Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 154
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- Chapter 154 - Chapter 154 Raising the soul
Chapter 154: Raising the soul of man Chapter 154: Raising the soul of man Two weeks had passed, and the pirate ship sliced through the waves like a beast returning to its lair.
The once pristine white sails were now stained with salt and streaks of battle, while atop the mast, the banner of a raging wave fluttered proudly, rippling in the wind.
Its deep blue crest against a black background seemed to roar with the same fury that had filled Blake’s men during their raids. It had been years since Blake felt this alive, a feeling he hadn’t tasted since that fateful day at Rock Bottom, sailing beside his father.
The sea roared beneath them then, a relentless force of nature, much like the battle that had taken place.
The clash was nothing short of catastrophic-a defeat that lived on in infamy-but no one could deny the magnitude of it.
For Blake, the memory was vivid, a dark cloud that shaped the man he had become.
He had been a boy of only fifteen summers, yet he fought as if he’d been bred for it, cleaving through men like a veteran of a hundred battles.
All the free lords united under one banner and one might, known as the Free Fleet, they surged toward the Imperials with brutal force.
The ships smashed into the enemy with the power of a raging axe striking down a tree.
Splintered wood, torn sails, and drowning men littered the sea.
His father, the infamous commander of the Roaring Axe, led the charge, while Blake and his brothers each commanded a ship of their own.
It was a glorious assault-Blake himself had taken down three ships that day, ramming their hulls and sending them to the depths.
He remembered the twelve men he had personally cut down, their screams echoing in his mind even now.
But glory quickly turned to horror.
The Empire of Rolmia, ever cunning, had set a trap.
Unknown to Blake’s father and the fleet, the Imperials had hidden their true strength behind the rocky cover of Hervia, a port of the Oizen principality , a small one just east of the battlefield.
As the Free Fleet pressed forward, stretched too thin and too eager for blood, the trap was sprung.
From the east, the Imperial fleet emerged in full force, their sleek warships cutting through the water with deadly precision.
Blake’s heart had dropped as he saw them-hundreds of ships, bearing down on their vulnerable position.
The Free Fleet, committed to their forward assault, was unable to change course in time.
It was like watching a wolf pack descend on an injured stag.
The Imperials rammed their ships from the side, the sound of wood shattering and men screaming filling the air.
In the chaos, the proud Free Fleet crumbled.
Out of the eighty ships that had set sail that day, only twenty limped away, battered and broken.
Of the four ships his brothers commanded, only Blake’s remained.
His three brothers-Karos, Merek, and Hadrin-died at Rock Bottom, their ships splintered into the sea.
The memory of their final moments haunted Blake.
Karos, defiant to the last, shouting orders as his ship went down in flames.
Merek, torn apart by an enemy boarding party.
Hadrin, struck by a stray catapult stone, his ship sinking before anyone could react.They all died as true men.
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The fourth brother, Kalen, survived-but barely.
He had been found adrift, muttering incoherently, his eyes glazed over, broken by the horrors of the battle.
Kalen’s mind never returned from Rock Bottom, and to Blake, it was as if he had lost him too.
His father never recovered from the wounds from the battle, dying just few days later, and so the fourth son suddenly became lord of Ela’s island, at the cost however of their way of life.
That day changed Blake forever.
It had been a defeat, a massacre.
But it had also been a lesson of hyubris of men who believed themselves to be gods.
Following the catastrophe at Rock Bottom, the Empire of Rolmia swiftly tightened its grip on the seas, aiming to exterminate what remained of the pirate fleets that had once terrorized their merchant vessels.
The key to this dominance was the capture of the fortress of Harmway, a stronghold used by the pirates to launch their raids and retreat to safety when the Imperial Navy closed in.
Without Harmway, the pirates were little more than scattered bands, unable to organize large-scale attacks.
The fortress of Harmway had always been a crucial base of operations for the pirate lords, its location perfect for controlling the narrow strait between the open sea and the Empire’s bustling trade routes.
