Goddess
Pirivena, Chaldea
Night had fallen over the abandoned city, the only sound being that of waves crashing against stone and metal. With many of its structures now underwater due to the rising tides, it looked like the coastal metropolis was being swallowed up by the sea.
The sole residents of Pirivena were supposed to be the Finfolk, a tribe of weirdos LARPing as mermaids. They had made their homes where the ocean met the city, living in the submerged houses and offices in the lower levels. In the dry parts, however, a criminal enterprise had apparently sprung up… one that the local authorities were ill-equipped to deal with. Slavery was outlawed on Chaldea, but the rules regarding sentient trafficking were a little more hazy, mostly because of the planet’s problems with maintaining a stable population. They needed people, and sometimes they didn’t care how they got them.
That was what had brought Ishani here. There had been a kidnapping. Seven kids, aged seven to fourteen, taken during a field trip. The heads back at the Academy hadn’t cared enough to go after them. Resources were stretched thin after the invasion of Ossus, and a handful of snotty punks who were weak and stupid enough to be captured by common slavers weren’t worth the time and effort to reclaim. Truth be told, Ishani herself probably wouldn’t have gotten involved, had she not learned the name of the planet the kids had been tracked to. Chaldea. Her homeworld. Feth.
That said, she wasn’t strong (or dumb) enough to go alone. She tried to get a few of her fellow acolytes involved, but nobody wanted anything to do with this mission.
Arcturus Dinn
was still missing, otherwise he would’ve been Ishani’s first choice.
Alina Tremiru
scared Ishani, what with her being a vampire and all, and she really didn't want to be in a combat situation involving blood with Alina around.
Melydia Gold
would be too out of her element in this place. So that left only one option, really. The bounty board.
Some guy named Dagon had signed on at the first mention of saving kids captured by slavers, even agreeing to low pay (she was giving up all her savings for this, which wasn’t much to begin with). She didn’t tell him where they had come from or where they were bound to after they were rescued. After all, he didn’t necessarily need to know, right? He was just the hired muscle, the shoot-em-up guy. Or the stab-em-all guy. Bludgeon-them-to-death guy? Whatever weaponry he preferred.
So it was that Ishani and this Dagon guy came to be standing on a hill overlooking Pirivena. She was peering through a pair of binoculars at an old run-down warehouse on the edge of the city, surrounded by a fence and patrolled by a few scattered guards. There were no windows, but she sensed various presences moving around within. Nobody who stood out, save a few bright points. Force sensitives. They were all clustered together in one corner, presumably corralled in a cage or cell of some kind.
“I think the fence might be electrified…” She trailed off, lowering her binoculars and looking around for Dagon. It was very dark, and he was wearing a dark outfit. Granted, so was she, but her blonde hair was a visible bright spot. “Uh, I could probably zap it before it zaps us… but I’d have to get close, and then the guards will be a problem.” Far from being a great tactician, her entire plan basically consisted of find a way in and crack a few skulls to get there. The details of how they would pull it off were up in the air.
Night had fallen over the abandoned city, the only sound being that of waves crashing against stone and metal. With many of its structures now underwater due to the rising tides, it looked like the coastal metropolis was being swallowed up by the sea.
The sole residents of Pirivena were supposed to be the Finfolk, a tribe of weirdos LARPing as mermaids. They had made their homes where the ocean met the city, living in the submerged houses and offices in the lower levels. In the dry parts, however, a criminal enterprise had apparently sprung up… one that the local authorities were ill-equipped to deal with. Slavery was outlawed on Chaldea, but the rules regarding sentient trafficking were a little more hazy, mostly because of the planet’s problems with maintaining a stable population. They needed people, and sometimes they didn’t care how they got them.
That was what had brought Ishani here. There had been a kidnapping. Seven kids, aged seven to fourteen, taken during a field trip. The heads back at the Academy hadn’t cared enough to go after them. Resources were stretched thin after the invasion of Ossus, and a handful of snotty punks who were weak and stupid enough to be captured by common slavers weren’t worth the time and effort to reclaim. Truth be told, Ishani herself probably wouldn’t have gotten involved, had she not learned the name of the planet the kids had been tracked to. Chaldea. Her homeworld. Feth.
That said, she wasn’t strong (or dumb) enough to go alone. She tried to get a few of her fellow acolytes involved, but nobody wanted anything to do with this mission.



Some guy named Dagon had signed on at the first mention of saving kids captured by slavers, even agreeing to low pay (she was giving up all her savings for this, which wasn’t much to begin with). She didn’t tell him where they had come from or where they were bound to after they were rescued. After all, he didn’t necessarily need to know, right? He was just the hired muscle, the shoot-em-up guy. Or the stab-em-all guy. Bludgeon-them-to-death guy? Whatever weaponry he preferred.
So it was that Ishani and this Dagon guy came to be standing on a hill overlooking Pirivena. She was peering through a pair of binoculars at an old run-down warehouse on the edge of the city, surrounded by a fence and patrolled by a few scattered guards. There were no windows, but she sensed various presences moving around within. Nobody who stood out, save a few bright points. Force sensitives. They were all clustered together in one corner, presumably corralled in a cage or cell of some kind.
“I think the fence might be electrified…” She trailed off, lowering her binoculars and looking around for Dagon. It was very dark, and he was wearing a dark outfit. Granted, so was she, but her blonde hair was a visible bright spot. “Uh, I could probably zap it before it zaps us… but I’d have to get close, and then the guards will be a problem.” Far from being a great tactician, her entire plan basically consisted of find a way in and crack a few skulls to get there. The details of how they would pull it off were up in the air.
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