The Curator of the Sands
Published on: July 16, 2025
Nasus
Nasus is an imposing, jackal-headed Ascended being from ancient Shurima, a heroic figure regarded as a demigod by the people of the desert. Fiercely intelligent, he was a guardian of knowledge and peerless strategist whose wisdom guided the ancient empire of Shurima to greatness for many centuries. After the fall of the empire, he went into self-imposed exile, becoming little more than a legend. Now that the ancient city of Shurima has risen once more, he has returned, determined to ensure it never falls again. Nasus’s brilliance was recognized from a young age, long before he was chosen to join the ranks of the Ascended. A voracious scholar, he read, memorized and critiqued the greatest works of history, philosophy and rhetoric within the Library of the Sun before he’d seen ten summers. His passion for reading and critical thinking were not passed down to his younger brother Renekton, who was quickly bored, and spent his time fighting with other local children. The brothers were close, and Nasus kept a protective eye over his younger brother, helping to ensure he didn’t get into too much trouble. However, it wasn’t long before Nasus was welcomed into the exclusive Collegium of the Sun, leaving home to take up his place in this prestigious academy.
        
  While the pursuit of knowledge would always be his passion, Nasus’s grasp on military strategy and logistics ensured 
            he became the youngest general in Shuriman history. While he was a competent soldier, his genius lay not in fighting battles, but in 
            planning them. His strategic foresight became legendary. In war, he was always a dozen moves ahead of the enemy, able to predict 
            their movement and reactions, as well as pinpoint the exact moment to push the attack or pull back. A deeply empathetic man who 
            took his responsibilities incredibly seriously, he always ensured his soldiers were well provisioned, paid on time, and treated 
            fairly. Every loss of life pained him deeply, and he often refused to rest as he planned and replanned his troop movements and 
            battle dispositions until they were perfect. He was loved and respected by all who served in his legions, and he guided the armies 
            of Shurima to countless victories. His brother Renekton often served on the front lines of these wars, and the two of them quickly 
            garnered an aura of invincibility.
        
  Despite the acclaim Nasus won, he did not enjoy war. Though he understood its importance
            - for now at least - in ensuring the continued progress of the empire, he firmly believed his greatest contribution to Shurima was 
            in the knowledge he gathered for future generations. At Nasus’s urging, all the books, scrolls, teachings and histories of the 
            cultures he defeated were preserved in great libraries and repositories throughout the empire, the greatest of which bore his name. 
            His hunger for knowledge was not for selfish reasons, but to share wisdom with all of Shurima, to enhance understanding of the world 
            and bring enlightenment to the empire. After decades of dutiful service, Nasus was cruelly struck down by a terrible wasting sickness. 
            Some say he encountered Amumu, a long-dead child-king said to bear a terrible curse; others believed he was laid low by the evil 
            magicks of an Icathian cult-leader. Whatever the truth, the emperor’s own physician declared, with a heavy heart, that Nasus was 
            incurable, and would be dead within a week.
        
  The people of Shurima went into mourning, for Nasus was its brightest star and beloved by all. 
            The emperor himself begged the priesthood for an augury. After a day and night of communing with the divine, the priests declared it the 
            will of the sun-god that Nasus be blessed with the Ascension ritual. Renekton, now a great war-leader, raced back to the capital to be 
            with his brother. The terrible sickness had advanced dramatically, and Nasus was little more than a skeleton, his flesh wasted away and 
            his bones as fragile as glass. So weak was he that as the golden light from the sun disc streamed onto the Ascension dais, Nasus was 
            unable to climb the final stairs and step into the light.
        
        
  Renekton’s love for his brother was stronger than any sense of self-preservation, and he 
            nobly bore Nasus onto the dais. Ignoring his brother’s protests, he willingly accepted oblivion in order to save Nasus. However, 
            Renekton was not destroyed, as was expected. When the light faded, two Ascended beings stood before Shurima. Both brothers had been 
            deemed worthy, and the emperor himself dropped to his knees to give thanks to the divine. Nasus was now a towering, jackal-headed being 
            of great strength, his eyes glittering with fierce intelligence, while Renekton had been transformed into a heavily muscled behemoth 
            bearing the likeness of a crocodile. They took their place alongside the other rare Ascended beings of Shurima, and became its protectors. 
            While Renekton had always been a great warrior, now he was virtually unstoppable. Nasus too had been gifted with powers far beyond the 
            understanding of mortal men. The greatest boon of his Ascension - his newly extended longevity, which allowed him countless lifetimes 
            to spend in study and contemplation - would, after the fall of Shurima, also prove to be his curse.
        
        
  One side-effect of the ritual that disturbed Nasus was the increased savagery he saw within 
            his brother. At the culmination of the siege of Nashramae, which finally brought that ancient city under Shuriman rule, Nasus witnessed 
            the victorious Shuriman soldiers butchering everyone they came across and setting the city ablaze. Renekton led the massacre, and it was 
            he who set fire to the great library of Nashramae, destroying countless irreplaceable volumes before Nasus was able to contain it. This 
            was the closest the brothers ever came to bloodshed, standing in the center of the city, weapons drawn against each other. Under the stern, 
            disappointed gaze of his brother, Renekton’s bloodlust waned, and he finally turned away in shame. 
            
            
  Over the following centuries, Nasus bent his every effort to learning all he could, scouring the desert for years in 
            search of ancient artifacts and wisdom, eventually going on to discover the legendary Tomb of the Emperors hidden beneath the Shuriman capital.
            
  Nasus and Renekton had both been lured away when the Ascension ritual of Emperor Azir went terribly wrong, the young 
            emperor betrayed by his closest advisor, the magus Xerath. The brothers returned as fast as they could, but were too late. Azir was dead, 
            along with most of the capital’s citizens. Filled with rage and grief, Nasus and Renekton battled the malevolent being of pure energy 
            that Xerath had become.
            
  Unable to kill Xerath, they sought to bind him in a magical sarcophagus, but even that was not enough to hold him. 
            Renekton, perhaps attempting to atone for Nashramae years earlier, grabbed Xerath and bore him into the Tomb of the Emperors, bidding 
            Nasus seal them in. Nasus refused, desperate to find another way, but there was no other option. With a heavy heart, he sealed Xerath 
            and his brother within the fathomless darkness, locking them away for all eternity.
        
            
            
  The Shuriman empire collapsed. Its great central city sank into ruin, and the holy sun disc fell from the sky, drained 
            of power by Xerath’s magic. Without it, the divine waters flowing from the city ran dry, bringing death and famine to Shurima. Bearing the heavy 
            burden of guilt for having damned his brother to darkness, Nasus took to roaming the sands, accompanied only by the ghosts of the past and 
            his grief. A melancholy figure, he stalked the now dead cities of Shurima, watching as they were slowly swallowed by the desert, lamenting 
            the fallen empire and its lost people. He embraced isolation, a lean, solitary nomad who the occasional traveler claimed to glimpse before 
            he disappeared into a sandstorm or an early morning haze. Few believed such stories, and Nasus became little more than a legend.
            
  Centuries passed, and Nasus all but forgot his old life and former purpose, until the moment when the now buried Tomb of 
            the Emperors was rediscovered, and its seal broken. In that moment, he knew Xerath was free. Ancient vigor stirred in his breast, and as Shurima 
            rose from the sands, Nasus traversed the desert, angling toward the newly reborn city. Though he knew he had to battle Xerath once more, hope 
            stirred within him for the first time in millennia. Not only was this potentially the dawn of a new Shuriman empire, but he dared believe it 
            might also herald a long-awaited reunion with his beloved brother.