As a ghost ship, the Silent Mary was more like a wreck than a working ship
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As a ghost ship, the Silent Mary was more like a wreck than a working ship. It looked worrisome because the sails were torn, but sailed at a godless speed, and the hull almost rotted up to resemble a large floating thoracic cage. Dark clouds gathered behind the ship, although the rest of the sky was clear. Salazar’s ship was like a sea monster, from which no pirate ship could escape, for its hull opened up like the mouth of a huge beast, then tearing its prey and drowning it. By the time the Silent Mary became a ghost ship, the gangways and their guardrails collapsed in several places and were no longer usable, forcing the crew of the ship to cross directly to the main deck. The ship’s prow, located under the beaupré, showed a woman holding a spear. Like many other Spanish ships of the time, the Silent Mary had a Howler-Billed mast at the end of the Beaupré. With her keel, bottom and lower decks almost entirely destroyed, her exposed members to the weather and many boards broken or missing, her sails in rags and all her mast broken, the Silent Mary was no more than a wreck. Under normal circumstances, any ship with such extensive damage would sink when it hits the water. However, defying the laws of physics, the Silent Mary continued to sail like a normal ship in sailing condition, even though it was more of a skeleton than a ship. Now a terrifying specter, she has become the main tool of Salazar’s revenge. Using his magic, Salazar could easily bend the bow of the ship to the rear and open the ship’s girders like the jaws of a giant sea monster. He then crushed the Silent Mary on the deck of an enemy ship, breaking it in half, while the Silent Mary, protected by Salazar’s magic, and despite its decrepit appearance, was apparently indestructible. Another aspect of the ship’s hull that could be transformed by Salazar’s will was the ability to animate the figurehead into a living, massive and apparently sensitive wooden monster that attacked enemies.
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As a ghost ship, the Silent Mary was more like a wreck than a working ship. It looked worrisome because the sails were torn, but sailed at a godless speed, and the hull almost rotted up to resemble a large floating thoracic cage. Dark clouds gathered behind the ship, although the rest of the sky was clear. Salazar’s ship was like a sea monster, from which no pirate ship could escape, for its hull opened up like the mouth of a huge beast, then tearing its prey and drowning it.
By the time the Silent Mary became a ghost ship, the gangways and their guardrails collapsed in several places and were no longer usable, forcing the crew of the ship to cross directly to the main deck. The ship’s prow, located under the beaupré, showed a woman holding a spear. Like many other Spanish ships of the time, the Silent Mary had a Howler-Billed mast at the end of the Beaupré.
With her keel, bottom and lower decks almost entirely destroyed, her exposed members to the weather and many boards broken or missing, her sails in rags and all her mast broken, the Silent Mary was no more than a wreck. Under normal circumstances, any ship with such extensive damage would sink when it hits the water. However, defying the laws of physics, the Silent Mary continued to sail like a normal ship in sailing condition, even though it was more of a skeleton than a ship. Now a terrifying specter, she has become the main tool of Salazar’s revenge. Using his magic, Salazar could easily bend the bow of the ship to the rear and open the ship’s girders like the jaws of a giant sea monster. He then crushed the Silent Mary on the deck of an enemy ship, breaking it in half, while the Silent Mary, protected by Salazar’s magic, and despite its decrepit appearance, was apparently indestructible. Another aspect of the ship’s hull that could be transformed by Salazar’s will was the ability to animate the figurehead into a living, massive and apparently sensitive wooden monster that attacked enemies.
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