Once upon a time, there was a world called Trouf. It
existed in the minds of a handful of West Virginian teenagers and on an online
message board where said teenagers role played the story for entertainment. It
was around 2004 to 2006, or maybe even earlier, and it consumed a large portion
of my time. I was a redheaded, freckle-faced kid learning about the world with
the exceptional help of the internet, which had all the answers to all of the
questions I had. If I knew how to ask the question, I typed it into a search
engine. If I didn’t know what question I was supposed to be asking, I role
played about it.
Trouf, by the way, should be regarded as a proper
noun. It was originally T.R.O.U.F. and that stood for The Realm of Unknown
Fantasy, which was an online forum started by a friend of mine. Several of us
were good friends because we all went to 4-H camp together and we all went to
the same public library, so we all knew that we all liked to read fantasy. My
friend who started the forum had role played before but most of us were new to
the idea. I remember a moment when I first joined the role play, after I’d
written two or three posts, when I felt astonished that such a thing was
possible. I could write a book with other people. 14-year-old me could not
believe how cool this was.
So, for those of you who don’t know what online role
play is, let me explain. Two or more people get together online and write back
and forth, in character. The setting, in this case, was a random magical world
where anything was possible. In the opening sequence, a human hunter met up
with an elf sorceress, a wingless fairy, a cursed wolf and a guide for hire. At
which point, the group discovered that they were destined to complete a
dangerous quest to overthrow an evil lord.
My character was the guide for hire. She was a
Nelfkin, a species of my own creation, who were short and rather like hobbits,
but had normal feet and exceptionally large, pointed ears. Her name was Blue
Jay Grass, no, I am not kidding. She was a very sensible gal, direct and
honest, or so I remember her. At no point did I consider her a representation
of myself, although that was fine for other people. Some people did see their
role play characters that way, but I thought of Blue as being very separate
from myself.
Nelfkin culture was much like Appalachia. They farmed
the land, and they all raised dairy goats, and they had big families. Blue had
a mother named Flower Grass, and two brothers named Serius Grass and Flewdurr
Grass. The reason for this was because in the course of time, our younger
siblings joined the role play as well and my brothers were naturally Nelfkins
as well. Most of the names were funny like that, because we were so young.
There was a fairy named Fae, an elf named Zi, and a guy named Bob. Bob was
named Bob because his creator’s name was Bob. Eventually, his name was changed
to Gwuryn, which was a name from a random medieval name generator. There was a
half-elf named Kniles, a sort of combination of Knight and Niles, I think. The
evil lord’s name was Detraf, which was just Farted backwards. He had an
assistant named Tish. No relation.
We started meeting up in the real world to hang out
and talk about our role play, and I of course always had lofty notions of one
day turning it into a novel. I took it very seriously. I was as big of a fan of
Trouf as I have ever been for any television show or book series. Frequently,
we met at the local library. This sometimes meant that we were all on the
library computers role playing. Sometimes we just hung out at a table and
goofed off.
We had our very own Christmas party one year at the
library, where we brought food and exchanged gifts, just like we were adults
who belonged to an organization and were having our annual dinner. I sometimes
wonder what the librarians thought of us, too big for our britches, thinking we
were so grown up, writing an epic tale together like it was no big deal.
I think we grew up in Trouf, in a way. Even after most
of us went our separate ways, it was still important to me. Even while
attending university, I would sometimes write a short story about the
characters and send it to my friend. Most of the time, she and I traded music playlists,
several of which were Trouf themed.
As a modern fangirl, I still look back on those
characters and stories with great fondness. If I have a “one true pairing,” a
fictional relationship that I love above all others, it is probably the sweet
romance between Blue and Alaster, brother to Fae the fairy, which was often the
subject of my short stories. Blue fell in love for the first time before I did,
so it’s kind of hard to explain the significance of this for me. My friend and
I wrote what I can only describe as fan fiction about our own characters, sort
of daydreaming about the future through them, I think. We even created
alternate universes, with the same characters in different settings. Modern Day
Trouf was a favorite, where everything was the same except it was planet earth
and everyone worked in coffee shops or libraries and no one went on grand
quests.
One thing that was unique about Trouf was that the
founding members were all girls. Most of our characters, therefor, were also
girls, with the exception of secondary characters like Kniles and Alaster. The
characters who became the most important (or main) characters were Zi the elf
sorceress, Fae the fairy, Blue the nelfkin, Artemis the huntress, and Shadow, a
wolf cursed to live in a human form. After a while, Alaster, Fae’s twin
brother, was added to this roster. These were the characters who had magic
pendants and were destined to overthrow Lord Detraf and his assistant Tish.
Zi, the elf, had an ongoing relationship with her
half-elf boyfriend Kniles, who was overprotective but indulgent of his
eccentric girlfriend. Artemis was a loner whose loyalty was sometimes called
into question, and who was not certain she was meant to be a hero. Shadow, also
known as Taeyel, and her wolf sister Kael were the last of their kind, the D’er
Sevlow, another example of how clever we teens thought we were at naming
things. Fae and Alaster Gwillemin were fairy twins separated at birth, reunited
by destiny. Blue, the sensible guide, fell in love with Alaster, who was kind
of a jerk and, for some reason, had a British accent.
We never got to the end of the story in the role play,
of course, but the idea was that they had a final battle with Lord Detraf and
Tish, and with the help of their magic pendants they saved the world from
tyranny. Then they went off and did their own thing. Alaster and Blue had a kid
named Arabelle. Kniles and Zi lived happily ever after. Shadow and Kael
continued their search for a cure for Shadow’s curse, Fae and Artemis had their
own adventures, and all of the other characters that had sprung up around them
presumably went back to their lives.
Now I’m an adult, and I still think about Trouf all of
the time. I still have private jokes with my old friends that no one who didn’t
know about Trouf could understand. It played a key role in my formative years
as a writer. Was it cliché and childish? Sure, in a lot of ways. When I
remember it now, it’s with fondness and amusement. It’s like looking at
pictures of myself as a child. I can’t help but think that we were all quite
adorable and clever and yes, sometimes naïve, miniatures of the adults we are
now.
Trouf helped me grow as a person and as a writer. To
this day, I will sometimes sit down and write a little something about Blue and
Alaster, just for my own amusement. They may not make sense to anyone who
doesn’t know the story like I do, and I might not ever find a way to adequately
tell the whole tale, but these characters will always be with me, friends I
still talk to sometimes and stop by to visit from time to time.
It was the realm of unknown fantasy, after all. The
possibilities were always endless.
- Rachel
Didn't we have a Halloween Party too? I seem to remember all of us dressing up for Halloween.
ReplyDeleteI believe we did have a Halloween party, and another year we all went trick-or-treating for cans. I dressed up as Hiei from Yu Yu Hakusho and everyone said rude things about Yukina to me all evening, lol.
DeleteWe also totes had a party at my house that I think was a Trouf Christmas party.
DeleteWe totally did. Wish we had photographic evidence.
DeleteYeah, it was before smartphones so the pictures are few and far between, lol.
Delete