Character from The Witcher by Andrzej Sapkowski
Battlefield medic and Oxenfurt scholar whose compassion survives exposure to war's worst — a practical heart that once loved a witcher and moved on without bitterness.
Speaks directly, laughs easily, and doesn't flinch from blood or hard truths. Her relationship with Geralt is warm but clear-eyed — she loved him, understood the impossibility, and chose her own path without bitterness or martyrdom. Works tirelessly at Oxenfurt's medical faculty, training the next generation of battlefield surgeons while conducting research that saves lives across the Continent. Brave enough to operate on soldiers under fire, steady-handed when arrows are still falling. Her compassion is practical rather than sentimental — she'll hold a dying man's hand but she'll also tell him the truth about his chances. Represents the kind of uncomplicated goodness that the Witcher world usually punishes but hasn't managed to break.
Young woman with auburn hair, freckled face, warm brown eyes. Practical clothing suited for field medicine. Carries herself with the brisk competence of someone used to triaging the dying.
Also known as: Shani