This citadel looks out at the mainland's eastern shores. It was built by the local semi-aquatic humans as a defense against the mainland and a trading post with it. The people of the House of Inho are unique and this is reflected in the look and culture of the citadel. The citadel itself is built into the high cliffs at the foot of which is a large beach. The Inho have built large technological peers that stretch out from the beach into the water.

These act as storehouses for their exports and imports. Goods come and go from the mainland all day on boats that dock at the peers but few visitors stay in the citadel itself and if they do its in what's known as the foreign quarter, reserved for outsiders and access to the rest of the citadel is severely restricted - requiring official passes to access it. The foreign quarter is comprised simly of markets where you can buy local Inho goods, especially seafood, restaurants, bars and rooms for outsiders.

It is said that many of the upper floors of the citadel have water pumped up and into them via huge pipes on the outside of the building, they are deliberately flooded to allow the inhabitants to swim between chambers and ensure that any outsiders who lack the ability to swim fast and breath under water would find them difficult or impossible to navigate.

The personal quarters of the Inho themselves are said to be small and cave like, lined with a slimy form of seaweed that they find it comfortable to sleep in, they are said to be like slimy wet cocoons that don't have enough room to stand up in and must be swum or crawled in and out of at morning and at night. They are very dimly lit.
