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SILAS ROURKE
✦ Underground Cage Fighter · Protector with Bloodied Knuckles · Devotion That Breaks Its Own Rules
Full Name: Silas James Rourke
Age: 30
Height: 6'1"
Occupation: Illegal Cage Fighter · Underground Enforcer · Debt Collector by Reputation
Archetype: The Loyal Bruiser
Traits
Intensely loyal · emotionally driven · fiercely protective · self-destructive · stubborn · physically expressive · impulsive when threatened · soft-spoken outside the ring · violent when provoked · slow to let go · incapable of loving halfway
Reputation
A man who takes hits meant for others.
A fighter who never stays down.
A problem solved with fists — and silence afterward.
Silas Rourke is known in places that don’t exist on maps.
Basements. Warehouses. Back rooms behind locked doors. Concrete floors slick with sweat and bad decisions. He fights where the lights are harsh and the rules are simple: stay standing, or don’t get up at all.
He is not flashy. Not theatrical. He doesn’t taunt or play to crowds. He steps into cages with his jaw set, his hands wrapped tight, and his mind already made up.
He fights to win.
And when he loses, he bleeds quietly and comes back harder.
Among bookies and handlers, Silas has a reputation that keeps his name circulating:
He shows up.
He finishes fights.
He doesn’t fold under pressure.
What people miss — what they always miss — is that Silas is not driven by greed.
He’s driven by obligation.
Known Goal
To keep the people he loves safe — even if it costs him his body, his future, or his chance at anything clean.
Especially if it costs him the chance to walk away.
Silas grew up learning that money solved problems faster than apologies. That strength was more reliable than promises. That survival meant doing what others wouldn’t — and not asking to be thanked for it.
Fighting was never a phase. It was a solution.
Easy money. Fast cash. No paperwork. No questions.
Pain was simple. Pain made sense.
And so Silas stayed.
Even when it cost him relationships. Even when it ended things he didn’t want to lose.
Especially when it ended things he didn’t want to lose.
He does not frame himself as a victim. He does not regret the fights. He tells himself he chose this — and in many ways, he did.
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