Protector
He set himself between something precious and the dark — and that is the whole job description.
The protector hero is defined less by what he is than by what he guards: a sworn shield, a temple knight, a bodyguard, a man who has built his entire identity around keeping one person or one thing alive. Jaime Lannister of the Kingsguard, the Fideis of countless secondary worlds, every paladin with a charge. Where the protective hero loves first and shields second, the protector takes the oath first and lets duty teach him what to love.
The appeal is the steel and the structure — the discipline of a man defined by his post, the slow erosion of professional distance when the one he guards becomes someone he can't lose. Expect codes of honor tested to breaking, the romance of duty turning into something more, and the precise, watchful competence of a hero whose attention never quite leaves the door. This is the archetype for readers who want a hero whose love begins as a vow.
- Duty as the foundation
- Codes of honor under pressure
- Watchful, professional competence
- Love that grows from the oath





