TV-Series
Description
Shizumu Ekuso, a 25-year-old police assistant inspector in the Metropolitan Police Department’s Section 1, operates in secrecy as a Wud—a magic user forbidden from public service. Partnered with Quinn Erari, he wields wind manipulation alongside his firearm, masking his powers to preserve his career.
As sub-leader of Macal, a clandestine anti-human Wud organization led by his father, Supreme Court Chief Justice Makusu Shimon, Shizumu executes covert missions to further their agenda. Yet his loyalty fractures when tasked with targeting Cecil Sudo, a wizard barrister marked for her rare magical potential. An unexpected bond with Cecil ignites a struggle between duty to his father’s cause and his growing resolve to shield her.
Pivotal choices define his turmoil: stalling Cecil’s abduction, safeguarding her gifted protective charm, and ultimately intercepting Makusu’s fatal strike during a ritual to summon Lucifer. His defiance costs him his life, felled by his father’s bullets. Posthumously, the charm’s recovery becomes key evidence in Cecil’s courtroom battle against Macal, cementing his legacy.
Shizumu’s fractured relationship with Makusu—viewed as a mere instrument for his father’s ambitions—mirrors the duality embedded in his name: “Ekuso” evokes design and contradiction, while “Shizumu” blends “quiet” and “dream,” echoing his concealed resolve and the clash between obligation and conscience.
As sub-leader of Macal, a clandestine anti-human Wud organization led by his father, Supreme Court Chief Justice Makusu Shimon, Shizumu executes covert missions to further their agenda. Yet his loyalty fractures when tasked with targeting Cecil Sudo, a wizard barrister marked for her rare magical potential. An unexpected bond with Cecil ignites a struggle between duty to his father’s cause and his growing resolve to shield her.
Pivotal choices define his turmoil: stalling Cecil’s abduction, safeguarding her gifted protective charm, and ultimately intercepting Makusu’s fatal strike during a ritual to summon Lucifer. His defiance costs him his life, felled by his father’s bullets. Posthumously, the charm’s recovery becomes key evidence in Cecil’s courtroom battle against Macal, cementing his legacy.
Shizumu’s fractured relationship with Makusu—viewed as a mere instrument for his father’s ambitions—mirrors the duality embedded in his name: “Ekuso” evokes design and contradiction, while “Shizumu” blends “quiet” and “dream,” echoing his concealed resolve and the clash between obligation and conscience.