Chapter 475: Deck Battle
Water Magician
Editor: Tseirp
âBring us alongside the starboard of the large ship. Weâll board from there!â
âUnderstood!â
The helmsman responded to Captain Gorickâs orders.
Both the large ship and the ghost ship were stationary.
The ghost ship was massive.
Its deck was much higher than that of either the Lone Dark or the large ship.
Boarding a ship with such a high deck was challenging.
Conversely, boarding a ship with a lower deck was easier.
You just needed to toss a rope and slide down it.
The decks of the Lone Dark and the large ship were at roughly the same height.
With perfect maneuvering, the Lone Dark pulled up to the starboard side of the large ship.
âToss the ropes!â
Ropes were thrown toward the large shipâs deck from both the bow and the stern.
The bow and stern were much higher than the deck.
Throwing the ropes from such a height created a slope.
Using that slopeâ¦
âBoard!â
Captain Gorickâs command echoed.
The first to move was First Officer Lena.
She slid down the rope from the stern and landed gracefully on the large shipâs deck.
The crew of the Lone Dark followed.
By that time, the deck of the large ship had already become a living hell.
âWeâre the Suje Kingdom Navy! Weâre here to help!â
As they boarded, the crew of the Lone Dark shouted.
Making it clear that they were allies and had come to assist.
The crew of the large ship had already lost morale.
It was essentially the same as giving up.
But now, reinforcements had arrived?
Here, in the vast open sea?
Come to think of it, there was a ship they had told to flee earlierâ¦
âThe navy?â
âThatâs right! Weâre the Suje Kingdom Navy from the Archipelago! Donât give up!â
The enemies boarding from the ghost ship were⦠skeletons.
They were skeletons.
Skeletons werenât particularly strong.
Of course, there were some special ones, but most were not too formidable.
However, there were a lot of them.
And some of them seemed to know how to use their numbers to overwhelm.
Moreover, some carried weaponsâ¦
All the skeletons on the large shipâs deck had knives.
âI donât think theyâre marines⦠but they can board other ships?â
âOf course. If sailors on a warship canât board an enemy vessel, theyâre only half-trained.â
Chief Engineer Gunno answered Ryoâs question.
They were standing on the deck of the Lone Dark.
Ryo and Abel had never done ship-to-ship boarding, so they were left behind.
Gunno, as a senior officer, had been made the Lone Darkâs acting commander.
This meant the captain and first officer had already boarded the enemy ship.
Although they were at the bow, they could still clearly see what was happening on the deck of the large ship.
âSkeletons, huhâ¦â
âWith knives, theyâre troublesome foes.â
Ryo said, and Abel nodded in agreement.
To defeat skeletons, blunt weapons like clubs or hammers were effective.
On the other hand, edged weapons like swords or spears tended to slide off the bones without dealing much damage unless struck perfectly.
Knives were even worse in that regardâ¦
âTheyâre a pain for sailors who use knives as their main weapon.â
âAh, I see.â
Ryo finally understood Abelâs point.
The large ship they had come to help was apparently a warship from a country called Bor.
Naturally, its crew were soldiers.
Like the Lone Darkâs crew, they should have been used to fightingâ¦
In a world where ship-to-ship combat was common, being able to board and fight was expected.
They could board, so it wasnât surprising they could be boarded as well. That happens often enough in battles.
So, the crew should be able to fight, tooâ¦
Yet, the large shipâs crew was at a huge disadvantage.
Ryo had been wondering whyâ¦
The problem was the mismatch in weapons.
Weapon compatibility cannot be underestimated.
The Lone Darkâs crew also mainly used knives.
They were supposed to, butâ¦
âTake that!â
âBreak!â
âHit!â
Shouting these words, they were swinging something.
âIs thatâ¦?â
âHammers. In ship-to-ship combat, sometimes you board the enemy ship to break through the hull and sink it. Thatâs when you bring those.â
âI see.â
Abel asked, Chief Engineer Gunno answered, and Ryo nodded in understanding.
If the enemy crew was too strong to overpower, sinking their ship by smashing the hull was a valid strategy.
Ship-to-ship combat, which looked straightforward, had its complexities.
âIf the large shipâs crew had known theyâd be fighting skeletons in advance, they might have prepared such weapons. They probably have them in the armory.â
Chief Engineer Gunno said, shaking his head slightly.
The importance of prior information.
On the deck of the large ship, intense combat raged, but the crew of the Lone Dark was holding their own.
They had been aware that skeletons were their enemy before boarding.
There was no sign of them being overwhelmed.
Howeverâ¦
âThey just keep coming.â
âIâve cut that rope several times already, but it keeps getting reattached.â
Ryo and Abel were focused on the rope connecting the ghost ship to the large ship.
The skeletons were using it to slide down and board.
Neither of them had set foot on the battlefield that was the deck of the large ship.
They remained on the Lone Dark.
Of course, neither Ryo nor Abel was just lazing around.
The crew of the Lone Dark had boarded first to save the crew of the large ship.
Their initial goal was to drive off the attacking skeletons, a temporary fix.
But that alone wouldnât resolve the situation.
The victory conditions were unclear.
What needed to happen for everyone to be saved?
What would end the ghost shipâs assault?
If this were a game, the victory conditions would be explicitly stated, but reality doesnât work that way.
They had to figure out how to achieve victory on their own.
The enemy was skeletons.
In other words, they didnât tire.
The longer this dragged on, the more disadvantageous it could become for the humans⦠maybe.
Even that wasnât certain.
There was just too little information.
Thatâs why Ryo and Abel werenât jumping into the fray; they were stepping back to observe the situation as a whole.
