Themes: high hopes, integrity, career
Member of Precinct 23. The former golden kid from a well-off family, Jewel used to be a Lieutenant, too, as a partner of Rex Poe. Jewel was actually the first one to get the promotion, meaning that Rex was promoted as a “satellite officer” alongside Jeweln. But then, drugs did them in. It is, of course, legal to buy and use drugs in Revachol; however, nobody should be high on psychedelics on the job. Somebody tipped the Ethics unit, they did a blood test, and then Jewel was demoted and reassigned into the Counter-Truancy Task Force, aka the “skip squad”. Junior delinquency, a massive mark of shame.
Now they have a chance to come back. This mission is a test for them: the rest of the squad should “rate their performance” to decide if their punishment layoff into the “skip squad” should end or be extended.
For all this, Jewel is boiling inside. They still have issues with the rest of the precinct, but their work with the juvenile youth has convinced them that sometimes there really is a need for strong-armed solutions. And at the same time… maybe Jewel does not want to leave because, with the young ones, there are so many bright moments. Jewel will do what they always do when stressed - find their truth in aggressive street paintings.
Not all the characters living in La Cage will last through the whole game. Some of them will leave midway through the game, one way or another, either voluntarily or forcibly. But after a psychedelic evening intermezzo and enough time to unwind, the players of characters who left the tenement will return once more, this time taking on the roles of RCM (Revachol Citizens Militia) officers - an infamously donation-dependent, notoriously unorganized, and woefully understaffed police force of the city. The arrival of new characters on the crime scene will not only shake things up in La Cage but also bring a resemblance of authority. However, due to some mismanagement, it seems two rival precincts managed to send out a squad to investigate. Will they get along or will they drown in the grey zone of the law?
They used to be THE cool kids - organizing disco parties, performing stand-ups, and not caring about anything (or anybody) else. Now, as adults, they are in charge of the best club in La Cage (no matter what The Second Club thinks) and will do anything to make sure their guests enjoy themselves. But the upcoming few days will also force them to remember the past they would rather forget: have they grown enough to face up to what they have done or will they continue to avoid it forever?