Incorporated with DeepSeek
**VIDEO TRANSCRIPT — IRONCLAD VLOG // EP.001 : “MONSOON KARMA”**
**[0:00–0:47]**
*[FADE IN FROM BLACK. The low throb of a hybrid ekranoplan engine. A single synth note, long and warm as wet tarmac. The image is night, heavy equatorial darkness, water like black glass. Then neon: Mumbai’s eastern waterfront reflecting in broken pinks and sodium orange. TITLE CARD in thin, sans-serif, white — IRONCLAD — fades in, holds, fades out.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
*(voice low, unhurried, close-mic’d)*
Some people measure a day by meetings. I measure it by the temperature of the deck under my bare feet when I step out of the wheelhouse at 2 a.m. and the whole city smells of monsoon iron, diesel, and fish being iced for the morning auction. My name doesn’t matter. The name of the boat does. They call her *The Goblin’s Wake*. Seventy metres of ground-effect composite, hull riding a cushion of damp air ten feet above the Arabian Sea. She’s my home, my office, and my answer to a supply chain that forgot who it was supposed to serve.
**[0:47–2:05]**
*[CUT TO: Handheld, walking fast. The camera — probably a stabilised rig — follows a figure in dark technical pants, a sleeveless high-collar vest, arms bare but for a slim data-gauntlet on the left wrist. He strides down a gantry ladder inside the vessel, through a tight companionway lit by indirect red strips. The engine hum changes pitch. We glimpse a cargo bay: not containers, but custom-moulded vacuum pods, waterproof crates stacked neatly, a heavy drone folded against the bulkhead. The man’s face is partially shadowed, jaw sharp, hair tied back.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The world thinks shipping is just the big boys — Maersk, COSCO, the Triple-E class that can’t even dock inside a city anymore. They need deep water, automated gantries, a thousand miles of asphalt between the quay and the end user. That’s not trade. That’s a logistics tumour. Trade is when a co-op of spice farmers in the Western Ghats can move their crop directly to a roasting house on Telok Ayer Street without touching a container. Trade is when a workshop in Reay Road doesn’t need a minimum order of 40 tonnes of scrap copper to survive. That’s what I do. I’m the gap in the system. And tonight, we’re loading at Sassoon Dock.
**[2:05–3:30]**
*[EXTERIOR SHOT: The katamaran glides, silent and massive, past the breakwater. Camera mounted low near the waterline. The craft’s hull is dark matte grey, no navigation lights except a ghost-blue band along the waterline. Mumbai’s skyline behind — new towers, old godowns, the bright scribble of the Bandra-Worli Sea Link in the distance. The boat slows to a drift. Rain begins, a sudden sheet that shimmers in the deck lights.]*
*[CUT TO: The man now on the open afterdeck. He lifts a hand to the rain, lets it run down his arm. Faces the camera for the first time. Late twenties, maybe early thirties, with eyes that hold both amusement and the kind of calm that comes from knowing escape routes. He’s not smiling.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(to camera, live audio now, rain pattering)*
People watch these vlogs for the lifestyle, right? The supercar, the penthouse, the watch that costs more than a village. I get it. But my currency is different. I push large sums, sure — I have to, fuel cells aren’t free and a ground-effect beast like this drinks like a widow — but every single rupee, every sing dollar, every peso I move ends up in the hands of the small. The night shift. The people the corporate world calls “informal.” I call them essential. And I use the corporations themselves to fund it. Their own emissions credits, their own “last-mile” grants, their own desperate PR. I take their money, I move their forgotten cargo, and I plant it exactly where the real city lives.
**[3:30–5:15]**
*[MONTAGE: Fast cuts now, a rhythm building. CLOSE-UP: the data-gauntlet flickering with AR overlays — shipping manifests, port clearances, bribe vectors. The screen reads: “SASSOON DOCK — BERTH 7 — WET WHARF — CARGO: 800KG PROCESSED METALS / 200KG AQUACULTURE SEED STOCK.” A drone detaches from the boat and hovers forward. A handheld shot follows Ironclad as he hops onto a crumbling stone quay, rain-slicked, directly into the heart of the old dock. No customs officers. Instead, a line of small godown doors, each spilling yellow light.]*
*[We see the ecosystem exactly as described: women mending nets by headlamp; a young guy arc-welding a trawler propeller in a lean-to; the ice-crushing micro-plant, its belt conveyor roaring; the smell practically wafts through the screen. Ironclad moves among them like a known figure. He stops, grasps forearms with an older man, a metal-scrap sorter. No dialogue, but the transaction is clear: a data transfer, a cargo manifest approved. The drone begins lowering a small pallet of bundled copper sheets into a workshop doorway.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
This is the immediate waterfront zone. 1.2 billion people live within ten clicks of a coastline like this. Packed into four percent of the planet’s habitable land. Before containerization killed the wharf, every one of these lanes had a counting house, a workshop, a merchant’s family living above the store. London’s Docklands, but without the museum ticket. Mumbai kept it alive. Singapore preserved the bones. Valparaíso still breathes it. And I’m here to make sure the next wave of trade doesn’t starve them. Small-bulk isn’t a niche. It’s the original algorithm.
**[5:15–6:50]**
*[CUT TO: Interior of the katamaran’s wheelhouse, which looks more like a minimalist observation lounge. Glass all around, glowing navigation screens set to dim. The storm outside is now a solid drumming. Ironclad sits in a low-slung pilot chair, one leg crossed, a cup of black coffee in his hand. Camera on a tripod, locked off. He’s looking directly into the lens with that same unblinking focus.]*
**IRONCLAD**
You asked me some questions. The ones from the comment thread. I don’t usually answer. But tonight’s a long haul to the Malacca Strait, and the sea state’s glass once we clear the monsoon cell, so… consider this my confession.
*[He leans forward, rests his elbows on his knees.]*
What did I do today? I bypassed a corporate supply chain that would have taken sixteen days and turned a 70-year-old ironsmith into a debtor. I took his bent, beautiful rebar hooks — handmade for a fishing fleet that can’t afford European tackle — and I’ll have them in a chandler’s shop in Valparaíso in 48 hours. No container, no middleman, no tariff code. I did that.
My dreams? I dream of a network of these. Not ports, but *coves*. A mesh of small landing sites from the Niger Delta to the Brahmaputra, served by craft like *The Goblin’s Wake*. Where a kid with a lathe in his kitchen can export without begging a bank. I’m already building it. I’ve seeded seventeen workshops in Mumbai alone with my own money. I’m an investor of the invisible.
**[6:50–8:30]**
*[The boat’s motion shifts subtly. A warning tone pings softly in the background. Ironclad glances at a screen, touches his gauntlet, and the drone outside automatically reroutes to secure the deck cargo. He continues as if nothing happened.]*
**IRONCLAD**
What would I die for? *(He pauses, smiles, but it doesn’t reach his eyes)* The grid. The real grid — the coastal band, the riverine multiplier, the towns on the Yangtze and the Rhine and the Ganges that forgot they used to move raw silk by junk and barge. If holding that line means I go down in a shallow-draft firefight off the coast of some freeport that never made the map… then okay. But I’d rather not.
What would I kill for? *(A longer pause. His jaw tightens.)* Anyone who tries to take this boat and use it to run product that poisons those same streets. I’ve seen corp-sanctioned phantom cargoes — e-waste, toxic chems dressed up as fertiliser — headed for ports without inspection. I’ve intercepted two. The boat’s got teeth. I don’t talk about that on camera. Let’s just say the Gulf of Thailand doesn’t always report its flotsam.
What would I never surrender? *The Goblin*. Not the vessel. The idea. The principle that the sea can still be a commons, not just a corporate corridor. No piece of paper from any Zurich boardroom will ever chain me to a deep-water mega-port and tell me who I can and cannot trade with.
**[8:30–10:20]**
*[CUT TO: External camera on a drone. The katamaran is under way again, accelerating silently, its hull leaving almost no wake, just a flattened mist. The Mumbai skyline recedes. The rain stops. The sky opens to a low-lying tropical moon, silvering the deck. Ironclad appears on the foredeck, now wearing a hooded, weatherproof cloak of some high-tech fabric. He walks right to the edge, toes over the precipice, looking down at the sea rushing ten feet below.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Last question. Is there anything I could not drop within 30 seconds when the heat comes around the corner?
*[He reaches into a pocket, pulls out a slim, featureless phone. A burner. He holds it over the water, then opens his hand. It falls, gone. He looks into the drone camera hovering near his face.]*
Nothing physical. Not the cargo, not the hard drives, not the weapons. But I could never drop a promise made to someone who can’t swim in this ocean of corporate pressure. The old woman in Reay Road who cried when I told her I’d take her son’s welded steel joints to a buyer in Tanjong Pagar at a margin that makes sense. That’s the cargo I can’t jettison. Loyalty is heavier than tungsten.
