Ships and Corsairs of the Shattered Coast
In the Sundered Realm, ships are more than transport. They are lifelines, weapons, and — for some — homes.
The Crimson-Sailed Corsairs
The most feared fleet on the Shattered Coast flies sails dyed the colour of arterial blood. The Crimson-Sailed Corsairs are not a single organization but a loose confederacy of pirate captains bound by a shared code and a shared contempt for authority.
Their origins trace to the years immediately following the Sundering, when the first raiders realized that the new, fragmented geography of the world made naval power more valuable than any army. A ship could reach places that would take a land force weeks to traverse — if a land route existed at all.
The Corsairs operate from a network of hidden anchorages scattered across the Shattered Coast. Their code is simple: share the plunder fairly, never attack a fellow Corsair without cause, and never sail into the deep trenches. That last rule is absolute. Even the most reckless Corsair captain respects the deep.
The Maiden's Kiss
Of all the ships that sail the Shattered Coast, none has a more storied reputation than The Maiden's Kiss.
She is a three-masted brigantine, lean and fast, with a hull of blackened oak and figurehead of a woman whose expression seems to shift between welcome and warning depending on the light. Her crimson sails are said to be woven with thread salvaged from a Sarathi burial ship — a claim that the Sserakai find deeply offensive but have never been able to disprove.
The Maiden's Kiss is captained by Thalara "Mist-Veil" Corvel, a half-elven woman of legendary cunning. Thalara earned her epithet for her ability to navigate fog banks that would leave other captains hopelessly lost. Rumor holds that she possesses a magical compass of Sarathi make — a device that points not north but toward safety, whatever that means at any given moment.
Under Thalara's command, The Maiden's Kiss walks the line between corsair and privateer. She raids the ships of foreign powers with enthusiasm but has been known to defend Fort Valiance merchant convoys when the price is right. The Valiance Guard considers her a criminal. The merchant guilds consider her a necessary evil. The common sailors of the Underdocks consider her a hero.
The Sunset Docks
Every evening, as the sun drops toward the western horizon, the Underdocks of Fort Valiance are transformed. The harsh daylight gives way to amber and gold. The battered hulls of fishing boats and merchant vessels are painted in warm colour. The air smells of salt, tar, and frying fish from the dock-side vendors.
This daily transformation has given the lower docks their informal name: the Sunset Docks. It is here, in the golden hour, that the real business of Fort Valiance is conducted. Deals are struck, debts are settled, and crews are recruited for voyages that no one will speak of come morning.
The Sunset Docks are neutral ground by long tradition. Violence is not forbidden — this is Fort Valiance, after all — but anyone who starts a fight during the golden hour can expect to answer to both the Valiance Guard and the Corsair captains, a combination that tends to discourage all but the most determined troublemakers.