Some characters are written to entertain. Lyric Saint was written to testify.
In this episode, we peel back the lace on a femme who don’t raise her voice—but still leaves bodies in her wake. No gimmicks. No approval-seeking. Just a woman in white who turns silence into judgment and grace into fire.
Tahari breaks down the bones of a “Femme With the Motive”... the kind of woman who gets mistaken for soft because she’s calm—and ends up rewriting the entire damn gospel.
We’re talking about:
- Writing rage that don’t scream
- How silence can be sharper than vengeance
- Building characters who lead with power and petty
- Why Lyric Saint is not a redemption arc… she’s a reckoning
- What it means to write women who don’t just survive—they sanctify
This ain’t craft tips. This is a character confession. And if you’re building your femme with the motive? You gon’ need prayer... and pen.
Listen, if you’re a writer who:
- Is tired of soft-spoken villains and wants femme characters with conviction
- Builds stories where trauma is layered, not centered
- Writes women who’ve been misunderstood, underestimated, or weaponized
- Wants to walk the line between sacred and savage
Subscribe to the fire. Because some pens don’t heal. They hunt.