Rank: Lt. JG
Position: Chief of Engineering
 

Name:

Katherine Warrens

Age:

21

Call Sign:

-

Parents: 

Theodora and Gerald Warrens (deceased)

Siblings: 

Lieutenannt John Warrens, pilot, deceased in first skirmish with Cylons

Gender: 

Female

Spouse: 

None

Quote:

"If it ain't broke, please don't break it"
Physical Description

Height:

5' 8"

Weight:

110

Eye Color:

Dark brown

Hair Color:

Dark brown, curly

Distinguishing Marks:

Jagged scar along the right side of her spine, approximately six inches long and two inches wide. Tattoo of a winged angel on her right butt cheek.

 

Hobbies/Interests:

Abusing her holodeck privileges, watching the stars race by

Character History

History:

Younger of two children born and raised in Oasis, a small town outside Caprica City, Katie watched her older brother with awe, as he became a pilot. She followed in his footsteps in joining the Fleet, but instead became an engineer, focusing more on the engines that run the battlestars as opposed to flight decks.  It was here that she learned to be slightly intolerant of the space jockeys who seemed to her to believe that the ship began and ended on the flight deck.

She was assigned to the Galactica, more as a training assignment since it was due to be decommissioned.  Then the Cylons attacked.  Her brother, on the Atlantia, was killed fighting the Cylons in his Viper.

Meanwhile, on Galactica, things weren't so good in Engineering.  The original chief was killed, as were most of the crew.  She barely survived, and in fact has a piece of Engineering embedded in her back, in a spot too dangerous to try removal.  Right now it’s harmless.

She was released from the infirmary one month and many attacks later to find that she was now the leading authority on FTL drives, not because she was the smartest person in the galaxy or the most experienced, but because she was the only left.  She was given a field promotion to LTJG and made Acting Chief, which is a joke, because there's no one left in the fleet to replace her.

 
 

Special Notes: