Difference between revisions of "Gemma Larsen/Introduction"

From City of Hope MUSH
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Xtan
(Created page with "<br>150px|right<br><br><font color=white style="font-size: 9pt; text-shadow: 2px 2px 6px gray;">You'd think people don't die of tuberculosis anymore....")
 
imported>Xtan
Line 1: Line 1:
<br>[[Image:Usury_sigil.png|150px|right]]<br><br><font color=white style="font-size: 9pt; text-shadow: 2px 2px 6px gray;">You'd think people don't die of tuberculosis anymore. It's so Victorian, and surely we have cures? As it turns out, they don't always work.
+
<br>[[Image:Usury_sigil.png|160px|right]]<br><br><font color=white style="font-size: 9pt; text-shadow: 2px 2px 6px gray;">You'd think people don't die of tuberculosis anymore. It's so Victorian, and surely we have cures? As it turns out, they don't always work.
 +
 
 
She'd been sickly for a while. The illness refused to leave her body, so there she was in her hospital bed indefinitely. She'd been there for years, in and out of the ward. Moving was hard, but she had a laptop that she ran a blog from. It was moderately popular, enough to pay the bills.
 
She'd been sickly for a while. The illness refused to leave her body, so there she was in her hospital bed indefinitely. She'd been there for years, in and out of the ward. Moving was hard, but she had a laptop that she ran a blog from. It was moderately popular, enough to pay the bills.
 +
 
She was testing new drugs to treat the TB, but as it turns out, they didn't even slightly help. That's probably what killed her.
 
She was testing new drugs to treat the TB, but as it turns out, they didn't even slightly help. That's probably what killed her.
 
<br></font>
 
<br></font>

Revision as of 10:59, 13 May 2014


Usury sigil.png



You'd think people don't die of tuberculosis anymore. It's so Victorian, and surely we have cures? As it turns out, they don't always work.

She'd been sickly for a while. The illness refused to leave her body, so there she was in her hospital bed indefinitely. She'd been there for years, in and out of the ward. Moving was hard, but she had a laptop that she ran a blog from. It was moderately popular, enough to pay the bills.

She was testing new drugs to treat the TB, but as it turns out, they didn't even slightly help. That's probably what killed her.