Age: Adult / 6’ / DOB:
1938 - 1991
William Afton.
Former puppeteer for children's tv, and still passionate about puppet making. He has a study full of the things. It's by far the children's least favorite room in the house.
Although he may not have loved Carol in the traditional sense, he did genuinely enjoy her company and held no malice towards her. This being said, he found her death to be an expensive inconvenience.
With an upbeat All-American attitude, a silly necktie, and the tendency to say things like "I'll be damned" and "Would you look at that?" William Afton has the entire town wrapped around his finger. They can't seem to get enough of the guy, and he's happy to give them what they want. They don't realize that they're entertaining a fox in the henhouse.
Honestly he only started hanging out with Henry because the guy looked really weird and William wanted to see what that was all about.
Killing Charlotte was impulsive. He had no plan, no vendetta, it was just a matter of being 4 mojitos deep, a screwdriver in the side door, and a girl being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Framing Henry however... that was a targetted attack to rub salt in the wound.
Nobody that saw William's car outside that night could properly identify it due the storm, and it wasn't like it was out of place anyway. William literally owned the place, of course his car would be there.
And isn't it suspicious that Henry should "lose track" of his own daughter? Isn't it strange she ended up outside when she had a whole robot created to keep her indoors? How convenient that it should to be trapped under boxes at such a time.
Of course nobody heard a struggle. Why would Charlie think to scream when seeing her own father? And the nervous breakdown Henry had after she was discovered, why, to the public it could easily read as guilt and a refusal to accept what he's done.
Naturally, William he would attest that neither one of them could have been responsible for such a horrible act. They'd never do such a thing, especially not to a child! Children are the life of the diner! Oh, but such a shame Henry can't use the Fredbear suit as his alibi. William and Henry regularly wore both suits after all.