Character name: Yagyuu Hiroshi
Nationality: Half Japanese, half Chinese
Age: 18
Rank: A
Appearance/Personality: Yagyuu is neat and tidy to a fault. Even when he is out of uniform, his dress is immaculate, without a hair out of place. He chooses to dress himself in dress casual styles, with khaki slacks and collared shirts and sweater-vests, for most occasions. He is never seen without his glasses, despite the fact that he does own contacts; he's not one for trends or vanity, and only cares about keeping himself neat and well-groomed.
To match his exterior, Yagyuu is an extremely responsible, serious person. To outsiders, he appears to have very little sense of humour, and believes highly in moderation and business before pleasure. He does not approve of tomfoolery or irresponsibility, and is neat and tidy to the point of obsession. He has a strong sense of what is right and what is not, and will do what it takes to make things "right." The only thing that is lacking from making him the perfect gentleman is his moral sense; he believes that the ends justify the means in most cases, and will do whatever gets him results.
History: Yagyuu's father was the son of a long line of butlers, while his mother was the youngest daughter of the owner of a successful chain of expensive Chinese restaurants. They were only married briefly after Yagyuu's conception because of his mother's father's insistence, and because of his parents unhappy situation, Yagyuu feels some degree of resentment towards the wealthy even now.
After his parents split when he was five, Yagyuu moved with his father back to Japan and was raised and groomed to be the perfect butler. With a strict, stereotypical-asian parent with high expectations, Yagyuu was, in return, the perfect child; he never let his father down and became the spitting image of the perfect butler, never out of line. When his father wanted to send him off to Lioncrest to train further as a perfect butler, Yagyuu, of course, did not object, and continued to succeed even after at Lioncrest.