The Forgotten Faithful: A LitRPG Adventure (UnderVerse Book 2) Cajiao, Jez (best selling autobiographies TXT) đ
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âWeâve almost finished unloading her. Weâve gotten several tons of foodstuffs, and a considerable amount of armor and weapons that are being moved into the armory. The goods that the ship had in its hold are more⊠unusual⊠now that Iâve had the chance to look them over.â
âGo onâŠâ I said, shifting to lean against the side of the ship and considering him with interest.
âWell, Iâve spoken with Isabella, and some of the items in the hold definitely did not come from her village.
There are a lot of strange items aboard for a warship, bundles of cloth, a few small totems, and a large frieze that appears to have been broken in two when loading. There are at least a dozen magelights, from what Iâve seen so farâŠâ He stopped at my look of confusion. âMagelights are, well⊠lights made by mages, I guess. Never really thought about the name before.â He shook himself and went on quickly. âThey are charged with mana, and they provide light throughout the night. Theyâre not particularly expensive, but candles are far cheaper, so theyâre unlikely to have come from another small village. I suspect the ship found a traveling merchant and robbed him. The crew members seemed to think the ship was collecting taxes for the city. I believe they were collecting wealth for the captain, judging from the conversations Iâve had.â
âSo, we had a captain that was using his ship to go pirating?â I asked, grinning, and Oren jumped in as well.
âAye, laddie, anâ judginâ from the damage weâve fixed so far, âe was makinâ the ship look more damaged than it really be. Problây tryinâ to get away from thâ fightinâ! As to the piratinâ, well, it no be that uncommon. Warships be expected to help supply themselves, now anâ then.â
âSneaky fuckers!â I said, still grinning.
âYou seem inordinately pleased about that, Jax,â Cai said, leaning against the ship as well and facing me after scanning the area to make sure we werenât being observed. âWhatâs going on in that devious mind of yours?â
âIâm just thinking that if thereâs no way to prove which goods are whose, we canât be expected to return anything. That means itâs all ours, spoils of war and all that, and if pirating is that common, wellâŠâ
âWell, what be stoppinâ us from doinâ thâ same!â Oren chimed in, grinning wolfishly.
âExactly! Ans if itâs known that the Warship has been doing this, and that others do too, well, Barabarattas might think the ship went rogue, rather than being capturedâŠâ
âSo, heâs more likely to be annoyed and wait a while before sending other ships after this one. And he didnât think his ships had arrived yet, so he probably thinks weâre all fighting you for the tower or something nowâŠâ Cai concluded, and I grinned back at him.
âExactly! We really need Decin on our side, then, as I bet whatever we try to pull on the city to steal those manastones would work a lot better with two ships than one!â
âDamn right, laddie!â Oren said, his grin stretching his face even further.
âTime for a quick test flight. Letâs go see if we can convince Decin, save anyone that we can, and get his ship repaired and back here!â I said, clapping my hands together. Cai saluted and spoke quickly before turning away.
âIâll get on with things here and get the cargo sorted.â With his departure, Oren and I headed up onto the ship, dodging crew that ran and weaved about, carrying the final piles of gear off the ship, and straightening the trio of cylinders that sat on the deck.
âWhat are those?â I asked Oren, and he grunted as he saw what I was looking at.
âFlaminâ dangerous be what they be! There be three oâ them, yer see?â He said, gesturing to the two on the deck, one on either side of the ship.
The third and final one was set in the bow, heavily secured in place, compared to the other two, with a mass of metal strapping it down. âThose two, they be for fightinâ ships; fire a great big rock up to a mile. Sod-all accuracy, though. Iffân yer need to use them, yer need to be in close! Tâother one, though? Thatâs a Lightninâ Shot. Yer use that on buildinâs. I only ever seeâd one fired afore; well, two, but the second wenâ âboomâ anâ thâ ship done vanished. The time it worked, though? Hellish powerful!â
âWait⊠the other one exploded? What happened?â I asked, Oren eyed the explosive construct as he shrugged.
âWho knows! They be new to the fleet. Ainât nobody seen âem afore a few years back. Some olâ design Barabarattas found in a ruin. Like thâ first airships, there be a lot oâ trial anâ error. More error ân not, if yer get itâŠâ
âFuck, man, thatâs insane.â I said, shaking my head and inspecting the cannons. All three were totally different looking, for all that the first two were similar in design. One of the smaller two had fanciful swirls and patterns on it, where the other was bare. The big one was clearly lashed in place to try to counter some kind of kickback. âWonder why they never used them on us?â I said aloud as I studied them.
âProblây didna give âem time, or weâd all have been fucked.â Oren said, shrugging again and moving off to shout at someone that was coiling rope on the deck exactly like everyone else, to my untrained eye. Oren yanked it from her hands and didâŠexactly the same thing. I frowned, trying to figure out what was going on, but I had a lot more important things to try to figure out first. Hell with it.
I turned around and watched as Oracle appeared from the Tower and flitted over to me. She smiled, then flew straight to Bob, landing on his shoulders and folding her arms over the top of his skull as she regarded the four ruffians still inside the
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