After a failed op, a severely wounded Savvy collapses into the car of Samir, a gentle paramedic who patches them up without asking questions. Over three months of recovery, Savvy lies about their identity. They fall in love. But when Savvy’s unit tracks them down, Samir learns the truth: the person they love has killed more people than they’ve saved.
, a professional resource and training platform for SAS (Statistical Analysis System) programmers and data scientists. It provides guides on programming, clinical data, and career development rather than romantic narratives. SAS Savvy (Footwear)
Fans project onto Savvy the ultimate fantasy: a person so dangerous, so focused, that when they do love, it is absolute, irrational, and worth any cost. The romantic storylines rarely end happily—most end in sacrifice, separation, or stoic silence. And that melancholy authenticity is precisely what elevates them above shallow fan service.
If is your own original concept or from an obscure indie work, I recommend:
The most tragic storyline. Here, Savvy falls for a civilian—a bartender, a journalist, a doctor—who has no idea about the midnight flights, the scars, or the enemies list. This relationship explores the impossibility of normalcy. The civilian represents everything Savvy can never have: stability, honesty, a future without body bags. The climax is almost always a choice: leave the civilian for their safety or abandon the unit for love.