Maria Barring

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/milva_by_onelillwitch_d5tp5o7_copy.jpg
"Let me never skin a rabbit again if I have ever seen a more idiotic man!"

Appears in: Baptism of Fire | Tower of the Swallow | Lady of the Lake

"You have no chance of rescuing your young lady. You will never reach Nilfgaard, or even the Jaruga. In this state you could not even walk up Sodden. Your death is already written. It is written on your stubborn face, you can see it in your own terrifying eyes. Death will surprise you soon, witcher. But thanks to this little deer, you will not die of starvation. And that's a good thing. Well... I think."

Maria Barring, better known as simply "Milva" or "Kania" (meaning "kite") in the Elder Speech, and known as "Sor'ca" ("sister") by the elves was a superb female archer from Upper Sodden, one of the few non-dryads tolerated in Brokilon. Eithné was said to be rather fond of her. She led four fictional crusades against the dryads in the hope of reducing the number of volunteers for their expeditions. But when her true part in this was discovered, she vanished.

During the Second Nilfgaard War she guided the shattered remains of the Scoia'tael commandos through the forest. There, she met the wounded and recuperating Gwynbleidd and became the second of Geralt's companions behind Dandelion.


  • Action Girl: Thanks to her archery skills, she racks up an impressive bodycount.
  • All Love Is Unrequited: It's implied that she has a crush on Geralt. Early in their journey, Milva - under the (false) assumption that Geralt is motivated by romantic love - makes a number of snide remarks regarding the nature of their quest, implying that she is jealous of the witcher's obsession with finding Ciri.
    Geralt: She needs me.
    Milva: (to herself) She isn't the only one.
  • Berserk Button: She's a moody enough woman as it is, but being called "auntie" by Angouleme really ticks her off.
  • The Big Guy: She contributes almost entirely by shooting anyone who will threaten the party. She has enough strength to One-Hit KO a grown, strong man, and her expertise at multiple ranges makes her very much if not more useful a party member than Geralt in a skirmish and she definitely exceeds him in body count. Furthering this Trope, she breaks up a trust-tension fueled scuffle between Cahir and Geralt by belting them.
  • Braids of Action: Justified. She is an unmarried peasant woman.
  • Broken Bird: While her childhood was not the happiest one, it is her state (mentioned below) that puts a strain on her mental well-being.
  • Brutal Honesty: She's a very simple-minded person, so whenever she speaks what she thinks about something, she never beats around the bush.
  • But I Can't Be Pregnant!: She conceived with an elf during a particularly unlucky attempt at border crossing into Brokilon, but a Convenient Miscarriage happened as it was becoming obvious.
  • Character Death: Dies during the assault on Stygga castle, dealing a Mutual Kill with another archer.
  • The Comically Serious: Being an honest and down-to-earth commoner in a team of sometimes stuffy characters can bring rather unexpected consequences.
  • Convenient Miscarriage: Not really. While it does solve a moral dilemma she has regarding abortion, she ends up weakened, sick and takes some time to recover physically - and much longer to finally stop being depressed about it.
  • Good Girls Avoid Abortion: Talked out of it by Geralt, but soon after she miscarried anyway.
  • Heartbroken Badass: Ironically, done to herself; she spends the second half of Lady of the Lake sulking and depressed because she turned down her lover's marriage proposal. As Regis notes, she's acting more like someone who was dumped, rather than someone who did the dumping.
  • Important Haircut: Cuts off her braid after her Convenient Miscarriage.
  • The Lad-ette: Mostly so, although drinking binges aren't her forte.
  • "Leave Your Quest" Test: At Beauclaire. She receives a marriage proposition from a wealthy older baron who is antisocial like her and who genuinely respects her hunting skills and independence. For a while, she even seems to be regretting her hasty rejection. Given her hidden issues, one wonders what were her reasons.
  • Master Archer: Milva is really good with archery, to the point she often resolves any fights the hansa gets themselves into before Geralt can even close-in. The narration even notes the different types of bows she's used over the years until her current choice of bow. And against the archetype, she's pretty cheery person.
  • The Mole: In the backstory. Sometimes, an angry human mob decides to hunt some dryads for scalps; conveniently, there is a guide — Maria, a hunter's daughter, who knows the local forests perfectly. Alas, somehow dryads ambush the mob and kill everybody — except Maria and some wounded dude whom she carries out. Milva managed to play the guide four times before people started to make the connection.
  • Mutual Kill: During the assault on Vilgefortz's hideout at Stygga Castle, Milva and the last of the castle's archers loose arrows at each other at the same time. Both are fatally injured and die shortly afterwards.
  • Never Learned to Read: To be expected given her background.
  • Pregnant Badass: She's pregnant for much of the journey until she miscarries.
  • Real Women Don't Wear Dresses: It's stated she pretty much had to be forced into one, when the hanse was invited to a party in Beauclair.
  • The Rest Shall Pass: During the finale, she ties down most of the soldiers stationed in Stygga Castle, with the sole purpose of letting the rest of the hansa keep going. It gets her killed.
  • Rewatch Bonus: Once the reveal is reached, a bunch of scenes with her gain a second meaning. Was her hangover just bad, or was it something more? Was she really so much of a Ladette, or did she want to prove something to herself? And so on.
  • Weapon Specialization: Bows. She really knows her way around them.
  • Weapons of Their Trade: Defied. Milva at one point brings up differences between hunting bows and ones capable of being really dangerous to humans.

