Scherezad has some amnesia and memory issues, how have you been navigating these treacherous waters?
I haven't so much as navigated those waters as drowned in them (and occasionally wondered why I didn't just let the shark that character was jumping have a snack). Here are two examples. All of them are bad ones, and I wouldn't recommend them for anyone.
a) Vieve was murdered in a station side apartment by another player's character. She wasn't expecting to be murdered, because the murderer was one of the few people she genuinely trusted. The murderer, who had some experience in murdering people in stations, was smart enough to remove enough key pieces of incriminating evidence (including her corpse) from the apartment to make it look like she'd simply disappeared. Again. Pieces of her corpse didn't turn up for nearly two RL weeks after that.
She did not have a jump clone at the time.
She did have a medical clone, which had last been updated four RL weeks prior to her murder. I have always played with the assumption that the brain recording obtained during podding always gets stored on a fluid router connected server, where a copy resides until the clone revival process is proven successful or deemed a complete failure. If one pays for a better clone, that price includes the backup and incremental storage (last viable one only, replaced by next viable copy) of these brain recordings.
When Vieve's mother was notified of her murder, some legal wrangling ensued
1, then Vieve was revived with her memories from six weeks before. She was left to piece together what had happened in that missing time by piecing together the notes in her appointment calendar and conducting interviews of the people referenced in that appointment calendar ... at least the ones who were willing or available to talk to her. Strangely, both her estranged husband and her alleged fiance (alleged, because the only evidence of Jonny's proposal she had were notes about needing to find a ceremony site and someone to perform the ceremony) were both among those who weren't available.
The experience taught her that jump clones were Good Things To Have.
b) I never intended to create Sabi, Vieve's older sister. She had died in backstory a few years before Vieve became a capsuleer and I'd intended to keep her dead. Blame Julianus Soter for fishing her out of that backstory and dropping her into Paix Azur as an OOC surprise to me/IC surprise to Vieve. Or actually, don't blame him. His OOC scheming resulted in some entertaining play for a fair number of people.
I think this might be the point where some of y'all might ask "why did you go along with this"? Go back and read the last sentence of the previous paragraph. That's why.
I didn't want to go with an "undercover FedNav Intelligence officer who was so patriotic she let her own family believe she was dead so she could do the dirty work required in order to ensure the good citizens of the Federation could sleep safe at night" angle, because that would have been quick, easy, and would have required more suspension of disbelief than I was willing to put anyone through. In backstory, Sabi was a FedNav capsuleer, and a test pilot for its Weapons Systems research. I believed I needed an explanation as to why a former test pilot only had noob capsuleer skills.
I think this might be the point where some of y'all wonder if I'm nuts for being concerned about this stuff. The answer to that is 'yes, absolutely barking mad, thank you'.
This is why I went with this amnesia trope: "On the eve of her graduation from a FNA conventional military officer's program, a plain and ordinarily very serious young woman from a well off family got so wasted that she wound up charging a cosmetically enhanced clone (because her
crazy dilletante younger sister had always been so pretty that she'd gotten away with everything) and soft neural scan to the household credit account. When she sobered up, she contacted her father, who forgave her and told her that he'd take care of the charge before her mother found out about it. Flash forward a decade and change later, and that clone wakes up on a cot in the back room of an abandoned hydroponics facility with the cluster's worst tequila hangover and a military-grade portable comm terminal. And ... the facility's on Caldari Prime. Which is occupied. By the State. Or Caldari who call themselves Provists. And she's dead and buried in the family orchard in Mies, only, she's very much not. That she'd been a test pilot, which is funny, because she'd thought she was going to get assigned a spot in Intelligence because she wasn't
that good a pilot. And she'd what? She'd been a
capsuleer? But she'd only been borderline for that program, and her parents were dead set against it, and ... why exactly was her sister a capsuleer and a combat pilot working for State interests? Was this some kind of a sick joke?" et cetera et cetera things get worse et cetera assumptions get made et cetera more things get worse before they get really bad et cetera.
1By sheer coincidence, I was lucky enough that Vieve was murdered in a Federal Administration station at the same time that people in another
Federal Administration station were experiencing a mysterious food-borne illness. It seemed quite reasonable that Celeste (then by all appearances a very loyal Federation citizen, former Senate employee, et cetera) would barter keeping her mouth shut about a capsuleer also getting dead by Federal Administration incompetence in exchange for the power of attorney over her daughter's medical clone. While Vieve was was married at the time, her estranged husband was also number one on the list of murder suspects.