Three days later, the sky was a flat sheet of gray, thick clouds hanging low, the kind of weather that could turn calm seas treacherous with the wrong gust of wind. Ludger stood inside the captainâs cabin of the Ironhand Guildâs largest ship, arms crossed as he studied the map spread across the center table.
Outside, the deck thudded rhythmically as crews prepared for departure. Rope coils tightened, anchors lifted, and the metallic groan of reinforced hulls echoed across the port. The Ironhand fleet wasnât massive, but it was dense, every ship reinforced, every crew seasoned, every mage already braced for combat.
A dozen ships total. Most of them medium-sized. Two of them large. Their own,
The Tidebreaker
, was practically a floating fortress. And all of it⊠for one transport run.
Too much? Maybe. Necessary? Definitely.
Eighty percent of the Ironhand Guild was present, ready, and grim-faced.
Kaela leaned against the cabin wall, spinning a dagger between her fingers with practiced boredom. Maurien sat cross-legged near the window, eyes half-closed, listening to the wind like it was talking to him. Ludger suspected, knowing Maurien, that it probably was.
Renvar stood closest to the map, staring at the clusters of ship markers with a mixture of awe and confusion. Eventually, he turned toward Ludger with a baffled look.
âHey, uh⊠Vice Guildmaster?â
Ludger answered without looking up. âWhat.â
Renvar gestured vaguely toward the outside, toward the dozens of armed sailors, the thick lines of rigging, the mages overseeing the mana core crates, the heavy atmosphere that suggested a war was about to start.
âWith this many people moving the shipment⊠do you think the pirates will even show up?â Renvar asked. âI mean⊠look at this. This is an army. Whoâd be stupid enough to charge us when weâre this prepared?â
Kaela laughed under her breath. âIdiots.â
Maurien murmured without opening his eyes, âDesperate people.â
Ludger finally glanced at Renvar and shook his head once.
âYouâre asking the wrong question.â
Renvar blinked. âAm I?â
âYes,â Ludger said. âThe question isnât whether theyâll come. Itâs whether they can afford
not
to.â
Kaela uncrossed her arms, smirk growing. âMana cores are too valuable. Whoeverâs supplying those pirates? They donât want us moving them safely. They want that supply chain broken. And they want the cores for themselves.â
Maurien opened his eyes just enough to add, âIf pirates wait until weâre less prepared, they risk losing their funding. Their reinforcement shipments. Their runic gear. Whoeverâs supporting them wonât tolerate hesitation.â
Renvar processed that for several seconds.
âSo⊠theyâre forced to attack?â
Ludger nodded. âTheyâll come. Theyâll be aggressive. And theyâll hit us with everything they've got, shields, runic cannons, maybe even their flagship.â
Renvar swallowed. âAnd weâre just⊠sitting here waiting?â
âWelcome to naval warfare,â Kaela said, clapping him on the back. âTry not to puke when the ship starts lurching.â
Ludger turned back to the map, voice steady.
âIf the enemy is being backed by someone with deep pockets, theyâll have no choice but to push forward. They can't let a shipment like this slip. And they canât afford to look weak in front of their benefactors.â
He marked a stretch of the route that curved around a cluster of small islands.
âThis is where theyâll strike. A narrow route. Limited space for maneuvering. Hard currents. Theyâll try to surround us, fire their runic cannons at the escort ships first, and then swarm the transport.â
He straightened, tapping the map once more.
âTheyâll come,â Ludger repeated. âBecause they have to.â
A horn blared across the port. Orders echoed. Sails unfurled. The fleet began to move. Kaela sheathed her dagger, Maurien rose silently, and Renvar grabbed the nearest railing to brace himself as the deck shifted beneath their feet.
Ludger looked out the window toward the open sea.
âLetâs hope theyâre not ready for us.â
The cabin door swung open with a heavy thud, and Rathen stepped inside, already fully geared despite being a guildmaster who shouldâve been behind a desk, not at the helm of a warship.
