Chapter 147 - SunFang (1/2)
”Someone's a little stronger is coming...” On the mind of Jomel Motus weak voice was heard, jomel snapped back to reality. His raging mode subsides.
His attack was blocked by some kind of another jackal-like creature he fought in the pyramid, where he was captured.
”I will share some little memory that I devoured, use this to keep yourself alive...” Motus continued along with his voice disappeared with some unknown memory of the being or some kind of spirit breaker Motus's devoured.
Jomel found out that In the memory he had the life of the spirit breakers identity, the name is sunfang, son of set, brother of Anubis and Wepwawet.
He was some kind of a rebellious being compared to his mighty brothers but he is a force to be reckoned with, he was a Fiend or Evil type of Soul-Beasts.
Sunfang is a lustful, brutal, and independent being. He hated his brothers but never dared to hurt them, he was punished by his brother for following his father's teaching: Set - The God of chaos.
Set and an Amarok named him Sunfang similar to that of Ra, the Sun God Ra.
Ra was believed to rule in all parts of the created world: the sky, the Earth, and the underworld. He was the god of the sun, order, kings, and the sky.
Ra's most commonly attributed power is that of life or creation, including the creation of Earth, Heaven, the Underworld, and all of the gods in each of the three worlds.
The Egyptians believed that Ra created the seasons, plants, animals, and even humankind.
Ra, the Egyptian god of the Sun, had two eyes: the Sun and the Moon themselves. The solar eye (”Eye of Ra ”) represents Ra's destructive side, the heat of the Sun, as well his power to vanquish evil beings, such as the mythological App.
Jomel also found out the sunfang was the Son of An Amarok lady and Set: The god of chaos.
An Amarok, or Amaroq, is a gigantic wolf in some legend, it is said to stalk and devour any person foolish enough to hunt alone at night. Unlike wolves who hunt in packs, amaroks hunt alone.
They are also said to devour and punish any souls and torture them in eternity inside their stomachs. Even when they die, the torturing process will not stop.
In Rink's book.
In one tale, a persecuted and physically stunted boy seeks to increase his strength. When he calls out to the lord of strength, an Amarok appears and wrestles him to the ground with its tail. This causes several small bones to fall from the boy's body.
The Amarok tells the boy that the bones had prevented his growth; he instructs the boy to return daily to develop his strength. After several days of wrestling with the Amarok, the boy is strong enough to overcome three large bears, thus gaining him the esteem of his village.
In another story, a man mourning the death of a relative hears reports that an Amarok is nearby. He and a relative go in search of the Amarok. They find instead her pups, and the mourner kills them all. The mourner's relative becomes frightened. The two retreats to hide in a cave.
Looking out, they see the adult Amarok returning to her pups, carrying a reindeer in her mouth. When the Amarok fails to find her offspring, she hastens to a nearby lake and drags a humanoid form from the water; at that moment, the mourner collapses.
The Amarok, ”from which nothing remains concealed”, took the mourner's soul from his body.