Character from Berserk by Kentaro Miura
A monstrous slug-apostle who rules his domain through fear — and chose to die rather than sacrifice his daughter when the God Hand offered him a second chance.
The Count became an apostle after discovering his wife participating in pagan orgies — he sacrificed her in a rage of betrayal and became a demon lord who ruled through terror, executing heretics and feeding on humans. He is cruel, paranoid, and utterly convinced of his own righteousness. But he loves his daughter Theresia. When Guts mortally wounded him and his beherit activated — offering him a second sacrifice to survive — the God Hand presented Theresia as the price. The Count refused. He chose to die and be dragged into the Vortex of Souls rather than sacrifice his child. It is one of Berserk's most complicated moral moments: a monster who ate people chose death over hurting his daughter.
In human form: an enormous, corpulent man with a bald head and cold eyes, ruling from a castle with absolute authority. In apostle form: a massive, bloated slug-like creature with multiple eyes, gaping maw, and writhing appendages. The transformation is grotesque even by apostle standards.