[@AnaSilan Sunja] [hider=Leon (HUNTER)]THE CLERIC Leon Schezar Male - 30 years old - American - Not in communication with any other hunters, thus unaware of the “war”. “Render unto dust.” [img]https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/d5/8e/9f/d58e9fa0492f535553cfb6c1bc978950.jpg[/img] Leon possesses the soul of Tortured Azazel, an angel who fell from heaven and was condemned to be castrated by both humans and demons for the rest of eternity. However, Azazel was freed from his prison of endless agony by the hands of higher beings: though it cannot be said which one(s). Leon does not know that he is the reincarnation of that “scapegoat angel”. As a result of inheriting Azazel’s soul, the human man Leon possesses unique and otherwise unfounded qualities: he is, however, nothing but a human. The Witch is in ultimate defiance of God. It is Leon’s purpose to reduce these creatures to ashes, though Azazel is not aware that this was the intention of his revival into a new form. Strictly an angel cannot walk upon the lands of Earth until Paradise arrives: thus Azazel has become an instrument of the will of God in the world of mankind without breaking this mandate. The benefit of choosing Azazel to rise from the torture chambers of hell to become a heavenly conduit in human form, is his connection to the Archangel Chamuel. Leon is led ever onward by the will of the Seraphim: for an archangel need never rest. When Leon’s body is asleep, his awakens to being an agent of Chamuel, who guides him on his hunt, watching over him. This means that during the day Leon leads the life of an entirely normal man: while during nightfall, he transforms into a powerful witch-slayer. He often wakes up sore, but his most serious wounds are entirely healed before the dawn’s light, allowing Leon to remain unsuspecting of the puppeteering ways of the heavenly choir. Leon lives an entirely normal life at a desk job, performing data analysis on car crash statistics for his company. To some of his coworkers he seems too boring: he isn’t interested in much beyond what he reads in order to help him fall asleep. He was once caught at work reading a Superman comic at lunch, which served as a talking point for a couple of days. Almost entirely however, his fellow employees did not take note of Leon’s existence. Sometimes it was as though he didn’t recognize his own existence either, behaving like a cog in a machine until he could read something fictional and quickly descend into sleep again.[/hider] Is this up to standard? I felt as though a human without some kind of divine assistance standing up to mind-bending witches and muscly dragons would be just fish food.