He wore light naval armor reinforced with light plates along the ribs and shoulders. A long, steel spear rested across his back, its runic engravings faintly glowing in rhythm with the shipâs engine core. Even captains needed to be armed these days⊠especially
these
days.
Without ceremony, Rathen moved straight to the shipâs helm, built directly into the cabin, and began adjusting the Tidebreakerâs wheel and runic throttle, guiding the massive ship into formation as the fleet drifted away from the harbor and toward open waters.
âAlright,â he said, voice tight but controlled, âbefore we head out too far, you need the latest numbers.â
Kaela and Renvar leaned closer. Maurien approached silently. Ludger remained at the map table, eyes focused but listening. Rathen glanced back at them.
âThe last major attack we had involved six pirate ships,â he explained. âNot counting the smaller skiffs they used as distractions. And these six werenât uniform, three were standard raider vessels, two were reinforced hulls, and one was⊠different.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âDifferent how?â
Rathen grimaced. âRunic plates thicker than our own. Double-layered mana shielding. And their cannons burned azure instead of orange. That means theyâre powered by an external mana core system, not internal reservoirs.â
Kaela muttered a curse. Renvar swallowed audibly. Maurienâs brows lowered a millimeter, his version of emotional shock. Rathen continued, adjusting the throttle again as the Tidebreaker picked up speed.
âWe believe they have ten ships in total. The six weâve fought, and four more we havenât seen yet from up close. Maybe more, if theyâve captured vessels from foreign traders.â
Ludger clicked his tongue. âSo worst case? Ten fully-armed ships. Possibly a flagship with upgraded core systems. And runic cannons that can tear through Ironhand armor.â
Rathen nodded.
âAnd if they deploy all ten,â he said, âyou four will need to hit them fast and hit them hard. Break their formations before our escorts take too much damage.â
Ludger exhaled through his nose. âAnd weâll also need to avoid friendly fire after we split up.â
Rathen forced a smile, the tired, strained kind that said heâd thought of that too and didnât love the odds. Rathen continued, steady but grim:
âWeâll target the pirate hulls with our cannons. Hammer them from the sides while they focus on the transport. Your goal is to disrupt their command, their casters, their cannons⊠whatever you can sabotage. We can finish the rest.â
Maurien stepped forward, voice colder than the sea breeze slipping in through the cabin window.
âAnd if the flagship appears?â
Rathen met his gaze, jaw tight.
âThen sink it.â
The ship creaked as it cut through the waves. The fleet around them tightened formation. The horizon ahead was darkening despite the morning sun.
Kaela grinned. Renvar smiled. Maurienâs eyes sharpened. Ludger finally lifted his gaze toward the open waters.
âGood,â he said.
Rathen adjusted the helm one last time.
âLetâs give them a battle theyâll regret starting.â
Ludger stepped away from the map and planted both hands on the table, voice cutting through the room with the kind of calm authority that made even the shipâs hull feel quieter.
âAlright. Hereâs how weâre doing this.â
Kaela stopped spinning her dagger again. Renvar straightened like a startled dog. Maurienâs attention sharpened immediately. Even Rathen paused at the helm to listen.
âWeâll operate in three groups,â Ludger said.
He pointed at Maurien first.
âMaurien works solo.â
Maurien nodded once, totally unsurprised.
âYour job is assassination and disruption. Take out casters, officers, and captains. Break their morale and their chain of command. Move from one ship to the other focusing on that.â
Then Ludger tapped his own chest.
âIâll be working solo too.â
Kaela lifted an eyebrow. Renvar made a sound somewhere between agreement and fear.
âMy job will be to punch through shields, break hull reinforcements, and sabotage their cores. If any of the reinforced ships or the flagship shows up, Iâll handle it.â
He turned to the other two.
âYou two,â he said, pointing at Kaela and Renvar, âwill work together.â
Kaela smirked, unsurprised. Renvar tried to smirk back and only managed a nervous laugh.
âYouâve already fought together. Youâve fought bandits and traffickers side-by-side. You know each otherâs rhythm. Use that. Cover for one another. Renvar, your speed and acrobatics. Kaela, your agility and precision. Combined, youâre better than the sum of your parts.â
Kaela bumped Renvarâs shoulder with her elbow. Renvar nearly tripped, but nodded enthusiastically.