    Cahir Mawr Dyffryn aep Ceallach 

Count Cahir Mawr Dyffryn aep Ceallach

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cahir_mawr_dyffryn_aep_ceallach_by_tissia1229_d99bjbd_copy.png
"It may be, that against all appearances, we have something in common, you and me?"

Appears in: Blood of Elves | The Time of Contempt | Baptism of Fire | Tower of the Swallow | Lady of the Lake

Dandelion: Aha! What a beauty! Where did you get it, Nilfgaardian?
Cahir: I'm not Nilfgaardian. I come from Vicovaro and my name is Cahir...
Dandelion: Okay, okay, I know.

A Nilfgaardian knight, well, technically he is from Vicovaro, so, a Vicovarian knight under orders to capture Ciri during the Thanedd Coup. After his failure and subsequent defeat at both Ciri and Geralt's blades and to escape his inevitable punishment by his own superiors, he joins Geralt's party when the witcher accidentally saves him yet again. Who, very reluctantly, accepts his company after trying to scare the youth away several times during their trek. Geralt questions his presence many times after this but the young man's dreams prove that there is more to his impromptu alliance than a simple life debt, and that meeting the Child of the Elder Blood leaves an indelible mark on all individuals.


  • Black Knight: He wears the Nilfgaardian colors, which just so happen to be black. He is by no means a villainous sort, but he did spend a long time working directly for the emperor.
  • Cool Helmet: His winged helmet, which is something that Ciri dreams about in her prophetic visions.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: A Black Knight wearing almost exclusively dark colours and face-covering helmets that works for The Empire... and is one of the most decent people in the whole saga, even before he abandoned his employer.
  • Fire-Forged Friends: It takes a long time for Geralt to get over his disdain for Cahir but get over it he eventually does, and the two get along really well and have each other's back in every fight. Somewhat subverted in that Cahir fully expects to have to fight Geralt to the death once they find Ciri as he intends to take her back to Nilfgaard - something Geralt obviously won't stand for - but the two more or less agree they'll cross that bridge when they get there. Which never comes to pass anyway.
  • Heel–Face Turn: See above; he was not outright evil, only serving the bad guys.
  • Hypocritical Humor: As mentioned below, he insists that he's not a Nilfgaardian, because in the Empire, you have to be born in the province of Nilfgaard to claim it. However, he has no problem referring to all the peoples of the north as "Nordlings" irrespective of their nationalities.
  • Insistent Terminology: He's not Nilfgaardian, he's Vicovarian. In the Empire, only those born in the Empire's heartland call themselves Nilfgaardians, and... (the party eventually stops paying attention).
  • I Owe You My Life: This is the reason why he joined Geralt's party; Geralt unknowingly saved him from You Have Failed Me. Later he admits other reasons beyond that, though.
  • The Lancer: In line with Five-Man Band standards, he's the hanse's second melee fighter, and the younger, more optimistic counterpart to older, angsty Geralt.
  • Love Before First Sight: He fell for Ciri, after seeing her once as a child (and fueling her Black Knight nightmares ever since), and a second time in combat (she almost killed him). Both times he was under orders to capture her.
