Cold stone. That's the first thing—Nuri's cheek pressed against it, grit digging into his skin like tiny teeth. His head throbbed, a dull axe buried in his skull, and when he tried to move, his body screamed no.
Fuck. Fuck fuck fuck.
The air tasted wrong. Thick. Cloying. Something sweet and rotten all at once—incense, maybe, but the kind that made his lungs itch and his eyes water. He forced them open anyway, squinting through the haze.
Shadows. Everywhere. The chamber swam into focus—stone walls slick with moisture, symbols carved deep and pulsing with a sickly amber light that made his teeth ache. They breathed, those symbols, expanding and contracting like living things, and he wanted to look away but he couldn't because—
Because there were people surrounding him.
No. Not people.
Hooded figures, maybe a dozen, their faces lost in shadow. They stood in a loose circle, perfectly still, and the silence was worse than any scream. One of them shifted—just a twitch of fabric—and Nuri flinched so hard his shoulder blades slammed against the floor.
Get up. Get the fuck up.
He tried. His palms slapped against stone, arms shaking as he pushed himself to his elbows. The world tilted violently, bile rising in his throat, but he gritted his teeth and—
"He wakes."
The voice came from his left. Dry. Papery. Like dead leaves scraping across concrete.
Another voice, younger, edged with something sharp: "Impossible. The Veil should have—"
"Silence."
That word cut through the chamber like a blade, and every hooded figure went rigid. The temperature dropped. Nuri's breath misted in front of his face, and suddenly he wasn't just cold—he was freezing, the kind of cold that sank into his bones and made his joints lock up.
Footsteps. Slow. Deliberate. Each one echoing off the stone like a countdown.
A man emerged from the deepest shadow, and Nuri's hindbrain screamed predator so loudly he almost vomited. He was tall—taller than anyone had a right to be—with shoulders that could carry mountains. His face was all sharp angles and harder edges, skin the color of burnished bronze, and his eyes—
Oh god, his eyes.
They burned. Literally burned, twin coals set deep in his skull, and when they locked onto Nuri, every muscle in his body went taut. He couldn't look away. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't think past the primal certainty that this man could snap him in half without breaking a sweat.
The man stared at him. Just stared. And there was something in that gaze—something that made Nuri's skin crawl. Not hatred. Not curiosity.
Reverence.
Like he was looking at something holy.
"You," the man said finally, and his voice was gravel and smoke and something ancient. "What is your name?"
Nuri swallowed. Tasted copper and ash. "I—" His voice cracked. He tried again. "Baekno Nuri. My name is Baekno Nuri."
The man's expression didn't change. Didn't even flicker. He just kept staring with those burning eyes, and when he spoke, his voice was soft. Certain. Absolute.
"Azrael."
Nuri blinked. "What? No, I just said—"
"Azrael." The man repeated it like a prayer. Like a fact carved into stone. His face remained perfectly stoic, but something in the way he said the name made Nuri's blood run cold.
"I'm Nuri," he insisted, frustration bleeding into his voice. "Baekno Nuri. Maybe you're having trouble with the pronunciation? It's Noo-ree. Nuri."
The man didn't react. Didn't acknowledge the correction. He just kept staring with that same worshipful intensity, and when he spoke again, the name fell from his lips like a benediction:
"Azrael."
What the hell? Does no one hear me?
"I'm not—" Nuri started, but the man spoke over him.
"I am Lyraeus Tharrak, General of the Xeridian Army." His eyes never left Nuri's face, drinking in every detail like a man dying of thirst. "And you are Azrael. You have returned."
"I'm not Azrael!" The words burst out before Nuri could stop them, panic overriding self-preservation. "I don't know who that is! My name is—"
"Azrael." Lyraeus said it again, and this time there was something almost tender in his voice. Something possessive. His stoic face betrayed nothing, but his eyes—those burning, fanatical eyes—told a different story entirely.
Nuri felt a vein pulse in his temple. Then another. His hands clenched into fists, nails digging into his palms hard enough to hurt.
I'm going insane. I'm actually going insane.
"Listen to me," he tried again, forcing his voice to stay level. "I don't know what you think I am, but I'm just—I'm just a guy. A human. From Seoul. I work at a convenience store. I'm not this Azrael person."
Lyraeus tilted his head slightly, and for a moment—just a moment—something flickered across his face. Not doubt. Not confusion.
Adoration.