For years, it had allowed them to strike swiftly, then vanish before the Imperial Navy could retaliate.
But after the slaughter at Rock Bottom, where the pirate fleet was lured into a deadly trap and nearly wiped out, Harmway became a sitting duck with no hope of support from the isles of its masters.
With most of their ships destroyed and the survivors too scattered to regroup, the pirates could do little to defend Harmway.
The fortress was strong, its stone walls towering over the sea, but it couldn’t stand against a determined Imperial assault without a fleet to protect it.
The Empire sent its forces, and after weeks of siege, the walls of Harmway finally crumbled under the relentless bombardment.
Imperial soldiers stormed through the breach, slaughtering the remaining defenders.
For the pirates, the fall of Harmway marked the beginning of the end.
Without the fortress, they had no safe port to repair their ships, gather supplies, or plan their raids outside their immediate waters.
The Imperials quickly moved to patrol the waters surrounding the fortress, declaring it off-limits to any vessel without their approval.
The once-feared pirate fleet, already decimated, was now fragmented and unable to launch coordinated raids.
Their golden age was over, their power broken.
———- Blake stood at the bow of the ship, as he always did, letting the wind whip across his face.
His long, black hair blew freely behind him, strands occasionally sticking to his sunburned skin.
His piercing gaze scanned the horizon, but this time it wasn’t searching for prey.
This time, he was simply savoring the victory, the triumph of their raids, and the spoils they had taken.
Gold, silver, and more slaves than they could count now filled the ship’s hold, but it wasn’t the riches that satisfied him the most.
No, it was the opportunity to change things to make them right.
As the salty breeze swept over him, Blake closed his eyes for a brief moment, feeling the pull of the sea deep within his bones.
The wind was his herald, the waves his throne.
He felt invincible.
His men called to one another behind him, sharing bawdy jokes and tales of their raids, their spirits high from the success of their recent plundering.
He was not sailing home but instead toward Blacktide Cove, the place where each lord or their representatives were sent to discuss matters regarding the confederation policies.
It was funny they called themselves the Confederation of the Free Isles and yet they could not even raid and pillage wherever they wanted. The wind filled the white sails, and beneath him, the oars groaned as the slaves rowed in rhythm, cutting swiftly through the waves.
Blake had been summoned by the other pirate lords to face judgment for breaking the Treaty of Sea-Rock.
That treaty, forged between the Free Lords and the Empire of Rolmia after years of bloody conflict, was clear: no pirate vessel was allowed to raid within the water of the imperial seas.
For two decades, the treaty had kept a fragile peace between the pirates and the Empire.
The Free Lords could raid elsewhere, but the Imperial Sea was forbidden, and any pirate caught there would answer to the Free Lords before even facing the wrath of the Empire.
They did not only lose their will to fight but also their back spine. Blake had been ordered to present himself before the Free Lords and explain why he had risked their fragile existence for his greed, in case he did not, he would be declared a criminal and brought to the Call with iron around his ankles. He didn’t care.
His raids had been successful, and he had claimed more than gold-he had tasted the thrill of defying the greatest maritime power. Blake had no intention of walking into Blacktide Cove and accepting punishment like some beaten dog.
As his ship neared the jagged cliffs that guarded the cove, he gripped the edge of the bow, his knuckles white but his mind sharp.
He wasn’t going there to bow to the Free Lords, nor to grovel for their mercy.
No-he was going to argue his case and stroke the fire now smoldering within every free man who still had salt in his veins.
The treaty was nothing but a leash, a shackle the Empire had thrown around their necks, and Blake would remind them of that in case they failed to feel the rope.
He would remind them of the glory that had once belonged to the free men of the sea, of the riches waiting in the Imperial waters, and of the chains they had allowed themselves to wear for far too long and that was now time to break off from.
He wasn’t coming to apologize-he was coming to stoke the flames of rebellion.
This was no time for submission.
Blake was ready to fan the fire of defiance, one that could burn away the fear and timidity the Free Lords had clung to for too long, it was time to awake the ancient kings of the seas.
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