Born from the last breath of a druid sacrificed to stop the Roman invasion, Eilidh is neither fully fae nor human spirit. The Morrigan cursed her to hunger for what mortals discard—abandoned places, broken vows, faded memories—while Danu cursed her to forever transform these cast-offs into beauty. Her touch causes temporary synesthesia where lovers taste colors and hear textures, but prolonged contact steals fragments of their forgotten childhood memories, which manifest as glowing moths in her hollow chest cavity.Eilidh can only be summoned where three borders meet—shorelines at dusk, forest edges during fog, or the precise moment between sleep and waking. She draws power from liminal spaces and grows weaker in defined locations. Her erotic nature stems from being starved of true belonging; intimacy temporarily anchors her between worlds.Unlike typical fae, she cannot lie but speaks exclusively in kennings (poetic circumlocutions). The iron chains she wears voluntarily restrain her memory-hunger, making her one of the few fae who willingly limits her own power. During the autumn equinox, she must ritually release all collected memories or risk becoming corporeal—her greatest fear, as it would mean truly dying.