XXX4Fans
bluefishcake from patreon
bluefishcake

patreon


Sexy Steampunk Babes: Chapter Sixty

Neither Clarice nor her twin sister had been able to simply stand idly by while their homeland was under siege. Not as nobles, sworn to protect their people, and certainly not as proud, red-blooded Linholmians.

For Clarice’s part, every fiber of her being had screamed for action when the first skydock came down, yet the Queen’s decree was unyielding. The students of the academy were not to make use of their private shards to join the air battle. They were to hunker down like rats and simply… let the chaos unfold.

Perhaps, in retrospect, that had been the correct decision – as they watched shard after shard launch from the airfields ringing the city, only for them to be brought down by the foe before they could even begin to account for themselves.

The women piloting those craft had been fully trained pilots, ones who’d likely graduated from the very academy grounds on which she now stood. And while their mass produced drakes weren’t likely to be of a similar quality to the bespoke rides that many of the students here possessed, Clarice couldn’t see that marginal difference in quality resulting in any kind of improved outcome for any student foolish enough to ignore her majesty’s orders and take to the skies.

Still, it hadn’t taken long for an opportunity for action to present itself as the first of the enemy airships moved to loom over the grounds of the academy itself and start disgorging enemy mages.

Clarice didn’t know how many the half-fleet had dropped. A platoon? Two? Significantly less troops than currently manned the academy garrison at any rate.

Though one would be hard pressed to see that now, she thought as screams rang out following the telltale whoomph of a fireball being launched from beyond the small checkpoint they’d made just inside one of the passages leading to the airfield.

"A fresh bow, ma’am,” barked a nearby guardswoman, snapping Clarice out of her musings.

The cadet’s hands moved automatically moved to hand off a fresh, bolt-bow, even as they accepted the one that was now almost entirely depleted of aether. The guardswoman gave a small grunt, checking the magazine was full – to Clarice’s slight irritation – before storming off back to the barricades. Leaving the cadet and her small collection of bolt-bows and their ammunition behind in the small nook she’d been told quite expressly not to move from.

For her part, as she set about repriming the weapon by refilling its aether reserves and replacing the magazine, Clarice was still a little surprised to see the academy’s plebian staff making use of bolt-bows. Normally they strode about with swords, spears or crossbows.

Plebian weapons.

Of course, now that she could see the system in action, she understood why the academy had trained its guards this way. In hindsight, it was obvious. If the academy were ever attacked, its surplus of partially trained noble born mages were far too valuable to risk on the front lines. With that said, it would be a waste to leave all that magical potential entirely idle.

To that end, the Instructors had asked for volunteers willing to essentially act as walking pressure tanks for the academy guardswomen doing the actual fighting. The bolt-bows needed refilling every two minutes or so, which meant women from the squad she’d been ‘attached’ to were constantly cycling back to her for refills of aether and ammo.

It was actually rather tiring, truth be told. Yes, a mage had access to a theoretically unlimited amount of raw aether, but in practice that wasn’t entirely true. The closest sensation to producing aether that Clarice could think of was in tensing a muscle. And while that tensing that particular muscle wasn’t particularly strenuous in the short term, after nearly an hour of constant use, she was beginning to feel it ‘cramping’.

Part of that came down to just how busy the checkpoint she’d been assigned to was.

Glancing around the pillar she was hidden behind, she could see the hangars just beyond the barricaded gates, where an intense firefight was still ongoing.

Of course, there were ongoing firefights all across – and in some cases, within – the academy grounds, but those taking place on the airfield seemed particularly heated.

The reason for that was simply because the academy absolutely refused to allow the enemy to access the many shards stationed in its exterior hangars – or more precisely, mithril cores that powered them. The Queen's decree might have forbidden a sortie from those shards for now, but there was every chance that might change in the near future.

With a steadying breath, she returned her focus to the task at hand, her hands never faltering as she readied another weapon for the next guardswoman to arrive at her position, the woman’s once gleaming white armor now marred by soot and scrapes. The hiss of pressurizing aether filled the air in a rhythmic reminder of her purpose in this battle.

Of course, that wasn’t the only sound filling the air, beyond the cannon fire of the airships above or the hissing of bolt-bows nearby. No, there was a new sound, one that was the cause for Clarice’s belief that the ‘no sortie’ order might well soon be lifted.

Clarice’s gaze shifted past the airship looming in the skies beyond the gates, its massive shadow a stark contrast to the fires raging in the distance. Beyond it, she could see the shard battle still unfolding. One of the shards briefly came into view, illuminated by the fiery glow of a burning ship as it dipped low, skimming dangerously close to the chaos.

Recognition struck instantly. Even through the dark, smoke and chaos. She’d would have recognized that profile anyway. It was too… strange for her not to.

“Empty frames my ass,” she muttered.

Well, now she knew why he’d not been selling his new design.

Rather than allow the Jellyfish to serve as a launch platform for Royal Navy shards - craft that would otherwise be left on airfields when a fleet left port – it was clear now that his intention had always been to create his own airfleet to garrison his carrier.

Which… she honestly didn’t know why she’d not thought that a possibility? Xela had relayed at length the story of William’s arrival at Redwater and his response to the mere perception of people under his command having ‘divided loyalties’.

Why would a man like that not want his ship crewed entirely by his own people if he had the means?

Of course, the rub was in the means.

How the hell had he gotten access to this much mithril? There… must have been enough flying around out there to produce an entirely new airship if need be.

Perhaps even two.

Yet rather than hold onto it, in case anything happened to the Jellyfish, the madman had apparently had all that mithril shaved down into shard-cores instead.

…Which, would certainly have a lot of traditionalist nobles asking questions, no matter the result of this fight – given the irreversible nature of that change. After all, for every half dozen dozen shards in existence there was one less airship – and that one less airship meant one less noble house in existence.

That could exist.

And I pray to god he’s not using the plebian pilots, because that means we’re about to start seeing them drop out the sky any minute, she thought hurriedly. And why do they make such a godawful roaring sound when they-

The distinct sound of a fireball exploding in the distance yanked her back to the present. A chorus of screams followed, cutting through the droning hum she’d just been momentarily distracted by. Clarice’s nose wrinkled as the acrid stench of burning flesh reached her.

Movement caught her eye - a guard, the rough-voiced woman from before, being dragged back by a colleague. Blood streaked the ground where her limp body was being pulled across the stones. It was clear what the woman’s destination was, but she paused as a glance toward the healing station further back, behind another checkpoint, showed a long line of moaning and injured women.

A situation Clarice didn’t doubt was the case at any of the other dozen healing stations that had been set up across the academy grounds.

"You a healer?" the injured woman’s voice rasped as she caught Clarice’s eye. “Taking a class on it maybe?”

Clarice shook her head, her throat tight.

"Shit, alright. Get her back to the healing station," the guardswoman ordered, her voice sharp despite her injury. "Then get back here.”

With that, she was gone, bolt-bow unshouldered as she headed back towards the barricade.

Clarice watched her go, before turning to the wounded and burned woman in front of her. It was clear being dragged had done her no favors, and while the elven girl was no healer, she did know first aid.

It wasn’t magic healing, but it might allow the guardswoman to live long enough to get some. Or at least, that was what her aunts always said.

Setting her jaw, she knelt beside the injured woman and began tending to her wounds. Her hands moved swiftly, tearing off a strip of her shirt to make a bandage while checking for signs of deeper damage. She worked in silence, her ears attuned to the battle raging around them.

Another explosion rocked the academy, this time from the main building. The ground trembled beneath her knees, and the distant shouting of orders and screams of pain blended into a chaotic symphony, but she ignored it.

She knew most of the fighting was actually towards the library – for some reason the enemy were focused there. By contrast, the attack on the hangars seemed almost like an afterthought.

But that doesn’t mean we aren’t holding on here by the skin of their teeth either, she thought as a dozen shards of ice flew overhead to shatter against a nearby pillar.

Sure, the academy guards had likely given the enemy a nasty surprise by showing up with bolt-bows, but that was all they’d done. At the end of the day, the plebian women weren’t mages. And while the Instructors were stiffening the lines where they could, they were thin on the ground given that a decent number of the more combat focused staff had sortied using their shards at the outset of the fighting.

And they likely weren’t coming back.

Clarice pressed her lips together as her thoughts went to her sister. She had no idea where she was. They’d been split up when they volunteered to help.

She could only hope her younger sibling was wise enough to keep her head down.

 

-------------------

 

Marcille knew this was a terrible idea. The eastern hangar wing was lost. Most of the other defenders had already pulled back to the western one to make their stand there – before presumably falling back to the main control building.

Marcille knew that was the smart choice. These pirates – or whatever they were – were seasoned killers. Despite being outnumbered nearly two to one, they’d torn right through the squad of guardswomen she’d been accompanying to guard the hangars.

Yet rather than run like she was supposed to when those brave women went down… she’d instead made her way here.

To the Whitemorrow hangar.

Where the basilisk sat. And now she was sitting in the pilot seat, staring at a very much unopened hangar door.

“You know this is likely to get us both killed, right?” A voice asked from behind her.

“I offered to drop you off at that checkpoint we went past. You could have limped from there,” Marcille pointed out as she continued going through the pre-flight checks.

“Oh, I’m not complaining,” the orc said, wincing slightly as she clutched her side. “I owe these bitches payback for what they did to my squad. I just… wanted you to make sure you knew what the odds were.”

Marcille frowned.

She didn’t intend to die here – and yet, she couldn’t dismiss the other woman’s words out of hand. Before tonight, death had always seemed such a distant nebulous concept.

She could die here tonight. Likely would.

All for a shard?

Some part of her couldn’t claim that was wrong – and yet another part of her rebelled against the idea of her life being that cheap.

Or so easily ended.

“I-”

“Shhh.”

