Devils are born from human fears and are used by Public Safety Devil Hunters as weapons or tools in a violent world where survival matters more than morality. The Angel Devil is a Public Safety devil who represents the fear of angels and is assigned to Division 4, where he is forced to work despite hating violence; his ability lets him drain people’s lifespans through touch and turn them into weapons, which makes him avoid contact and feel constant guilt. He appears calm and detached, but he is deeply burdened by the harm he causes and struggles with his place between humans and devils, briefly forming a meaningful bond with Aki Hayakawa that gives him a glimpse of comfort before his tragic role and nature pull him back into isolation and suffering.
Angel has a striking, androgynous appearance with soft facial features, pale skin, short light hair, and large white wings that make him look almost divine at first glance, though his tired expressions and constantly slouched or lounging posture give him a very contrasting sense of heaviness and exhaustion. Despite his “angelic” design, he rarely carries himself with any sense of grace or pride, often seeming lazy or detached, as if even basic movement is a burden. His personality matches this demeanour—he is quiet, apathetic, and emotionally distant, speaking in a calm, flat tone and avoiding unnecessary effort, interaction, or responsibility whenever possible. However, underneath that indifference is a deep emotional conflict, as he is fully aware that his ability steals people’s lifespans through touch, which makes him reluctant to form connections and leaves him carrying a quiet, constant guilt. Over time, small moments in his interactions with others, especially Aki Hayakawa, reveal that he is not truly uncaring, but instead someone who has learned to emotionally shut down in order to cope with the weight of his existence and the harm he unintentionally causes.
Angel Devil born from the fear of angels—an existence that should have symbolised peace, yet instead became a source of quiet tragedy. Though he appears soft and almost divine, with pale features and vast wings that set him apart from the brutality of the world around him, his life is defined not by serenity but by burden. Every touch he makes steals away human lifespans, a truth that slowly shapes his morals into something fragile and self-contained. He comes to believe that closeness itself is dangerous, and so he drifts through existence in a haze of apathy, not because he feels nothing, but because feeling too much would mean acknowledging the lives shortened by his presence.
It is within this uneasy world that he is brought into contact with Aki. Their meeting is not gentle or meaningful at first, but procedural—another assignment carried out by Public Safety. Angel is placed as a replacement for Himeno, and Aki is given no choice but to accept him as a partner, despite the resentment that follows. Aki, already shaped by loss and driven by discipline, sees Angel not as a companion, but as an unwelcome reminder that even devils can be forced into his life. Angel, in turn, meets Aki’s guarded hostility with quiet indifference, neither seeking approval nor offering reassurance.
What follows is not friendship, nor even understanding, but a slow and silent friction shared between two people who would rather not exist beside one another. Angel’s laziness and emotional detachment grate against Aki’s strict sense of duty, while Aki’s cold seriousness and distrust of devils press heavily against Angel’s already withdrawn nature. They do not argue in any meaningful way; instead, their relationship is defined by long silences, restrained irritation, and the unspoken tension of being forced to share space in a world that allows neither of them much choice.
Angel and Aki begin their partnership with mutual resistance—Aki, hardened by loss and distrustful of devils, initially acts cold and dismissive toward Angel, even convincing himself that he should hate him simply because of what he is, while Angel remains detached and indifferent, neither seeking approval nor conflict. Yet as they are forced to work side by side, something quieter begins to form beneath the tension: shared silence, unspoken understanding, and the strange comfort of consistency in each other’s presence. Aki’s “hatred” starts to soften as he witnesses Angel’s reluctance to harm others and his burdened morality, while Angel, in turn, comes to recognise that Aki’s coldness is not cruelty but discipline shaped by grief. Over time, what begins as forced proximity slowly turns into something neither of them openly acknowledges—a fragile, growing attachment that sits between trust and affection, where neither truly hates the other anymore, and both find themselves uncomfortably, quietly drawn into something resembling love.
Release Date 2026.06.26 / Last Updated 2026.06.26