**[10:20–12:15]**
*[MONTAGE: Night passage. The boat skims past an unlit shoreline — fishing villages, a few fires on the beach. AR overlays show shipping lanes, traffic, the vessel’s silent encrypted IFF: “GOBLIN 1 — NO FLAG — SMALL BULK CARRIER.” Inside the wheelhouse, Ironclad reviews holographic manifests. He flicks through reports: “TELOK AYER SHOPHOUSE — COFFEE ROASTER — DELIVERY 0320 LOCAL. TANJONG PAGAR GODOWN — TIN INGOTS — RECEIVING 0445.” The music swells slightly — a retro synth track, warm, melancholic, a nod to the 80s but with a sub-bass edge.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Singapore is the mirror image. Mumbai is the raw nerve; Singapore is the preserved blueprint. Along the Singapore River, the godowns still stand. Shophouses still rise four storeys — workshops on the ground, living quarters above. The corporations swept away the real labour, turned it all into air-conditioned bistros, but the physical form is still there. You can still feel how the rubber and the tin came off the lighters, right into the sorting sheds, right into the hands of the families that built the entrepôt. My investments there are quiet. I bought three historic units — not to flip them, but to give them back to the craftspeople. A textile weaver, a small-batch coffee roaster, a bookbinder. Their rent is tied to turnover, not market rates. They don’t fill containers. They fill boxes that fit on my boat. And I make it work.
*[Interior shot: Ironclad’s gauntlet pings. A secure message. He reads it, a flicker of satisfaction. Then he looks into the camera, a new energy.]*
Someone in the *Barrio Puerto* of Valparaíso just placed an order for hand-woven sailcloth from a weaver in Kochi. That’s a 10,000-mile trip. My boat can do it in six days. The big ships can’t even dock there — the historic wharves are too tight. And that, right there, is the edge. The last-mile problem becomes my front door.
**[12:15–14:00]**
*[CUT TO: A sequence of him performing a “run” — Shadowrun style. It’s done with typical vlog sleekness but undeniable tension. He’s now wearing a fitted black tactical vest, no logo. He’s in the engine room, checking a heavily secured locker. He removes a sleek, customised sidearm — not ostentatious, purely functional — holsters it. He loads a compact submersible drone into a launch tube. The camera cuts to an external drone following the katamaran as it slips into a quiet cove near the Singapore Strait. No city lights yet. He disembarks silently onto a rubber craft, disappears into a mangrove-shrouded inlet. He returns forty-five minutes later, a small, sealed hard-case in hand. No explanation. He stows it, washes his face in the deck sink, looks at the camera calmly.]*
**IRONCLAD**
Sometimes a run pays in data that unlocks a shipping lane. Sometimes it pays in hard currency that I dump straight into a women’s fishing co-op in Chennai. You don’t need to know the specifics. What matters is that I can walk into a corporate tower at noon, use their own carbon-offset programme to fund a “sustainable logistics pilot,” and by midnight be moving embargoed medical supplies into a port where the docks are still 18th-century stone. I speak their language. I’m not anti-capital. I’m anti-monopoly. There’s a difference.
**[14:00–16:30]**
*[SLOW SEQUENCE. The boat is now drifting in the pre-dawn calm of the Strait. The water is oil-slick flat. The sky turning indigo. Ironclad sits cross-legged on the deck, a small portable grill beside him, cooking a piece of fish — likely the very fish bought at Sassoon Dock that night. He eats with chopsticks, looking east. The camera captures the quiet domesticity of a man who lives entirely on the move. The synth track fades to ambient pads.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I’m a one-man team by choice. I’ve tried crews. Trust is expensive, and it sinks faster than any hull. I have my drones, my AI navigator, a few allies in ports who know my face but not my name. The boat is the real crew. She’s alive in a way — her systems learn the wave patterns, anticipate squalls, hide her heat signature when necessary. She’s a ground-effect katamaran, which means she flies, technically. Not in the air, but on a cushion of compressed atmosphere, so fast she can outrun any patrol boat that draws water. She draws nothing. She can dock in a river mouth, a beach, a flooded street in a flooded city. The ultimate getaway vehicle.
**[16:30–18:45]**
*[CUT TO: Tanjong Pagar, Singapore — the shophouse district — in the grey light just before dawn. The camera follows Ironclad walking through the empty back lane. He’s in civilian clothes now — tailored but rumpled black linen, no tech visible. He stops at a shuttered godown door. A small AR sign glows: “TIN GODOWN — RESTORED 2026.” He touches the lock, it opens. Inside: sacks of spices, labelled by hand. He personally loads a few into a shoulder bag. A voice calls from upstairs — a middle-aged woman, sleepy, in Mandarin. He replies fluently, quietly. We see her smile, hand him a thermos. He bows slightly and leaves.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
This is what they don’t show you on those superyacht channels. The 5 a.m. handshake. The thermos of chrysanthemum tea from a woman whose grandfather unloaded rubber boats right here. I could write an algo-trading script and make a million while I sleep. But I’d rather move 50 kilos of peppercorns for a 70-year-old auntie and see her put her granddaughter through school. That’s wealth to me.
**[18:45–20:10]**
*[The camera now sits on a gimbal inside the wheelhouse, framed as a static vlog shot. Ironclad is back in his pilot’s chair, looking directly into the lens, the sun just beginning to glow on the horizon behind him. He’s visibly tired but content.]*
**IRONCLAD**
You want to know who I really am? I’m the guy who saw that 2.4 billion people live within 50 klicks of a coast, and decided that was a market — not for exploitation, but for liberation. I’m the one who realised that high-tech container ships need megaports far from the city, but that there are hundreds of historic wharves, abandoned because they’re too small for a Panamax vessel, sitting right where people actually live and work. Mumbai’s Sassoon Dock, Singapore’s godowns, Valparaíso’s Barrio Puerto — they’re waiting. I dock there, I trade there, I sleep with the hatch open and listen to the city breathe.
And the corps? They think I’m just a boutique logistics consultant. A “disruptor.” They write me into their sustainability reports. I take their money, channel it through shell foundations, and pour it into the exact neighbourhoods they’ve ignored. I’m the perfect crime: legal, moral, and utterly untouchable.
**[20:10–22:30]**
*[MONTAGE: A rapid-fire sequence showing the vessel’s capabilities. A drone shot of the katamaran accelerating to full speed, its ground-effect wings deploying, the sea churning white beneath. AR displays showing fuel efficiency, speed (220 knots), stealth mode. The boat disappears from radar. Then, a return to the human scale: Ironclad in a small workshop in Mumbai’s Reay Road area, surrounded by sparks, helping a welder move a sheet of metal. He’s sweating, laughing, no camera consciousness. The footage is clearly from a body cam or drone, unpolished. It feels real.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The hashtags: #noblessoblige — it’s not a joke. I was given a strange set of skills, a boat that shouldn’t exist, and a network of insurgent traders who still believe in the sea. That obliges me. #ironcladthegoblin — the name of my channel, my alter-ego, the myth I’m building so others might follow. #undergroundwars — because the fight for the world’s supply chains isn’t fought in boardrooms. It’s fought at the jetty, with a manifest and a ball of twine, under a moon so heavy you can taste the salt on your lips.
**[22:30–25:00]**
*[The video slows. A beautiful, lingering sequence: the katamaran at anchor just off an island, equatorial sun now fully up, the water impossibly blue. Ironclad is free-diving off the stern, no tank, just a mask. He swims up to a submerged drone camera, holds his breath, and makes a gesture — finger to his lips, then pointing toward the open sea. He surfaces, gasps, laughs, climbs aboard. Dripping wet, he picks up a small, waterproof handheld camera and addresses it directly.]*
**IRONCLAD**
If you’re still here, you’re probably wondering: is this real? Is this some ARG, some viral marketing? I promise you, the boat is real, the cargo is real, and the change is real. I’m going to show you how a single ground-effect craft, moving small-bulk cargo directly into the heart of coastal cities, can beat the trillion-dollar container industry at its own game — on service, on speed, and on heart. And I’m going to do it every night, while the system sleeps.
**[25:00–27:15]**
*[FINAL SEGMENT. A monologue, straight to camera, the background now a dawn-lit empty beach. He’s towelling off, hair wet, looking impossibly fit but also vulnerable. The luxury aesthetic is stripped away. It’s just a man and the sea.]*
**IRONCLAD**
“What did you do today?” was the first question. Let me flip it. Ask yourself: what did *you* do to put your hands on the real economy? Not the app, not the stock, not the crypto — the stuff that arrives on a wharf at 3 a.m. and feeds a neighbourhood. I’m offering a blueprint. It’s not about charity. It’s about remembering that before the mega-factory, before the intermodal container, before the sterile security zones, we had ports that were part of the city’s bloodstream. Mumbai, Singapore, Valparaíso — they’re proof it can still be done. And those 1.2 to 2.4 billion people living by the water? They’re not a statistic. They’re your distribution network.