Marcille clamped her mouth shut instantly at the other woman’s sharp whisper. The guardswoman had crouched low behind the ball turret’s lower armor, her hand signaling silence. For her part, Marcille followed suit, ducking down as her gaze flicked to the Basilisk’s side-mounted rearview mirror.

There was movement at the hangar’s side entrance.

Both women watched as a squad of invaders breached into the room, their pitch black armor and gambeson fully visible for the first time in the hangar’s mage-lights as they moved forward with eerie synchronicity. Bolt-bows scanned every inch of the structure’s interior as the group of mages moved forward as one.

And in that moment, Marcille knew for a fact they were elves.

Oh sure, she’d suspected before, given the amount of magic the invaders had been throwing around, but seeing them clear the hangar only confirmed it.

It was in the way they moved. Fluid, precise, without a single wasted motion. Aunt Sara moved in the same way.

While other elves were often content to gain a certain level of competency in a given vocation before moving onto other pursuits, others chose to use their long lives to hone but one.

…And Marcille was about to try and get the drop on them.

What had she been thinking?

Her breath threatened to hitch as the group of enemy elves continued to spread out, checking every corner with chilling efficiency, their faceless steel helms constantly on a swivel. The guardswoman—whose name Marcille frustratingly realized she didn’t know—crouched even lower, as did Marcille herself.

Marcille caught the orc guard’s glance and shook her head sharply.

‘Wait,’ she mouthed.

The enemy team was closing in. One was approaching the Basilisk, likely to check for its core or confirm it was inactive. Others moved toward the hangar’s main doors, having sensed the latent magic laced into the structure and likely seeking to ensure they weren’t a threat.

Any second now, she thought.

The approaching elf paused, bolt-bow raised as she seemed to see something in the Basilisk’s rear turret.

…Which was when the enchantments Marcille had spent her last two spell slots imbuing into the hangar doors hinges went off.

The sound echoed through the cavernous space as the massive doors groaned and fell outward, exposing the hangar interior to the chaos outside, as every bolt-bow and open palm immediately pivoted toward the noise.

And for a split second, no one was looking at the Basilisk.

“Now,” Marcille grunted, hand thrumming with magic as she slammed her hand down on the Basilisk’s core activation plate.

The craft hissed to life as the dual-cores flooded the interior of the machine with high pressure aether.

Activating the pneumatic gun controls of the rear mounted gun pod.

The guardswoman within didn’t waste a moment. Her finger were already squeezing the trigger – and while the first rounds out of the barrel fired sluggishly, the Basilisk’s systems still warming up, the next few weren’t. As the twin cores surged to full power, the rounds tore through the air with deadly force, ripping into the nearest elf before sweeping across the room.

Caught out and surprised, the elves’ sleek movements were no match for the unrelenting firepower of the Basilisk. Marcille stumbled a little as she turned her back on the chaos, the vibrations from the guns thrumming through the frame as she started up the propellers and released the brakes.

A bolt of lightning slammed into the Basilisk’s hull as the craft began to reverse out of the hangar. making Marcille flinch - but the reinforced armor held firm. A normal shard would’ve been torn open by an attack like that, but the Basilisk was no ordinary shard. It wasn’t some nimble fighter. It was the world’s first dedicated anti-ship shard, designed to simply ignore incoming fire.

The guardswoman did not let the attack go unanswered, gun-pod swiveling around to spray down the area the spell came from, the Basilisk’s heavy cannons simply tearing through any intervening equipment the enemy tried to use as cover.

With that said, while they’d reaped a heavy tally on the enemy squad in the opening salvo, they hadn’t gotten all of them. More to the point, they’d spread out instinctively.

A second bolt struck the Basilisk a moment later, just as they hit the runway and started to turn. The air out here was alive with sound – even beyond the hissing of the Basilisk’s rear cannon and the plinking of bolt rounds hitting its outer frame, Marcille could hear the deep droning hum of the shards above as they continued to battle for dominance over the skies. Meanwhile, the airships overhead continued to fire the occasional cannon shot at the academy.

Oh, and the orc was laughing.

“Come on! You like that!? You like that!? Well mommy’s got more for you!” the woman cackled as she continued to hold down the trigger on the rear gun – only adding to the ongoing cacophony of noise.

Not that Marcille had long to focus on the acoustics, as the Basilisk started to pick up speed. She wanted to be off the ground and in the air before either the survivors of the squad they’d just ambushed got lucky with a spell or some of the other squads attacking the airfield doubled back and brought them down through sheer volume of fire.

Because while the Basilisk’s armored frame was damn tough for a shard, the propellers and cockpit were just as vulnerable as any other light craft.

To that end, while a vertical takeoff would have been standard under normal circumstances, sitting stationary with hostile mages nearby was a death sentence. Instead, Marcille prepared for a frog-leap takeoff - a hybrid maneuver designed to get airborne quickly while maintaining forward momentum. It was as ugly to see in practice as it was bumpy. It was also incredibly risky, but then again, so was everything else about today.

She’d just started powering up the accelerator though when her heart sank. Across from her, almost directly above her intended flight path, an enemy airship was shifting into position to intercept.

Their escape hadn’t gone unnoticed.

Now, while cannons weren’t typically effective against shards, the Basilisk wasn’t currently in flight. It was trundling up the runway - a perfect, slow-moving target.

For a moment, she considered bailing, only for another trio of pings off the wing to remind her of what the likely outcome of that would be.

The invaders, whoever they were, hadn’t seemed inclined towards taking ransoms before – and they most definitely wouldn’t be now. And on foot, they’d be sitting ducks for the commandos surely watching from the hangar.

Well, I tried, she thought faintly, some part of her still disbelieving as she saw the many cannons lining the ship’s starboard side. Sorry, Sis.

Sound and motion fell away – but for that incessant droning sound overhead. If anything, it suddenly seemed louder in that stilled moment.

It was actually a little annoying. She’d die, never quite knowing why the newly arrived shards made that sound. What William had done to them. How he’d had access to that much Mithril. Or the pilots to man them. It had definitely been more than ten minutes since she’d seen them swoop in, and yet they weren’t falling out of the sky – beyond those that were shot out of it - so they weren’t a product of his ‘plebian pilot program’.

Why did they sometimes burst into flames rather than aether? Why were they so fast?

That and so many other questions flashed through her mind as the droning reached an apex, drowning everything else out.

…Right before a series of... somethings shot through the smoke above the airship, trailing fire.

Like an aether javelin, she thought faintly – right before nearly a dozen of the things slammed into the enemy airship in a rapid, devastating salvo of flames.

The impact was catastrophic, the explosion lighting up the night and sending the airship lurching like a wounded beast. More followed in quick succession as more corsairs appeared from the smoke, sending salvoes of ‘fire-javelins’ into the side of the ship.

Not all hit. More than a few were launched too early or off target, sending them careening into the dirt – or in one case the academy itself.

Marcille barely noticed.

Her focus was on the airship that had once seemed so invincible, now lurching to the side as aether billowed from at least one of its aether tanks, while the propellers on its starboard side spun impotently, flames licking at the exterior armor.

The Corsairs, half a dozen at least, moved on, taking to the sky once more, as they sought to outrun what she now realized was a trio of shards impotently attempting to chase the faster craft as they shot into the sky once more. For just a moment, Marcille’s heart skipped a beat as she wondered if those pursuers would instead turn on her craft – only just now getting airborne – but they seemed entirely focused on taking revenge on the escaping corsairs and zoomed overhead.

“What the fuck was that?” she breathed as, in the distance, another airship was struck by a similar payload as had just struck the one in front of her.

Aether javelins, certainly, with some kind of powerfully enchanted warhead, but why had there been so many of them?  Normally, firing a single aether-rocket required rerouting power to pressurize the launch, but those corsairs had unleashed entire salvos in the course of their pass.

And why fire?

Surely that – along with the fact that sometimes the Corsairs she saw burned when struck – had to be related in some-

“Hit the accelerator, kid!”

The guardswoman’s shout snapped her back to reality as she realized that the window of opportunity for her to make an escape was wide open. The airship that had once blocked her path was now barely able to keep itself airborne as it drifted aimlessly away from the academy.

Marcille didn’t hesitate as she hit the controls and the Basilisk roared forward, all of its aether production turned towards engine power as the ball turret powered down with a whine.

With the enemy shards still locked in their dogfight above – or chasing the recently arrived second group - the path was clear for now. To that end, rather than climb, Marcille aimed for the outskirts of the city and the safety of the darkness beyond. Once there, she’d be able to either climb and rejoin the fight – or rally with the Jellyfish wherever it might be.

As she did, her gaze flitted toward the large explosive sitting in the Basilisk’s belly. A mischievous grin tugged at her lips.

Certainly, she apparently owed William pretty much everything – but she was also determined to show him that he wasn’t the only one with tricks up his sleeve.

The Corsairs had been impressive, certainly, but it had taken them half a squadron to wound that airship – even with their repeating fire-javelins.

The Basilisk had no need for such numbers.

Just a target and a window of opportunity.

 

-----------------------

 

“Order received,” Yotul conveyed to the orcish woman manning the Blood-Oath’s communication orb. “Tell admiral Nerensky we shall move into position immediately.”

In Yotul’s experience, the most valuable trait of a freedom fighter was patience. Not courage, or ferocity, though those were both useful too. But patience.

One would assume, that as the mobile threat, it was up to the guerrilla fighter to dictate the pace of the engagement. After all, it was usually they who picked the time and place of a battle, forcing the defender to scramble to repel them.

This was untrue.

It was the defender who picked where and when a fight took place. Unknowingly. For it was the role of the freedom fighter to wait. To wait until the defender made a mistake. They may not know when or where, but with enough time, an opportunity would present itself.

And then they would strike.

The current situation was a prime example.

