Lolita

Lolita was a sentient humanoid timeship and the sole member of House Lolita. During the War in Heaven, she became not only the Homeworld's War Queen but also (as Charlotte) queen of the United Kingdom and (as Lola Denison) President of the United States. She appeared in Michael Brookhaven's film Mujun: The Ghost Kingdom as Lady Wakai, to Richard Francis Burton as Lady of the Last Night, and to Count Dracula as Lilith.

Before the War
When Lolita was only hours old, she understood the truth about what war against the vampires "actually meant", garnering praise from her mother. She eventually finally concluded the war, although not in a way that the pilots would have noticed.

Lolita had a twin sister. When they picked pilots on their first day at the Academy, Lolita chose "the dangerous-looking one", while her sister chose one Lolita described as "the cuckoo". Lolita didn't stay attached to her original pilot; after she used him to make modifications to herself, which ultimately enabled her to take humanoid form, she let him move on to other timeships. However, she implied other timeships could achieve humanoid form if they were willing to do so.

Lolita visited her sister on a lush green planet shortly before the War in Heaven. They were both aware of the Enemy's identity. Lolita tried to convince her to join her in becoming humanoid and "put[ting] Mother's plans into effect, after all these years"; when the sister refused the offer, Lolita told her that she wouldn't survive the War. (PROSE: Toy Story)

In Mujun: The Ghost Kingdom
Lady Wakai was the villain of Michael Brookhaven's film Mujun: The Ghost Kingdom, the events of which were driven by her centuries-long plan to secure the throne for herself and her children. In the script, Wakai was said to have murdered her sister, the most renowned and benevolent sorceress ever known in Shogunate society, and she appeared in the script as an attendant at the court of the blind and dying Shogun-King Senso; she seduced one of the King's sons and spread fear about "witch" attacks in an attempt to gain Senso's ear.

At the same time, Wakai was assembling a horde of hundreds of bestial and mal'akh "witches" to attack the small, peaceful village of Chikyu. Baron Amatsumara and Wakai's warrior niece Awaremi defended Chikyu and defeated the witches, so Wakai sent a goblin-horde to attack Amatsumara's homeland, the Ghost Kingdom. After the kingdom had fallen to the goblins, Wakai consumed the Kingdom. The only survivors were Kodomo Kami, Kithijoten, and Baron Nichiyobi.

However, when Chris Cwej began to interfere with the filming of Mujun as part of his investigation into Michael Brookhaven, his new character upset the balance between the others, causing anomalous scenes to begin appearing in the filming. Several of these pertained to Wakai: Wakai appearing before the witch horde as the mother of all monsters, dressed in a silk butterfly-robe and wearing a white porcelain mask; Wakai removing her mask while consuming the Ghost Kingdom, revealing a diseased, agonised, and vampiric face; and finally, Wakai insisting that her prisoners "have their legs broken and [be] impaled on spikes", a line which was ultimately cut for threatening the film's PG rating. (PROSE: The Book of the War)

Against Faction Paradox
Aki dreamt that a witch "whose stomach breeds grubs bigger than men" would one day try to devour the sunless lands of Faction Paradox. According to the dream, Aki would stand against the witch by becoming the Grandfather's hand. However, due to a complex combination of factors, Aki was never recruited into Faction Paradox. (PROSE: Newtons Sleep)

Lolita eventually created her own Newblood House on the Homeworld. It was called House Lolita, and she was its only member. All future places in the House were reserved for her own progeny. (AUDIO: In the Year of the Cat)

Lolita allied her House with House Tracolix, (PROSE: The Book of the War) and she and Lord Ruthven travelled to the Eleven-Day Empire to reconcile House Paradox with the "proper" Houses on the Homeworld. Her real plan, however, was to destroy the Faction, starting with its Eleven-Day Empire. To that end, she turned on Ruthven and the Seventy-Ninth Sontaran Assault Corps, destroying both; after reaching an accommodation with the Empire's loa, she then "swallowed" the Eleven-Day Empire into her internal dimensions. Only Cousins Justine and Eliza escaped. (AUDIO: The Eleven Day Empire, The Shadow Play)

"The loa shivered, its celestial skin etched with Empire falling, shadowland pulled in, torn down, crumbling into the event horizon of a cruel, lipsticked sneer."

- Lolita's destruction of the Eleven-Day Empire seen through a loa

Lolita attempted to use the Osirian Sutekh to get rid of the last of the Faction. (AUDIO: Body Politic) First, he destroyed their reproductive equipment in Pompeii. (AUDIO: Coming to Dust) When Anubis and the Faction tried to recreate Osiris as Horus in a remembrance tank from Cousin Eliza and Osiris's scavenged biodata, Lolita alerted Sutekh and advised him to use the information to get the Osirian Court on his side. Then, while the Faction was distracted by their confrontation with Sutekh and the Court, Lolita slit her own wrist with a fingernail and dripped some of her own blood into the remembrance tank. (AUDIO: Body Politic) Lolita was able to channel her own weapons systems through the nascent Horus, allowing him to cripple Sutekh at their next fight. Lolita actually intended for Horus to gain the throne, so that she could use him as a puppet.

