Nigel was born and raised in the slums of the Iron Horizon, a floating nation of repurposed aircraft carriers that had evolved into one of the most powerful maritime forces on the seas. Life aboard these massive vessels, linked together by a maze of barges and makeshift platforms, was unforgiving. In the Iron Horizon, survival wasn’t guaranteed—it had to be earned. The society valued strength, innovation, and the ability to pull your own weight, and those who couldn’t were left to fend for themselves or cast aside. It was a culture driven by merit and independence, traits Nigel always struggled to embody.
Growing up on the lower decks, Nigel was never more than a face in the crowd, another kid among thousands struggling to survive in a place where weakness wasn’t just frowned upon—it was a death sentence. The lower decks were the heart of the Iron Horizon’s underclass, a cramped, industrial maze of rusted hallways, leaking pipes, and makeshift shelters. It was a world far removed from the gleaming command towers and spacious quarters of the captains and engineers, where the powerful ruled and the privileged thrived. Down here, life was a constant grind. Families huddled together in small, overcrowded compartments, and the air was always thick with the acrid stench of machinery and sweat.
Nigel learned early on that you either toughened up or got left behind. The Iron Horizon’s culture of merit and strength was especially harsh in the lower levels, where opportunities were scarce, and survival meant fighting for every scrap. Whether it was for food, supplies, or just a place to sleep, competition was fierce. For a kid like Nigel, who didn’t stand out in any particular way—neither exceptionally strong nor particularly clever—blending in was both a blessing and a curse. It kept him out of trouble, but it also meant that nobody was coming to help if he ever needed it.
He spent his childhood navigating the unspoken rules of the lower decks: avoid the gangs that ran the black markets, don’t cross the repair crews who controlled the essential systems, and always be wary of those who saw weakness as an invitation to exploit. The captains and higher-ups rarely ventured into these areas unless they needed something, and when they did, it was to remind everyone that those who couldn’t contribute to the Iron Horizon’s survival had no place on the fleet. People were discarded as easily as broken tools.
Nigel’s days were spent doing whatever menial jobs he could find—hauling cargo, assisting mechanics, cleaning up the messes left behind by the more important members of the faction. It wasn’t glamorous, but it kept him fed. Dreams of rising through the ranks, of becoming one of the elite who walked the upper decks in sharp uniforms, quickly faded as he realized how few ever escaped the grind of the lower levels. He was just another nameless kid in a place that chewed people up and spat them out, and despite his best efforts, it seemed like his fate was already decided.
That was the reality of life on the lower decks: you were invisible unless you made yourself useful. And Nigel had never found a way to stand out. His future seemed bleak until desperation pushed him into the risky world of scavenging. He joined a crew tasked with the dangerous job of making runs to the land, where the promise of valuable salvage was outweighed by the lethal threats that lurked there—mutated creatures, contaminated landscapes, and the ever-present risk of infection.
Nigel soon realized that these trips weren’t for him. He had watched too many of his fellow scavengers meet gruesome ends, torn apart by monstrous creatures or consumed by the hostile environment. But the trades from successful hauls kept him going. As long as there were goods to be scavenged and bartered back at the Iron Horizon, it felt like the only option, even if each trip left him more disillusioned than the last.
His breaking point came during what should have been a routine scavenging mission. Ambushed by a raider family that part of the Saltborn Clans, Nigel’s crew was decimated, caught off guard and overwhelmed by the ruthless tactics of the seafaring marauders. In the chaos, Nigel realized something profound—he had no loyalty to the Iron Horizon anymore. The rigid meritocracy that had shaped his entire life suddenly felt hollow, its promises empty. So, in a split-second decision, he abandoned everything and joined the very clan that had attacked him.
Now, Nigel sails with the Saltborn, embracing their raider lifestyle. What started as an escape from the suffocating rigidity of the Iron Horizon has become something far more liberating, though at a cost he never expected. For the first time in his life, Nigel has found freedom—true, unfettered freedom. There are no councils of captains to answer to, no endless grind to prove his worth to a society that saw him as expendable. With the Saltborn, life is simpler, and in many ways, better. He has food, fuel, and the open sea, but it’s come at the expense of something deeper—his own moral compass.
At first, he hesitated. His first few raids, the adrenaline masked the unease. They raided smaller factions and nomad families, people not unlike the ones he grew up with, scraping by just like he had. The Saltborn took what they wanted—fuel, food, supplies—and left nothing but destruction in their wake. It was brutal, but in this world, survival had no room for sympathy. That’s what he told himself at first.
Nigel quickly learned to push aside any guilt or discomfort. The rewards were too great to ignore. Fresh food, fuel to keep the ships running, weapons, and gear. For someone who had grown up knowing hunger and lack, the sudden abundance was intoxicating. He no longer had to scrounge for scraps or rely on others’ charity. He could take what he needed, what he wanted, without question or consequence. Each successful raid solidified his new reality: this was the cost of freedom, and it was worth it.
But with every raid, he also had to learn to do things he once thought unimaginable. Attacking the defenseless, families with nothing but desperation in their eyes, scavengers who posed no real threat—he had become a part of the very cruelty that used to disgust him. There were moments, fleeting but sharp, when the screams of those left behind haunted him. A time when Nigel would have called them innocent, but that word has lost its meaning. What did innocence mean in a world where survival was everything? He told himself they would have done the same if they had the chance. That’s how he quieted the whisper of his old self.
That whisper, the moral voice he once had, now feels like a distant memory—a relic from a past life. It’s faint, almost insignificant, drowned out by the roar of survival and the thrill of victory. The line between right and wrong, once so clear in his mind, has blurred beyond recognition. In its place, he’s embraced a new set of rules, ones written by the Saltborn: take what you can, give nothing back, and never hesitate. Hesitation can cost you everything out here.
Nigel’s life is better in almost every way. He has the freedom he always craved, the autonomy to live on his own terms, and a level of comfort he never thought possible. But in gaining all of that, he’s also lost a part of himself. His old morals, his former conscience, are little more than echoes from the past, drowned by the rush of the wind and the sea as he sails toward his next raid.