Thebaypirate - Extra Quality

"The Bay has its own laws," Croft said, stepping onto Eli’s dock as the fog rolled in. "Finders keepers is for children. You’ll sell me the coordinates."

For three hundred years, local legend whispered of the Crimson Kestrel , a privateer’s sloop that sank in 1722 not with Spanish silver, but with a chest of cursed ledgers. The ledgers named the "respectable" merchants of the Bay who secretly funded pirates to sabotage rival shipping lines. If found, the ledgers would rewrite the founding families of Maryland—turning monuments into monuments to fraud. thebaypirate

A modern-day corporate raider named Silas Croft had caught wind. Croft’s ancestor was the lead name in those ledgers. Now Silas ran a shipping conglomerate that bore the same stolen crest. He arrived at the marina not with a boat, but with a gleaming black helicopter and a lawyer who smiled like a shark. "The Bay has its own laws," Croft said,

"Not all treasure is gold. Not all pirates steal. Some just return what the tide borrowed." The ledgers named the "respectable" merchants of the