The two were vastly different.

greed/ɡrēd/

noun

intense and selfish desire for something, especially wealth, power, or food.

And

na·ive/nīˈēv/

adjective

(of a person or action) showing a lack of experience, wisdom, or judgment.

Spain was greed. He was fearsome and evil in its purest form. He was a pirate. He was not empathetic or forgiving. He killed, he pillaged.

He would steal lives from hands that hardly grasped it. He would slaughter family's.

In his reasoning they were 'simple' humans.

Romano, the young nation, was naive. He was young.

He knew the world could be cold. His grandfather had showed him that by selecting his brother over him.

But he did not have the wisdom to see that the world could be more. He saw the world in a one-sided view. A world where he meant nothing and his brother meant the world.

Somehow these two would cross paths. You would think a tragedy would become of it. A murderous pirate and a young innocent child.

Maybe it will. Maybe the pirate will grow angry and stain his hands with more blood.

Maybe it will be fiction. In a way where a simple child thaws the heart of the scary pirate. And the pirate is perfectly fixed and will never wrong again. And it will all be perfect.

But that isn't very likely at all.