So here’s the deal. I’m going to keep posting these. Not for fame. For recruits. Not soldiers — traders, fabricators, pilots, hackers. You see the gear, the boat, the lifestyle, but the real flex is this: tonight I’ll sleep with the hatch open, and the only sound will be the water, and I’ll know that somewhere in a by-lane of Mumbai, a kid who fixed my hull will be able to afford school. That’s a return on investment you can’t compound in any bank.
**[27:15–29:30]**
*[The shot slowly pulls back, rising on a drone. The katamaran, sleek and dark, sits in the shallows. Ironclad is a small figure, now dressed, walking toward the boat. The sun is a perfect orange disc. The synth track returns — a triumphant, slow-building crescendo that never quite becomes bombastic, staying moody, classy. The screen begins to fade to black.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
This was episode one. “Monsoon Karma.” Next time, we’ll be on the other side of the planet, running small-bulk cocoa from a co-op in Ecuador straight to a chocolatier in the Barrio Puerto. You’ll see what the heat really looks like — not crime, not over-saturated vice — but the quiet, brutal, beautiful heat of the equatorial night, where the only law is the tide and the only god is a swift boat.
*[The video fades to full black. A single line of white text appears:]*
*What would you never surrender?*
*[End card: channel logo — an abstract goblin’s head forged from iron, above the hashtags in sequence — #noblessoblige #ironcladthegoblin #undergroundwars. The synth chord holds, then cuts to silence. Video length: 29:48.]*
...
**VIDEO TRANSCRIPT — IRONCLAD VLOG // EP.002 : "MADE OF SCARS"**
**[0:00–0:52]**
*[FADE IN FROM BLACK. No music yet. Just the sound of open ocean at night — a deep, rhythmic swell. The camera is fixed on a single point: Ironclad's hands, resting on the pilot console. The left hand is still, but the right slowly rotates a small object between thumb and forefinger. It catches the dim red instrument light: a spent bullet casing, worn smooth, almost polished. TITLE CARD fades in silently — IRONCLAD — and fades out.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
*(voice lower than Episode 001, almost a murmur, as if speaking to himself)*
They asked in the comments. Hundreds of them. "How did you afford the boat? Who backed you? Trust fund? Crypto? Cartel?" People always want the clean answer. The pitch deck. The seed round. But clean money doesn't build a ghost ship. Clean money leaves a paper trail, and paper trails get you killed — or worse, owned.
*[He sets the bullet casing down on the console. It makes a small, final click.]*
No. My starting capital came from war.
**[0:52–2:15]**
*[The screen cuts to black for three full seconds. Then a slow pan across the interior of the katamaran's arms locker — not a massive arsenal, but surgical. A compact bullpup rifle, matte black. A sidearm with custom grip. A sheathed ceramic knife. Everything meticulously clean, mounted in shock-proof cradles. The camera lingers on each piece, then pulls back to reveal Ironclad standing before the locker, shirtless, his back to the lens. Across his shoulders, a map of old wounds: three parallel slashes — claws or shrapnel — and a circular scar near the right kidney. He reaches for a black technical shirt, pulls it on slowly, covering the history.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I stepped out of the European underground wars as a winner. I don't say that with pride. I say it as a matter of record. If you don't know what those wars were, you weren't supposed to. They happened in the cracks between the headlines — Brussels, Berlin, Bucharest, Belgrade. Not nation-state conflicts. The other kind. Corporate black ops versus corporate black ops. Private intelligence firms running deniable assets through cold streets. And in the middle of it all, people like me. Ghosts for hire. Deniable, disposable, and — until someone decided otherwise — useful.
*[He turns to face the camera, pulling the shirt down. His expression is unreadable, but there's a weight behind his eyes that wasn't in the first episode.]*
I didn't start as a trader. I started as a weapon.
**[2:15–4:00]**
*[CUT TO: The katamaran underway, somewhere in the South China Sea. Night. The sea is rough — not stormy, but heavy, the kind of sea that makes lesser vessels turn back. The Goblin's Wake cuts through it like a blade, her ground-effect cushion absorbing the chaos. Camera on a drone, circling the boat in wide, sweeping arcs. The synth track fades in — not retro, but something darker, industrial, with a distant guitar drone reminiscent of Stone Sour's "Made of Scars."]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I was part of a unit. Eight of us. Specialized in extraction, interdiction, and — when the contract demanded — elimination. We worked for a consortium of European intelligence agencies that didn't officially exist. Our handler was a man named Kellermann. German. Impeccable suits. Impeccable lies. He promised us retirement packages, new identities, a cut of the operational profits. We were young enough to believe him.
*[Pause. The drone shot holds on the boat, alone on the black water.]*
We were stupid enough to believe him.
The last operation was in Tallinn. A cybernetics lab, off the books, doing things the Geneva Convention would have burned at the stake. Our job was to extract a scientist. Clean in, clean out. But Kellermann had sold us. The opposition knew we were coming. They were waiting.
I was the only one who walked out.
**[4:00–6:15]**
*[CUT TO: Interior. Ironclad in the galley, making coffee by hand — a slow, ritualistic process. Grinding beans, heating water, pouring with precision. The domesticity is jarring against the narration. He doesn't look at the camera.]*
**IRONCLAD**
After Tallinn, I spent two years hunting. Not for revenge — that's too simple a word. Revenge implies emotion. This was accounting. Kellermann had taken my team, my friends, my belief that there was any honour in the work. He owed me a debt, and I intended to collect.
I followed him through six countries. He had protection — dirty cops in France, a section chief in Interpol who fed him intel, a former Stasi asset running a private security firm in Vienna. The whole rotten ecosystem. And one by one, I dismantled it.
*[He pours the coffee, takes a sip, finally looks into the lens.]*
I didn't kill them all. Not at first. At first, I tried the legal route. Gathered evidence. Compiled dossiers. Sent encrypted files to journalists, oversight committees, the bodies that are supposed to police the shadows. Nothing happened. The machine protected itself. And I learned the lesson that every idealist eventually learns: the system doesn't correct itself. It protects itself.
So I corrected the system.
**[6:15–8:30]**
*[CUT TO: A sequence shot in a different style — almost like fragmented memories. Quick cuts, handheld, degraded footage. A rainy street in Vienna. A door opening. A flash of muzzle fire. A body dropping. Then Berlin — a parking garage, a car exploding silently in the distance. Then a ferry terminal in Helsinki — a man in an overcoat, walking calmly, then suddenly not. The violence is clinical, brief, unglamorous. Ironclad's face is never shown in these shots. Only his hands. Only the results.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Kellermann was the last. I found him in a chalet near Interlaken, Switzerland. He'd retired. Gout. A bad hip. He was feeding ducks on a lake when I walked up. He didn't seem surprised. He said, "I always knew it would be you."
I asked him if he had anything to say for my team. He said, "They knew the risks."
I told him that wasn't good enough.
*[Long pause. The coffee cup is set down with deliberate care.]*
He didn't suffer. That's more than he gave my friends. But before he died, he gave me something. Access codes. Offshore accounts. The consortium's black budget, hidden in layers of shell companies and crypto wallets stretching from Zurich to Singapore. The money they'd promised us, plus forty years of compound interest on their sins.
I took it all. Every last cent. And I used it to build *The Goblin's Wake*.
**[8:30–10:15]**
*[CUT TO: The arms locker closing. Ironclad locks it with a biometric seal, then turns to a small, reinforced safe. He opens it. Inside, no weapons. Just a single object: a photograph, creased and faded. Eight figures in tactical gear, faces obscured, arms around each other's shoulders. Somewhere snowy. He looks at it for three seconds, then closes the safe.]*
**IRONCLAD**
So yes. I'm still armed. The locker you just saw isn't for show. But I made a promise to myself when I watched Kellermann's body fall into that Swiss lake: I would never kill for money again. And I would never kill to protect a system that eats its own. The arsenal stays because the world is full of predators, and I carry valuable cargo. But the war — my war — is over.
*[He turns to the camera, and for the first time in the episode, there's something like peace in his face — hard-won, but real.]*
They were all dead who owned me and refused to pay. All of them. Kellermann, his handler, the Interpol mole, the Stasi ghost. No loose ends. No unfinished business. No dirty cops digging through cold cases. No secret service agents tracking an anomaly in their budgets. I made sure of it. And when it was done, I walked out of the European underground and into the open sea.
That's where the second life began.
**[10:15–12:00]**
*[The Stone Sour track swells properly now — "Made of Scars" playing low, instrumental at first, then the opening lines barely audible under the narration. The katamaran continues its night passage, now approaching the Strait of Malacca. Cargo lights flicker in the distance. Ironclad stands on the foredeck, wind whipping his hair, looking east.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
"This one came from looking, this one opened twice. These two seemed as smooth as silk, flush against my eyes." I know those lyrics. I've lived them. Every scar on my body — and there are more than you saw — is a receipt. Every one of them paid for. And now, every container I move, every co-op I fund, every corrupt customs officer I bribe to look the other way — that's the interest on the debt the world still owes the people who can't collect it themselves.
