Sarah O’Sullivan

The Navigator of the Atlantic Raiders

Sarah O’Sullivan was born on the rugged shores of the Isle of Man, where the sea was both a livelihood and a way of life. Her father, Jack O’Sullivan, was one of the finest cartographers and navigators of his time. His maps, meticulously drawn and fiercely accurate, were coveted by merchants, explorers, and pirates alike. His knowledge of the world’s hidden passages and treacherous waters made him a legend among those who sailed the high seas.

So it begins...

Growing up in the bustling port of Douglas, Sarah lived among sailors, fishermen, and traders. From an early age, she learned to read the stars as others read books, tracing the constellations that guided ships safely across the ocean. Under her father’s tutelage, she mastered the art of cartography and navigation, developing an instinct for the sea that few possessed. While many expected her to follow in her father’s scholarly footsteps, she knew her place was not in quiet study—it was out on the open water, where knowledge meant survival.

Her path changed forever when she met Dani Campanella. Their friendship was immediate and unwavering, forged in adventure and shared ambition. It was through Dani that Sarah first encountered the Barbarossa brothers—Captain Francis “Redbeard” Barbarossa and his brother, Black Powder Barbarossa. The infamous pirate siblings commanded both fear and respect, their influence stretching across the trade routes of Europe and beyond. Dani had become entangled in their world, and through her, Sarah found herself drawn into their orbit.

With her skills as a navigator and cartographer, she provided them with routes to transport their volatile wares safely, avoiding both naval patrols and rival pirates. In time, she became an asset to the ARC as a navigator whose maps could mean the difference between success and disaster.

Joining the Atlantic Raiders, Sarah became the crew’s strategist, their guide through uncharted waters and enemy-infested seas. Her knowledge of hidden passages, secret trade routes, and the world of merchants and pirates made her indispensable. She was not a warrior like Dani, nor a leader like Redbeard, but she was something just as vital—the mind behind the maps, the one who saw the path forward when others saw only storm and shadow.

For Sarah, the sea had always been a place of possibility, a world where maps led to new discoveries. But now, it had become something more—a place where bonds were forged in salt and fire, where loyalty mattered more than law, and where the truest treasures were not gold or jewels, but the allies who stood beside her in the face of the storm.

She was no longer just Sarah O’Sullivan, the cartographer’s daughter. She was a Raider, a navigator of the unknown, and a keeper of secrets that could change the tides of history itself.

And her story was only just beginning.