[table][row][cell][h2][b]June[color=2e2c2c].[/color]Summers[/b][/h2][/cell][cell][/cell][/row][row][cell][center][img]https://i.imgur.com/AodlDur.jpg[/img] [b]17 | June April Summers | She/Her [/b][hr] [i]"I saw it coming... everyone else just didn’t."[/i][/center][/cell][cell] [b]Description:[/b] [indent]June Summers is the calm, watchful core of the “Terrible Trio,” noticing details others miss. While Claire takes charge and Zoey excels in chaos, June observes, adapts, and anticipates. Growing up near Cornell, she relied on her intellect and instincts in a town that values loudness and toughness. Her calm, analytical nature offers the group perspective, but there’s an underlying tension; she’s aware of things others overlook and sometimes reacts to events before they happen. She was present at the warehouse the night everything went wrong. While Claire and Zoey responded instinctively, June remained still—watching, memorizing, moving only when necessary. Some moments from that night, she doesn’t fully remember choosing, only realizing afterward that she had already acted. Certain details are too vivid, while others feel... missing, as if something significant was decided without her. Most of the time, June is consistent—quiet, thoughtful, precise. But not always. There are occasions when something about her shifts. Subtle at first. She straightens slightly. Speaks more directly. Moves with a confidence that doesn’t match her usual hesitation. Decisions are made faster, cleaner—like there’s no need to second-guess. In those moments, she doesn’t just seem observant—she seems *certain*. Not confident. Not guessing. Certain. And then it passes. She returns to her usual self, sometimes unaware that anything has changed. Others, she hesitates—like trying to recall a thought she never finished. Small objects around her sometimes feel slightly out of place. Positions seem… adjusted. She doesn’t question it—it's understandable when it happens. June is loyal to Claire and Zoey, even if she sometimes feels slightly apart from them. She detects risks they miss, patterns they overlook, and outcomes they don’t consider. Occasionally, she acts on those instincts before she can explain them—placing herself or others where they need to be without fully understanding why. Her presence is grounding. But not always in ways that feel natural.[/indent] [b]Abstraction:[/B] [indent][i]Unknown.[/i][/indent][/cell][/row][/table]