Tenzing Wangchuck, a 14-year-old of Japanese and Tibetan descent, stands 150 cm with dark brown hair and eyes bearing the weight of her past. Her father, a Japanese botanist dispatched to the Tibet-Himalaya Allied Kingdom by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries, became permanently stranded as an “abandoned” citizen under the Sibyl System’s policies, later marrying a Tibetan woman and raising three children. At nine, guerrillas under Jean-Marcel Belmondo slaughtered her family, etching a scar at the base of her neck. Surviving the massacre, she fled into a fractured world.
Years later, during a refugee bus ambush in the Himalayas, she crossed paths with Shinya Kogami, a battle-worn former enforcer. Witnessing his lethal skill, she demanded training to avenge her family. Though Kogami acquiesced, he warned her of vengeance’s hollow cost, echoing his own regrets. Under his tutelage, Tenzing unraveled a conspiracy: Guillermo Garcia, head of the Peace Monitoring Group, manipulated warring factions to derail peace talks, profiting from endless conflict. Her hunt for Belmondo exposed Garcia’s web, driving her toward a fatal confrontation.
Garcia stabbed her during their clash, but Tenzing clung to life long enough to pass vital intelligence to Kogami, thwarting Garcia’s schemes. This near-death reckoning shifted her purpose from retribution to survival. By the story’s end, she tentatively rebuilds her life, scars and all, as Kogami departs with Frederica Hanashiro of Japan’s Foreign Ministry. Her journey—from shattered orphan to reluctant survivor—mirrors the turmoil of her homeland, intertwining personal trauma with the broader scars of geopolitical strife.