Born in Edinburgh’s outskirts, Savard came from a lowly family. His mother, Rose, was the youngest sibling of four, in a long line of medical practitioners, charlatans in the opinions of others. Against her family’s wishes, and at the expense of their support, she wedded a brute by the name of Suder, a towering brute. Even despite his reputation, she loved him, and who was anyone to tell her differently? There was just so much about Suder that she adored. He was strong, he cared for her, he seemed to provide anything she could have ever wanted out of a mate. Of course, the life smuggling, extortion, fraud, gambling, intimidation, and execution was a dangerous one to live, and while at first he was subtle about the things he did, he eventually stopped caring about it, and little by little, his lifestyle consumed the family. It came to the point where while Savard was quite young, the family moved to Castle Stuart, given that a “guild” had promised to “make” Suder. Rose was appalled, but smitten nevertheless. Of course, the relationship was doomed to fail, even if she denied it to herself.
Eventually, Suder stopped coming home as often, if ever, leaving Rose to raise Savard and Malachi on her own, practically. Without much support, the area of Castle Stuart they lived in was known to be rough, filled with all sorts of dregs, perfect for a wolf like Suder, but not so much or a family. It wasn’t long before Savard and Malachi fell in with the very same crowd his father ran with. As they had no other opportunities, the brothers soon became willing to work the odd job, if it meant that nobody would bother them. They would steal, bear false witness, harass and intimidate, and as they grew older and gained notoriety in their own right, fought, beat, extorted, and even killed. Why would they do the things they did? Did Savard enjoy threatening an old, blind wolf into reporting a competitor to the Imperial Guards as part of a conspiracy against the royal family? Collecting “insurance” from families no different from his own? Ensuring that certain guards would look the other way when something went down? The money and opportunity was alluring, at first. It even offered him a chance to feel in control of something, giving and getting respect. He felt he could make a name for himself, be somebody. But over time, the thought of everything he was building and a part of becoming legitimate helped him sleep, knowing that one day it could all come crashing down.
It just so happened in a particularly troubling way for him. Savard was close with Malachi, but as the older brother, he was the more confident and ambitious one. Savard was quieter, but more of the thinker if anything. Malachi took a job from a friend of a friend, one who was well acquainted with his father. Word was that somebody in Castle Stuart was offering an under-the-table reward to take out a powerful aristocrat with pro-Voxi sympathies. They couldn’t prove it, but they knew it, so in desperation it seemed, they turned to the shadows. A few of the details sounded off to Savard, but despite his protests, Malachi enlisted in it, obliging Savard to support his brother. It was a set-up. A rival gang had floated the idea, and in the carnage—one still talked about by those who witnessed it—Malachi was killed, and Savard left for dead, left to be arrested by Crown officials. Although they assured him he would never leave prison alive, he did a little over a year of prison time. It pays, of course, to have friends who help make evidence and witnesses disappear.
But with his brother’s death, and a re-evaluation of the life he lived, Savard felt compelled to make a change. While in prison, Savard came to the realization that deep down, he didn’t like the life he had, and regretted the choices he made. His brother’s death was difficult to get over, even if he didn’t show it. Despite this, he kept his integrity, and despite promises of a more lenient sentence and perhaps preferential treatment, Savard never gave anybody up. He had a knack for staying out of trouble, and of course, being a wolf that knew how to get things for others. He stayed out of trouble for the most part, and being gone as long as he was, the world around him seemed willing to move on. By the time he was released from the prisons, Savard found it hard to catch up. Running with his old crew doing the same jobs no longer appealed to him, not that anything did. Of course, it did not change the fact that the life he had was all he knew. Still, it appeared that with what having happened happening, he found a way out.
Savard attempted to use his remaining adulthood years to invest in somewhat honest work. He was no longer an assassin, someone who preyed on the defenseless, but did dealings that were honorable. Tracking down a runaway daughter, ensuring a blind old wolf was not extorted again, maybe even ensuring a real piece of shit wolf got arrested by the Crown. He walks a thin line, however, between loyalty to those from his previous life, and his newer moral convictions, and with each action he takes, he considers whether it is a step towards a good life, or a step back towards the life he seeks to leave behind. Of course, even if he had turned a new leaf, it never meant he turned against anybody. The fear of being labelled as a snitch haunts him in a way, and gives him fear that he may spend the rest of his life looking over his shoulder. But then again, perhaps nobody was sure whose side he was really on, if he was even interested enough to pick.
parents
Suder and Rose
siblings
Malachi
lover
N/A
children
N/A
extended
N/A