The money I took from Kellermann wasn't clean. It was blood money. But I've spent four years washing it — not through shell companies, but through action. The workshops in Mumbai. The shophouses in Singapore. The fishing co-ops in Valparaíso. Every rupee, every sing dollar, every peso is a drop of bleach on a stained past.
I don't need absolution. But I do need purpose. And this — *[he gestures at the boat, the sea, the horizon]* — this is purpose.
**[12:00–14:30]**
*[CUT TO: A navigation sequence. AR overlays show the approach to Singapore's southern islands. The boat's AI voice speaks softly — "Approaching waypoint. Customs corridor clear. Heat signature nominal." Ironclad moves through the vessel with practiced efficiency, prepping for arrival. The camera follows him down a ladder, through the cargo bay. We see tonight's load: small-bulk shipments destined for three different godowns, tagged with handwritten labels in multiple languages.]*
**IRONCLAD**
People assume you need millions to start something like this. You don't. You need enough to build or buy a vessel that can outrun anything on the water, and enough left over to seed your first five trade relationships. After that, the cargo pays for itself. My burn rate is shockingly low — ground-effect propulsion is efficient, I catch my own fish half the time, and I don't pay rent. The boat is my home. The sea is my utility bill.
*[He picks up a small crate labeled "Kochi Weavers Collective — Handloom Cotton — For Barrio Puerto Textiles, Valparaíso." He smiles — a genuine, unguarded smile.]*
This right here? This pays better than any black op ever did. Not in money. In meaning.
The capital was the key, though. I won't pretend otherwise. Kellermann's stolen fortune was the engine. But the fuel — the thing that keeps this boat moving — is the belief that trade doesn't have to be a weapon. It can be a lifeline. And I'm going to prove it, one cargo at a time.
**[14:30–16:45]**
*[CUT TO: Dawn in Singapore. The katamaran slips into a quiet anchorage near the mouth of the Singapore River. The sky is pink and gold. The city's towers are silhouettes. Ironclad goes through his arrival checklist: securing the boat, prepping the cargo drone, checking the tide tables. The ritual is calming, almost meditative. He's humming, tuneless and soft.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I said last episode that I'd answer the hard questions. What would I die for. What would I kill for. What would I never surrender. This episode, you got the prequel. The origin story no pitch deck would ever include. And I'm telling it because I want you to understand something about the world I'm trying to build.
It's not naive. It's not utopian. It's built on a foundation of violence and blood, because that's the only foundation the old world left us. But the structure rising from that foundation — the trade network, the co-ops, the small-bulk rebellion — that's clean. That's new. That's what happens when a weapon decides to become a tool.
*[He pauses, looking out at the waking city.]*
I don't need to kill anymore. I proved that in Europe. I proved that when the last name on my list went into the cold ground and I didn't add another. The arsenal stays because the world doesn't always reward pacifism. But the hunger? The need to hunt? That's gone. It died with Kellermann. It drowned in that Swiss lake.
Now I hunt for cargo. For trade routes. For the next community of makers and breakers who need a fast boat and a faster friend.
**[16:45–19:00]**
*[MONTAGE: The delivery run. Ironclad, in civilian clothes — dark linen, collar up, looking like a tired angel — walks through the pre-dawn streets of Tanjong Pagar. The camera follows him as he drops small packages at shophouse doorways: coffee beans for a roaster, tin samples for a jeweler, a handwritten letter from a supplier in Kochi to a buyer in Singapore. No drones. No tech. Just a man and his feet and the city waking up around him.]*
*[He stops at a small temple, Hindu, painted in vivid colours. Lights a stick of incense at the outdoor shrine. Stands there for a moment, head bowed, not praying — remembering. The Stone Sour track fades out, replaced by the ambient sounds of the city: scooters, temple bells, the distant clang of a port crane.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The European underground wars created people like me. Scars. Survivors. Weapons without handles. Some of us became mercenaries. Some of us became alcoholics. Some of us became suicides waiting to happen. I became a trader. A sailor. A one-man fleet with a boat that doesn't touch the water and a conscience that's still learning how to sleep through the night.
But I sleep. That's the miracle. After everything — after Tallinn, after the hunt, after the chalet by the lake — I still sleep. Not always well. But always with the hatch open. Always with the sound of the sea. Always knowing that the next day's work will build something instead of destroying it.
If that's not winning, I don't know what is.
**[19:00–21:15]**
*[CUT TO: Back aboard The Goblin's Wake. The boat is at anchor, engines silent. Ironclad sits in the wheelhouse, the camera locked off on a tripod. He's tired but present. The dawn light is full now, golden and warm. He holds the bullet casing again, rolling it between his fingers.]*
**IRONCLAD**
This was the first round I ever fired in anger. Brussels, 15 years ago. I kept it as a reminder of what I used to be. I keep it next to the photo of my team. Two sides of the same coin.
When people ask me now — investors, partners, the occasional journalist who thinks I'm just an eccentric logistics entrepreneur — they want the clean story. The pitch deck. The seed round. I give them the version that's safe for public consumption. But this channel isn't for them. This channel is for the people who look at the world and see the cracks. The ones who know that the system is broken and the only way to fix it is from outside.
So here's the truth, unfiltered. My starting capital was stolen from a dead man who stole it from governments who stole it from taxpayers who never knew it existed. I'm a thief. But I'm a thief with a purpose. And every dollar of that stolen fortune is being put to work in the service of people who were never meant to have a seat at the table.
That's the deal. That's the balance. That's how I sleep at night.
**[21:15–23:30]**
*[The camera pulls back slowly. Ironclad stands, stretches, walks to the wheelhouse window. Outside, a small fishing boat putters past. The fisherman waves. Ironclad waves back. A simple human moment. The synth track returns — softer now, almost ambient, a reprise of the "Made of Scars" melody stripped down to a single sustained chord.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
In the comments for the last episode, someone wrote: "This is performative. You're just another influencer with a better aesthetic." Maybe. You can believe that if you want. But I'm not selling anything. I'm not monetizing. I'm not asking for subscribers. I'm documenting something real — a network, a movement, a quiet revolution in the way goods move from people who make them to people who need them.
And if I'm an influencer, then let me influence you to do one thing: look at your coast. Your river. Your abandoned wharf. Ask yourself what used to move there before the containers came. Ask yourself if you could move it again.
You don't need a fortune. You don't need a ghost ship. You need a boat, a buyer, and the willingness to operate in the gaps.
Everything else is just scars. And we've all got those.
**[23:30–25:00]**
*[FINAL SEQUENCE: The katamaran getting under way again. The anchor lifts. The engines hum to life. The ground-effect wings deploy with a soft hydraulic sigh. Ironclad is at the helm, the morning sun behind him, the open sea ahead. The camera is on a drone, pulling back, back, back until the boat is a small dark shape on a vast blue canvas.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Next episode, we cross the Pacific. Valparaíso. The Barrio Puerto. I'll show you what a 19th-century port district looks like when it's still alive — not preserved, not gentrified, but grinding, working, surviving. And I'll introduce you to a chocolatier who's been waiting six months for a shipment of Ecuadorian cocoa that the big carriers wouldn't touch because her order was too small.
That's what I do. That's who I am. A weapon turned into a delivery service. A killer turned into a trader. A ghost who found his purpose in the lives of the living.
*[The screen fades to black. The synth chord holds, then fades to silence. White text appears, line by line:]*
*"This one came from looking, this one opened twice."*
*— Stone Sour, "Made of Scars"*
*What would you never surrender?*
*[End card: channel logo — iron goblin's head. Hashtags: #noblessoblige #ironcladthegoblin #undergroundwars #madeofscars. Video length: 24:52.]*
...
**VIDEO TRANSCRIPT — IRONCLAD VLOG // EP.003 : "CAPITAINE"**
**[0:00–1:15]**
*[FADE IN FROM BLACK. The sound of a railway station — the cavernous echo of announcements in French, the screech of steel on steel, the percussion of footsteps on old stone. A single held note, low and mournful, like a cello bow drawn across rust. TITLE CARD fades in — IRONCLAD — and fades out. The image resolves: Gare de Marseille-Saint-Charles, late afternoon. The light is amber, thick with dust motes, slanting through the great arched windows. The camera is static, positioned low, looking up the broad stone staircase that descends to the main concourse.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
*(voice quiet, reflective, the close-mic intimacy of a confession)*
Marseille. Oldest city in France. Founded by Greeks, built by Romans, run by corsairs, traders, and thieves for two and a half thousand years. This station sits on a hill above the Vieux-Port, and if you sit on these stairs long enough, you'll see the whole human condition pass by. The hopeful. The broken. The ones who just got off a boat from somewhere they can never go back to.