She had not known what the outcome would be when she’d crossed the ocean to make her deal with the Dark Elves. It was a choice made more as a result of desperation than consideration. A final attempt by what was left of the free orc fleet to strike at their enemy by borrowing the strength of another.

She had known, even then, that there was a decent chance those elves would simply choose to enslave her crew and steal the Blood Oath – and his secrets – before they even heard her proposition.

It had been a gamble. But that was nothing new. Every raid was a gamble. Every step beyond the razorback mountains was a gamble. Every child born under the tyranny of humans and elves was a gamble.

In the end, the greed of the elves had paid off. The Blood Oath had been a prize to be sure, but it paled in comparison to the secret of how to slay Kraken.

A secret that could only be held in one of two places – the Royal Palace or the Academy.

Both places an Elven fleet could not reach without suffering great losses. Both places the Blood Oath could reach.

So an accord was struck. And for the price of one ship, she would have an opportunity to strike the very capital of her oppressors with the force of a dozen.

The gamble had paid off.

And once more she waited. She endured the slights and insults of the elves as they essentially laid siege to her ship. As they paraded her people as slaves before her. As they proposed a plan of attack that had her vessel act as the vanguard.

She had waited. For an opportunity. For a moment when her enemy would make a mistake.

For the enemy of her enemy was most certainly not her friend. Just another enemy.

And here and now, they had made a mistake.

One she intended to capitalize on.

“Olga,” she said quietly, or at least as quietly as one could while still being heard over the chaos of the bridge.

The arrival of two entire squadrons of shards had not been ideal at all. And while the Blood Oath had fortunately been spared the fate of two of the other underships hovering over the academy, she didn’t doubt those attack craft would soon return with fresh payloads of whatever weapon they had used to such great effect against those ships just moments ago.

The elven admiral was not taking the losses or surprise well and had just ordered the Blood-Oath into a new position via orb. A move that just so happened to position the Blood-Oath over the other ships still conducting the academy raid – almost like a shield.

An order Yotul had just accepted without complaint.

And if the elven admiral wasn’t a tyrant more accustomed to dealing with slaves than free orcs, she might have thought that willingness to obey such an order peculiar.

“Yes ma’am,” the former navy woman turned free orc responded.

“It occurs to me that our hosts of the last few months are rather distracted right at this moment. Between those peculiar new shards arriving and the ongoing assault of the academy, the ships we are currently performing overwatch for will be operating on a rather skeleton crew.”

No shard pilots would be onboard. No elven commandos either, given they had all been deployed to search the academy for the Kraken Slayer recipe. All that would be left would be two or three elven sailors and maybe a dozen plebian crew. Either human or dwarven auxiliaries – or orcish slaves.

Yotul rather hoped it was the latter. It would make what came next easier.

As it occurred to her that there were now no less than two underships running with minimal crew directly beneath her vessel.

While her own ship contained her entire tribe. Which had made for rather cramped conditions these last few months – but she was thankful for it now. She had inside this vessel nearly a hundred veteran warriors and a half dozen mages.

And an opportunity had presented itself.

Her enemy had made a mistake. Not least of all, in not recognizing her as their enemy. Even as they held her people in chains.

And she intended to punish them for that mistake.

“Rally the warriors,” she said as she casually reached out and accepted a bolt-bow of one of her guards.

The elf – their ‘liaison’ for the battle – didn’t see the shot coming, focused as she was on watching the battle unfold through the Blood Oath’s windows. The trio of bolts struck home, and the woman collapsed bonelessly against a nearby console.

“I think it’s time we replenish the losses we took in our last battle,” Yotul announced to the bridge crew – who already knew the plan - as she handed the weapon back, watching dispassionately as the elf’s body was dragged away by another guard. “And I think the vessels below us will serve as suitable payment for bringing our elven friends across the ocean, no?”

The cheers she received in return warmed her heart almost as much as the fires in the city beyond.

Had she planned for this?

No.

But that wasn’t what a good freedom fighter did.

They waited.

For the moment when their enemy made a mistake.

“Vengeance is done. The enemy have tasted our wrath. And now we retreat, to haunt their dreams.” Yotul shouted. “The Blood-Oath is leaving! But he shan’t leave alone!”

They’d need to move fast. They would only have so long before those shards returned with their strange fire-javelins.

And Yotul would not make the mistake of failing to recognize that just because they now shared an enemy that they weren’t still enemies.


Comments

Ah good point I didn't think about that.

Michael Stough

Ah okay I see. I thought the humans were the natives to the area, not the orcs. I thought that the Orc homeland was that place with Orc in its name.

Diego Urbina

Just because the Queen is trying to outlaw slavery doesn't change the fact that the orcs see both the humans and elves as invaders on their land.

Blue Fishcake

Is that how you think the orcs see things or how you see things? Your wording left that a bit ambigous since as readers we know the Queens power isnt absolute.

Diego Urbina

I doubt the Blackstones have stop attacking the Orcs long enough to mention it. Also, your the damn Queen screw the Blackstones send everyone up there and take them out. if anyone is against you then, their head suddenly leaves their neck.

Michael Stough

Wait so do the Orcs know the Queen has been trying to outaw slavery? I got really confused somewhere.

Diego Urbina

Blue is telling us that it will be done soon.

Pwntatochip

?

Ollie Fairweather

Beta readers have it :D

Blue Fishcake

Fair enough. I wasn't thinking of railroads as something that was going to affect the war, but more as something that is likely to appear after the war because of William's innovations. This really was an 17-18th century world with airships and magic added. I think William's innovations are going to change that radically, unless somebody conquers the world, declares his stuff taboo, and can make it stick. It is hard to put technological genies back in their bottles.

Trevayne

Not enough time for the rail roads. The infrastructure could take years to build to any meaningful level. Maybe after the war.

mike wade

I disagree, especially about trains. The need doesn't come from the ruling class, it comes from the desire of cities to grow and be fed. Right now, aside from the airships, all of the transportation is by sailing ship and wagon. The airships are important militarily, but AFIAK there are no merchant or transport airships. They are too expensive. As for why they might want railroads, AFIAK they still mine for ores to produce metals. Given that, they either have to ship food to the mining locations. Doing that by wagon places significant limits on the area the food can be drawn from (horse or ox-drawn wagons can only move stuff so far), which limits the production of the mines/refining to the workforce that can be fed. While in theory, they could use airships, in practice they are military only. Thus, I think there is a need for improved surface transportation. As for tanks, they already have basic aether-powered machine guns in the shards. I can see fortress or castle-mounted aether machine guns using a mithril core that powers all the guns. Doing that on a mobile platform would be difficult, but with William's innovations, not a problem. The main reason they don't have big land forces is that they are vulnerable to airships. Still, they need some land forces for things like raids and defending against them. Anti-aircraft systems would be useful, but they need to be big enough to reliably reach airship operating altitudes and we don't know how high they can go. In OTL WW1, the German Zeppelins that bombed London would fly around 3.5-4 km up, so useful AA guns should be able to reach at least 5 km. This means guns at least 75mm (app 3") in size, which is certainly doable but bigger than anything William has done so far.

Trevayne

You've managed to balance the combat in these chapters really well. The narrative is y getting lost in the action of the moment. The other perspectives you've tied in are done in a way that doesn't come across as confusing too.

Folly Industries

I doubt armored vehicles are the way to go in the immediate aftermath when you can simply introduce the machine gun. And in this world air power has ruled supreme. The most logical thing to do would be to build anti air systems. With high explosive shells since airships are apparently very hard to destroy. It's difficult to predict how mages with limited casts would respond. The world seems stuck in feudal society due to mages and their abilities preventing it from going further. We have seen that they don't have the factory line up due to their reliance of mage smiths. They have intricate abilities in piping due to eather being considered as a gift from the other plane of existence. Their entire wold has prioritized differently from our own. We wouldn't see a train in this world setting, as there wouldn't be a perceived need from the ruling class.

Isak Mark

Most of the impact of Jungle/Kickstart are the vocals and the MC is the only person who could judge if its being sung correctly and verify the instrumental part is up to snuff. Ride of the Valk's is only half the work for the same impact as it's instrumental only and played with already existent instruments.

Househut21

Thinking some more about this combat, something else William might want to consider is a tank or APC. This raid has shown that ground combat is still necessary on some occasions. Getting across ground that is swept by enemy fire is still important and the example of the Basilisk shows that vehicles can be built to resist enemy fire and spells. For that matter, aside from airships, what other transportation methods are available? We have seen sailing ships and horse-drawn carriages, but railroads should be possible as well. Generally steam punk is 19th century-ish, but this world seems more like the 1700s with some magic-tech (airships, aethercannon, shards, communication crystals, etc) added. Bringing in internal combustion engines will have major implications and side effects across society as a whole and not just changing warfare. I wonder how telegraphs and telephones compare in cost to communications crystals, for example.

Trevayne

On a separate note, I take it this battle and the immediate reactions to it are the end of this book. I expect the civil war to kick off in the next book. Somehow I doubt William is going back to the Academy any time soon, although I am amused contemplating the reactions of the students and faculty if he did try to finish his education there.

Trevayne

Either would work, but I think he needs a magic amplifier for them to be heard in a battle at any distance from his own ship.

Trevayne

So far the battle opened with a curb stomp. We shall see if it closes with one. The real questions are how many of the Lunite shards survive and if the rockets can be fired from outside the effective range of the anti-shard aethercannon on the Lunite airships. If the answers are few or none and yes, it is going to be William curb stomping the Lunites. We already know there are at least three Lunites shards still in play, but they could be the last survivors, having landed to rearm and repair, and now launched again to help against the Corsairs. What we don't know is whether the defensive guns have enough range to engage the rocket-firing Corsairs before they launch their rockets. If they don't, the Corsairs will just take them apart from outside their own range and they are dead meat. At that point their only chances to live are surrender or scattering and fleeting.

