Leannan
  1. Characters

Leannan

The Green Lady, The Mother of Forests, The Lady of Rainbows, She of Leaf and Silk, Queen of Trees, The Joyous Mother
Current Location
Leànnan resides in The Seelie Court, a beautiful castle made of interlocking trees within the mysterious realm known as the Faewild. It is entered through a portal in a tree somewhere in the sprawling forests of the Sea of Green, but one may only pass through if granted her blessing.
 
General Description
Leànnan is the second child of Jak'ra and Amaryllis, the elder twin sister of Dezrael, the wife of Mardukthe mother of the five lesser gods Herne, MimusSionnaine, Og-Meddwl and Judah, and goddess of both the creative and destructive forces of nature in all their myriad forms, life, lust, sex, fertility, birth, pleasure, emotions and instinct, rainbows and agriculture. She rules the season of Spring and represents the ideal of Creation, as without creation there is nothing. 
 
Forms
Leànnan’s forms include a sapient cloud of blossom petals, a golden doe with glowing white eyes, a disembodied voice created by the wind blowing through the trees, a floating female figure made of clouds, an animated bark carving in a tree which magically heals itself when she leaves, and a pregnant High Elf woman with golden hair and rainbow eyes. Her true form, however, is much more impressive. Leànnan’s true form is a phenomenally beautiful green-skinned woman with four arms, floor-length hair made of vines with various mosses for other body hair, rainbow eyes, blue abstract tattoos across her entire body bar her head, pointy ears and butterfly wings made of leaves, who is naked with only her hair to cover her modesty.

Interactions with Mortals
She is also occasionally known to appear in the dreams of those who she wishes to appear to, often in an erotic fashion.

Legends
Infamous pirate Ahmad claims to have pleasured Leannan during the Second Age, though obviously the veracity of this is highly doubtful as Leannan, as a goddess of pleasure, makes no secret of whom she has visited (or the fathers of her various children when she can remember them), so it seems unlikely that there would be no record of this outside of his own claims.
During the First Age, Leannan was behind the event where the sinking of Trollopolis. Many interpret this to have been due to Leannan taking umbrage with the actions of people within the city, but unbeknownst to most mortals the storm was actually the unintended result of the extremely difficult birth of Sionnaine.

Title
The Green Lady, The Mother of Forests, The Lady of Rainbows, She of Leaf and Silk, Queen of Trees, The Joyous Mother

Type
Deity

Races
God

Gender
Female

Pronouns
She/Her

Personality

Personality
Leannan, despite being possibly the most directly powerful of the gods thanks to her abilities, is staunchly a pacifist, finding war and unnecessary death abhorrent. She firmly believes that love and understanding can be used to solve any problem, and the various churches that she is worshipped by (with the exception of the Cult of the Wrathful Mother, which she actively sabotages) follow this ideal to the letter.
Leannan herself is, in conversation, kind, protective and loving, but also extremely and deliberately forward and erotic in behaviour to those she is not related to (though, contrary to what you may expect and to what some may think, she is very against doing anything without the consent of the other person.) She is also deeply and often irrationally emotional, and these emotions are often uncontrolled and explosive, but rarely with the direct intent of killing anyone; despite this, she is still far and away the most emotionally functional of Jak'ra and Amaryllis' children.
She is very close to her children, spending over two centuries locked away in the Seelie Court in mourning following the death of her eldest son Herne. She and her husband Marduk are also extremely close and almost sickeningly affectionate, though they have seemingly a consensually open marriage considering Leannan's core nature.

Orientation
Pansexual (in the most literal of terms)