Miss Right

Background
Sadie Wright was born a prodigy and a problem child—brilliant, bored, and never quite where people expected her to be. As a member of the legendary Wright family, expectations were sky-high. She shattered every academic standard put in front of her... and then promptly refused to play the game.
  While her cousin Jason Wright became the clean-cut hero Mister Right, Sadie turned to iced coffee, indie radio, and building world-breaking tech in her dorm for fun. Her early success with the Micro-Fiend Projectors—repulsor-hovering drones capable of projecting adaptive force fields—put her on the radar of global super-agencies and villains alike.
  But it wasn’t until she was tricked into building a combat suit for the criminal Shock-n-Awe that she found purpose. Wracked by guilt and rejection of Wright Tech’s corporate culture, Sadie took up the stolen name Miss Right. Since then, she’s been tracking down misused tech, sabotaging exploitative systems, and helping misfit heroes stay alive and powered—her way.
  She recently uncovered the lost journal of her ancestor Thomas Wright, a frontier inventor and founder of Wright General, and his legendary partner Tabitha Catalina, a former saloon girl turned queenpin of the Old West. Their stories reframed Sadie’s view of herself—not as a failed heir, but a continuation of a deeper, rebellious Wright legacy.
  Personality
Outwardly? Sadie’s a sarcastic, hammock-loving, iced-cappuccino-fueled slacker who complains about everything from sunlight to startup culture. She downplays her intellect, avoids attention, and uses laziness as camouflage. Most people assume she’s underachieving by choice. They’re not entirely wrong. The truth is deeper: Sadie is emotionally guarded, deeply self-critical, and carries guilt like a soldering iron scar. She hides her hurt behind wit, her brilliance behind messiness, and her loneliness behind work. She struggles with feelings of alienation from her family, especially her mother, and constantly fears she’s a disappointment no one will say out loud.
  She sees herself as a failure of legacy—even though she’s more in line with the true spirit of the Wright family than most corporate heirs. Her admiration for her ancestors Tom Wright and Tabitha Catalina has reawakened something fierce in her: a desire to help, to build, to belong—but on her terms.
  Fiercely loyal to those who earn her trust, she often acts more out of empathy than logic. She loves broken people, chaotic allies, and underdog causes. If you misuse her tech, she’ll hunt you down. But if you’re trying to do the right thing—even if you suck at it—she’ll give you a drone and a fighting chance. Sadie Wright isn’t perfect. But she’s honest. And when she finally stops hiding behind sarcasm, you see what she really is:
  A builder of justice, forged in guilt, fueled by caffeine, and more Wright than anyone gives her credit for
Children

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