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The Boatmaker's Apprentice: Engines Of Rebellion

Ren_Ren_7705
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Synopsis
Sequel to The Boatmaker’s Apprentice. The river will not remain quiet. After escaping the fall of Dillaclor, Sir. Wilkinson and his companions refuse to run again. Hidden along the reeds beyond the cliffs, they begin construction of a low-profile mechanical steamboat — part shelter, part weapon, part defiance — a vessel built not to flee, but to move unseen and strike where stone walls cannot reach. Their counterattacks begin with precision. Supply routes collapse overnight. Patrol boats vanish in fog. Watchtowers burn without warning. Whispers spread of a ghost engine gliding through the shallows before dawn. For the first time since seizing the throne, Nux is forced to react. And he reacts ruthlessly. The canals are fortified. The guard is purged and reshaped. Public punishments become quieter — more strategic. The city tightens under his control. But war does not stay contained within walls. As Dillaclor fractures under internal pressure, ships begin arriving from beyond the eastern horizon. Not merchants. Not allies. An unfamiliar banner rises along distant shores. A kingdom long absent from border affairs begins to take interest in instability — and in the river that feeds half the continent. Neither Nux nor the rebels anticipated a third force. And third forces do not wait for invitations. Within the resistance, strain begins to show. Roald’s ingenuity pushes their machines faster, larger, more daring — sometimes beyond caution. Liora finds herself navigating political currents far more dangerous than river ones. Isobel’s silence sharpens into decisions that may divide as easily as they unite. Wilkinson, architect of mobility, must face an unsettling truth: building something powerful enough to win a war may also make them visible to powers far greater than Dillaclor. Alliances shift. Information becomes weaponized. Trust grows conditional. What began as a rebellion against a tyrant becomes something far larger — A struggle over who controls the waterways… Who commands innovation… And who decides the future of kingdoms. When the river ignites this time, it will not be contained to one city. And not every enemy will wear the same face.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1, Emberwake

Fog lay low over the river, thin as breath against water.

Something moved within it.

Not drifting.

Guided.

The hull rode shallow, iron-banded wood slipping through reeds without splash. No sail caught the air. No oars disturbed the surface. Only a muted pulse carried beneath the deck — a contained rhythm, steady as a second heartbeat.

A figure stood at the stern, one hand resting against a compact engine housing bolted low and central. Through metal and timber, vibration traveled into bone.

Below deck, a valve adjusted with careful precision.

Steam rerouted.

The faint plume above the vessel thinned until it vanished entirely.

The craft became almost indistinguishable from debris caught in current.

Ahead, a lantern swayed lazily over the river's central channel.

Patrol.

Two silhouettes shifted aboard the larger boat — relaxed, unhurried. One laughed. The sound carried.

The smaller vessel did not slow.

At the bow, another figure raised two fingers.

The stern inclined their head once.

The rudder adjusted barely a degree.

Iron brushed against stalk and root with a soft hiss.

The patrol lantern drifted closer.

Ten yards.

Eight.

Five.

No call.

No alarm.

The larger vessel passed through the fog unaware.

Only when distance widened did the pulse beneath the deck deepen again.

A whisper rose from below.

"It holds."

A quiet reply from above.

"For now."

The fog thinned as the craft cleared the bend.

On the far bank, blackened stone stood where an old watchtower once monitored river traffic. Its upper half had already collapsed weeks prior — damaged, abandoned, waiting for repair.

Waiting.

The figure at the bow studied it.

A hand signal.

The pulse beneath the deck intensified.

Steam redirected through narrow-lined chambers.

Along the vessel's flank, concealed ports slid open with soft mechanical clicks.

Three compact charges launched in silent arcs.

They struck low.

Precise.

A breath of stillness—

Then the tower's weakened base failed.

Not an explosion.

A surrender.

Stone folded inward on itself with a heavy, controlled collapse. Dust rose, thick and sudden, swallowed quickly by fog.

By the time debris settled into the riverbank, the vessel was already turning.

Reeds parted.

Steam thinned.

It vanished the way it had come.

An hour later, two fishermen found the rubble.

They stood in silence, staring across the water.

"No blast," one muttered.

"Didn't hear one," the other replied.

They watched the surface.

For a moment, nothing.

Then—

A faint shimmer passed midstream, distorting the reflection of morning light before fading entirely.

The older man swallowed.

"It moves under the fog," he said.

"Who?"

He did not answer.

The vessel slowed only when the reeds thickened enough to swallow it whole.

Steam softened to a low hum.

From below deck, a young figure climbed up through the hatch, wiping soot from one cheek with the back of his wrist. His eyes were bright despite the heat.

He looked back at the water.

At the thin trail still barely visible in the warming air.

"It leaves a mark," he said quietly.

No one responded.

He studied the distortion again.

Heat trembling over the river's skin.

"Like an ember," he murmured.

The word seemed to hang there.

He tested it once more, softer but certain.

"Emberwake."

The figure at the stern turned slightly.

A pause.

Then a single nod.

No ceremony followed.

No discussion.

The engine resumed its steady rhythm.

The vessel carried its name forward.

By dusk, word would spread along the docks.

A tower fallen without warning.

A patrol that saw nothing.

Smoke without flame.

Something moving where nothing should move.

No one would agree on its size.

Or its shape.

But they would agree on one thing.

The river was no longer loyal to the city.

And somewhere beneath the reeds, the pulse of Emberwake continued — quiet, deliberate, waiting.