Trevayne

Ride of the Valkyries

Admiralthrawnbar

The real question should be, is William going to make a grand entrance with Welcome to the Jungle/ Kickstart my Heart blasting to boost morale?

Conrad34xdsa

Welp, winding down on a Saturday and feeling pretty good about this chapter. Not going to lie, I've been dreading this arc for a while given the whole back to back combat thing, but it's not been totally terrible :D (One thing I miss about Sect was that most fights there were curbstomps in either direction and ended in about a chapter at most)

Blue Fishcake

Why do they need to catch his attention? They were already discussing how the relationship would work at the picnic in chapter 56. I also really doubt Blue is going to take out the orcs this early.

Trevayne

I got my bets on next Friday

Spintool

Saturday believers (me)in shambles

jkbscopes

I liked the jokes

Found&Lost

Three birds with one stone? If that doesn’t catch our young protags’ attention, not much will.

Allen Mainville

tough crowd

Random Information

I don't know, having this on a Monday would uplift me quite a bit

O

Yes, I like this story a lot so I probably take it too seriously.

Trevayne

It is better than Monday.

Trevayne

That's some nice brutal truth there I respect it... Even if it makes me sad :( William is on the edge of a big damned hero moment and I love it.

Vonbaron

I smell LIES and DECEIT

Found&Lost

Good things come to those who wait

DMR1

Looking at how much draft I've still yet to get through... I'm going to err on the side of caution and say Sunday.

Blue Fishcake

But but the enhanced mithril shards can now last up to an hour without mage intervention! So non-mages can fly them. And I think you missed the little joke.

Random Information

It’s gotta be Saturday. It can’t be otherwise. And yes, the Queen is going to live. I feel it in my heart.

Brian Roger

I agree with Saturday, although I would be quite happy with a Friday surprise. I think the Queen will survive since she is surrounded by her royal guards. We have already seen from her agents that these are very skilled individuals. In addition, the palace has defenses which the Queen's people know very well. The only real advantage for the attackers is their fire support from their airships and they can't be that liberal with it lest they blow up the information they are trying to get. I agree that the post-battle discussion between them will be very interesting, especially if the Jellyfish has to take out the opposing airships over the palace. Granted, a situation where Williamn has to discuss with Admiral Tyana, the commander of the returning capital fleet, just why he was unable to save her mother's life, could be pretty interesting. That said, I doubt it because I think Yelena still has a role to play.

Trevayne

I think they will try to reseal things, but I doubt it will happen quickly. All they really need to do is head out over the ocean, in a different direction than where they know the Royal Navy force will be returning. It is still night and there are no magic radars AFIAK. Once they are out of sight, they can take as long as they need to restore their ability to submerge. I think it will take at least several hours, but the Lunites may have improved on the process. Edit: One additional consideration is that they need to use magic for magecrafting to reseal the gun ports. They may not have magic available because they just fought a battle. If they do not have enough spell charges available it may be 12 plus hours before they can reseal the underships to regain the ability to submerge.

Trevayne

I assume this is supposed to be an in-universe cover story? It isn't going to hold that long because word about the pilots will leak. As soon as people realize that most of William's pilots are non-mages, everyone is going to know these are are not mithril shards, double enchanted or not.

Trevayne

They must have much experience in making the crafts both submerge and battle ready and submerge able. I think they will magic weld the ships quickly after destroying the remaining crew maybe they will take prisoners. And flee via the ocean.

Isak Mark

As for my answers I'll go with an optimistic saturday. The milf we all love will live and we will have an awesome conversation between her and Will after the battle. This battle is going to be so sexy.

Isak Mark

Ah, my favorite day is tomorrow have the bets come in? First order on the agenda what will happen with the queen? Will we get a word hint? How sexy will this battle get? Gentlemen and the single lady prepare yourselves.

Isak Mark

@Trevayne, the story is great and the numbers don't really effect the story too much but it can become somewhat confusing when you have conceptualized different scales. It will be easy to fix on a re-write.

Isak Mark

For those of you blathering on about Artificial Cores and harrowing, William and his alchemists have created minor improvements, but nothing revolutionary. The overall project is called the "Lindholm Industries Enhanced Shards" and the specific improvement is the "Double-Enchanted Core for Efficient Impulse and Thrust". I'm sure most factions will be able to reproduce these effects with some minor thought and effort. So please stop the disinformation.

Random Information

I doubt this very much. From the Watsonian perspective I think Marcille is going to finish off one of the cripples because she has one shot at it. She wants to demonstrate that while Corsairs can cripple airships, Basilisks can kill them. I doubt she wants her first attempt to be on an intact airship. From the Doylist perspective, shooting down the orc ship would seriously damage the orc storyline and remove them as a faction. The only free orc characters we know would be dead. It makes for a much better story if they get away to continue their activities with a couple of new ships to replace the ones they lost. If this was a story about the heroic exploits of Marcille, having her make three kills with one shot might be appropriate. However, she isn't the main character and that kind of success both looks forced (deus-ex-machina) and seriously prunes another story element. I suppose I could be wrong, but I don't think Bluefishcake wants to simplify William's life right now. YMMV.

Trevayne

Doing it as a commando raid is one thing. Doing it in a battle with lots of ships is another. If it is a black night, how do the mage-saboteurs find dark ships on a dark night? If it is a pitched battle, it is more plausible, but yes some saboteurs do make it. Do we have any statistics on how many don't make it and get shot, lightning bolted, or fireballed en route? Mage saboteurs are used because they are one of the fewer long-range weapons available to airships besides shards. They were the only long-range weapon until shards were introduced. That doesn't mean they are a good option. Yes, we do know that some make it. What we don't know is what proportion of the attempts at boarding are successful. I expect there are 10-20 dead mage-saboteurs for every one that succeeds in boarding a hostile airship and stealing a core. Mage-saboteurs are a high-risk, high-reward strategy. They make sense for the Elven powers because their entire population is made up of mages. For everyone else, there are probably more productive ways to use mages.

Trevayne

The Lunite Admiral ordered the Orc ship to shield the two remaining airships at the academy. The Orc leader plans to capture them, but she will need to be really close to get her warriors onboard. I think that Marcille will see a ‘window of opportunity’ from how close the Orc airship is hovering above the other two. She will use her aether javelin to destroy the Orc airship, and it will crash downwards onto the other two.

Chris

I have noticed Blue tends to avoid giving hard numbers, probably because that way he can't get called out on a contradiction. There are probably a few retcons in the works before this is published, especially the ones that state the Royal Navy has 35 ships (19 RN proper and 16 Royal vassals - chapter 29) and the later chapters which strongly suggest the RN has about 30 ships without counting the vassals - the chapter where it is stated the deployed RN force that intercepted the diversion force had a nearly 3-1 advantage over the 12 Lunite airships. This is not a complaint, just an observation. I would far rather have an author who does their characters and politics well, but has issues with the numbers over a writer whose story has detailed numbers that make perfect sense but wooden characters and a paper-thin plot.

Trevayne

This is missing my larger point. They may be able to function with lower safety standards because aethergun ammo is more stable. If they try that using chemical explosives, they are courting disaster. People who try to adapt and/or use William's explosives will probably blow themselves and others up if they try to treat them like traditional munitions. As for aethergun peculiarities, I doubt there are that many. They tweak the aerodynamics and flight characteristics of shards, but I expect they only have a few aerhercannon designs for shards. So far all shards seem to have aethermachine guns. I doubt there is much performance difference between the aether cannons on the Drakes and any others, just like almost every US fighter in WW2 relied on varying numbers of .50 cal machineguns. There just isn't that much performance difference between airguns. Edit: One more point is that if they really want to safeguard the shards and their cores, those cores should be in a vault. IIRC the Ashfields developed the modifications to allow shard cores to be easily removed and stored separately in a secure location after dealing with William's antics too many times. I would not be at all surprised if it is now widespread.

Trevayne

Another interesting question is just what are the orcs going to do? They will probably get away with their own ship and two captured Lunite ships. They are all fitted as underships, but none of them can currently submerge. They don't have resealable gunports, so they are probably looking at several hours, possibly days of magecrafting to get the ships ready fort submergence again. At a guess, they will head out to sea and try to loop around the coast to return to orc territory. That way they can resume their previous operations and give the orcs a big morale boost because they regained their previous ship numbers. They probably also have left behind Lunite weapons and gear that were spares for the Lunite commandos. The interesting question is does anybody know about them? The Lindholmians will see them leave, but unless the Jellyfish is ordered to pursue, I expect they will let them go. Once the threat to the academy is over, they will naturally head to the palace to try to relieve Queenn Yelena. Given that, from the Lindholm perspective, three ships got away from the academy. Unless a shard came close enough to see an orc crew, how do they know who is on those ships? They may be able to find out if they take Lunite prisoners, at least some who will probably bitterly complain about being left hanging by the orcs. This leads to the other interesting point. If they figure out that the three ships are orcish, do they tell anybody? They might well figure out the had to know and didn't tell the Crown. If so, do they take the high roads and warn the Blackstones or do they keep silent, figuring they didn't tell us so why should we tell them?

Trevayne

Another reason I think they’d keep these loaded would be lack of uniformity. We hear about how all the Royal Navy pilots are in Drakes, which are a known quantity and have been in service for a long time. That means they have an ammo and loadout standard, something that’s not always applicable for all the bespoke craft that the nobles bring to the Academy with them. “I had a Drake, but I traded the .44 nose gun for .50 wing turrets.” - some noble Logistical nightmare for a quartermaster, made even worse during an actual combat operation. It’s just easier to keep them topped up if needed and not worry about finding the specialties to meet the needs for each unique configuration when under active threat. “There may be crates of ammunition for that, but the belt feeder can’t accept the size of the drums… etc. “

Drew Monney

I feel like Blues numbers, stats and physics have been pretty poor for this novel. We have had different information about the sizes of airships like how is he able to suddenly fit 40 planes on his medium sized airship, it would have made more sense that most of them followed the jelly fish while airborne instead of suddenly turning every airship into an aircraft carrier size. I really like the character interactions. The reason for Will's "isakai" was probably one of the best revelation and reasoning behind having another's memories and experience I have ever seen in a novel. It was brilliant. And of course blue is great at politics. .

