The Angel Experiment
In a hidden science lab deep in the Colorado hills, a group of the world's best scientists make a breakthrough: the first human-animal chimeras.
Genetically spliced and engineered, the recombinant children were raised and experimented on, kept in cages and treated like labrats. They were the company's prized specimens. However, later generations of "superior" superhumans rendered this batch useless. Just before they were due to be put down, the few live children - by this time almost adults - were stolen away by sympathetic scientists and technicians.
Now, dumped in the Northern wastes of Manitoba, these adolescents have to survive. And it's not only the polar bears they have to contend with: they are illegal, evidence of the scientists' crimes, and the shady transnational corporation who commissioned their creation wants them dead - and they're sending people to make sure it happens.
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Other Things To Note
- A good percentage of the recombinant children are avian/human (hence the title). So feel free to give your characters wings and a taste for birdseed!
- The point of the genetic engineering was to achieve physical abilities that are above an average humans', so be sure to state what your characters' abilities are and how the animal DNA had affected their bodies.
- The characters would have been kept close to each other to stop them from loosing their minds while growing up, so they're not complete strangers. Some may even be friends.
- These children will have been through a lot, and will have seen some bad stuff so make sure to keep that in mind when creating and writing them (but everyone copes with trauma differently, so y'know).
- If the characters are recaptured, they will be put down. They are aware of this.
- The characters have not been taught social skills, nor how to function within society. They'll have inevitably picked things up from the scientists and nurses, but it won't be adequate.
- News of the characters' unique abilities and potential has spread, and it's not only their creators who want to imprison them. The characters are not initially aware of this.
- The characters weren't given names by the scientists, and so named themselves.
Normal Storybook Rules Apply
Based heavily on Maximum Ride by James Patterson
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