  • Nice Guy: Beneath the black armor and eagle-wing helmet is a genuinely decent man who did his best to comfort a terrified Cirinote , stands by his friends, and does his best to assist Geralt in his search despite knowing it will likely end badly.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: His first few appearances paint him as a nightmarish figure as he's being viewed through the lens of a traumatized child. The truth behind him is much more complicated.
  • Poor Communication Kills: He was not able to speak the Cintran tongue at the time he captured Ciri, leaving him unable to communicate with and comfort the frightened child, which only made him that much more terrifying for her.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: At the time, he didn't know the reasons why Emhyr wanted Ciri. He just went to retrieve her from the Cintra massacre merely because he was ordered to.
  • Psychic Dreams for Everyone: He has the same dreams of Ciri as Geralt, proving Destiny has him more than a mere background.
  • Rape as Drama: Geralt suspects he did something particularly vile to Ciri due to the recurring nightmares she suffered from her encounter with him, and remains hostile to the former knight for a very long time. It turns out Cahir did nothing of the sort. He retrieved her from the burning city as he was ordered to, undressed her so he could bathe her after seeing how dirty she had gotten, and tried to comfort her when she went catatonic.
  • You Have Failed Me:
    • His first failure to retrieve Ciri from Cintra resulted in him being imprisoned for a year. His second failure to get her from Thanedd left Cahir dead to rights as far as Nilfgaard was concerned.
    • It's a bit more complicated than that- he spent a year in prison not because of his failure so much as a few choice words about the Emperor and the whole quest for Ciri; as for Thanedd, it's again not so much the failure (though it likely didn't help his case) as it is the fact that in the aftermath he vanished off the face of the... Witcher... planet... whatever through a chain of events he had precisely zero control over. Really, the poor guy veers into Cosmic Plaything territory with the rotten luck he has.
  • You Shall Not Pass!: Dies pulling one against Bonhart so Ciri can escape. Cahir knows he has no chance against the older warrior when he does this but still manages to bruise him — which is more than can be said for the Rats, and they fought Bonhart six on one.

    Emiel Regis Rohellec Terzieff-Godefroy 

Emiel Regis Rohellec Terzieff-Godefroy

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/regis.jpg
"It is a matter of principle."

Voiced by: Mark Noble (English)additional VAs

"My name is Emiel Regis Rohellec Terzieff-Godefroy. I have lived in this world for four hundred and twenty-eight years according to you humans, six hundred and forty-two years according to the calculations of the elves. I am a descendant of the survivors, hapless creatures trapped among you after the disaster, which you call the Conjunction of the Spheres. I am considered, to put it mildly, a monster. A horrible bloodsucker. And now I have stumbled upon a witcher, a professional whose job it is to eliminate those like me. That's all."

A medic and herbalist who joins Geralt's party — supposedly, because he was already planning to go their route. Though friendly, he is an enigmatic individual, a man of intellect who lives in the middle of nowhere and has a share of habits someone paranoid might consider very suspicious.