Ludger continued, voice level but firm:
âAll of us here have decent mana pools. Strong enough to fight. Strong enough to infiltrate. But none of us can maintain extended battles on open decks under heavy fire. Our job is simple: Sabotage the enemy ships. Cripple their ability to fight. Let the Ironhand fleet finish the job.â
He swept a gaze across the room, steady, stern, assessing.
âThis isnât a heroâs war. This is a surgical strike. Fast and decisive.â
The room felt heavier now, the tension shifting from nervous anticipation to sharp focus.
Ludger finished with the part he refused to compromise on.
âIn case of injury, any injury at all, you return immediately to the Tidebreaker. No exceptions. No stubbornness. No trying to âpush through it.ââ
Renvar stiffened. Kaela narrowed her eyes but didnât argue. Maurien simply inclined his head in agreement. Ludgerâs tone grew even colder.
âOut here, a single wound can mean bleeding out before a healer reaches you. Or falling off a ship. Or getting hit by a stray cannon shot. Weâre not taking stupid risks.â
He held each of their gazes for a heartbeat.
âThatâs an order.â
The cabin went silent except for the creaking of wood and the distant crash of waves against the hull. Then Kaela let out a low whistle.
âWell,â she said, leaning back with a grin, âsounds like weâre finally doing something fun.â
Renvar exhaled shakily. âFun. Yeah. Letâs⊠call it that.â
Maurien closed his eyes briefly, attuning to the wind outside, then nodded. âUnderstood.â
Rathen, still at the helm, cracked a humorless smile. âIf this doesnât break them, nothing will.â
Ludger turned toward the door, already feeling the shift in the air, the tightening aura of a battle creeping closer on the horizon.
âGood,â he said quietly.
âGet ready.â
Kaela broke the tense silence firstâof course she didâby leaning forward on the table with the exact expression of someone about to ask something deeply irresponsible.
âSo,â she began casually, twirling a dagger between her fingers, âif I do really well out there⊠like,
really
well⊠can I get a ship for myself?â
Renvarâs head snapped toward her so fast he almost pulled something.
Maurien didnât even blink.
Rathen choked at the helm.
Ludger just stared at her.
Kaela continued, undeterred. âI mean, if we take out several of their ships, itâd be a shame to let all that perfectly good wood and iron sink. Might as well recycle, right? And think about itâKaelaâs Ship. Sounds good. Has a nice ring.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, closing his eyes for one second the way a father does when his child asks if the family pig can be turned into a horse.
ââŠNo.â
Kaela pouted. âWhy not?â
âBecause,â Ludger said, deadpan, âthe spoils will be split between Ironhand and the Lionsguard, and any damaged ships will probably be salvaged to repair existing onesânot handed out like toys.â
Kaela lifted a finger. âBut if we capture one intactââ
Ludger cut her off with a flat stare. âWeâre not here for souvenirs.â
She opened her mouth again.
Ludger raised his voice one notch, not loud, but with enough authority to flatten the argument.
âWeâre not focusing on spoils at all. Our objective is to exterminate the pirates, break their support network, and prevent further attacks.
Thatâs it.
â
Kaela crossed her arms, grumbling something under her breath that sounded suspiciously like, âStill want a shipâŠâ
Renvar whispered to her, âWhy would you even want one?â
Kaela whispered back, loud enough for everyone to hear, âBecause pirates donât expect a woman flying at them from the sky armed with knives.â
Maurien murmured, âSheâs not wrong.â
Ludger ignored all of them and walked toward the cabin doors.
âNo ships,â he repeated, tone final. âJust sinking the ones that matter.â
Kaela muttered, âFine. But if I hijack one in the middle of battle, you canât stop me.â
âYes, I can.â
âYou probably wonât.â
Ludger paused, turned, and gave her a look that promised consequences. Kaela smiled innocently. Renvar silently prayed the pirates would kill him first.
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