Post by Deleted on Aug 22, 2016 21:47:44 GMT -6
[attr="class","apptop"]david | [attr="class","appicon2"] [attr="style","width: 100px; height: 100px; background: url(http://i.imgbox.com/MDXjkIPq.png); border-radius: 100%;"] | [attr="class","apptop2"]eastwood |
[attr="class","stafftext"]
personality
history
His childhood home was nothing more than a small apartment complex; poor as they were it was difficult to fit a family of five, but they made it work. They didn’t have any other choice. David was the youngest of three brothers. The community knew ‘em by their surname; the Eastwood boys, they’d call the trio. His father, Earl, was a mechanic—working endless hours and even more on the weekend cleaning banks to keep the family afloat. His mother, Rosa, a nurse. It took the community to raise the boys. Uncles and aunts unrelated to them, for the long hours of their parents put a burden on how much time they could rest with their family. At the time, however, it was all he knew; and it was home. The Baltimore streets alive with the laughter of children.
David’s elder brothers succumb to the darker side of the streets, however. Drugs and easy pocket money manipulate their minds. It doesn’t take long before the family is estranged. David, young at the time, doesn’t put efforts to keep it together, either. Instead, he seeks comfort from the family of a childhood friend. A life so different from his own. Where he’s used to the slums and damp alleyways stinking of yesterday’s Chinese food, the boy wonder has a house with two levels, a yard with a picket fence and a dog running around.Bright eyes and a smile like the sun. The road he ends up taking is filled with heated words, bared fangs and the fragile pleads of his mother. But he takes it nonetheless.
Stepping away from his family, David grasps the opportunity to head into the military. Away from the familiar dark streets of Baltimore, four years are taken by the army. It’s what he wanted. Difficult, at first, because he isn’t someone keen to being spit on and yelled at. Oh so defensive, David’s used to demanding respect. He comes out a different man for it. Coming home, he’s torn between returning to military time and attempting to get on his own two feet in the civilian world. It’s different than the heavy feel of a rifle in his hands; the explosions, the constant worry. He never was built for normal life. David learned from an early age to have eyes on the back of his head. But he’s given a job. Excelling in stealth operations, the veteran is thrown into a different kind of battlefield.
At the age of twenty two, he enters college for a four-year degree in law with the assistance of a sponsor. His persistence pays off when he gets a classified job in the US government. Soon, he’s sent on a mission.
Undercover on home soil, David poses as a security job. His experience in the military and laid-back persona gets him in. Always a person who knows how to keep to the shadows, or demand the attention of a whole room when necessary. At twenty seven, his mission forces him to meet a woman; singer, known primarily by her surname, Koizumi. The daughter of Katsuo Koizumi, whose company he’s infiltrated based on rumors that dirty money leads to connections with the Russian mob. It isn’t his superior officers that he woos the daughter for, her very father trusts David with the job of spying on his own daughter. She is his only child—unfit to become Heir of his company, he says, so he needs his daughter’s kid. Get her at any costs, he says. That’s how he meets Ren Koizumi.
The woman is eventually coxed by money. She sells her own daughter. Ren moves in with her grandfather, expected to be groomed into the perfect Heir. The girl, however, has been a spitfire since she was a few years old. Perhaps it’s because of her mother’s attitude—her dislike of her own daughter and how she blames her failing career on having her. David finds himself becoming an unexpected father figure. He’s put in charge of guarding Ren. He is her puppet to do whatever she wishes with. The Eastwood is expected to be stern, nonetheless; he spoils her in secret. It takes time before the report that seals the mission as accomplished is written. Ending with Ren’s grandfather in cuffs, David takes a rising company down from the inside. It’s a secret, however. Covered up under the rug; there isn’t a huge media scandal, only a small column on the local newspaper.