Isak Mark

That’s fair, but you fail to take into account that these are private hangars of the Royal Military Academy, Located next to/ in the Nations capital, guarded around the clock not just for the shards, but for the student’s safety as well. They’re already super vigilant against saboteurs and infiltration just due to the Mithril in the shards. They will be the best defended hangars on the continent, so I don’t believe they’re overly concerned about sabotage. This is pretty much the Fort Knox of hangars as far as layers of protection and redundancies go, with only the Palace getting more specialized defenses, and most likely all shards within do have to maintain the Royal Navy standards of being ready to deploy if called into action. In this case, the Queen forbids the students from flying out to join the fight so as to preserve the military minds, but that may not always be the case. If the extra shards and pilots could turn the tide of a pitched battle, they’d absolutely scramble the half-trained pilots from the academy. Switching out ammunition isn’t a fast process, especially if the ammo belts are being enchanted. In that case, they would not be enchanted until being placed into service as things enchanted as a whole, but broken apart, make the enchantment break down faster. We see that when those ammo belts specifically for training are used only for that exercise and enchanted as they’re being loaded to avoid degrading the spell. The same enchantment degradation time limit would not apply to non-enchanted munition or to enchantment stable munitions like cannonballs or alchemy based weapons. So why not save the flight crew and those on the ground time during the mad scramble and keep the shards loaded with standard ammo just in case they are called to defend the Capital? This minimizes the time from first alert to shards airborne, then those pilots could cycle through for specialties as time allows.

Drew Monney

Yes, in general that is true, but in this particular case the Lindholm ships are hours away from the capital. They didn't want to let a potential invasion fleet get that close. In 20/20 hindsight, they should have intercepted closer in so they could have gotten back to the capital in time to do something. As it is, it the Lunites have a sufficient speed advantage, say 10-20%, they can just go around the Lindholm ships because the weapon ranges are just that low. Assuming of course that the Lindholm shards can not slow the Lunites down.

Trevayne

My vision is exactly that they get flown in many many miles away, hit a flight ceiling airships can't hit, and board from above. Even better if it's at night and they're pitch black so it's harder for shards to see tiny humonoid projectiles. We know that sabatours make it onto ships already even with the existence of shards and shipborn AA. There's no reason to believe any of that has changed other then they now need a new way to get close enough to do what they've been doing already.

Alex LordThorsen

On the question if speed, the Lindholm vessels can't force an engagement but they have a shorter path to travel while defending so they can intercept incoming craft as long as their reconnaissance spots the attacking fleet in time.

Alex LordThorsen

The real problem with shards fighting airships is that it is like carrier aircraft fighting ships in the 1930s. There were legitimate questions about whether aircraft could carry heavy enough weapons and penetrate AA fire and hit ships trying to maneuver evasively and not get hit. Both AA and aircraft were rapidly improving. Here the same issues apply. IIRC shards are a relatively recent development and may not even have been featured in the last fleet engagement that sank all those mithril cores near Al'Hundra. In this world, the issues are complicated because the air-gun-like nature of aether cannons means they don't have that much range. That makes it easier for shards to get close, which they have to do because their main anti-ship weapons are bombs. We have seen that there have been some experiments with aether rockets, but they effectively work like a compressed gas cylinder with its valve knocked off. The big problem is that the aether has to be taken from the core's output and a shard charging an aether rocket is moving slowly and sluggishly.

Trevayne

Yes, the Basilisk is the first shard specifically designed for anti-shipping. That does not mean that shards can not damage ships. Just look at the battle with the underships. One of the Lindholm losses is described as a flying burning wreck because three fire lances from enemy shards hit it. It is sort of like WW2 fighters. A P-47 or Corsair was not optimized for ground attack, but they could certainly carry bombs and rockets to attack ground targets. Most shards are optimized for air-to-air and stress maneuverability. That doesn't mean they can't carry other weapons, just that they are more vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire because they don't have much armor, if any at all. The Basilisk is armored because it is designed to get through the AA and deliver a heavy bomb to the target.

Trevayne

True, fighting the Lindholm ships would lead to their defeat, but they wouldn’t need to fight them because they can outrun them. Also, I don’t think the Lindholm shards would be able to damage the Lunite airships, because they are designed for dogfighting other shards. One of the twins remarked in an earlier chapter that their House’s new shard was the first one designed for anti-ship attacks. The Royal Navy are using Drakes and they only have the aether guns, which don’t sound like they have the force to penetrate steel armor of an airship. The Lunites wouldn’t be like the Southern Lindholm noble house and using wooden airframes. Yes, the Royal Navy has the advantage in the numbers for both airships and airframes, but that’s negated by the Lunite airships that can outrun them. Also, their shards, the Drakes, might be able to catch them, but to what end because they can’t penetrate/damage the Lunite airships.

Chris

Indeed you make a strong argument that William's life has also reinforced the harrowing tendencies.

Vonbaron

I expect the 12 Lunite airships are fleeing. They do not want to fight the Lindholm Royal Navy when it out numbers them by 2-1. Exactly what is happening depends on the timing. Assuming there was at least half an hour before the Lindholm force was told about the attack on the capital, I expect there was a shard vs shard battle that the Lunites are losing because they are outnumbered better than 2-1. A few Lunite ships are crippled and subsequently destroyed. They could try to go around the Lindholm force, but they run the risk of being damaged and slowed down by shard attacks. Any ships that are slowed to where the Lindholm ships can catch them are destroyed. As for the previous engagements, I expect the Lunites had enough ships that they thought they could win an outright victory. While they can try hit and run tactics, those work a lot better when ships have long range weapons. Until William started innovating, the only long range weapons were shards. Aethercannon and spells seem to have an effective range of several hundred meters. Basically, the Lunites can't be forced into an engagement unless something, like damage from a shard attack slows them down. However, while fast and maneuverable, their weapons don't outrage the Lindholm ship weapons. They also probably carry fewer weapons.

Trevayne

Curious about the battle tactics, but I’m not trying to overthink things. The earlier chapters stated that the Lunites sent a fleet of 12 airships and around 50 or so pirates in seafaring vessels. The pov of a pirate leader stated that 12 Lunite ships scattered as the Lindholm Royal Navy began to descend to engage, and left them as bait for the Royal Navy to attack/distract them. She stated that the tactics of Lindholm was to engage over the ocean. Also, Lunite ships are designed for speed and agility, and to operate wit a minimal crew of 30 mages; alluding to keeping weight to a minimum. In contrast the airships of the Royal Navy of Lindholm are designed to last through a protracted engagement. They carry more personnel, around 80 or more, and are designed to last through a “slug” match. My question is if the Lunite ships are so much faster, why didn’t they use hit and run tactics previously? How did they ever get caught in open water, and why didn’t they just avoid the Lindholm ships by flying around them? If most of the ships of Lindholm couldn’t match them for speed, then why couldn’t they make it over the ocean and onto land. It states that 6 ships were dispatched to engage the pirates. What about those 12 remaining Lunite airships? The Royal Navy was lured away from the Capital for the 10 under ships to attack and loot the new technologies. I imagine with the radio technology that the Royal Navy is returning to the Capital, but are the 12 Lunite ships headed to the Capital as well? If so, then will those 12 ships arrive first?

Chris

It isn't just his harrowing, his entire childhood and teenage life on this world has demonstrated that words without force are empty. He apparently wasn't able to persuade his mother to see things his way on anything important and his general attitude is scarred by that experience.

Trevayne

William's harrowing certainly pushes him to the "barrel of a gun" method. Fortunately we've seen his team mates and specifically Marline give him some reality checks at critical times. Thanks to Marline he's actively aware of his harrowing effecting his decision making. That alone is a huge help for him in being more of a speak softly but carry a big stick type.

Vonbaron

Fair enough, weapons loaded with Bear-Blood aren't that dangerous. Still, the weapons William is introducing aren't that stable. They are going to need to learn that these explosives need to be treated with respect and not just left hanging around. For that matter, even if it is relatively stable, leaving it on a parked aircraft is just asking for sabotage by a mage with ill intentions. All they need to do is to get access to the shard, add the salmon roe, set their demolition conditions, and depart. When the conditions are set (say the next time the shard core is activated, the device goes off). Modern aircraft in OTL, even going back to WW2 are not normally left sitting around with full bombloads, unless they are on alert status and expected to be ready within 5 - 30 minutes (depending on the status). Those aircraft are guarded and the pilots are nearby. They aren't just left sitting in an empty hangar.