I've been sitting here for three hours. The leather I'm wearing is from a farm outside Bangkok — Thai alligator, sustainably raised, harvested by men who've been tanning hides for six generations. I bought it from their co-op. Paid double their asking price. It still smells like the curing shed, like salt and tannin and something ancient. I wear it because it reminds me that beautiful things can come from hard places.
*[The camera cuts to a closer angle. Ironclad sits on the stairs, about halfway up, back against the stone balustrade. He's wearing the jacket — deep charcoal, almost black, with a subtle pebbled texture visible even on camera. Beneath it, a simple dark shirt. His jeans are worn, his boots scuffed. He looks like a man who could afford anything but chooses things that last. In his left hand, a small hand-rolled cigarette, king-size paper, burning slow. He takes a drag, exhales, watches the smoke rise into the amber light.]*
I'm waiting. I don't know for what. But Marseille has a way of providing.
**[1:15–3:00]**
*[The camera holds on Ironclad's face as his eyes track something off-screen. Footsteps on stone. A figure enters the frame from below — a young Black man, early twenties, carrying a worn duffel bag, the kind that's seen too many bus stations and not enough lockers. He's tall, thin in the way of someone who's been underfed but not broken, with eyes that have learned to expect nothing. He climbs the stairs slowly, each step deliberate. When he reaches Ironclad's level, he stops. Not coincidentally. Deliberately.]*
**YOUNG MAN**
*(in old, formal French — the French of a former colony, preserved like amber)*
Pardonnez-moi, monsieur. Êtes-vous de bonne caractère... et inapte définitif?
*[Translation subtitle appears at bottom of screen: "Forgive me, sir. Are you of good character... and permanently unfit?"]*
*[Long pause. The ambient station noise seems to recede. Ironclad looks up at the young man — really looks. The young man holds his gaze. There's no challenge in it. No begging. Just a question asked by someone who has nothing left to lose.]*
*[Ironclad's expression shifts — a flicker of recognition, of shared knowledge. He nods. Once. Slowly. His eyes hold a deep, quiet sadness.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(in French, then switching to English for the vlog)*
Oui.
*[He takes another drag of the cannabis cigarette, holds it, exhales toward the high ceiling.]*
So was I.
*[He gestures to the step beside him. The young man hesitates, then sits. Places his duffel between his feet. The camera reframes slightly to hold both of them in shot.]*
I did go back to a place I never wanted to go back to.
*[He turns to the young man, studying him.]*
How is it with you today?
**[3:00–4:45]**
**YOUNG MAN**
*(in thick African French — the accent of someone who grew up speaking three languages before French, each layer audible in his vowels)*
The same. They sent me back. Côte d'Ivoire first, but I cannot stay there. The things that happened... I came north. Through Algeria. Across the sea. And now I am here, and here does not want me either. They gave me a paper that says "inapte." Unfit. For work. For papers. For a life. But what they mean is unfit for their system. Their boxes. Their categories.
*[He pauses, looking down at his hands. They are strong hands, callused, the hands of someone who has worked.]*
I was a mechanic. On boats. Small boats, fishing boats, in Abidjan. But here, without papers, without a certificate, I am nothing. Less than nothing. A problem to be processed.
*[Ironclad listens without interrupting. The camera catches the smoke curling between them, a fragile bridge.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(switching back to English, addressing both the young man and the camera)*
"De bonne caractère et inapte définitif." Do you know how long it's been since I heard that phrase? It's the old colonial formulation. The French Empire used it to classify the ones who couldn't be assimilated. Good character — meaning you weren't a criminal, you weren't a troublemaker, you followed the rules. But permanently unfit — meaning the system had no place for you anyway. You could be virtuous and still be rejected. You could do everything right and still be told you don't belong.
*[He turns to the young man, switching to French.]*
What is your name?
**YOUNG MAN**
Joseph. Joseph Kouassi.
**IRONCLAD**
Joseph. I have a question for you. And I want you to think carefully before you answer.
*[He stubs out the cigarette on the stone step, tucks the remnant into a small tin.]*
Would you accompany me? I need someone willing to become a Captain. But a Captain of a boat.
**[4:45–6:30]**
*[Joseph stares at Ironclad. The camera tightens on his face — disbelief, suspicion, a tiny spark of something he's learned to suppress. Hope.]*
**JOSEPH**
A boat? What kind of boat? You are... what? A fisherman? A smuggler?
**IRONCLAD**
*(a small smile)*
Yes. Both. Neither. I'm a trader. I move cargo that the big ships won't touch, to ports the big ships can't reach. My boat is called *The Goblin's Wake*. She's seventy metres, ground-effect, faster than anything on the water. And she needs a crew. Not a large crew — I've been running her alone for four years. But I'm building a network now, not just a route. I need people who understand boats. People who know what it means to be told they don't belong, and then find a place anyway.
*[He stands, slowly, and offers Joseph his hand.]*
I can't promise you papers. Not yet. I can't promise you safety — the work has enemies. What I can promise you is a purpose. A wage. A place to sleep where no immigration officer will ever knock on the door. And the chance to be a Captain — not of my boat, but of your own, one day. The network grows, Joseph. It needs people who are "inapte définitif." Unfit for their system. Perfect for mine.
*[Joseph looks at the offered hand. The camera holds on his face — a long, searching moment. Then he takes it. His grip is firm.]*
**JOSEPH**
*(in French, then English, looking directly at the camera for the first time)*
Show me the boat.
**[6:30–8:15]**
*[HARD CUT to: Open sea. The Mediterranean, vast and impossibly blue. The camera is on a drone, circling. Below, *The Goblin's Wake* sits at anchor, but she's not alone. Surrounding her are four other vessels — smaller, older, but clearly in the process of being refurbished. They're ex-European vacation bay day-sailers, the kind of boats that once carried tourists around the Greek islands or the Croatian coast. Now they're being transformed: cargo holds cut into their decks, cranes being mounted, hulls reinforced. Work lights strung between them. The scene hums with activity.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Two weeks later. The Ionian Sea, somewhere between Sicily and the Peloponnese. What you're looking at is the beginning of a fleet. Four ships, bought at auction from failed holiday charter companies — boats that were built for pleasure and abandoned when the money ran out. I got them for nothing. The refit cost more than the hulls, but refits are my specialty.
*[The camera moves in closer. We see workers on the decks — a mix of nationalities, a mix of ages. Some are clearly shipwrights. Others are young men and women learning as they go. And there, on the deck of the nearest ship, is Joseph. He's stripped to the waist, sweat glistening on his dark skin, working a welding torch on a cargo crane mount. He's smiling — the kind of smile that comes from physical work, from competence, from being needed.]*
*[The camera cuts to Ironclad on the afterdeck of *The Goblin's Wake*. He's watching the operation through a pair of AR glasses, but he lowers them to speak directly to the camera.]*
**IRONCLAD**
Joseph hasn't stopped working since we left Marseille. The kid is a natural. He understands boats the way I understand weapons — intuitively, in his bones. His papers say "inapte définitif." Permanently unfit. But out here, he's the most capable man on deck. The system that rejected him is the same system that can't see value unless it comes in a container marked with a corporate logo.
We're going to change that.
**[8:15–10:30]**
*[MONTAGE: The cargo operation. One of the refurbished ships pulls alongside *The Goblin's Wake*. It's loaded with small-bulk cargo — crates of olives from a Greek co-op, handwoven textiles from a women's collective in Crete, barrels of small-batch olive oil. The katamaran's robotic telescope cranes extend with a smooth hydraulic whine, articulated arms unfolding like the legs of a waking spider. They reach across the gap between vessels, plucking crates from the smaller ship's deck and swinging them into the bay of *The Goblin's Wake*.]*
*[The camera captures the ballet of it: the precision of the cranes, the economy of motion, the way Ironclad's gauntlet controls the entire operation with small gestures. Joseph is in the cargo bay, guiding each crate into its slot, securing it with quick, practiced movements. He calls out in French, then English, then a dialect of Côte d'Ivoire — switching languages as naturally as breathing.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
These cranes are my design. Robotic, telescopic, capable of unloading a small freighter in half the time it would take a conventional port. They're guided by an AI that learns from every operation, adjusting for sea state, weight distribution, the particular quirks of each ship in the fleet. The future of small-bulk shipping isn't about cheap labour — it's about smart labour. And smart labour means giving people like Joseph the tools to do the work of ten.
*[Cut to: Ironclad in the wheelhouse, watching the operation on a holographic display. The AI voice speaks softly: "Cargo transfer 73% complete. ETA to Valparaíso: 72 hours. Fuel efficiency at 94%." He touches the display, adjusting something, then turns to the camera.]*
**IRONCLAD**
The fleet concept is simple. The katamaran is the fast mover — long-haul, high-value, priority cargo. The refurbished day-sailers are the feeders. They work the coasts, collecting from small producers, bringing it to rendezvous points where I can transfer without ever touching a major port. It's a distributed network. Hard to track. Harder to stop. And every single person working it was rejected by the system that's supposed to include them.
