Description
“Lady Mist” – February 1722
In February 1722, near Nassau in New Providence, the morning sun filtered gently through the sails of a modest two-masted merchant vessel making its slow journey toward port. The peaceful silence was suddenly shattered by the anxious ringing of a bell. Shouts rang out across the deck, and sharp whistle blasts signaled danger. From behind, a dark and powerful sloop advanced quickly toward the ship’s stern.
Warning cannon shots crashed into the sea, sending towering sprays of water across the decks of the Lady Mist. Above the approaching vessel, a black flag snapped violently in the wind—a clear and chilling declaration of who they were: pirates.
Every sailor who traveled these waters knew the risks. This region, known as “The Pirate Havens,” was lawless and remote, particularly around the Bahamian islands where imperial authority was weak and outlaws thrived. Pirate attacks often ended in surrender, or in short pursuits that turned brutal when resistance provoked violence—sometimes deadly.
As the pirates rushed forward, driven by greed and adrenaline, they failed to notice something unusual. Suddenly, the Lady Mist made a sharp turn to starboard, exposing her full broadside. Her gun ports swung open.
The attackers had made a fatal mistake.
The small “merchant” ship had already reached her true purpose. A devastating barrage of cannon fire erupted from her side, tearing through the pirate sloop in a storm of flame and destruction. Her powerful bombard cannons—strong enough to bring down a small fortress—reduced the pirate vessel to wreckage in moments.
Soon, stories spread from the Bahamas to the eastern Caribbean about a mysterious ghost ship that hunted pirates. Some claimed its captain was not human at all, but a terrifying sea creature—a mermaid with fire instead of hair.
But legends often grow from misunderstood truths.
The “mermaid” was real—not a creature of myth, but a fierce red-haired Irish woman born around 1700. Her name was Anne Bonny, one of history’s most famous female pirates. Active between 1718 and 1720, she was eventually captured and sentenced to death. Historical records never clearly revealed whether she was executed or released, and her fate became a mystery.
Until now.
According to this telling, Anne Bonny’s knowledge of piracy proved invaluable. Instead of facing the gallows, she was secretly commissioned by English authorities to combat the very criminals she once sailed beside. She was placed in command of a state-of-the-art warship known as the Lady Mist—a vessel designed to lure pirates into their own destruction.
—Jordan Dimitrov





