Victor

Victor was a decorated soldier during WWII. After the war, he went to work for an unnamed intelligence agency, carrying out assassinations and other classified missions during the Cold War. It didn’t take him long to stumble into the world of the supernatural. To this night he wonders who was pulling the strings behind his last mission and why he was sent to kill the Tremere manipulator, Traska. He suspects that whoever set him up knew that he wouldn’t be able to destroy the undead Duke. Once Embraced, his training in blood magic was rudimentary at best. However, unlike other apprentices, no one seemed to mind. This added to Victor’s suspicion that they had chosen him for a different task. He realized his military background was an asset when local Regent asked him to lead a squad of ghouls and Ducheski revenants against a Sabbat pack that had taken over a biker bar outside of town. After the successful mission, the Regent explained to him that the Tremere had lost some of the warrior spirit that had forged the Clan in their earliest nights.

With the rebellion of the Gargoyles, the defection of the antitribu, and the death or torpor of several Clan elders who were involved in the early battles against the Tzimisce, the Tremere had faltered. Traska (and a few other loyal Tremere) had been tasked with seeking out experienced fighters for the modern age, and Victor was one of several ex-military candidates selected to shore up the Tremere’s combat capabilities. Victor travels around the world visiting different Tremere chantries, advising the local Regent on how to shore up defenses and counseling against relying solely on mystical rituals to protect the sanctum. He is an advocate of high-tech security systems and well-trained ghouls, and often requests custom built traps from the engineers of the Ducheski to fortify locations important to the Clan. His goal is to eventually become Tremere Justicar, though he knows that may take years.

Character Sheet
Clan: Tremere

Generation: Ninth

Sire: Duke Traska

Embraced: 1950