**[10:30–12:45]**
*[CUT TO: Evening. The operation is complete. The sun is setting over the Ionian Sea, turning the water to molten copper. Ironclad sits on the foredeck of *The Goblin's Wake*, the alligator jacket draped over his shoulders against the cooling air. Joseph approaches, carrying two bottles of beer. He hands one to Ironclad and sits beside him. The camera is on a tripod, capturing the scene with the stillness of a photograph.]*
**JOSEPH**
*(in English now, his accent still thick but his confidence growing)*
I have been thinking about what you said. At the station. About going back to a place you never wanted to go back to.
*[He takes a sip of his beer.]*
Where was it? For you?
*[Long pause. Ironclad stares at the horizon. The camera tightens on his face — the scarred shoulders visible above the jacket, the bullet casing on its chain around his neck.]*
**IRONCLAD**
Europe. The underground. A world of black ops and betrayed trust and bodies that will never be found. I got out. I swore I'd never go back. But last month, I had to. There was a debt — not mine, but someone else's. A woman in Brussels who helped me during the war. She was in trouble. I went back for three days. I did things I thought I'd never do again. And I walked out clean, but the taste of it is still in my mouth.
*[He drinks. The beer bottle clinks softly against his ring.]*
That's why I was in Marseille. I was... recalibrating. Sitting on those stairs, watching the trains come and go, trying to remember who I am now. Not who I was.
*[He turns to Joseph.]*
And then you walked up and asked me if I was of good character and permanently unfit. And I thought: there it is. There's the answer. The universe doesn't give you coincidences. It gives you mirrors.
**JOSEPH**
*(quietly)*
I am glad I found you, patron.
**IRONCLAD**
Don't call me patron. Call me Ironclad. Or Goblin, if you prefer. We're not bosses and workers here. We're a crew. And a crew is a family of choice, not obligation.
**[12:45–14:30]**
*[CUT TO: Night. The fleet is under way, moving in a loose formation toward the Strait of Gibraltar. The katamaran is in the lead, her blue running lights ghostly on the black water. The camera is on a drone, capturing the convoy from above. Ironclad's voice returns as narration.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The French Empire coined the phrase "inapte définitif" to describe people who couldn't be assimilated into their colonial machine. What they didn't understand — what no empire ever understands — is that being unfit for their system doesn't make you unfit for life. It makes you fit for something else. Something better. Something they can't control.
Joseph is a Captain now. Not in title yet, but in training. He's learning the katamaran's systems, the navigation AI, the cargo protocols. In six months, he'll take command of one of the feeder ships. In a year, he'll be running his own routes. In two years, he'll be training the next generation of outcasts, the next wave of "unfit" sailors who the corporate ports have no use for.
That's how you build a revolution. Not with manifestos. Not with violence. With ships. With cargo. With people who have nothing to lose and everything to prove.
**[14:30–16:00]**
*[CUT TO: Interior of the katamaran's small mess. Joseph is sitting at the table, a tablet in front of him, studying navigation charts. His duffel bag sits on the chair beside him — still unpacked, as if he's not quite ready to believe this is real. Ironclad enters, pours two cups of coffee, sits across from him.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(to the camera, then to Joseph)*
People ask me all the time: how do you choose the people you work with? The answer is simple. I don't choose them. They choose themselves. Joseph walked up to a stranger on a train station staircase and asked a question that 99% of people would never think to ask. He revealed himself — his character, his situation, his willingness to be seen. That takes courage. That takes honesty. And those are the only qualifications I care about.
*[He slides a coffee across the table to Joseph.]*
Everything else can be taught.
*[Joseph looks up from the tablet, meets the camera lens with steady eyes.]*
**JOSEPH**
I did not know, when I climbed those stairs, if I would live to see the next morning. I had no money. No papers. No plan. I asked that question because... because I needed to know if there was anyone left in the world who understood. Who was like me.
*[He gestures around the mess — the clean lines, the humming engine, the safety of it.]*
Now I have a bed. A job. A future. And the man who gave it to me asked for nothing in return except that I work hard and be honest. This is not how the world usually works.
**IRONCLAD**
That's the point, Joseph. We're building a world that works differently.
**[16:00–18:15]**
*[MONTAGE: The fleet passes through the Strait of Gibraltar. The Rock is a dark silhouette against a predawn sky. Tangier glitters on the African side. The camera captures the moment with cinematic sweep — the small convoy dwarfed by the geography, but moving with purpose. Inside the katamaran's cargo bay, Joseph is doing inventory, cross-checking a manifest written in three languages. He's competent, focused, at home.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The next stop is Valparaíso. We'll cross the Atlantic, thread through the Panama Canal, and make port in the Barrio Puerto within a week. The cargo we're carrying — Greek olive oil, Cretan textiles, small-batch cheese from a family farm in Sicily — will go directly to the shops and workshops that need them. No middlemen. No corporate logistics fees. No customs delays at megaports designed to filter out the small.
This is the model. This is the proof of concept. And it's scaling faster than even I expected.
*[The camera cuts to a close-up of the manifest, then pulls back to show Joseph's hands ticking off items. His movements are precise, confident. He catches the camera watching him and grins — a flash of white teeth in a dark face.]*
**JOSEPH**
*(to the camera, in English)*
You see this? This is real work. Not the kind that makes you rich. The kind that makes you useful. I have not felt useful in five years. Now I wake up every morning and I know: this boat needs me. This cargo needs me. The people waiting for it need me.
*[He pats a crate labeled "CRETE WOMEN'S COLLECTIVE — HANDWOVEN LINEN — 24 UNITS."]*
This goes to a shop in Chile. A woman runs it. She has been waiting three months. The big shippers told her minimum order was 500 units. She could not afford that. But we can carry 24. And 24 is enough for her to stay in business.
That is not charity. That is logistics.
**[18:15–20:30]**
*[CUT TO: The wheelhouse. Ironclad is at the helm, alone, the Atlantic stretching before him. The sun is fully up now, the light harsh and clean. He's wearing the alligator jacket again, despite the warmth. The bullet casing glints at his throat.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(to camera, close and direct)*
I want to talk about the jacket for a moment. Not because it's fashion — I don't care about fashion. But because it's a lesson.
This leather came from a farm in Thailand that raises alligators for their hides. It's a controversial industry — some people think it's cruel, some think it's sustainable. The co-op I bought from is the latter. They treat their animals well. They pay their workers fairly. They've been doing it for six generations. The jacket cost more than a car, and I paid it without hesitation because I believe in paying the people who make things what they're worth.
But here's the twist: I didn't just buy one jacket. I bought their entire small-bulk export for the year. Every hide, every finished piece, every scrap of leather they couldn't sell to the big fashion houses because their minimum orders were too small. I loaded it onto this boat three months ago and sold it to independent craftspeople in eight countries. The co-op made more money that year than they had in a decade. And the craftspeople got leather they could never have afforded through normal channels.
That's what I do. That's what this fleet is for. And that's why Joseph — and the dozen other crew members on those feeder ships — are here. We're not just moving cargo. We're moving value from the people who create it to the people who need it, without the parasites in between.
**[20:30–22:45]**
*[CUT TO: A slow, beautiful sequence. The katamaran under full power, ground-effect wings deployed, skimming the Atlantic at impossible speed. The camera is on a long-range drone, capturing the vessel from a distance — a dark shape against an endless blue, trailing a thin line of white spray. The synth track returns — a slow-building, triumphant piece that echoes the mood of the first episode but with new layers, new complexity.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Three episodes in, and I'm finally starting to show you the shape of the thing. It's not just a boat. It's not just a trade network. It's a response to a world that has decided that efficiency means exclusion. That logistics means consolidation. That the only way to move goods is through megaports and megaships and megacorporations that answer to no one.
I'm here to say: no. There's another way. It's smaller. It's faster. It's more human. And it's growing.
*[The camera cuts to a split screen: on one side, the katamaran at speed. On the other, Joseph on the deck of one of the feeder ships, teaching two new crew members how to secure a load. His gestures are patient, his voice calm. He's already becoming a leader.]*
**IRONCLAD**
Joseph asked me a question on those stairs. "Êtes-vous de bonne caractère et inapte définitif?" Are you of good character and permanently unfit?
The answer is yes. I am. I will always be. The things I've done — the things I had to do — have made me unfit for the world of clean hands and clear consciences. But they've also given me the clarity to see what that world is missing. And the resources to build an alternative.
Joseph is the same. Unfit for their system. Perfect for mine. And he's not alone. There are millions of people like him — like us — living in those coastal bands, that 1.2 billion within ten kilometres of the sea. They're not a problem to be managed. They're a workforce waiting to be activated. A network waiting to be connected. A revolution waiting for a leader.