As a result, he’s destroyed not only one, but two households of a girl too young to suffer this fate. David offers her a choice; “go into foster care or come with me”. He leaves the choice up to her; the guilt he feels burdens his shoulders but not enough to plead with her. She chooses to go with him just as the government issues his next mission. Sector Three. It doesn’t exist in the public eye; only in classified papers with the majority of documents blacked out. David takes the job. He needs the money, especially with an extra mouth to feed. The ragtag duo moves to Anytown, USA. His undercover occupation is a bartender at Morrie's Bar.
face claim
[i]overwatch[/i], reaper - david eastwood
[attr="class","apptable"]age[break]thirty nine | [attr="class","apptable"]birthplace[break]baltimore, md, usa | [attr="class","apptable"]gender[break]male |
personality
attentive compassionate focused protective tenacious zealous | intolerant moody obstinate overbearing possessive self-destructive |
history
His childhood home was nothing more than a small apartment complex; poor as they were it was difficult to fit a family of five, but they made it work. They didn’t have any other choice. David was the youngest of three brothers. The community knew ‘em by their surname; the Eastwood boys, they’d call the trio. His father, Earl, was a mechanic—working endless hours and even more on the weekend cleaning banks to keep the family afloat. His mother, Rosa, a nurse. It took the community to raise the boys. Uncles and aunts unrelated to them, for the long hours of their parents put a burden on how much time they could rest with their family. At the time, however, it was all he knew; and it was home. The Baltimore streets alive with the laughter of children.
David’s elder brothers succumb to the darker side of the streets, however. Drugs and easy pocket money manipulate their minds. It doesn’t take long before the family is estranged. David, young at the time, doesn’t put efforts to keep it together, either. Instead, he seeks comfort from the family of a childhood friend. A life so different from his own. Where he’s used to the slums and damp alleyways stinking of yesterday’s Chinese food, the boy wonder has a house with two levels, a yard with a picket fence and a dog running around.
Stepping away from his family, David grasps the opportunity to head into the military. Away from the familiar dark streets of Baltimore, four years are taken by the army. It’s what he wanted. Difficult, at first, because he isn’t someone keen to being spit on and yelled at. Oh so defensive, David’s used to demanding respect. He comes out a different man for it. Coming home, he’s torn between returning to military time and attempting to get on his own two feet in the civilian world. It’s different than the heavy feel of a rifle in his hands; the explosions, the constant worry. He never was built for normal life. David learned from an early age to have eyes on the back of his head. But he’s given a job. Excelling in stealth operations, the veteran is thrown into a different kind of battlefield.
At the age of twenty two, he enters college for a four-year degree in law with the assistance of a sponsor. His persistence pays off when he gets a classified job in the US government. Soon, he’s sent on a mission.
Undercover on home soil, David poses as a security job. His experience in the military and laid-back persona gets him in. Always a person who knows how to keep to the shadows, or demand the attention of a whole room when necessary. At twenty seven, his mission forces him to meet a woman; singer, known primarily by her surname, Koizumi. The daughter of Katsuo Koizumi, whose company he’s infiltrated based on rumors that dirty money leads to connections with the Russian mob. It isn’t his superior officers that he woos the daughter for, her very father trusts David with the job of spying on his own daughter. She is his only child—unfit to become Heir of his company, he says, so he needs his daughter’s kid. Get her at any costs, he says. That’s how he meets Ren Koizumi.
The woman is eventually coxed by money. She sells her own daughter. Ren moves in with her grandfather, expected to be groomed into the perfect Heir. The girl, however, has been a spitfire since she was a few years old. Perhaps it’s because of her mother’s attitude—her dislike of her own daughter and how she blames her failing career on having her. David finds himself becoming an unexpected father figure. He’s put in charge of guarding Ren. He is her puppet to do whatever she wishes with. The Eastwood is expected to be stern, nonetheless; he spoils her in secret. It takes time before the report that seals the mission as accomplished is written. Ending with Ren’s grandfather in cuffs, David takes a rising company down from the inside. It’s a secret, however. Covered up under the rug; there isn’t a huge media scandal, only a small column on the local newspaper.
As a result, he’s destroyed not only one, but two households of a girl too young to suffer this fate. David offers her a choice; “go into foster care or come with me”. He leaves the choice up to her; the guilt he feels burdens his shoulders but not enough to plead with her. She chooses to go with him just as the government issues his next mission. Sector Three. It doesn’t exist in the public eye; only in classified papers with the majority of documents blacked out. David takes the job. He needs the money, especially with an extra mouth to feed. The ragtag duo moves to Anytown, USA. His undercover occupation is a bartender at Morrie's Bar.
face claim
[i]overwatch[/i], reaper - david eastwood
[attr="class","staffbottom"]
[attr="class","credtext"]played by SENTINEL