Bvughu Thumury
Yûmkla Bvughu , Thumury ("Liver Hand")
Mental characteristics
Personal history
Bvughu has been a chieftain among the My since his eighteenth birthday, when he killed his father for the right to lead. This act was neither vengeance nor rebellion; rather, his father, Bveyghu Meyghituna, was suffering from a wasting illness and wanted to ensure that his village would be well ruled by his son. He arranged a duel between them. Although Bveyghu fought bravely and with honor, he stood no chance against his younger, healthier son. Bvughu, ever the dutiful child, made sure that his father's death was honorable, clean, and merciful.
IIt was perhaps that experience that led him to challenge Yūmkla Theythy Thîntuna for control of Nʊar. Theythy was inept and weak, yet he maintained his power through deceit, trickery, and assassination. Witnessing this despicable behavior and contrasting it with the honorable death of his own father, Bvughu confronted Theythy from the top of Mudha's Pinnacle in Nʊar. Theythy tried to avoid the duel, but could not do so. Bvughu played with his opponent, cutting him over and over with small, non-lethal strokes to humiliate his weak and craven opponent. In the end, he drove his blade deep under the Yûmkla's lower ribs on the right side, reached in the cut and pulled out his victim's liver, showing it to the dying potentate as he fell. In that moment, Bvughu earned his second name and a reputation for cruelty when necessary to impart a lesson, as well as mastery of Nʊar.
Intellectual Characteristics
Morality & Philosophy

Comments