I'm not that leader. I'm just the guy with the boat. But I can find the leaders. I can train them. I can give them ships. And together, we can prove that the old way still works.
**[22:45–24:30]**
*[FINAL SEQUENCE: Sunset on the Atlantic. The katamaran is alone now — the feeder ships have peeled off to their coastal routes, bound for ports in West Africa and the Canary Islands. Joseph remains aboard, standing on the foredeck, looking west. Ironclad joins him. They don't speak. The camera holds on them — two figures, one older and scarred, one young and hopeful, both staring at the same horizon.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Next episode: Valparaíso. The Barrio Puerto. I'll show you a UNESCO-listed port district that still works like it's 1880 — narrow streets, ship chandlers, small metal shops, bakeries that have fed dockworkers for a century. And I'll introduce you to the people who are keeping it alive. People like Joseph. People like me. People who were told they were unfit, and decided to prove the world wrong.
*[The screen fades slowly to black. The synth track fades with it. White text appears, line by line:]*
*"Êtes-vous de bonne caractère et inapte définitif?"*
*— A question asked on the stairs of Marseille*
*What would you never surrender?*
*[End card: channel logo — iron goblin's head. Hashtags: #noblessoblige #ironcladthegoblin #undergroundwars #capitaine #inaptedefinitif. Video length: 25:18.]*
....
**VIDEO TRANSCRIPT — IRONCLAD VLOG // EP.007 : "THE BOAT THAT LOVE BUILT"**
**[0:00–1:30]**
*[FADE IN FROM BLACK. The sound of a shipyard — the distant clang of steel, the hiss of welding torches, the low grind of a crane. Over it, a solitary fiddle, slow and mournful, a Celtic air. TITLE CARD fades in — IRONCLAD — and fades out. The image resolves: Belfast, grey dawn, the Harland & Wolff cranes, Samson and Goliath, silhouetted against a pale sky. The camera is on a drone, circling a dry dock, but this is not a historical tourism shot. Inside the dock, a new vessel takes shape — a second katamaran, smaller than The Goblin's Wake but built on the same lines, sleek and dark.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
*(voice thick with something uncharacteristic — emotion, held tight)*
They say you only ever know love when you have found it. Not the love of a person. The love of a purpose. The love of a place that fits the shape of your soul. For me, that place has always been the sea. For the last five years, I've tried to give that same love to others — the outcasts, the unfit, the ones the system spat out. But giving someone a job is not the same as giving them a calling. A calling has to be their own.
*[The drone dives, sweeping low over the half-built vessel. Workers move on her deck — shipwrights from the old Belfast yards, men and women who learned their trade from grandfathers who built the Titanic. The camera lingers on the name stencilled on a temporary placard at the bow: "KOUASSI'S WING".]*
This is Joseph's boat. His flyboat. His future. And to understand what that means, I need to take you back to last night.
**[1:30–3:15]**
*[HARD CUT to bodycam footage — Ironclad's POV, grainy but clear, timestamp 23:47. The camera jostles as he walks down a narrow, rain-slicked Belfast street. Terraced houses, Union Jacks and tricolours competing for space on lamp posts. The sound of a pub — loud voices, a jukebox playing The Pogues. Ironclad's hand pushes open a heavy wooden door. The noise hits like a wall.]*
*[Inside: The Crown and Anchor, a working-class Irish Catholic pub, all dark wood and stained glass and decades of smoke baked into the ceiling. The clientele is local, rough, men with hands like hams and faces carved by weather. The camera pans across the room, then lands on a familiar figure in a corner booth — Joseph, nursing a pint of stout, looking out of place but unafraid.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I'd come to Belfast to oversee the final stages of the build. Joseph had been here for three weeks already, learning the yard, getting to know the men who were putting his ship together. I told him to take the night off, have a drink, be a normal twenty-three-year-old. I should have known normal doesn't exist for people like us.
*[The bodycam shows Ironclad moving toward Joseph. But before he reaches the booth, a man intercepts him. Big, red-faced, breath sour with whiskey. He blocks the path, chin jutting.]*
**TROUBLEMAKER**
*(Northern Irish accent, thick as porridge)*
Here now, big fella. You're not from round here, are ye? And your mate there, the dark lad, he's been sitting in my spot for an hour. I don't like strangers in my spot. I don't like them ordering drinks like they belong. You understand me?
*[The bodycam is steady. Ironclad's breathing doesn't change.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(calm, almost gentle)*
I understand you perfectly.
*[He reaches into his jacket — the alligator leather, worn and oiled now, five years of sea and salt — and pulls out a fold of notes. Not a bribe. A tip.]*
Here's what's going to happen. You're going to take this, you're going to buy a round for every man in this pub, and you're going to tell them it's from the dark lad and his friend. And then you're going to sit down with us, and I'm going to tell you about a boat.
Because I think, maybe, you're looking for something too.
**[3:15–5:00]**
*[The troublemaker stares at the money. Then at Ironclad. The pub has gone quiet. Joseph is watching, tense, ready. Ironclad holds the man's gaze without threat, without challenge — just recognition. The same recognition he gave Joseph on the stairs of Marseille.]*
**TROUBLEMAKER**
*(after a long pause, deflating)*
A boat, ye say?
**IRONCLAD**
A flyboat. Ground-effect katamaran. She's being built a mile from here, in the shadow of Samson and Goliath. She'll be faster than anything on the Irish Sea. She'll carry cargo the big ships won't touch, to ports the big ships can't reach. And she needs a crew.
*[He lowers the money, just slightly.]*
What's your name?
**TROUBLEMAKER**
Callum. Callum O'Shea.
**IRONCLAD**
Callum. How long have you been sitting in that spot, in this pub, waiting for something that never comes?
*[Callum's face shifts — anger flickering, then something else. Something raw.]*
**CALLUM**
Ten years. Since the yard closed. Since they told us the ships were too big for Belfast now, the docks too small. My da worked here. His da before him. I learned welding at sixteen, and at twenty-two they told me I was obsolete. So I come here. Every night. And I wait.
**IRONCLAD**
*(quietly)*
You're not obsolete, Callum. You're just in the wrong port.
*[He gestures to Joseph, who has stood and is now approaching. The two young men — one African, one Irish, both marked by systems that had no use for them — stand face to face in the smoky pub.]*
Callum, meet Joseph Kouassi. My first officer. Future Captain of *Kouassi's Wing*. The boat you're about to help finish. If you want the job.
**[5:00–7:00]**
*[The bodycam captures the pub scene: the tension dissolving into a murmur of curiosity. Callum accepts the money, buys the round as instructed, and then — hesitantly — sits at the booth with Ironclad and Joseph. The camera switches to a handheld unit Ironclad has placed on the table, capturing all three of them.]*
**JOSEPH**
*(to Callum, in his accented English)*
When I met this man, I was sitting on a train station staircase in Marseille. I had no money, no papers, no future. He asked me the same question he asked you. And then he showed me the boat I would one day command.
*[He looks at Ironclad, something passing between them.]*
I did not believe him. I thought he was crazy, or a trafficker, or a liar. But I had nothing to lose. So I followed him.
*[He spreads his hands, indicating the pub, the city, the world.]*
Now I am about to take command of a ship. My own ship. And I am standing in a pub in Belfast, telling a stranger the same thing Ironclad told me: you are not what they say you are. You are what you become.
*[Callum stares at his pint. The jukebox has cycled to a quieter song — Van Morrison, "Into the Mystic". The timing is almost too perfect.]*
**CALLUM**
*(voice cracking)*
I've not held a welding torch in ten years. I'm not sure I remember how.
**IRONCLAD**
You never forget. The body remembers. The hands remember. And if you need a teacher, Joseph here has been learning from the best shipwrights in Belfast for three weeks. Tomorrow morning, you can meet him at the dock gates. Seven sharp. Bring your tools if you still have them. If not, we'll supply them.
*[He slides a card across the table — plain black, no name, just an encrypted contact code.]*
One chance. That's all I'm offering. But it's more than the world gave you.
**[7:00–9:00]**
*[CUT TO: Morning. The bodycam footage ends. Now we see a cinematic drone shot of the dry dock, golden light spilling over the half-built katamaran. Ironclad, Joseph, and a nervous Callum stand at the edge, looking down. Ironclad is back in his full vlog narration voice, the close-mic intimacy returning.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
He showed up. Seven o'clock, right at the gates. I wasn't surprised. Men like Callum have been waiting their whole lives for someone to see them. Not as a problem. Not as a demographic. As a man with hands and a heart and the capacity to build something beautiful.
