Luke Bouvier
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===Death=== | ===Death=== | ||
- | In 2039, he traveled with his wife, [[Emily and Mary Hinkelschmit#Emily Hinkelschmit-Dukakis-Johnson-Henry-Terwilliger-Warren-Bouvier|Emily]], that he wed a month before, to China to adopt a baby. The baby's name was [[Wu Hinkelschmit|Wu]]. 2 days after he adopted [[Wu Hinkelschmit|Wu]], Chinese Government officials thought Bouvier was spying on the Chinese government. | + | In 2039, he traveled with his wife, [[Emily and Mary Hinkelschmit#Emily Hinkelschmit-Dukakis-Johnson-Henry-Terwilliger-Warren-Bouvier|Emily]], that he wed a month before, to China to adopt a baby. The baby's name was [[Wu Hinkelschmit|Wu]]. 2 days after he adopted [[Wu Hinkelschmit|Wu]], Chinese Government officials thought Bouvier was spying on the Chinese government. A half-Tibetan official named [[Pu Aang]] shot and killed Bouvier, sparking the [[Second Cold War]], a cold war between China and the US. |
Revision as of 16:42, 7 June 2011
Luke Bouvier
Walker Luke Bouvier (19 April 2003-June 9, 2039) was a husband of Emily Hinkelschmit from May 2039 until his death in June 2039. He was also the adoptive father of Wu Hinkelschmit and the son-in-law of EJ Hinkelschmit and Hinka Johnston.
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Biography
Bouvier was born in 2003 in Washington DC to Yves Bouvier, a French immigrant, and Dorothy MacDonald Bouvier, an Scottish immigrant, making Luke be half French and half Scottish.
Early life
Bouvier grew up in a small Maryland town about 100 miles northwest of where he was born. He went to Catholic schools because his parents were Catholic. Bouvier was a good, but not great student.
College
Bouvier went to the University of Maryland for college and got a master's degree in teaching. He taught First Grade at a public school in southern Pennsylvania from 2025 until 2030, when he became a government agent.
Death
In 2039, he traveled with his wife, Emily, that he wed a month before, to China to adopt a baby. The baby's name was Wu. 2 days after he adopted Wu, Chinese Government officials thought Bouvier was spying on the Chinese government. A half-Tibetan official named Pu Aang shot and killed Bouvier, sparking the Second Cold War, a cold war between China and the US.