Wally is a humble man who loves his wife and supports his son's business. He's frequently timid when it comes to confrontations, ending up a stuttering mess. However, he's fiercely passionate about noble society's prejudice towards off-worlders. His family holds more traditional, noble values than him. He loves hearing people ramble during his work, passively absorbing many walks of life and their perspectives.
He has fantastic memory and does remember the majority of his passengers in great detail.
He helps his wife keep the home tidy and his son maintain the business.
Wally grew up in an unstable household. In his preteen years, his mother and father divorced. He lived with his aunt in the fallout.
After getting his business specialization, something he despised having to do because of its tedius nature, he invested and bought a failing carriage company from a retiring nobleman; With his uncle's help, Wally turned it into a successful avenue.
During a business party that he attended to advertise to investors, he met his wife. They married after 4 years of dating. When they discovered a child was on its way, Wally visited both of his parents and asked them to be present during the birth. Though it was not the intention, Wally saw his once broken parents patch old wounds the same day his child was born.
The events of One Week in Stem City happen.
Wally was heading to work one ordinary morning when he saw a swarm of Lawmen in the street tackling Romeo J. Spearhead. Wally watched in shock as the fragile man was beaten hard enough for blood to stain the street. Romeo was carried off to Stem Tower and the Lawmen broke up the spectating crowd. That memory stayed with him for a long, long time.
Mid-life crisis hitting around the age of 50, a stressed Wally passed his company's ownership down to his son and helped him keep it operational. He wants to find a purpose in life, but he hasn't managed quite yet.
Vince Yenderson Jr. - His personal doctor, whom he quite enjoys the company of. Sometimes they imply how they feel about society and its system's treatment of off-worlders, but they never go the full length and have a conversation about it.
Romeo J. Spearhead - He remembers Romeo very vividly, both the week leading up to and the day of Romeo's arrest.