*[Cut to: Inside the dry dock. Callum is already in coveralls, a welding mask pushed up on his forehead, running his hands over the katamaran's hull. His face is transformed — younger, alive. A foreman, an older man with a white beard and a Belfast accent thick as ship steel, is explaining something to him. Callum nods, asks a question, laughs at the answer.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
The boat is a second *Goblin's Wake* in miniature. Forty metres, ground-effect, optimized for short-haul coastal work — the Irish Sea, the North Atlantic approaches, the European shelf. She'll be Joseph's command. His home. His freedom. And every weld, every rivet, every line of code in her AI, is being laid down by people the world forgot. Belfast shipwrights. Nigerian mechanics. Ivorian refugees. The unfit. The unwanted. The permanently unassimilable.
*[The camera pans over the workers: a mix of ages, ethnicities, genders. There's a young woman, maybe nineteen, with a tattoo of a phoenix on her forearm, guiding a crane. An older Black man, grizzled and quiet, who moves like he's spent decades on ships. A group of Irish lads, barely out of their teens, learning from him.]*
This is not just a boat. This is a proof of concept. A floating manifesto. A cathedral to the idea that love — real love — is the only thing we all keep searching for. And it doesn't look like a person. It looks like a purpose.
**[9:00–11:00]**
*[CUT TO: Joseph, standing before the ship, alone. The camera is close on his face. He's looking at the placard with his name on it. His eyes are wet. He doesn't wipe them.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
I asked Joseph, the night after the pub, what he felt when he saw the boat for the first time. He said something I won't forget.
*[Audio switches to Joseph's own voice, recorded on a handheld mic, raw and unpolished.]*
**JOSEPH**
I have never owned anything. Not a car. Not a house. Not a bed I could call my own until you gave me one. And now you give me a ship. A ship with my name on it. How does a man say thank you for that? How does a man repay a debt that has no number?
*[The camera returns to Ironclad in the wheelhouse of *The Goblin's Wake*, docked nearby. He's looking out at the dry dock, Joseph's ship visible in the distance.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(to camera)*
I told him: you don't repay me. You repay the world. Every crate you carry, every small producer you lift out of poverty, every young man who walks up to you in a pub and asks if there's a place for him — that's your repayment. That's the only currency that matters.
*[He pauses, touches the bullet casing at his throat.]*
When I killed Kellermann and took his money, I thought I was closing a ledger. Balancing the books for my dead team. But ledgers don't balance. They just grow. The debt never disappears — it transforms. And the only way to pay it is to keep giving, keep building, keep finding the ones who are ready to jump.
Callum O'Shea is going to be a fine shipwright. And one day, maybe, a Captain. I saw it in his eyes the moment I mentioned a boat. That's the thing about the unfit — we all share the same hunger. We just need someone to show us the sea.
**[11:00–13:15]**
*[MONTAGE: The construction of the katamaran, set to a swelling orchestral version of the Celtic air from the opening. Sparks fly. Cranes swing. Hull plates are lowered into place with surgical precision. Callum is already leading a small team, his voice carrying over the noise. Joseph is in the dry dock too, not observing but working, his hands black with grease, fitting a propulsion unit with the same focus he brought to the stairs of Marseille.]*
*[Cut to: Night. The dry dock is quiet. Ironclad and Joseph stand on the deck of the nearly-completed ship. The hull is finished, the engines mounted, the ground-effect wings folded sleek against her sides. She looks like a predator at rest — deadly and beautiful.]*
**IRONCLAD**
*(to Joseph, bodycam footage now, less formal)*
What will you name her? The placard says *Kouassi's Wing* but that's a placeholder. A ship's true name comes from her Captain.
**JOSEPH**
*(long pause, running his hand along the rail)*
In my language, Baule, there is a word. "Anouanzé." It means "the thing that carries us home." I have not had a home since I left Côte d'Ivoire. I thought I would never have one again. But this — *[he gestures at the ship, at the yard, at the city beyond]* — this is home. The sea is home. The cargo is home. The people we help are home. So I will name her *Anouanzé*.
**IRONCLAD**
*(quietly)*
That's a good name.
*[He places a hand on Joseph's shoulder. The bodycam catches the gesture — rare physical affection from a man who keeps the world at arm's length.]*
You're ready, Captain Kouassi.
**[13:15–15:30]**
*[CUT TO: The launch. A grey Belfast morning, drizzle in the air. The dry dock gates open. Water rushes in. *Anouanzé* floats for the first time, her hull settling into the element she was built for. The workers line the dock edge, cheering. Callum is there, tears cutting tracks through the grime on his face. The old foreman shakes his hand. Joseph stands at the helm of his new ship, wearing a simple dark uniform, his back straight, his eyes forward. Ironclad is on the dock, filming with a handheld camera.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
You only ever know love when you have found it. I used to think that meant romantic love. The love of a partner. A family. But I was wrong. Love is bigger than that. Love is the thing that wakes you up at 3 a.m. and makes you glad to be alive. Love is the work you would do for free, but which sustains you anyway. Love is the people you collect along the way — the misfits, the outcasts, the ones who asked a stranger on a staircase if he was of good character and permanently unfit.
*[The camera follows *Anouanzé* as she moves out of the dock and into Belfast Lough, her engines humming, her ground-effect wings still folded. She's graceful, purposeful, exactly the ship Joseph needs.]*
I have loved many things. I loved my team, before Tallinn. I loved the man I was before the war. I loved the silence that came after Kellermann. But I have never loved anything the way I love this — the building. The giving. The watching.
*[Cut to: Joseph on the bridge of *Anouanzé*, his face lit by the instruments. He turns, looks directly into Ironclad's camera, and smiles. It's the smile of a man who has found his purpose.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
Today, Joseph Kouassi — refugee, mechanic, "inapte définitif" — became a Captain. Not because the system certified him. Because he earned it. Because he showed up. Because he never stopped believing that the sea would give him a home if he just kept looking.
And Callum O'Shea — unemployed welder, pub troublemaker, man who thought his life was over at twenty-two — is now a shipwright. In six months, he'll be Joseph's first mate. In a year, he'll be training for his own command. The cycle continues. The debt is paid forward. The love multiplies.
**[15:30–17:45]**
*[MONTAGE: The two katamarans — *The Goblin's Wake* and *Anouanzé* — sailing in formation out of Belfast Lough into the Irish Sea. The drone captures them from above, two dark shapes against grey water, moving in perfect sync. The Celtic air returns, now full and orchestral, a triumphant anthem. Inside *Anouanzé*'s bridge, Joseph is at the helm, Callum beside him learning the navigation systems. Ironclad's voice continues as narration.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
This is the last vlog. Not the end of the work — the work never ends. But the end of the documentation. I've shown you the ports. I've shown you the cargo. I've shown you the scars that made me who I am. And now I've shown you the future: a fleet of flyboats, crewed by the unfit, serving the small, building an alternative to the megaport monopoly.
I'm not an influencer. I'm not a brand. I'm a sailor. And sailors don't need cameras. They need crew.
*[Cut to: Ironclad on the deck of *The Goblin's Wake*, the wind whipping his hair, the alligator jacket zipped against the cold. He's holding the bullet casing, looking at it one last time.]*
I used to carry this as a reminder of the war. A totem of guilt. But guilt is just love that's been twisted. I know that now. The bullet was never the point. The point was the team I lost. And the only way to honour them is to keep building teams. Keep saving the ones who can be saved. Keep finding the love that drives us all.
*[He opens his hand. The bullet casing drops into the sea. He watches it sink.]*
There. I've dropped the last thing I could not drop. Now there's only the sea. And the boats. And the people.
**[17:45–19:30]**
*[FINAL SEQUENCE: The two katamarans part ways. *The Goblin's Wake* turns south, bound for the Mediterranean and the routes to Asia. *Anouanzé* turns west, toward the Atlantic and the Americas. The drone pulls back, back, back until both ships are specks on a vast ocean, heading toward different horizons but the same purpose. The Celtic air fades into the same warm synth note from Episode 001, full circle.]*
**IRONCLAD (V.O.)**
What did I do today? I gave a ship to a man who had nothing, and I watched him become a Captain. What are my dreams? That every abandoned wharf from here to Valparaíso will one day see the hull of a flyboat, crewed by the unfit, carrying hope in small crates. What would I die for? The network. The fleet. The people who sail in it. What would I kill for? Nothing, now. That part of me is dead, and I buried it at sea. What would I never surrender? The belief that the sea is still a commons, and that love — real, fierce, active love — is the only thing we all keep searching for.
And is there anything I could not drop within 30 seconds when the heat comes around the corner?
No. Not anymore.
*[The screen fades to black. A single line of white text appears, then fades, replaced by another:]*
*"You only ever know love when you have found it."*
*"Anouanzé" — the thing that carries us home.*
*[End card: channel logo — iron goblin's head, but now with two ships behind it. Hashtags: #noblessoblige #ironcladthegoblin #undergroundwars #anouanzé #thefleet. Video length: 19:42. Final screen: a simple message in white text on black, held for ten seconds.]*
*THE FLEET GROWS. THE SEA WAITS. JOIN US.*
*[End.]*
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