Myriad Heavens: Rise of the Rune God-Chapter 76: Pirate Den 3

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Chapter 76: Chapter 76: Pirate Den 3

Around them, more pirates were coming to the same conclusion. The initial alarm and confusion was giving way to excited chatter, people pulling up holographic displays and scanning the ship’s specifications from a distance.

Krell studied the readings. Merchant vessel, probably carrying cargo. Even if the cargo itself was worthless, the ship’s components were valuable. Drive systems, power cores, navigation arrays—all of it could be stripped and sold.

And they were stuck here with nothing to do.

"I’m going to take a look," Krell said.

Vex nodded. "Same. Syla?"

"Already on my way." She was pulling up a teleportation formation on her wrist device. "Meeting point is sector seven, platform nineteen. That’s closest to where the ship dropped in."

Krell activated his own teleportation array—a consumable talisman he kept for emergencies and opportunities. The formation activated around him, spatial energy gathering.

The last thing he saw before the teleport completed was the Freehold erupting into activity. Ships launching, people teleporting, communication channels lighting up with chatter. Every pirate organization in the system was mobilizing.

Three million pirates. All of them desperate, bored, and suddenly very interested in one merchant ship that had made the worst navigation error in history.

Sector seven was crowded.

Krell materialized on platform nineteen and immediately had to dodge to the side as another pirate teleported in right where he’d been standing. Then another. Then five more. Within seconds, the platform was packed with people, all staring out at the ship floating a few thousand kilometers away.

It looked exactly like the scans had indicated. Mid-sized merchant vessel, maybe two hundred meters long, painted in standard civilian colors—white hull with blue accents. The kind of ship you’d see at any trade port in Federation space, completely unremarkable except for the fact that it was here.

"Beautiful," someone muttered.

More pirates were arriving every second. Teleporting in, flying in on personal craft, arriving in small raiding ships. The space around sector seven was filling up fast, hundreds of vessels and thousands of individual cultivators all converging on the merchant ship.

Krell activated his communication channel and tuned to the Red Scars’ private frequency. "Anyone else from our group here?"

A voice crackled back. "Krell? It’s Mara. I’m at platform twenty-two with about fifteen others. You seeing this?"

"Yeah. Everyone’s mobilizing."

"Of course they are. That ship’s the biggest score anyone’s seen in months." Mara paused. "We should coordinate with the other organizations. Figure out how to split the loot before someone tries to claim the whole thing."

That was smart. With three million pirates all looking at the same target, things could get messy fast. Better to establish shares now than fight over them later.

But before Krell could respond, someone else beat him to it.

A booming voice echoed across every communication channel in the system, overriding private frequencies with sheer power. Krell recognized it immediately—Commander Torval, leader of the Crimson Blade organization, one of the largest groups currently hiding in Kaelen.

"ATTENTION ALL VESSELS. This is Commander Torval of the Crimson Blades. We are claiming primary rights to the merchant vessel in sector seven. Any organization wishing to participate in the raid will coordinate through us. Shares will be distributed based on contribution. Anyone who attacks independently will be considered hostile."

Krell grimaced. Of course Torval would try to take control. The Crimson Blades had numbers—probably twenty thousand members in the system right now—and Torval was Star Fusion realm. Strong enough to enforce his claim if it came to a fight.

Another voice cut in, this one female and sharp. "This is Captain Yara of the Void Serpents. The Crimson Blades don’t own this system, Torval. Multiple organizations have equal claim."

"Then let’s coordinate like adults," Torval shot back. "I’m setting up a command channel. All organization leaders join immediately. We divide this properly or we waste time fighting each other while Federation reinforcements potentially show up."

That got people’s attention. The word "Federation" made everyone nervous. If this ship had sent a distress signal before jumping...

No. Krell shook his head. Space jumps were too fast for distress signals. The ship had appeared out of nowhere—no time to call for help.

He watched as the communication channels organized themselves. Leaders coordinating, shares being negotiated, attack groups forming. It was chaotic but functional. Pirates were good at improvising.

Syla appeared beside him, having teleported from wherever she’d ended up. "This is going to be a circus."

"Organized circus," Krell said. "Torval’s actually handling it well."

"For now. Wait until people see what’s actually in that cargo hold. Then we’ll see how organized everyone stays."

Around them, the assault force was taking shape. Thousands of ships forming into loose formations, cultivators grouping by organization and power level. The merchant ship just floated there, seemingly unaware of the swarm gathering around it.

Krell pulled up the tactical display again. Still showing the same readings—merchant vessel, standard configuration, nothing unusual except for its presence here.

"Something feels wrong," he muttered.

Vex had made it to the platform too. He glanced at Krell. "What?"

"That ship. It’s just sitting there. No movement, no defensive formations activating, no attempt to flee."

"Maybe the crew’s in shock. Or dead. Space jump malfunctions kill people."

"Maybe." Krell kept watching the ship. His instincts—honed over fifteen years of raids and close calls—were screaming at him. Something was wrong.

But around him, thousands of pirates were already moving into attack position.

The assault began.

The first wave consisted of fast-attack ships—small craft designed to disable larger vessels quickly. They accelerated toward the merchant ship, weapons charging, boarding crews ready.