  • The Alcoholic: A part of his backstory is that he got out of his addiction, after one drunken accident too many left his life in such a ruin he realised he had to change. His drug was actually human blood, and his bout of self-reflection was induced by being staked, decapitated, set on fire and then buried for fifty years while he healed.
  • Almighty Janitor: When Geralt and the others first encounter him, he presents himself as a village herbalist living a simple life in Brugge. In truth, he is a Higher Vampire, and could easily destroy anyone who gets in their way, but prefers to resolve things diplomatically instead, making sure that he leaves very little impression, lest his true nature be discovered.
  • Apologetic Attacker: Gives a mournful apology in the game before ripping into Dettlaff's throat to destroy him forever.
  • Back for the Finale: He's absent for the games on account of being dead, but plays a big role in Blood and Wine, which serves as the Grand Finale for the game series.
  • Back from the Dead: Higher vampires like him can regenerate from apparently fatal wounds, though the process can take a long time depending on how much damage they sustain. In the video games it can be sped considerably up by another higher vampire, which is exactly what happens to Regis, allowing him to show up alive again in Blood and Wine.
  • Being Good Sucks: He really tries to come to a peaceful solution for all parties in Blood and Wine, but in the Golden Ending he has to kill Dettlaft to stop his friend's rampage amongst the humans, and is ostracized by the rest of the vampire community because his actions are seen as a betrayal to his race.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Regis is one of the kindest and most reasonable, even-tempered people you will ever meet in the harsh world of The Witcher. But as a Higher Vampire, he wields unimaginably terrifying power.
  • Combat Medic: Mainly a healer yet, befitting of his species, can easily butcher anyone when he needs to as shown in Blood and Wine.
  • Cowardly Lion: He calls himself a coward. If not for that, the word would never occur to you in conjunction with him.
  • Did We Just Have Tea with Cthulhu?: The first thing Geralt and company do when they meet him is get drunk on his special mandrake brew. It takes them a while before they realize he's actually a vampire, and an especially powerful Higher Vampire to boot.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Regis is one of the most polite individuals in the whole series, and throughout Blood and Wine he will defend Dettlaff by arguing he's sure his friend has a good reason for his actions and Dettlaff can change, though does agree he's taking things a bit far. In the end though, Regis is disgusted when he begins killing innocent folk and sides with Geralt to kill him, doing the deed himself to permanently end Dettlaff's life.
  • Forgotten Fallen Friend: He is not directly mentioned when Ciri summons ghosts of Geralt's friends. In the video games, it turns out to be because he's not actually dead.
  • Friend-or-Idol Decision: In Blood and Wine, he tries to protect and defend Dettlaft, the vampire who saved him, while knowing Dettlaft is a wanted murderer. Geralt, who is also one of Regis closest friends, straight up asks Regis whose side he would be on if Dettlaft cannot be talked down.
  • Friendly Neighbourhood Vampire: Regis is totally uninterested in preying on humans. He's a delightful and friendly fellow who genuinely enjoys interacting with people, to the point of being somewhat long-winded.
  • From a Single Cell: As a Higher Vampire, Regis can regenerate from any injury. Even being reduced to a smear of blood by Vilgefortz wasn't enough to fully kill him, though the process would have taken a very long amount of time, though Dettlaff's intervention prior to Blood and Wine speeds the process up considerably.
  • Hidden Depths: Apart from everything else about him (scholar, intellectual, medic, kind-hearted, dark secret), it turns out that he can brew moonshine from mandrake roots that knocks even Geralt flat.
  • Horrible Judge of Character: Deep down, he seems to be aware that Dettlaff is too unstable a person to truly live in the human world, but still insists that he's a good person and does everything he can to prevent Geralt from killing him.
  • Humanoid Abomination: He's a Higher Vampire, so he's this by default.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: Says this word for word in Blood and Wine after he kills Dettlaff to stop his assault on Toussaint, forever marking Regis as a traitor to his own kind.
  • Insufferable Genius: He is intelligent, highly educated, experienced and really not shy about showing it off at the slightest opportunity. He later toned it down for a while after being scolded by Milva. From Dandelion's journal depiction of the incident: "The most effective defense against intellectual dominance is a timely and thorough scolding of an intellectual who appears to be dominant."
  • I Owe You My Life: In Blood and Wine, he feels a great sense of loyalty to Dettlaff for restoring his body, which drives him to go to great lengths to save his friend even while he goes on a murderous rampage across all of Beauclair.
  • Kill It with Fire: Gets burned to death by Vilgefortz.
  • Late-Arrival Spoiler: To anybody who's played the games before picking up the books (as in, pretty much the whole Anglophonic world). While he's not part of the games' main cast, his nature as a vampire is explicitly discussed.