As for Chief Engineer Gunno, he was guarding the Lone Dark.
The remaining crew, mostly engineers and cooks, stayed behind.
In other words, everyone else had boarded the large shipâ¦
Though even those left behind were fully armed.
âHey, skeletons donât have magic stones, right?â
âOf course not. Youâve been an adventurer longer than I have, Abel. Why are you asking that?â
âWell, you seeâ¦even those talismans and spirit tags use magic lines to channel magic power instead of magic stones, right? I was wondering how skeletons work.â
In response to Abelâs question, Ryo grimaced and shook his head.
âGood observation, as expected from a former A-rank adventurer. But those skeletons donât have anything like magic lines attached to them.â
âYeah, I figured.â
âYou already knew?â
âSkeletons you encounter while adventuring donât have magic stones, and no one knows where they get their magic power from⦠but they still move. Itâs always been a mystery.â
âThatâs true. It is strange. Are skeletons the only âmonstersâ without magic stones?â
âMaybe wraiths⦠or shadow stalkers too? There arenât many like them thoughâ¦â
Abel thought for a moment, looking up.
Before his words trailed off.
He was staring at the ghost shipâs forecastle.
âAbel?â
âJust nowâ¦I think I saw something from the bow of that ghost ship.â
âSomething? Could it be the boss?â
âYeah, the leader of the enemy. Itâs possible. I thought I saw something glowing blue, butâ¦could it be that we have to defeat that thing to end this?â
âGlowing blueâ¦What is that? Iâve fought strong skeletons like Skeleton Arcs that are immune to magic with everyone from âRoom 10â, but none of them ever glowed blue. Oh, and Iâve also fought a skeleton swordsman stronger than you in a dungeon⦠again with âRoom 10ââbut it didnât glow either.â
âA skeleton swordsman stronger than meâ¦?â
âAmon awakened and defeated it. That was the moment Amon began his path as a master swordsman.â
For some reason, Ryo boasted about Amonâs achievements with an air of superiority.
âI seeâ¦well, whatever. The crew of the Lone Dark is still holding out fine for now, but who knows how long thatâll last.â
âTrue. Well then, shall we have Abel storm the enemyâs base?â
âWait a second. Why just me?â
âGood catch! This is the perfect moment to send a frontline swordsman deep into enemy territory and settle things!â
âI think you should come too, Ryo.â
âDragging a rear-line magician to the frontlines? As expected of the brutal swordsman Abel, you sure live up to your name.â
âStop giving me weird titles.â
Ryoâs suggestion of a new nickname was quickly rejected by Abel.
âFine. Iâll go with you, but youâre responsible for fighting whatever dangerous thing that approaches, okay? Iâll take care of the other skeletons.â
âUh, sureâ¦â
âWell then, Gunno-san, weâre off.â
âEh? Oh, uh, okay? Take care?â
Gunno didnât fully grasp the situation.
He overheard Ryo and Abel talking about boarding the ghost ship, butâ¦
How exactly were they planning to do that?
âLetâs go. â
As Ryo chanted, frost erupted from the deck where they stood.
It quickly grew into a massive ice pillar, lifting both of them high above the ghost shipâs deck.
The frost pillar kept rising until it reached about halfway up the ghost shipâs mast.
From there, the two looked down at the deck of the ghost ship.
âSwarmingâ¦like ants.â
âYeah, itâs pretty gross.â
Both Abel and Ryo grimaced.
It was understandable.
The deck was so packed with skeletons that there was barely any space between them.
There were easily over a thousand.
ââ
A few moments laterâ¦
Thud, thud, thudâ¦
The sound of heavy objects falling echoed through the air.
The fell through the air.
The ice walls, created high in the sky, came crashing down onto the ghost shipâs deck, crushing the swarming skeletons.
âAhh, that felt refreshing.â
âYou never change, do youâ¦â
Ryo nodded with a satisfied expression, while Abel shook his head slightly.
He had seen Ryoâs magic countless times, but every time, Abel couldnât help but think how terrifying it was.
It made all strength, speed, and technique meaningless.
A magic that demonstrated the fearsome power of a magician.
The frost pillar shrank a bit, lowering them to the same height as the ghost shipâs deck.
Ryo and Abel leaped onto the deck.
It had become a frozen wasteland.
And the crushed skeletons were vanishing.
âNot bad.â
The moment that voice echoed.
Clang!
The sharp sound of clashing swords rang out.
Abel had blocked a sword, faintly glowing blue, with his beloved blade.
âNice! Very nice, swordsman! Youâre a worthy companion for the magician who cast that spell!â
âYeah, thanks.â
The blue-glowing man laughed as he praised Abel, who responded with clear displeasure.
âItâs been a hundred years since someone stepped onto this deck. Last time, it was just one. Now, there are two of you. What to do.â
As soon as the blue manâs monologue endedâ
Clang!
Once again, the sound of clashing blades filled the air.
This time, Ryo had parried with his sword Murasame.
The attacker was a woman, also faintly glowing blue.
âIâll make both of you my thralls, to serve me forever.â
She said flatly, without a trace of emotion.
âThis is quite the problem. Iâm a magician⦠yet here I am, crossing swords.â
Ryo remarked, his voice louder than a mere whisper.
And the faintest hint of a smile playing on his lips.
âRyoâs a battle maniac after all.â
Abel muttered under his breath, though Ryo didnât hear him.
Thus, the battles on the ghost shipâs deck had begun, two duels unfolding simultaneously.
TLN: Please read my translations at , I did not give permission to any site to host my translations.
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