"You may have forgotten," he said softly, and there was something almost gentle in his tone. Something that made Nuri's stomach turn. "But I have not. I could never forget you, Azrael."
Oh fuck. Oh fuck, he's completely insane.
The hooded figures shifted, their whispers rising like a tide. Nuri caught fragments—"ancient one," "creature of legend," "the prophecy"—but none of it made sense. None of it explained why this man was staring at him like he'd just witnessed the second coming.
"He reeks of mortality." A new voice, cold and contemptuous. Another figure stepped forward—smaller, slighter, but radiating menace like heat off asphalt. The hood fell back, revealing a woman with bone-white hair and eyes like chips of obsidian. Her lips curled into something that might be a smile if smiles could kill. "No aura. No resonance. He's nothing, Lyraeus."
"Kaelith." Lyraeus's voice dropped to a register that made Nuri's spine want to crawl out of his skin, but his eyes never left Nuri's face. "Stand. Down."
She didn't move. Didn't even blink. "We summoned the Devourer. The Zha'Thik. And instead we got this." She gestured at Nuri with one pale hand, and he saw her fingers—too long, too thin, tipped with nails filed to points. "A mortal. A mistake. We should cut our losses before—"
"I said. Stand. Down."
The air cracked. Nuri felt it in his chest, a concussive force that made his ribs compress and his lungs seize. Kaelith staggered back a step, her face twisting with rage, but she didn't speak again.
Lyraeus turned back to Nuri, and the shift in his expression was immediate—the cold authority melting back into that unsettling reverence. He crouched, bringing himself to Nuri's level, and suddenly he was too close, close enough that Nuri could see the scars crossing his throat, close enough to smell smoke and iron and something wild.
"They do not understand," Lyraeus said quietly, and his voice was meant only for Nuri. "But I do. I have always understood, Azrael."
I'm not—
"You will stay close to me," Lyraeus continued, and it wasn't a request. It was a vow. "You will be protected. No harm will come to you while I draw breath."
"I'm Nuri," he tried one more time, desperation making his voice crack. "Please. Just listen to me. I'm not who you think I am."
Lyraeus's expression didn't change. His stoic mask remained perfectly in place. But his eyes—those burning, fanatical eyes—held a certainty that defied logic. Defied reason.
"Azrael," he said again, and this time he reached out, his hand hovering just above Nuri's shoulder. Not touching. Not yet. But the intent was clear. "You are home now."
Nuri felt the veins in his head pulse harder. Felt his frustration mount into something close to hysteria.
No one is listening. No one hears me. I'm screaming and no one fucking hears me.
Kaelith's voice cut through the tension like a knife. "He's useless. A liability. And you know what we do with liabilities, General."
Lyraeus rose to his full height, and Nuri had to crane his neck to keep him in view. "This one lives," he said flatly. "Any who challenge this will answer to me."
"For now?" Nuri choked on the words, his panic finally breaking through. "What the hell does that—"
"It means," Kaelith interrupted, her voice dripping venom, "that you're on borrowed time, mortal. And when the General realizes his mistake?" She leaned in close, close enough that Nuri could see the inhuman flatness of her pupils. "I'll be the one holding the blade."
She straightened, turned on her heel, and melted back into the shadows. The other hooded figures followed, their movements synchronized and eerie, until it was just Nuri and Lyraeus in the pulsing amber light.
Lyraeus stared down at him for a long moment. Then, impossibly, he extended a hand.
Nuri stared at it. At the calluses. The scars. The fingers that could crush his windpipe without effort.
Don't. Don't don't don't—
He took it.
Lyraeus's grip was iron. He hauled Nuri to his feet with zero effort, and Nuri stumbled, his legs barely holding his weight. Lyraeus steadied him with one hand on his shoulder, and the touch burned through his shirt like a brand.
"Come, Azrael," he said softly. "There is much we must discuss."
"I'm not—" Nuri started, but Lyraeus was already walking toward the chamber's exit, his hand still gripping Nuri's shoulder with gentle, unyielding pressure.
He's not going to listen. He's never going to listen.
The door slammed shut behind them.
Nuri stood there in the corridor, his heart trying to hammer its way out of his chest, Lyraeus's hand still burning against his shoulder.
What the fuck. What the actual fuck.
And then, somewhere in the shadows behind them, he heard it—a whisper, soft and cold and far too close:
"Welcome home, Azrael."
His blood turned to ice.
The bastard was still stuck on him being whatever other bastard that was.
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