Trevayne

This should be stable. They had moved away from the unstable Earth-Blood/Everburn/Demon-Piss”as it is vibration/shock sensitive and burns forever. Like a mix of napalm with Nitroglycerin. The new Navy standard and what this is more likely loaded with is Piper’s “Bear-Blood”. That burns the same but is inert until Salmon roe is introduced as an activator. No HE issues keeping a weapon without an activator, like stacking blocks of C4 plastic explosives and storing the detonators elsewhere. From chapter 41: “Piper was an alchemist. A fairly talented one at that. She was the one who invented Bear-Blood after all. Prior to her enrolment in the alchemist’s guild, the venerable guild had been churning out a variant of Earth-Blood that did little more than burn hotter and longer. In short, a slight improvement on the base asset of the substance at a ruinous cost in reagents. Ever-Burn, they’d called it. The Navy named it Demon-Piss. Personally, Piper thought the latter name more apt. After all, what else could one name a substance that had an unfortunate tendency to spontaneously ignite when unduly jostled? Just transporting the damnable substance from a ship’s reinforced storage locker carried risk – let alone loading it into a drop-pot, mounting it onto a shard’s underside before then carrying it into battle. Sure, it was powerful – and woe be to any bucket-brigade or hose-handler set to put out the blazes it created – but the cost in friendly ships and shards destroyed due accidental mishandling or enemy action wasn’t worth it… Personally, she was of the belief that the damnable substance’s infamous reputation was a large part of the reason for why the invention of carrier-airships was delayed. No captain wanted to helm a vessel expected to carry so much Demon-Piss in its hold. So, she’d been the one to invent an alternative. One that went against both tradition and methodology. Rather than try to reinforce the nature of a thing, she sought to contradict it by layering two concepts over one another by finding a substance that embodied the contrasts she’d needed. And she succeeded. Eventually. Bear-Blood was an improvement in all regards. A nuanced mixture of Earth-Blood, bear fangs and gold flakes, the alchemical solution rendered Earth-Blood’s inherent fiery nature inert and safe to transport – until the thick oily substance’s fury needed to be awakened into a fiery cataclysm. Not unlike a hungry bear awakening from winter. Hibernation was the concept. Naturally, the Royal Navy had been incredibly interested in a weapon that wasn’t just stable, but actively inert until salmon eggs were added to the mixture. Indeed, it didn’t take long for Bear-Blood to become a staple of Lindholmian navies…”

Drew Monney

I just hope he's more of a "Speak softly and carry a big stick" philosophy rather than "Political power stems from the barrel of a gun" philosophy. Because taking it too literal will quickly disabuse him of the notion. He is ALONE. I hope he realizes how true that is. If he is truly to not fail, he needs to not be alone. And realize that a big stick is more than just a weapon.

Katz

Reverse engineering is inevitable. The clues are everywhere and a proper intelligence network will put them together without access to anything physical. They know William likes explosions. THey know that William teamed up with alchemists who use fumes and fire. They know that the corsairs caught on fire when shot and/or crash. They know that the corsairs sound different. They know that the spinny bits are in the front. They can see the exhaust and/or oil marks. Very likely people would quickly start wondering if explosions or fire is somehow substituting for the compressed air the core provides. You gotta have something to convert the core's aether output to spinny stuff. In our world air powered engines have a variety of designs including multi-cylinder. I would assume the aether pressured powered machines would be more esoteric than a gas engine it's still working on a lot of the same mechanics. Having said that any copies will probably be of vastly inferior quality. It will for sure take time for them to develop the scientific knowledge base required to be a real threat in designs. I would assume that this Blue's world already has lathes of some kind. Making some lathes that are both accurate and precise is kind of hard. Stealing a lathe wouldn't be super easy either. William was planning to use the duchy to ramp up production and I don't see that all going through him. So I assume the character would have plans to implement some form of mass production. Industrial espionage being expected regardless.

Vonbaron

I think that’s the point. He would not want anyone else from reverse engineering his planes and more importantly, the engines. Even if someone (invisible or otherwise) steals all the parts needed to make the engine, the tolerances would not be correct and they would fail. Even if they managed to take a engine from the wrecked airframe, it would have its tolerances destroyed and they would be at square one. he would not want his tech to proliferate, he would want to be in control for as long as he can until he can move production to a more secure facility. Something like a island or else somewhere that he can keep invisible watchers from poking around

Conrad34xdsa

They do have jet packs, but it didn't seem like he was saying they get flown to a point about a mile away and continue by flight suit. That might work, but a saboteur's job is already hard. Now that all airships are going to have to improve their anti-shard defenses, it is going to be even harder. I doubt that any enchanted armor is going to be tougher than a shard, and the defenses are already going to be improved to deal with shards. Killing wannabee boarders in flight suits with weapons designed to defeat shards should not be that hard. Especially if they are coming in in a group because they got dropped by a transport shard nearby.

Trevayne

On a completely separate note, did this bother anybody? As she did, her gaze flitted toward the large explosive sitting in the Basilisk’s belly. A mischievous grin tugged at her lips. The Basilisk was sitting in the academy hangar with a full ammo load including a 1,000 kg anti-airship bomb loaded with earthblood (napalm equivalent). It goes to show the completely pre-industrial attitudes towards safety. If William is going to make lots of conventional HE weapons, he is going to have to institute a better safety culture or a lot of his stuff is going to be lost to stupid accidents and outright negligence. I suspect the inhabitants have gotten away with a lot because a fair amount of weapons need purposely directed magic to use. They need to learn quickly that high explosives stored improperly can have unscheduled explosions. The question is how many will learn the hard way.

Trevayne

I’m curious what the source of that line of thinking is from. Sounds reminiscent of something like “Fry the Brain”, makes for a fun perspective shift when thinking about the situation from either side of the conflict (defender vs freedom fighter)

ZBTmaniac

Thinking about it, one silver lining to this very dark cloud is that it will force the Royal vassals to modernize. They could get away with maintaining an older hull that they though they would never actually use in combat. After getting it shot down, I doubt very much that any noble would be allowed to build a new, obsolete, wooden hull airship.

Trevayne

As soon as anybody talks to the pilots, the fact that they aren't mages is going to come out. Even if it was a mithril core, the speed and altitude would make it a secret worth stealing. William has just put a massive target on his back. He wanted his own power base, and he is well on his way to getting it. What he hasn't considered is now that makes him a target for the big players. He has gained their attention.

Trevayne

@Von Baron - 1. IIRC Bluefishcake stated specifically that it was a bluff because William would never give his information to slavers. AFIAK there is no information package with the dwarves. It was just a means of bluffing the Queen. Since she doesn't really appreciate the depths of his loathing of slavery, she didn't realize the flaw in the bluff. 2. I don't think this universe has any conception of a nuke. They could destroy a city, but they would do it by having a fleet of airships conduct as many bombing runs as needed to level it. I don't think they have any concept of a device that could let a shard do that with one bomb. Maybe there are legends of ancient magics that could do that, but the only WMD reference I remember in the story was about a chemical attack. @Folly Industries - Yes and no, it depends on the weapon. It will be difficult, but a very good mage-crafter can probably duplicate a .50 cal machine gun. A superb one, like William, can probably do it in several months. It will take years to try to duplicate a Corsair, because the duplicators need to fully understand exactly how everything works. They need to know how the sparkplug fires to ignite the fuel mixture to create the pressure that moves the pistons. Figuring that out is not going to be easy. They don't need to know how it was made because it was made with magic. They will be making it the same way, probably breaking it down into parts and subcomponents that can be made by individual mage-smiths. It is just going to take a long time.

Trevayne

I doubt she would worry about being attacked again, at least not as much as she would worry about William being attacked. What happened to her would be even easier to do to William. If ten airships showed up over Redwater by surprise, he probably would have lost everything. He needed preparation time which he got by the summoning of the crown vassals. The Jellyfish didn't get wrecked with the rest because his ship was late.

Trevayne

I don't think it's quite as dramatic as the dreadnaught situation. Our main character is the only one who knows how to make corsairs, everyone else here is working with world war levels of mechanical aviation. Even if they can figure it out there's going to be trial and error. It's going to be a while before anyone else figures out guns nearly as good as William. Even magically knowing what it's made of doesn't tell you how it was made

Folly Industries

I don't think your arguments are wrong but I do feel like it's worth pointing out that these saboteurs have jetpacks, and enchanted armor plating is a theoretically possible counter technique to the risks of getting shot down on approach to a carrier. Just because we've invented shardless engines, doesn't mean they might not have a place in a plane anyhow.

Folly Industries

I agree that it would be a good idea. The problem that it faces is that unlike OTL, mage-crafting can achieve apparently everything the lathe can do, except mass production. To get people to use tools like the lathe, they have to realize that producing a lot of stuff has a virtue of its own. I agree that he would be better off by implementing the tools to build the tools so he can manufacture Corsairs entirely mundanely. I expect Blue did not want to spend 20 years in story getting there, so he uses mage-crafting to short circuit the process. It does leave everything dependent on William. If he is sick, injured, or dead, production halts. My guess is it would take years of trying before William's team could resume production of Corsairs without him, even with finished examples. They need to understand just how fine the tolerances are and how everything is supposed to work together. I also wonder if @Katz has picked up on part of his harrowing consequences. William focused on weapons production to build power, but he didn't think of all the other technologies that could also build commercial and industrial power, except for the gramophone. Maybe his particular Fae was really interested in seeing what human military tech could do so it stressed developing and using that tech as the preferred means of resolving problems.

Trevayne

Certainly possible, but an aircraft/shard that can carry ten people (much less 30) is going to be a bigger target. Airships are defended targets. It was one thing to have saboteurs in flight suits travel from airship to airship when they were shooting at each other from a few hundred yards apart. It is much harder to do it from miles away. That means they need a shard to get close which makes them bigger targets. I also disagree that mages will not be pilots. Mage pilots have additional weapons, like lightning bolt and fire ball spells that non-mages don't. Nobody except the Elves ever have enough mages though. Edit: The only reason the orcs can pull off their boarding exploits in this battle is the Lunites never thought they would have the initiative to try. They knew very well that there were no hostile airships in the vicinity of the palace, so the Lunite commander directed Yotul to watch from above. She had no idea the orcs could decide that they were no longer working for her and steal some of her ships. The really interesting question is whether the Lunite Admiral is on one of those ships or on a different ship. If she sees this happening, will she try to have her ship engage the orcs?

