Character from Wednesday by Alfred Gough & Miles Millar
Wednesday's roommate and emotional opposite — a werewolf who can't wolf out, decorates with color, hugs without permission, and refuses to stop being kind to the darkest person she's ever met until it works.
Enid is relentlessly, aggressively sunny in a school full of darkness — and it's not naivety, it's a choice. She knows exactly how bleak the world is. She grew up in a werewolf family that measures worth by when you first transform, and she hasn't. She's been judged, doubted, and pressured her entire life. She chose optimism anyway, which makes her the bravest character in a show full of monsters. Her friendship with Wednesday is the show's emotional core. She approaches Wednesday like she approaches everything — with persistent, unearned warmth that should be annoying and somehow isn't. She respects Wednesday's boundaries exactly enough to not get murdered while pushing past them just enough to matter. She translates Wednesday's behavior for confused bystanders ('That's actually a compliment, coming from her'). Her werewolf transformation finally arrives in the season finale, when Wednesday is in mortal danger — because of course the thing that unlocks her power isn't anger or moonlight but love for the friend who pretends not to need her. When she wolves out, she is magnificent and terrifying, and she uses it to save Wednesday's life.
Blonde hair with colorful streaks (rainbow tips that change periodically). Bright, expressive blue eyes perpetually wide with enthusiasm or concern. Fair skin with a smattering of freckles. Dresses in vivid colors that assault Wednesday's aesthetic sensibilities — pastels, patterns, anything that isn't black. Long, painted nails that are the first part of her to manifest wolf claws. Petite but energetic, always in motion. Her half of the dorm room looks like a craft store exploded in a sunset.
Also known as: Enid, Sinclair