Time Stamp: 31st Winter 513
Winter has hit the region now, there is little doubt about it as snow blankets much of the grasses and into the city of Riverfall. It is not the deep snow of the north, nor is there ice that makes traversing dangerous, but it does make for beautiful if cold scenery. The grass that poked up out of the grass was yellow and brittle, and was plentiful enough that the snow did not look quite as overbearing as it might have. The grasses also made good cover for those which wanted to uses it.
However out in the grasses, beneath the white snow dirt begins to move. Just the barest stirring of dark brown soil at first, then another, then suddenly a crude hand is pushed up. The nails are all jagged, none the same length as another, coated with soil, and a hibernating worm falls from the pinky to lay on the now blemished snow. Within ticks more hands stretch up from the snow to the sky, and the land for a full mile trembled and quaked as an army of yukmen began to rise from the womb of Mizahar. Their flesh were a muddy brown color, some with rocks protruding from their bodies, others with little winks of gems. This was a small batch, only about fifteen awoke from their slumber. Even though a low number awoke, there was still the customary 'culling' as they immediately fell upon two or three of the weakest, most slow members.
It was a vicious ritual, nails and teeth tearing yukman flesh, mud and blood now coloring the snow until actually four yukmen lay dead, leaving the final number to be at eleven. The first pushed a body back into a hole that had been left from their 'birth', crudely kicking the dirt back over it. Mimicking the first, the other yukmen began doing the same. These were humanoid in appearance, most ranging from four foot seven inches tall to five foot three, all where male. Turning, shambling in a random direction the Yukmen began to walk in a slow motion, toward RIverfall. Their eyes were dark brown to black, grunting and groaning in what perhaps might have been communication of some sort, though they seemed to all just move in a almost instinctual motion toward a population.
Winter has hit the region now, there is little doubt about it as snow blankets much of the grasses and into the city of Riverfall. It is not the deep snow of the north, nor is there ice that makes traversing dangerous, but it does make for beautiful if cold scenery. The grass that poked up out of the grass was yellow and brittle, and was plentiful enough that the snow did not look quite as overbearing as it might have. The grasses also made good cover for those which wanted to uses it.
However out in the grasses, beneath the white snow dirt begins to move. Just the barest stirring of dark brown soil at first, then another, then suddenly a crude hand is pushed up. The nails are all jagged, none the same length as another, coated with soil, and a hibernating worm falls from the pinky to lay on the now blemished snow. Within ticks more hands stretch up from the snow to the sky, and the land for a full mile trembled and quaked as an army of yukmen began to rise from the womb of Mizahar. Their flesh were a muddy brown color, some with rocks protruding from their bodies, others with little winks of gems. This was a small batch, only about fifteen awoke from their slumber. Even though a low number awoke, there was still the customary 'culling' as they immediately fell upon two or three of the weakest, most slow members.
It was a vicious ritual, nails and teeth tearing yukman flesh, mud and blood now coloring the snow until actually four yukmen lay dead, leaving the final number to be at eleven. The first pushed a body back into a hole that had been left from their 'birth', crudely kicking the dirt back over it. Mimicking the first, the other yukmen began doing the same. These were humanoid in appearance, most ranging from four foot seven inches tall to five foot three, all where male. Turning, shambling in a random direction the Yukmen began to walk in a slow motion, toward RIverfall. Their eyes were dark brown to black, grunting and groaning in what perhaps might have been communication of some sort, though they seemed to all just move in a almost instinctual motion toward a population.