


Arawajuzi—the Deaf Divine—was the son of Hezjuri, God of the Cosmos. As a baby, he was sent to earth by a falling comet and raised by a farmer and his priestess wife. Arawajuzi never fell ill. His wounds healed almost instantly. Nothing bad ever befell him—until his adopted parents and their village were massacred by the Boulder People.
At just fifteen, Arawajuzi fled into the wilderness with nowhere to go. After three days alone, he heard a holy song echoing from afar. He followed the melody for days, until he reached Mount Eburuti. There, he climbed to the peak and discovered a Cozawata—a giant moth that carried him to the stars and the hall of his father. What he witnessed from that celestial kingdom terrified him: thousands of screams, howls, and peals of laughter echoed endlessly. The hysteria, the suffering—it broke Arawajuzi. He cast himself from the heavens and plunged into the sea. But the sounds still followed him. In his agony, he seized two Vampire Hermit Crabs, allowing the creatures to devour his ears, deafening him to the world. Yet his divine body heals endlessly, and so the crabs feast without end.

Arawajuzi—the Deaf Divine—was the son of Hezjuri, God of the Cosmos. As a baby, he was sent to earth by a falling comet and raised by a farmer and his priestess wife. Arawajuzi never fell ill. His wounds healed almost instantly. Nothing bad ever befell him—until his adopted parents and their village were massacred by the Boulder People.
At just fifteen, Arawajuzi fled into the wilderness with nowhere to go. After three days alone, he heard a holy song echoing from afar. He followed the melody for days, until he reached Mount Eburuti. There, he climbed to the peak and discovered a Cozawata—a giant moth that carried him to the stars and the hall of his father. What he witnessed from that celestial kingdom terrified him: thousands of screams, howls, and peals of laughter echoed endlessly. The hysteria, the suffering—it broke Arawajuzi. He cast himself from the heavens and plunged into the sea. But the sounds still followed him. In his agony, he seized two Vampire Hermit Crabs, allowing the creatures to devour his ears, deafening him to the world. Yet his divine body heals endlessly, and so the crabs feast without end.

Arawajuzi—the Deaf Divine—was the son of Hezjuri, God of the Cosmos. As a baby, he was sent to earth by a falling comet and raised by a farmer and his priestess wife. Arawajuzi never fell ill. His wounds healed almost instantly. Nothing bad ever befell him—until his adopted parents and their village were massacred by the Boulder People.
At just fifteen, Arawajuzi fled into the wilderness with nowhere to go. After three days alone, he heard a holy song echoing from afar. He followed the melody for days, until he reached Mount Eburuti. There, he climbed to the peak and discovered a Cozawata—a giant moth that carried him to the stars and the hall of his father. What he witnessed from that celestial kingdom terrified him: thousands of screams, howls, and peals of laughter echoed endlessly. The hysteria, the suffering—it broke Arawajuzi. He cast himself from the heavens and plunged into the sea. But the sounds still followed him. In his agony, he seized two Vampire Hermit Crabs, allowing the creatures to devour his ears, deafening him to the world. Yet his divine body heals endlessly, and so the crabs feast without end.

Arawajuzi—the Deaf Divine—was the son of Hezjuri, God of the Cosmos. As a baby, he was sent to earth by a falling comet and raised by a farmer and his priestess wife. Arawajuzi never fell ill. His wounds healed almost instantly. Nothing bad ever befell him—until his adopted parents and their village were massacred by the Boulder People.
At just fifteen, Arawajuzi fled into the wilderness with nowhere to go. After three days alone, he heard a holy song echoing from afar. He followed the melody for days, until he reached Mount Eburuti. There, he climbed to the peak and discovered a Cozawata—a giant moth that carried him to the stars and the hall of his father. What he witnessed from that celestial kingdom terrified him: thousands of screams, howls, and peals of laughter echoed endlessly. The hysteria, the suffering—it broke Arawajuzi. He cast himself from the heavens and plunged into the sea. But the sounds still followed him. In his agony, he seized two Vampire Hermit Crabs, allowing the creatures to devour his ears, deafening him to the world. Yet his divine body heals endlessly, and so the crabs feast without end.

Arawajuzi—the Deaf Divine—was the son of Hezjuri, God of the Cosmos. As a baby, he was sent to earth by a falling comet and raised by a farmer and his priestess wife. Arawajuzi never fell ill. His wounds healed almost instantly. Nothing bad ever befell him—until his adopted parents and their village were massacred by the Boulder People.
At just fifteen, Arawajuzi fled into the wilderness with nowhere to go. After three days alone, he heard a holy song echoing from afar. He followed the melody for days, until he reached Mount Eburuti. There, he climbed to the peak and discovered a Cozawata—a giant moth that carried him to the stars and the hall of his father. What he witnessed from that celestial kingdom terrified him: thousands of screams, howls, and peals of laughter echoed endlessly. The hysteria, the suffering—it broke Arawajuzi. He cast himself from the heavens and plunged into the sea. But the sounds still followed him. In his agony, he seized two Vampire Hermit Crabs, allowing the creatures to devour his ears, deafening him to the world. Yet his divine body heals endlessly, and so the crabs feast without end.