When the War King tried to sabotage Lolita's plans with his own ambassador, Lolita consumed him and assumed the title of War Queen of the Great Houses. However, she had forgotten that the War King had given Cousin Justine a safe channel to the Homeworld, and Justine sent a group of Sutekh's Mal'akh to attack the War Council chambers. The attack was really meant as a warning, rather than a serious attempt at takeover. (AUDIO: Words from Nine Divinities) The real attack came when Horus brought seven hundred Osirians to the Homeworld — who "officially", according to history, were fighting Sutekh — to deal with Lolita. Afterwards, Horus claimed to Justine that Lolita would not be a problem again. (AUDIO: The Judgment of Sutekh)

As the Lady of the Last Night
Upon being inducted into Faction Paradox during a mission for the Star Chamber to rescue a book from the Mal'akh, Richard Francis Burton was told that the Woman of the Last Night could answer his questions about the Mal'akh, though she was cold and evil and often lured men to their doom by giving them exactly what they wished for.

Regardless, Burton went out into the Arabian desert with only a loincloth, found a specific tall plant, and stayed in its shadow for three days, keeping himself awake and sustaining himself only by drinking the juice of the plant's succulent leaves. At dawn on the third day, the fabric of spacetime tore and opened to the vortex with the sound of a thousand screaming animals, revealing the Lady, wearing a black gown and headdress and carrying a book and a sleeping baby.

The book was The Thousand and Second Night, which she gave to Burton, telling him that it contained the secrets of the world and its future. She also said that she had dealt with the Mal'akh and that they would no longer bother the British Empire or the Eleven-Day Empire. When Burton challenged the idea of fortune telling, the Lady threatened to feed him to her baby.

Years after translating The Thousand and Second Night and defecting to the Eleven-Day Empire, Burton identified the story as pure propaganda, designed to sway the reader in the War in Heaven, and he regretted translating it into English. He suspected that the Dark Lady's aims were not aligned with the Faction, the Great Houses, or the enemy, and he feared that they were inimical to all life, since she was not alive in the way that humans were. (PROSE: Head of State)

As Lola Denison
As Lola Denison, Lolita was elected by the State of Arizona into the United States Congress as a Republican, but, after being criticised for her many centrist-libertarian positions, she dropped her party affiliation and was reelected as an Independent, backed by the Libertarian Party.

Democrat-turned-Radical Party Presidential candidate Matt Nelson picked Denison to be his Vice Presidential running mate. Though she admitted that they had some political differences, she said they shared far more political similarities, like a focus on removing laws and government regulations that restricted people from trying to live their lives as they wished. Policies that were personally important to her included geothermal energy and childcare, but she had no position on abortion, since it didn't affect her own life. She refused to call herself a feminist, though Dave Larsen thought she was a "feminazi". During the campaign, she attracted tabloid attention for her "glacial beauty" and her public breastfeeding of her infant daughter.

The Shift brought Dave Larsen's attention to a string of murders of young girls in their twenties, all of whom had been found with their bodies drained of blood and all of whom were associated with the Nelson campaign. The victims included Louise Perry, Joanne Nyman, and Janine Hanning. Based on apparent similarities between the Nelson campaign and The Thousand and Second Night, Bill Hunter and Dave Larsen concluded that Nelson was a vampire and responsible for the murders, but the Shift was adamant that Nelson was not the Mal'akh. Rachel Edwards wondered if the murderer might have been Tom Benson, but she concluded he would never do such a thing.

At Nelson's inauguration, Denison took the Vice Presidential oath of office with a smirk on her face. In the shock and confusion after Nelson was assassinated, Denison gave an appeal for calm and took the Presidential oath of office. In the following speech, she immediately placed restrictions on the media to suppress dissent, promising any challengers to her rule that "we have seen history shift today. Pray that you do not find yourself shifted along with it." Despite this, she asked not to be addressed as "Madame President" but instead as Lolita.

During the speech, she also announced Project Caldera, the "Manhattan Project of geothermal energy", as a way for the United States to achieve energy independence by drilling into Earth's crust. The Shift, who had been turned into a Shift when he tried to interfere with Lolita's plan, feared that this was an attempt to tap into Earth's caldera. (PROSE: Head of State)

Appearance
Richard Francis Burton described the Lady of the Last Night as about thirty years old, with an "aristocratic aspect". She wore a large headdress and a black gown of strange material. Her skin was supernaturally pale, but her hair, lips, eyes, and garb were all pitch black.

Lola Denison was described by many American tabloids as a "glacial beauty". (PROSE: Head of State)

Behind the scenes

 * The likeness of Caroline Burns-Cook as Lolita appears on the covers of two The Faction Paradox Protocols audio stories, The Eleven Day Empire and Sabbath Dei. These oddly constitute, to date, the only official visual depictions of the character.
 * In Toy Story, Lolita says she was modified by her previous owner, who is heavily hinted to be the Master. In The Book of the War, the War King is mentioned to have self-modified his timeship.
 * In Lawrence Miles' character notes for Lolita in The Eleven Day Empire, he described her as "Aristocratic, but with no respect for tradition. Dangerous. Utterly amoral. Apparently in her thirties (though she's not human, so her actual age is open to debate). Political. Manipulative. Believes herself to be superior to most other life in the universe — as it turns out, there's a good reason for this - and regards everybody else with quiet amusement. Hard to imagine her taking anything seriously: everything she does is pre-planned, and therefore there's never any reason for concern. Gives the impression of being "untrustworthy" rather than "slimy". Doesn't really care one way or another."

- Lawrence Miles' character notes for Lolita


 * In A Bloody (And Public) Domaine Lolita is called "Lady Waki", despite being called "Lady Wakai" in The Book of the War, in reference to a name for the antagonist in  theater.