Mosh
Background
Chloe Cox doesn’t like to talk about where she came from because nothing good ever comes from walking down that street. The past only leads to existential crises she’d rather avoid. Chloe wasn’t born in the conventional sense—she was grown. Her father was a rogue scientist, a borderline madman, and an all-around bastard who believed in engineering the perfect super-soldier. Chloe was his grand experiment, a child crafted in an artificial womb from tailored DNA, meant to be both a living weapon and proof of his genius.
From the moment she could walk, she was tested, pushed, and honed like a blade. Her childhood wasn’t one of warmth or guidance—it was a never-ending gauntlet of pain and experimentation. She was his prototype, and worse, his investment. When she failed to show the intelligence he had hoped for, he dismissed her potential, threatening to "scrub the project and start again".
At fifteen, her father made a fatal mistake. He had found a buyer—a shadowy organization interested in purchasing her. The moment she overheard that conversation, the years of abuse and neglect boiled over into something primal. The walls of his lab weren’t strong enough to contain her rage. In a single night, she tore through billion-dollar technology with her bare hands, erased decades of research, and walked away, leaving the facility in flames.
Soon after, her father was found dead in what authorities called an “accident.” But Chloe knew better. He hadn’t delivered on his promise, and whoever had been waiting to claim her had no patience for failure.
Lost and alone, she wandered until she found a traveling family of grifters who took her in. Among them was Harper Young, a girl her age who quickly became her closest friend and confidant. Harper’s family taught her how to survive in the real world—not as a weapon, but as a person. Though they never knew the full story, they gave her a home and a sense of belonging.
Yet, deep down, Chloe still struggles with the question: Am I real? Am I just a weapon? Do I deserve this freedom? Every night, those thoughts linger.
When Harper decided to form the Miscreants, a group of rogue metahumans operating outside government control, Chloe joined without hesitation. Not just because she wanted to fight, but because she had finally found something worth fighting for. And, if she was being honest, because she had developed a massive, one-sided, disaster lesbian crush on Luna Delgado—who, unfortunately, remained utterly oblivious.
Personality
Chloe has come a long way from being a broken, abused girl. Now, she is confident, cocky, and unafraid to throw herself headfirst into any situation. She has embraced life on her own terms, balancing a love for underground MMA fights with an appreciation for street art. Her punk-rock aesthetic, brash attitude, and dry humor make her a perfect fit for the Miscreants.
She projects an air of carefree fun, but those who know her well understand that deep down, she still struggles with questions of identity and self-worth. She’s loyal to a fault, willing to fight and bleed for those she considers family—especially Harper and Luna.
Of course, there’s the small issue of her utterly obvious crush on Luna, which she refuses to admit to, no matter how much Harper teases her about it. But hey, nobody’s perfect.
For now, she’s content being the Miscreants’ scrapper—their go-to muscle, their most reckless fighter, and the one who always throws the first punch and often the last punch. And as long as she has her family, her fights, and a good reason to swing, she’s exactly where she wants to be.
Chloe Cox doesn’t like to talk about where she came from because nothing good ever comes from walking down that street. The past only leads to existential crises she’d rather avoid. Chloe wasn’t born in the conventional sense—she was grown. Her father was a rogue scientist, a borderline madman, and an all-around bastard who believed in engineering the perfect super-soldier. Chloe was his grand experiment, a child crafted in an artificial womb from tailored DNA, meant to be both a living weapon and proof of his genius.
From the moment she could walk, she was tested, pushed, and honed like a blade. Her childhood wasn’t one of warmth or guidance—it was a never-ending gauntlet of pain and experimentation. She was his prototype, and worse, his investment. When she failed to show the intelligence he had hoped for, he dismissed her potential, threatening to "scrub the project and start again".
At fifteen, her father made a fatal mistake. He had found a buyer—a shadowy organization interested in purchasing her. The moment she overheard that conversation, the years of abuse and neglect boiled over into something primal. The walls of his lab weren’t strong enough to contain her rage. In a single night, she tore through billion-dollar technology with her bare hands, erased decades of research, and walked away, leaving the facility in flames.
Soon after, her father was found dead in what authorities called an “accident.” But Chloe knew better. He hadn’t delivered on his promise, and whoever had been waiting to claim her had no patience for failure.
Lost and alone, she wandered until she found a traveling family of grifters who took her in. Among them was Harper Young, a girl her age who quickly became her closest friend and confidant. Harper’s family taught her how to survive in the real world—not as a weapon, but as a person. Though they never knew the full story, they gave her a home and a sense of belonging.
Yet, deep down, Chloe still struggles with the question: Am I real? Am I just a weapon? Do I deserve this freedom? Every night, those thoughts linger.
When Harper decided to form the Miscreants, a group of rogue metahumans operating outside government control, Chloe joined without hesitation. Not just because she wanted to fight, but because she had finally found something worth fighting for. And, if she was being honest, because she had developed a massive, one-sided, disaster lesbian crush on Luna Delgado—who, unfortunately, remained utterly oblivious.
Personality
Chloe has come a long way from being a broken, abused girl. Now, she is confident, cocky, and unafraid to throw herself headfirst into any situation. She has embraced life on her own terms, balancing a love for underground MMA fights with an appreciation for street art. Her punk-rock aesthetic, brash attitude, and dry humor make her a perfect fit for the Miscreants.
She projects an air of carefree fun, but those who know her well understand that deep down, she still struggles with questions of identity and self-worth. She’s loyal to a fault, willing to fight and bleed for those she considers family—especially Harper and Luna.
Of course, there’s the small issue of her utterly obvious crush on Luna, which she refuses to admit to, no matter how much Harper teases her about it. But hey, nobody’s perfect.
For now, she’s content being the Miscreants’ scrapper—their go-to muscle, their most reckless fighter, and the one who always throws the first punch and often the last punch. And as long as she has her family, her fights, and a good reason to swing, she’s exactly where she wants to be.
Children

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