  • Let's Get Dangerous!: In The Very Definitely Final Dungeon, he breaks his vow to abstain from drinking human blood.
  • Long-Lived: Like all other creatures in the series, high vampires are not immortal as such, they just appear to be so from human perspective (their lifespan being roughly twice as long as that of elves).
  • The Medic: Stitches wounds, quite knowledgeable about various physical ailments, and expert in the use of herbs to heal. Also, being a vampire, he can smell sickness and infection in blood.
  • Minored In Ass Kicking: He tends to stick to non-action roles, but he knows a few tricks.
  • Mr. Exposition: Regis loves to explain things.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: Becomes apparent in the vampire dungeon in Blood And Wine, where Geralt finds several books describing humans as a particularly intelligent species of livestock, as well as the caged remains of humans the vampires slowly bled to death. Regis is mortified by the conduct of his brethren, and goes out of his way to make amends as best he can.
  • New Powers as the Plot Demands:
    • Apparently. Justified by The Masquerade; see also Pet the Dog.
    • He certainly can turn into a huge bat, put people into deep sleep, is invisible to long-range detection magic, and resistant to wounds and heat. By his own words, he can regenerate from most severe wounds, if given enough time. He also can turn invisible and/or teleport (the scene where he uses this power depicts him as simply "vanishing", which is somewhat unclear).
  • Never Found the Body: At the end of the Saga, when Ciri summons the ghosts of old friends, he is nowhere to be seen. Vampires like him can regenerate. The fandom fell to Wild Mass Guessing and CD Projekt built from it: while his corporeal body was destroyed, another vampire helped him regenerate to appear in Blood and Wine.
  • Nice Guy:
    • By the time the party meets him, anyway. He's a pacifist and a medic, helping strangers without reservation and willing to drop his masquerade to save lives of people he just met.
    • This continues into Blood and Wine where Regis is trying to save as many lives as he can with as little bloodshed as possible. Regis also makes sure to prevent Geralt from meeting with the Unseen Elder due to the danger the Elder possesses to his friend. Furthermore, while Regis sees Dettlaff as a dear friend, Regis is absolutely disgusted by Dettlaff's attack on Beauclair due to the amount of lives lost. Lastly, Regis also takes some of Geralt's sharper barbs in stride and doesn't hold anything against Geralt.
  • Nightmare Face: His Game Face in Blood and Wine is not a pretty sight.
  • Our Vampires Are Different: There are several kinds of vampires in the Witcher world. Regis belongs to the so-called "high" vampires are fairly unusual even by those standards. Sunlight has no effect, and a stake through the heart stings but won't kill or even significantly injure. Most unusually, this kind doesn't need to drink blood to survive; rather, it's an intoxicant they enjoy. He treats his abstinence from it like a recovering alcoholic or addict.
  • Overly Long Name: His name is quite a mouthful, which is why people tend to just call him Regis. As he explains, it is so long in accordance to an old tradition of his people.
  • Pet the Dog: He drops The Masquerade and saves an innocent girl from burning. It conveniently turns out he's not in the slightest harmed by the trial-by-fire the fanatical priest requested.
  • Really 700 Years Old: About four-and-half hundred, actually.
  • Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: Granted, he's quite aware of it and is playing The Smart Guy stereotype up for his own reasons.
  • Shoot the Dog: Very unhappily resigns himself to personally killing his friend Dettlaff at the end of Blood and Wine, since the guy will not stop until he's killed every living thing in Beauclair and as a Higher Vampire, Regis is the only thing that can permanently destroy him.
  • The Smart Guy: He assumes this role in the party quite naturally. On Geralt's part, he and Regis reach a good understanding over the heads of outsiders (including the much younger rest of the hanse).
  • Sophisticated as Hell: As much as he is prone to Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness, later he grows quite fond of specific expressions used by Street Urchin Angouleme.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Since the games are separate from book canon his appearance in Blood and Wine can be considered this.
  • Unusual Euphemism: Occasionally delves in it when talking about blood.
  • Vampire Doctor: Regis introduces himself as a village medic and herbalist when Geralt first meets him, but is eventually revealed to be a Vegetarian Vampire. All the herbs he always has with him are mainly there to prevent dogs and other animals from picking up his vampiric scent — although after decades, if not centuries, of practice he has also become a legitimately good doctor and he has largley moved past his old temptations.
  • Walking Spoiler: It's hard to talk about Regis in any capacity without bringing up the fact that he's a vampire. It's even harder to talk about him in the games, particularly Blood and Wine. The fact that he turns up alive near the beginning is a huge shock to book readers.
  • Wolverine Claws: Among their powers, higher vampires can extend their nails into very long claws that can rip through human flesh like paper.

