((based off of This thing here.))
Around midday yesterday, a fight broke out over the Saphire Avenue Exchange. The fabled maiden assassin who has stalked many a women and killed them, was attacked by a Sultanswon initiate named Inessa Hara. They fought an intense battle high over the city street's until Inessa cut the thug down to size and sent him falling to his death in the street's below.
The thug in question was a Red Legion bandit from what official authorities say. The golden eagle insignia on the armor made that apparent.
That does raise questions though, how could a bandit thug make it past the eye's of the Brass Blades who patrol the city street's? Is the bandit problem worse than what we believe it to be?
For now though, the People who reside in Ul'dah tonight can rest easy knowing that the murderous scoundrel is gone.
Article: Inessa Hara, heroic assassin slayer or butcher?
During the attack in the city yesterday, it has come to light that the person who fought the assassin was none other than the Sultansworn initiate, Inessa Hara.
Known for her history as a detective in the private sector, she hung up her detective coat and traded it for a Sultansworn tabard and enlisted into the Sultansworn due to the rising Internal and external tensions within Ul'dah. As she says in her own words:
'Legion Bandits roam the Sagolii, gangs and thugs plague the streets of Ul'dah, murderers and criminal activity run rampant in the Thanalan and Ul'dah in general. I enlisted because I know I can do something about these problem's and I wont sit idly by while the city is threatened.'
Due to her recent involvement in preventing the assassination of a young woman in the market, locals have begun to revere her as a hero of sorts. Risking herself to protect others, but is this really the case?
Eye witness reports tell a tale that the fight between her and the assassin was a particularly bloody one. Blood splattered everywhere over the market and a severed limb along with deep cuts in the assailant's body.
While Inessa claims that she had to kill the bandit in self-defense, severing a limb from an opponent and making a mess of it does seem like a rather extreme way of defending oneself and others in the process.
So is Inessa a hero or a butcher who enjoys making a mess of her opponents? Who knows. . .
Around midday yesterday, a fight broke out over the Saphire Avenue Exchange. The fabled maiden assassin who has stalked many a women and killed them, was attacked by a Sultanswon initiate named Inessa Hara. They fought an intense battle high over the city street's until Inessa cut the thug down to size and sent him falling to his death in the street's below.
The thug in question was a Red Legion bandit from what official authorities say. The golden eagle insignia on the armor made that apparent.
That does raise questions though, how could a bandit thug make it past the eye's of the Brass Blades who patrol the city street's? Is the bandit problem worse than what we believe it to be?
For now though, the People who reside in Ul'dah tonight can rest easy knowing that the murderous scoundrel is gone.
Article: Inessa Hara, heroic assassin slayer or butcher?
During the attack in the city yesterday, it has come to light that the person who fought the assassin was none other than the Sultansworn initiate, Inessa Hara.
Known for her history as a detective in the private sector, she hung up her detective coat and traded it for a Sultansworn tabard and enlisted into the Sultansworn due to the rising Internal and external tensions within Ul'dah. As she says in her own words:
'Legion Bandits roam the Sagolii, gangs and thugs plague the streets of Ul'dah, murderers and criminal activity run rampant in the Thanalan and Ul'dah in general. I enlisted because I know I can do something about these problem's and I wont sit idly by while the city is threatened.'
Due to her recent involvement in preventing the assassination of a young woman in the market, locals have begun to revere her as a hero of sorts. Risking herself to protect others, but is this really the case?
Eye witness reports tell a tale that the fight between her and the assassin was a particularly bloody one. Blood splattered everywhere over the market and a severed limb along with deep cuts in the assailant's body.
While Inessa claims that she had to kill the bandit in self-defense, severing a limb from an opponent and making a mess of it does seem like a rather extreme way of defending oneself and others in the process.
So is Inessa a hero or a butcher who enjoys making a mess of her opponents? Who knows. . .