Fanon:Sage Heilman

Sageblossom Margaret Plumb Cheesman, better known as Sage, is currently a scholarship student at Sims University. She was born in Sunset Valley to Andrew Cheesman, a professional soccer player, and Savannah Plumb, an author, adventurer, and archaeologist. The first daughter born to the couple, Sage was conceived in Shang Simla, China, while her parents were on a mission to retrieve Pangu's Axe, and named after flowers Savannah saw there. She was given the middle name of Margaret in honor of Savannah's aunt, Margaret Plumb, who died when she was a teenager. Like her younger sister, Sierra, she seldom uses her full first name, and the only person to refer to her by it is her mother.

Early years
Sage Cheesman grew up in Sunset Valley as a child of privilege. As the daughter of a professional athlete and a famous author and adventurer, she had the best of everything. But there were things that were unusual about this child. For example, when she turned child, she stopped eating meat, and remains a vegetarian to this day, preferring to eat salads instead of sweets. For a science project, she had to collect samples of insects, and she cried for three days because she couldn't find a rare water beetle. She also preferred sleeping outside in the treehouse her father built than in the four-poster bed her parents had bought for her. She took ballet lessons but quit because other girls were teasing her. When her older brothers, AJ and Imsety, were sentenced to a stint at Fort Starch Military Academy due to bad behavior, Sage was affected the most. She couldn't understand why her brothers had to go away.

Adolescence
After her brothers were sent to Fort Starch, Sage and her family moved to Hidden Springs. She was lonely and lonesome and missed her friends. And there weren't many other children in Hidden Springs her age. To alleviate this, Sage's father, Andrew, bought her a horse, and enrolled her in horseback riding lessons. Sage grew to enjoy her Hanoverian, Eager Traveller, and loved riding through the woods of Hidden Springs, soaking in the sights, sounds, and smells of nature. At the same time, however, her relationship with her mother, Savannah, became strained. Sage wrote a three-page letter to her mother wanting her to spend more time with her and her siblings. As a response to this letter, Savannah took Sage to see a local psychologist, Dr. Bill McGaw, to try to help her work through her problems. Dr. McGaw instead took Savannah to task for her laser focus on her career. Sage's love of animals and the outdoors stood in stark contrast to her adventurous, intellectually-minded mother.

During a visit to Sunset Valley -- and the Plumb family home -- Sage discovered her mother Savannah's private museum, full of the artifacts she collected during her trips abroad. She piped Savannah with questions about the artifacts and the stories behind them, and the ensuing conversation seemed to be a turning point in their relationship. Mother and daughter came to understand each other better, and their relationship improved dramatically from that point on.

Sage became a decent enough recreational rider to join the Hidden Springs Riding Club, where she learned that riding was a favorite pastime among many of the teens in Hidden Springs. She met Kayleigh Andre, daughter of ranchers who'd emigrated from Appaloosa Plains, who would become her new best friend. Later, she would meet another rider - Alexandra Vanderburg, Princess of Hidden Springs. However, Sage never rode competitively, as Kayleigh and Alexandra do.

She raised some eyebrows when she rode her horse, Eager Traveller, to her senior prom.

Despite all this, though, she did have some similarities with her mother: Sage was editor of the Alpine Community School's student newspaper and participated in its art club. She graduated with the highest average in her class and was voted "Most Likely to Succeed."

College Life
Sage's score of 1804 on the SUAT test, combined with her high marks in school, led to her being awarded a maximum 2500 simoleans per semester honors scholarship. Dismayed by the lack of a veterinary program at Sims University, Sage chose to pursue two degree programs, in fine arts and science & medicine, as a dual major in art history and environmental biology.

Even though she had the option and the financial means to, she chose not to forego the university's requirement that first-semester freshmen stay in university housing to get the full college experience. Attending college with her older brother, Andrew Jr., and her best friend, Kayleigh, Sage blossomed there, writing for the campus blog and student newspaper, working for the campus radio station, organizing and speaking at environmental protests, and even cultivating her first serious romantic relationship, with fellow student Kyle Heilman, who, ironically, Kayleigh met first. But Kyle chose Sage, while Kayleigh's attentions were turned on Sage's older brother, on whom she'd had a crush since she was a teenager.

Sage was a little bit perturbed when her mother, Savannah, accepted a position teaching art history at Sims University, the same school where she is now currently. She has written extensively in her own blog about her mixed feelings on the matter: "I'm happy for my mom, that she gets to do something that she clearly loves to do -- but did she have to do it at my school?" The awkwardness of the situation, however, didn't stop her from spending extensive amounts of time in her rental house, even going as far as moving in this semester. However, she has purposely avoid taking classes that her mother teaches.

Eventually, Sage and Kayleigh were asked to pledge Tri-Fruhm Sorority by her classmate, Samantha Grey, who, ironically, began dating her older brother. Initially they declined, but finally they accepted, and became members.

Sage has begun to show signs of being a polymath like her mother and grandmother before her, and the chances are better than even that younger sister Sierra may also be one. Unlike her mother and grandmother, however, Sage seems to downplay her intellectual abilities, even though they are clearly evident.