    Angouleme 

Angouleme

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/angouleme_witcher_gwent.jpg
"Isn’t that right, Uncle White Hair?"

Appears in: Tower of the Swallow | Lady of the Lake

"And we went on robber's road. That's how it went for us, sometimes good, sometimes bad, sometimes we dealt it, and sometimes we took it. Sometimes we were tired, sometimes hungry. Ha, hungry more often. I caught and ate more of what creeps and crawls than I ever had in my life. And of what flies – I once even ate a kid’s kite, because it was stuck together with glue made from flour."

A young girl, around Ciri's age, who joins Geralt's party on his request as a part of his deal with local Nilfgaardian authorities to locate and remove a band of highwaymen to which she once belonged. Though Nilfgaardian law is harsh, she is granted parole — the local governor saw through Geralt and knew better than the witcher himself that he would not leave without her.


  • Bastard Bastard: Played With. Her noble mother conceived her with a stablehand and when it became a common knowledge, the girl was send to distant relatives. Then she went through all kinds of crap. By the time she joins the hanse, she does nothing but badmouth her "noble origins", but in the same time is past the point where she cared about any of it, simply living her own life.
  • Died in Your Arms Tonight: In Ciri's arms, after she bleed out from a wound in her thigh.
  • Hair of Gold: She does have a heart of gold too, but rather than the standard image described in that trope's entry, she's closer to this one.
  • It's All Junk: She used to have a medallion with her family's coat of arms. Then she simply bet it in cards and lost it, with no ill feelings or sentiment toward it.
  • Jive Turkey: Keeps talking in weird slang, presumably the in-universe equivalent of street thug lingo. Part of this involves calling every man 'unca' and every woman 'auntie.'
  • Princess in Rags: Not a princess, but somewhat surprisingly, she was a girl of relatively decent upbringing, but ended up on the street during the Nilfgaard invasion of Cintra.
  • Naïve Newcomer: Her first gang, along with her. It was just a bunch of war orphans that heard or read too many picaresque stories and considered trying it was better plan than staying in an Orphanage of Fear. By the time Geralt and co. meet the girl, she still has some of the original panache left in her.
  • The Nicknamer: It's usually "unca" or "auntie". Possibly related to her speech patterns.
  • Orphanage of Fear: After the war started, her custodians faced a choice: keep their three kids and a bastard of a distant relative or give the girl to a priest-run 'orphanage'. Turns out the orphanage happened to be a common brothel, only with kids and teens instead of adults. Angouleme escaped from there within few days.
  • Replacement Goldfish: It is rather heavily implied that Geralt requested her parole because she reminded him of Ciri.
  • Satisfied Street Rat: She really doesn't mind her ultimate fate, being perfectly content with a lifestyle of a common thug.
  • Sixth Ranger: She only joins around the fourth book of the Saga.
  • Street Urchin: She was in a teenage gang, then joined a bigger adult one. She still has leftover habits, which sometimes irritates the rest of the company. On her part, she doesn't always understand their objections.
  • Tagalong Kid: Most of the party is annoyed by her mere presence, while she follows them mostly because her old gang ceased to exist and Geralt happend to save her skin.
  • Thicker Than Water: Played with. As far as the girl is concerned, she couldn't care any less about her biological family, but it's also made clear there was at least some care provided to her solely due to being a distant relative, even if from an illegitimate bed.


Top