Jump to content

Connor Kelly

From Pact Wiki
Revision as of 19:34, July 28, 2021 by Happyrat321 (talk | contribs) (Added appearance)

<infobox layout="stacked">

 <title source="Name">
   <default>Connor Kelly</default>
 </title>
 <image source="Image">
 </image>
 
 <title source="title">
 </title>
 
   <label>Alias</label>
 
 
 
 
   <label>Age</label>
 
 
   <label>Gender</label>
 
 
   <label>Status</label>
 
 
   <label>Type</label>
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   <label>Classification</label>
 
 
 
 
 
 
   <label>Affiliation</label>
 
 
 
 
 
 
   <label>Family</label>
 
 
 
 
 
 
   <label>Occupation</label>
 
 
 
 
 
 
   <label>First Appearance</label>
 

</infobox> Connor Kelly is the father of Avery Kelly.

Personality

Connor is usually a pretty okay father. However, he often fails to notice problematic issues in his family, like Avery's loneliness or Declan's toxic behaviour.

Relationships

Connor is married to Kelsey Kelly.

When Avery came out to him as lesbian, he chose to be supportive, but needed some time to process and come to terms with it.

Him and Sylvia Hayward got on well when the two off them meet for lunch.<ref>- Excerpt from Dash to Pieces 11.2</ref>

Appearance

He has short red hair, a short beard and a lean body.<ref>Connor was a trim man in just about every respect.  Short red hair, short beard, well-fitted clothes on a lean shaped body.  He’d dressed up too.  Kelsey was lucky.- Excerpt from [7.a Spoilers] Can we talk about the girls</ref>

Chronology

He has recently stopped homeschooling his children and started a new job, at the same time Kelsey has started a new role in Thunder Bay and the two of them are lving apart for the moment.<ref>“I was thinking… my mom has this job she’s been doing in Thunder Bay for the last year, and someone quit and she got the head position there.  She goes on weekends and she’s been setting up the new office, and it was always this thing where, like, we might have to move if my mom got set up and my dad didn’t have anything.  But I left homeschool and my siblings did too, and my dad took the opportunity to resume working full time instead of working part time and… he’s good at it.  Earning good money, respected, and he wants to keep doing it.”

“So your mom’s leaving and your dad’s staying?”

“And they’ll be long distance.  They asked earlier, if we kids were to split up… who would want to go?”


- Excerpt from Dash to Pieces 11.3</ref>

References

<references/>