Krell watched from the platform, along with hundreds of other pirates who were waiting for the second wave or just observing.

The attack ships opened fire.

Energy beams, plasma torpedoes, kinetic rounds—all of it converged on the merchant ship’s hull.

And nothing happened.

The attacks hit the hull and... dissipated. Scattered. The energy weapons splashed against the white paint like water hitting stone. The kinetic rounds bounced off without leaving so much as a scratch.

The attack ships fired again. Same result.

"What the fuck?" Vex said.

On the communication channels, confusion erupted. Pirates demanding answers, attack ship pilots reporting their weapons were ineffective, organization leaders trying to figure out what was happening.

Krell’s blood went cold.

"That’s not a merchant ship," he said quietly.

Syla looked at him sharply. "What?"

"Merchant ships don’t have hull defenses that can tank concentrated fire from a hundred attack vessels without damage." Krell’s hand went to his weapon. "That’s military-grade shielding. Probably better."

Around the platform, other pirates were coming to the same conclusion. The excited chatter was dying, replaced by nervous muttering.

One of the attack ships tried ramming the merchant vessel. The pilot—probably Planetary Core realm based on the ship’s energy signature—accelerated to full speed and crashed directly into the hull.

The ship crumpled like paper. The merchant vessel didn’t even move.

"Retreat," someone said over the command channel. "Everyone retreat, this is a trap—"

But it was too late.

Ships were already trying to flee. Hundreds of them, breaking formation and accelerating away from the merchant vessel at maximum speed. Some headed for the edge of the system. Others dove toward planets or asteroid fields, looking for cover.

Krell grabbed Vex’s arm. "We need to leave. Now."

They ran for the edge of platform nineteen where Krell had left his personal craft—a small, fast ship barely big enough for two people. It wasn’t much, but it had a good FTL drive. If they could make it to the edge of the system and jump out...

The ship launched before he’d even finished strapping in. Vex was already at the controls, accelerating hard enough to make the inertial dampeners strain.

"Heading for the system edge," Vex said, hands flying across the control panel. "Activating FTL drive."

The ship shook as it broke atmosphere—or would have broken atmosphere if they’d been in one. Spatial transition. Going from stationary to faster-than-light in under three seconds. The stars stretched into lines.

Then they hit something.

The ship lurched violently, FTL drive screaming warnings. Vex cursed and cut the engines, dropping them back into normal space.

They were at the edge of the Kaelen System. Or rather, where the edge should have been.

Instead, there was a barrier.

A massive formation array stretching in all directions, completely encircling the system. It shimmered with barely-visible energy, the kind of power that made Krell’s spiritual sense ache just looking at it.

"What is that?" Vex whispered.

Krell knew what it was.

A containment field. Military-grade. The kind of thing used to trap entire fleets during war.

Around them, hundreds of other ships were arriving at the barrier, all of them trying to escape, all of them hitting the same wall.

Someone fired at it. A Solar Flare realm cultivator in a combat vessel, unleashing everything their ship had. The barrier rippled but held.

Someone else tried a different approach—a spatial tear technique, trying to rip a hole through the formation. Failed.

Krell watched a pirate activate what looked like a high-grade escape talisman—expensive, single-use item designed to teleport you out of life-threatening situations. The talisman activated, the pirate vanished, then reappeared five meters away. The barrier had blocked the teleport.

"We’re trapped," Vex said, his voice hollow.

On the command channel, chaos. Every organization leader was yelling at once, trying to coordinate, trying to find a way out. Some were still attacking the barrier. Others were calling for formation experts to analyze it. A few were already talking about surrender.

Krell opened a private channel to Mara and the other Red Scars. "Everyone listening?"

Several voices confirmed.

"The system is sealed. The merchant ship is a trap. The Federation set this up." He paused. "We’re trapped with three million pirates and a Federation military vessel. If we want to survive, we need to fight."

"Fight?" Mara’s voice was strained. "Fight a Federation ship that shrugged off concentrated fire from a hundred vessels?"

"Better than sitting here waiting to die or get captured." Krell pulled up the tactical display again. The merchant ship—or whatever it actually was—still floated in sector seven. Unmoving. Waiting. "Whatever that ship is planning, it involves all of us. We’re not escaping. So we fight."

Syla, still in the ship with them, was monitoring multiple communication channels at once. "Other organizations are reaching the same conclusion. Torval’s calling for a full mobilization. Every pirate, every ship, everything we have. Hit that vessel with overwhelming force."

Vex looked at Krell. "You really think we can win?"

"No." Krell was honest about it. "But I’d rather die fighting than surrender to Federation Marines."

He activated the Red Scars’ emergency channel, the one reserved for actual crises. "All Red Scars members in the Kaelen System. This is Krell. We are under attack by Federation forces. The system is sealed. Captain Vorin is unavailable, so I’m taking temporary command. Rally points are being distributed now. Prepare for combat. This is not a raid. This is war."

The ship’s communication panel lit up with responses. Two hundred Red Scars members scattered across the system, all acknowledging the order, all preparing for battle.

Krell looked out at the barrier still shimmering at the edge of the system. Three million pirates, trapped. One Federation vessel, waiting.

This was going to be a massacre.

The only question was whose.