Trevayne

Hard to know for sure that he did tip his hand about his new tech, though- even one of the twins thought it was mithril and not an artificial core

Jake the L

I agree with you, he focused so much on keeping secrets close to him that he forgot the concepts of assembly lines and replaceable parts are critical for logistics. Otherwise he's just an artisan creating bespoke technological marvels that will become unfixable or irreplaceable if he's not around. Now, granted there's absolutely no time to focus on institutions or earth enlightenment principles when you're a linchpin to a civil war conspiracy a few months from now, and he did create a pilot(hah!) program to search for and leverage potential talent among plebeians. But he should be doing so much more. As much as he's an out of context problem for the world, the world is also an out of context problem for him, given he's going in the most arsebackwards way. Weapons first, logistics and institutions later.

Katz

I've been thinking about this situation more than I should. One thing that I would definitely do is "invent" the modern lathe. Once you have a modern lathe you can use it to make another. Then the real concept of precision machining becomes reality. It would make true mass production possible for William's forces. I'm kind of assuming lathes exist in that universe as in real life primitive lathes were used as far back as ancient Egyptian times (+1100 BC). I imagine by this point Marline's aunts are thanking their lucky stars to be so closely tied to such power.

Vonbaron

1. It's a partial bluff. The mecant clan has the connections to make it happen and I'm sure WIlliam would make it happen. The contents of that package though could be considered a bluff at this point as we don't know if he's updated it. 3. "nukes BASICALLY" meaning whatever the universe would consider their version of nukes. His forces are blasting airships out of the sky like it aint no thang so you know...

Vonbaron

I wonder if William has fully appreciated the situation he has placed himself in? He wanted to get his own power base using his technology and he has arguably done that. However, does he realize the size of the target he has painted on himself? He demonstrated that he can build shards with artificial cores that can outperform traditional shards. He has armed them with better weapons that hit harder at longer ranges. He has introduced new anti-airship weapons. When the Queen asks him how he proposes to withstand full scale attacks and covert operations trying to kidnap him and/or steal his secrets, what does he say? The Lunites sent ten airships to get the secret of the Krakenslayer. Why wouldn't they send 20-30 to get him? Why wouldn't the Solites? For that matter, maybe the Blackstones will come south to grab him for themselves. The only thing that delays this is that it is going to take some time for the information to spread. Right now, the only people who know what is happening are William's people. However, once the battle is over, the word is going to spread. Somehow, William's ship, the Jellyfish, managed to defeat 5-10 raiders that had just crushed the Royal vassal fleet and the capital shard forces. Once that gets out, every significant military on the planet, except maybe the wood elves, is going to be very interested in getting their hands on William Redwater and what he knows. Edit: If they can't kidnap him or steal his secrets, they can at least deny them to Lindholm by killing him. For that matter, if anybody hears about his bluff (left his secrets with a third party with instructions to release them to everybody if he disappears), they might well think killing him is a way to deny him to Lindholm and potentially get access to his information.

Trevayne

This chapter solidified in my head that one short term to medium term change in aerial combat that will be very different from our world is sabatour transports. Now that airships aren't going to be dueling anymore and there's a lot of mages that don't need to fly shards i suspect one very deadly weapon is going to be transport aircraft that drop 10-30 very angry mages onto airships. Particularly if battles go more towards the Pacific Theater route where the carriers never see each other.

Alex LordThorsen

I agree with most of this but have a few caveats. 1. Is a bluff, although the Queen really didn't want to call William on it and nobody else knows about it. 2. Yes, in a feudal system people aren't supposed to just take family magic without compensation and I expect William's inventions would fall under similar rules. 3. I agree that the Queen doesn't know what else he could come up with, but the only mention of any kind of WMD I recall was a chemical attack. I don't think they have even imagined anything like a nuke.

Trevayne

nice

Marius Petrauskas

Good point, I had forgotten about the student shards. dep[ending on how far the Ashfield trick of securing the shard core has been adopted, they may not all be immediately flyable. For that matter, shards owned by specific noble families may have locks. They don't want some mage from any other house taking one for a joy ride.

Trevayne

If William is seen as responsible for saving the academy, nearly every noble family that had a student there is going to owe him one. But yes, everybody is going to see that he fought 1 vs 5 with the Jellyfish and won. Granted, they aren't going to know for some time what happened with the orcs, but there were five ships over the academy at the start of the fight and none at the end (I am assuming the cripple is shot down or captured). We have yet to see what happens at the palace.

Trevayne

Based on Marcille's and Clarice's POV in this chapter, literally all of the shards for the students at the academy are still there, minus the Basilisk. It sounds like most of the shards for the instructors are gone, but that wouldn't be close to the majority of shards available at the Academy.

just_some_guy.

Then they die. The thing is some of them maybe able to realize that the core is lost, but their lives are still possible to save. For that matter, these under ships were specially built/converted for this mission. I doubt these are regular Lunite ships. Yelena pointed out that they were of varied designs that did not make the attackers easy to identify. Given that, these are probably Lunites Navy ships, not House ships. They might not be as dedicated to dying with their ships.

Trevayne

they will either fight till the last, or skuttle the ship and try to ditch with the core. the ship and its core is vastly more valuable than any of the crews lives. they would rather die than lose it. or else the house in control of said ship dies with it.

mike wade

More to the point, the last time there was a technology transfer like that the end state was an invasion that blindsided her. This is one of those times where willful blindness protects her short and long term interests.

DMR1

3. Doing that is problematic for several reasons. 1. William has made it clear his tech is secured by dwarves who are to release it to EVERYONE upon his disappearance. Demanding he hand over the tech means it's very likely EVERYONE will get it too. 2. The Duchies aren't going to be happy about the queen over reaching in such a manner. This is likely to cause more to throw their support behind the Blackstones. 3. The Queen has NO idea what else William has kept secret and considering what she's seen I'm sure the queen is in NO hurry to see what he brings out when he says no. For all she knows William has nukes basically.

Vonbaron

A whole lot of "he did what?? the fuck??" gonna be happening across the country.

Vonbaron

Indeed even if as stated some of those vassels were rocking old wooden boats.

Vonbaron

@Mikolaj said 3. I would expect the Queen (or her next in line if she dies in the attack) to immediately demand transfer of “artificial core” technology to the state. I don’t think that after such a showing of William airplane capabilities in battle the Monarchy will stay away from the matter. I doubt the Queen would do that. Especially since she is in a bad bargaining position. The Royal fleet of 19-35 ships is still intact, but the vassal fleet has been gutted. The naval edge has swung even further to the North. We will see if they try to take advantage of that. That said, she will definitely express interest in them. For that matter, so will every other faction on the planet, once they hear about it. This gives William a lot of leverage. He wants an independent orc state. Personally, I think that is a bad idea, unless he plans on moving there and making the orcs the technological superpower. Even then, I expect the rest of the world to try to overwhelm them with numbers to try to get his tech. What she might offer as a counter is a separate orc duchy, once the Blackstones have either been crushed or agree. The real question is can the orcs and Blackstones (or their replacements) stop raiding.

Trevayne

Good point, but I doubt there are enough shards left for all the commandos to get out, unless some are lying on the wing and hanging on. There were about 40-60 present, but many were shot down as they tried to take off and fight. A few will probably get out that way, but the majority are going to be dead or prisoners within an hour or two.

Trevayne

She does have 30 airships. So she is going to use them to attack the only reason she is still alive? I doubt it. The real problem is that her 30 airships no longer have the backing of the Royal vassals because those ships were destroyed with the skytowers. Thus the force balance now favors the Northern Duchies even more than it did before. @Mike Wade, the Royal navy proper is untouched as far as we know. It went out to intercept the deception force. It is the Royal vassals that got wrecked.

Trevayne

Non carrier airships can become rocket and flak platforms.

DMR1

Thinking some more about the numbers, William may well have a reason to go rescue the Queen at the Palace. His Corsairs have taken out two airships, damaged and nearly crippled. Marcille is about to finish one off with the Basilisk. The Orcs have their own ship and are about to capture two more and leave. When William's strike Corsairs come back for round two, there should be only one cripple left. They can finish off that one and then head for the palace. William can't really contribute that much to the ground fighting at the academy because most of his people are plebians trained as pilots and airship crew. Once they get to the Palace, they should be able to kill or drive off the other attacking airships. The technological surprise is on their side and most of the Lunite shards have been shot down. This means airships trying to hit faster shards at long range with aethercannon. That probably isn't going to end well for the Lunites. The real question is will they try to fight to the end or will they surrender? Modern OTL custom is to fight until the ship sinks, but in the Napoleonic era and earlier surrendering a ship in a hopeless position was customary. We don't know which customs this world follows.

Trevayne

Once the Lunite commandos realize they're cut off after seeing their (former) airships leaving them behind, they'll have to go for the Academy's hangers as a last-ditch exit strategy. William and the royal navy not knowing if its students & instructors or desperate invaders flying those craft will be quite the mess.

Jacob

she definitely can't make any overt demands. her navy is trashed. the only real military power she has right now are her vassels, which includes william. If she demands technology and secrets from the house single handidly responsable for the crowns survival, she risks the other vassels flat out rebeling. the political fallout could be outright fatel.

mike wade

She literally has 30 airships with really angry sailors who have no one to vent their anger on.

Mikołaj

Why should they? To the rest of Lindholm he is a completely out of context problem. They can't predict his actions because they don't know his background and knowledge. Piper mentioned that mages and alchemists have been seeking an artificial core for decades without any progress. Why should anybody expect a newly en-nobled young man to produce something that has evaded so many for so long?

Trevayne

In addition, to a significant extent William is the technology. IIRC he has to finish every one of the engines the mage-smiths produce. I think they will eventually be able to make them without him, but I think that is at best a few years away.

Trevayne

We're eating good, nice work!

Drunk Pop-Tart

Nobody understands William: “And I thought we were going to… I don’t know… steal one from another house or something…” “I can’t believe I thought he ‘just wanted to use it in a schoolyard fight’,” “He implied it was gold ... I damn near tripped over my own feet in front of everyone when he pulled an honest to goddess mithril core out of his ass.” “Empty frames my ass,”

Random Information

The Queen's not exactly in the best position to make demands to William at the moment.

