Anita Schott
Born in the wilds of Northern Virginia to German nobility (the von
Schott family), Anita Schott had zebra stripes in her blood from an early
age. She would get her brothers angry at each other just so she could
officiate their fights. At family dinners, she would make sure that
no one got more than his or her fair share of food. She even made her own mother sit in the "penalty box" (aka the pantry) for burning a batch of cookies. In junior high, she joined the debate team to hone her
skills. She was later removed from the debate team and expelled from school for punching an opponent in the eye. Her hobbies are crime scene forensics, bird watching, guerrilla gardening, and drinking beer. She lives in South Austin with six cats, a snake, a snapping turtle, and a boyfriend who watches his every move to avoid being penalized.
Dax Wilphall
Dax Wilphall, son of Holy Roller preacher, youngest of five children, never found satisfaction in that life. Besides, those damn pews were hard. To please his father, however, Dax marched the straight and narrow. An honor student, his efforts were simply good cover for favorite pastimes: lighting Cherry Bombs in the teachers' lounge, and greasing the basketball court of the Hurtzhugh Hellcats before games. After graduation, he became roadie for a washtub band, the Rhinestone
Cowgirls. On a band stop in Cowpen, South Dakota, in a Deliverance-like saloon, The Ax Will Fall, Dax lost bad at the card game Killer. Money blown, running for his life, he was rescued by a vintage Thunderbird auto club, the Putas del Fuego. He rode with some hellions headed for Austin and discovered the roller derby revival. Looking back, he felt his life was always pointing him here.
His dad always said, "He'll be late for the resurrection." Dax just never knew Papa was talking about the resurrection of derby.