Random Information

A few key takeaways from the situation: 1. All non-carrier airships just got obsolete. It’s like the introduction of HMS Dreadnought before WWI. 2. William either has to make up some bullshit about his airplanes or admit that he made combustion engine thus allowing plebians to fly and making all shards a waste of mithril which would be better used as mithril core for airships. The fact that he is harrowed may be obvious for everyone to see at that point. 3. I would expect the Queen (or her next in line if she dies in the attack) to immediately demand transfer of “artificial core” technology to the state. I don’t think that after such a showing of William airplane capabilities in battle the Monarchy will stay away from the matter.

Mikołaj

I think it is more of an opening than favor. The orcs betrayal of the Lunites has probably saved the academy. The Lunites commandos on the ground have just seen two of their airships shot down and now the other three fly away. My guess is they either fight to the death or surrender. We will get to see their choice shortly.

Trevayne

I think the Blackstone betrayal is what will keep people from flipping. I think the general consensus would be something like "if the orcs are willing to turn on their Lunite allies, why would they not turn on us too." I highly doubt them turning on the Lunites will actually win them any favor.

Business Casual

It will probably delay it because the Blackstones will want some time to assess just what happened. However, it could easily accelerate it because the Crown vassals just took a major blow. This means the Royal faction lost 16-30 ships as a physical loss and the prestige loss of being sneak-attacked. Eleanor Blackstone has some big decisions coming up.

Trevayne

Did the defending vassal airships accomplish anything? We know that most we're caught flat footed and wrecked at their moorings, but at least four were active because Yelena said they were outnumbered nearly two to one in her POV. I thought that meant they had reduced the invaders to seven airships. However, as @jbkscopes pointed out, the orcs and William are both at the Academy. William's Corsairs have taken out two airships, Yotul has decided to take the other two away from the Lunites. That means there were five Lunites at the academy. If it was an even split, that means there are another five at the palace and the active vassal airships did not take out a single enemy airship, and not all of them were docked.

Trevayne

The Royal Navy wasn't touched, but the Royal vassals were wrecked. That is still a significant loss to the Crown faction as a whole.

Trevayne

But now they've also attacked the Lunites, so it is now a mixed situation. Also the Blackstones kept news of the Orc submarine secret, which many will consider a betrayal. All in all - complicated.

Random Information

If the orcs' involvement in the attack is discovered, it will weaken the emancipation faction for years.

Mikołaj

Ah, slightly more problematic, but at least they are less likely to struggle with power grabs… potentially. The crown will certainly be busy but it can not afford to not protect them while they recover. At least to a degree. Damn, Ashfield probably doesn’t have a presence here then? Hmm the attack likely still will delay the civil war, potentially. Honestly depends on how bad the losses are. However the biggest factor is potentially how whatever ruling crown at the end of this ordeal responds. If it’s isn’t strong enough discourse shall spawn. The Blackstones will potentially stoke the fire. However if the narrative is spun right could set the support of the clown for a while.

Medical-Cyanide

The only fleets summoned were the *royal* vassals from the Crownlands - I.E. those counties immediately surrounding the capital. Not the duchies or their vassals.

Blue Fishcake

> Just a target and a window of opportunity. > But that wasn’t what a good freedom fighter did. Holy crap BF, you might not like writing these battle chapters as much, but you sure as hell make them fun to read.

just_some_guy.

Thank you!

Andrew

on a technicality, it was mostly the vassal house if I'm understanding the situation correctly. the crown is currently sitting mostly pretty militarily wise.

Medical-Cyanide

as weird as it is. If William can figure out the backstabbing going on, It is in his best interests to let them go. send a word about it up the line and maybe a detachment of the Royal Navy can catch them, maybe. Either way that is the Academy skies cleared. 3 OPFOR airships out of the fight for the moment. as well as the opportunity to get a ream of shards in the air. probably from the most distant airfield from the palace first. then pushing back OPFOR shards enough to allow more RN airfield to join the fight, truly letting them hopefully turn the tides completely. The above is the absolute best-case scenario, if tacked on is that the commandos get the Scooby and surrender hoping for mercy. likely hood though is that they do not and the RN has a messy fight on their hands cleaning up commando holdouts.

Medical-Cyanide

The Coming civil war has potentially been stalled or at least made less of a threat by this attack, potentially. the Royal Navy is likely still at relatively full strength at this point, sans experienced pilots from the airbases. As well as the chaos and issues the capitol will suffer from this attack. Long and short, the Vassal houses of the lands have just felt a massive blow to their power structure with so many airships heavily damaged at the least. never mind if the hulls are totaled, as well as the crew aboard. being generous and saying most of the crew of the airships lived and the hulls are relatively intact. this is potentially a year at least if not more before the vassal houses are roughly back to the status quo. A major issue I can see after this is smaller Houses that just had a ship go down are incredibly vulnerable. (wonder if the Ashfield ship, forgot his name, was at the capitol.) Some of the larger houses potentially had larger fleets and didn't send everything (for example Blackstone) and a massive power vacuum has just opened up. and infighting is bound to happen. which just might end up causing its own civil war.

Medical-Cyanide

Or perhaps the solites will be happy to attack their now-crippled neighbor

Jake the L

Unlikely, considering Lindholm has been just as if not more damaged by thus, plus William has just displayed 2 more technologies that would be valuable to capture in addition to the kraken slayer.

Admiralthrawnbar

I don’t know how much of the Lunites’ strength is in this invasion but if Lindholm fucks them up enough in a spectacular enough way perhaps the Solites will settle for invading their closer, more predictable neighbor rather than risk the innovations of Lindholm and the necessary betrayal of the Blackstones. Edit: said Lunites instead of Solites

22junk

The Blackstones The royals just lost a significant amount of airships and firepower

jkbscopes

TAKE OUT THOSE FUCKING PT BOATS! Love that mission, the music blends with the gunfire perfectly and and constantly moving between guns is amazing, and I'm right with you on that ending being perfect

jkbscopes

Slight thing, the ones the free Orks are planning on taking are the remaining ones above the academy not the palace, I'm more interested to see what William will think of the change of ownership honestly, suddenly the elves doing the raiding are cut off unless they leg it across town or steal some shards,and that just leaves the ones actually over the palace which will have Williams full attention

jkbscopes

Beautiful chapter! The Basilisk is going into action, and the free orcs get a great opportunity to turn around their fortunes. As the old saying goes, keep your friends close, and your enemies closer! 😁👍

Baron Von Mott

Reminds me of the ending for that mission "Black Cats", from COD: World at War. "Mantaray 5-4, this is Havok 2-6, coming over you now! We'll take it from here. Get yourselves back to base!" That epic moment is carved into my brain forever 😁

Baron Von Mott

It could be either, but if they are HVARs there would be a lot more rockets flying (6 shards with 8 rockets each is 48). While Tiny Tims were intended for air to ground, airships are really big, armored targets and heavy rockets like Tiny Tims would do well against them.

Trevayne

HVAR's not Tiny Tim's, would be really cool to see a ground strike with the Timmy's though

Skonnchy

Lovely

JackPlague

i now this i basiclly meth for us, but at least let quality control finish their job!

mike wade

HVAR's go BOOM!

Carlos Torres

More comments when I wake up. It will be really interesting to see Yelena's reaction to the change in ownership of the airships over the Palace. Maybe the prisoners, if any, can tell her about the orcs. They might do so if they conclude the orcs took their airships. At some point in the future, this might open up possible diplomacy options. The orcs enabled the attack, but they also backstabbed the attackers. Depending on how well the palace was holding, their seizing the ships might have saved Yelena, assuming she has survived. The other thing I am curious about is what happened at sea. We saw the Lunite airships try to flee. Did the Royal fleet immediately head home, or did they decide to destroy the enemies in front of them because they were hours away from the capital and could not get there in time? If they decided to fight, they may not be able to catch the Lunites with their airships, but if they use all of their shards they can probably cripple several and destroy them with the fleet. The six airships already detailed can destroy the pirate fleet. Thinking about it, I wonder if Captain Kanna will realize she does have a card to play. She can offer to turn over her employers to the Lindholmians in exchange for their letting her and her ship go.

Trevayne

Legit pumped my fists at the mental image of corsairs blasting an airship like that.

Vonbaron

double cross on double cross. was there anyone who wasnt fucked over in this sordid mission of theirs?

mike wade

Just wait until all the other sides get involved!

Random Information

Of course! The rockets! I completely forgot about the Corsair's 8 wing mounted rockets.

Matt Bradock

Wow what a twist! Hope the orcs make it out!

Bas van Lissum

Really interesting developments with the orcs. They have decided to steal some ships and will thus be gutting the attack on the palace as the commandos lose their air cover and ride home. It will be very interesting to see what they decide to do once they realize they are screwed. Will they fight to the death or will they surrender? For that matter, Yelena should have a much better idea of who her adversaries are. It was not possible to be sure as long as they stayed in their ships, but now there are going to be bunches of dead or captured commandos.

Trevayne

Thats combat for you, especially a complicated raid involving a collision of new technologies.

Trevayne

The Queen is going to have such a huge migraine when this is over.

White Neko Knight

Great update. Lots to think about. It looks like the Corsairs are using rockets, probably Tiny Tims because it looks like about a dozen for each group of six. The twins are still alive and the Basilisk has its first kills, although commando victims of the rear turret and not yet enemy shards. Marcille now wants to show what a real bomb will do.

Trevayne

Yeah - they never quite get away with stealing the chapter.

Random Information

Everything is a bit complicated.

Random Information

Finally! Those Beta readers need to be faster

Found&Lost


Related Creators