Pairing: Kori x Dick x Reader
Content: Mer!AU, Human!Kori, Human!Dick, Syreathi!Reader / Siren!Reader, 5.4 k words
Warnings: the innate horror of a predator fighting hunger
Author’s Notes: Hi, Hi! This is part 2! Glad you guys enjoyed the first part! @duskeras @corvoqueen @jia-reads
At first, Kori thought the dagger was a singular omen—an isolated marvel to puzzle over, proof that something from the deep had taken notice of them.
But it did not end with the dagger.
The very next morning, she found something waiting on the shoreline where the tide stretched its fingers across the sand. A tooth, long as her palm and jagged at the edges, bleached pale from the sea. Richard had plucked it up with a boyish grin and joked about a lucky charm, something to scare away spirits. But when Kori turned the tooth in her hands, she did not feel luck. She felt recognition. The sea had offered them something of itself, and she could not ignore the way her heart shifted at that thought.
After that, the offerings grew more frequent. Some were simple marvels—strings of shells threaded together with kelp fronds, shaped into patterns she recognized from her homeland’s temple carvings. Smooth stones carved hollow by time, polished by the currents until they gleamed like pearls. She would sit with them in her lap while Richard foraged inland, tracing the ridges and lines, and wonder if some unseen hand had chosen them with care.
Other gifts were stranger. Once, a rusted buckle from a soldier’s belt, corroded but intact, its leather strap long since devoured by the sea. Another day, a coin gleaming too brightly, as if it had been polished by deliberate fingers. She did not recognize the crest upon it. Kingdoms rose and fell beneath the waves, their banners lost to time, and she could not help but think that this coin came from such a place—dragged from some graveyard of ships below.
And sometimes, the sea gave them tokens that made Richard blanch. A stingray carcass, its body torn and discarded on the sand, the crescent of a vicious bite missing from its side. A gutted barracuda, its scales dulled, as if placed carefully where they would see it. Richard muttered that something wanted to frighten them. He buried the carcasses quickly, his mouth tight with unease.
But Kori was not so sure. To her, they looked less like threats and more like trophies. Victories offered as proof. A silent voice whispering, see what I can do—see what I have done for you.
That was the detail she could not ignore. By every tale her people told, the Syraethi should have ended them both already. They were not merciful. They were not caretakers. The Syraethi lured ships to ruin, devoured their sailors, feasted on the marrow of drowned bones. They did not protect. They did not give.
Yet each morning she woke, alive. Each night she slept, and no hand dragged her into the surf. The storms passed around them, though the winds howled as though summoned. The sharks that should have prowled the shallows remained distant, shadows circling but never drawing near. Something—someone—kept them safe.
And always the gifts came.
Sometimes beautiful: a fan of coral so delicately branched it might have been carved by artisans, laid at the edge of the tide pools as if waiting for her hands. Once, a tangle of sea glass, smoothed into shapes that caught the sun and scattered it in shards of rainbow. Richard had laughed when she strung them into a necklace, saying she looked like a queen with her treasure, and she smiled but did not tell him that her chest ached with the gesture.
Sometimes unsettling: a necklace of teeth, unmistakably human, bound together with sinew and dried seaweed. Richard had thrown that one into the waves without hesitation, but Kori had stared at it too long, her breath caught. Was it meant as a warning? A reminder of what the sea could take? Or was it—like the shells and coral—simply another gift, something meant to be accepted and worn?
And sometimes, the offerings were neither beautiful nor grim, but personal. She woke one morning to find her name traced into the wet sand with a string of seaweed, each letter shaky, as if written by an unfamiliar hand. The tide had almost stolen it away, but she recognized it, clear as day.
Richard did not see that one. She brushed it away before he could, her heart thundering in her chest.
At night, when Richard slept, Kori stayed awake and watched the water. She told herself she wanted to keep vigil, to ensure no creature rose from the waves. But her gaze was always drawn to the shimmer of moonlight on the tide, to the dark line of the horizon where the sea breathed against the sky. And sometimes, she thought she saw it: the faint curve of a head rising from the waves, the flicker of movement too deliberate to be a fish.
Her people had no word in Richard’s tongue for the Syraethi. When she spoke to him, she used phrases like sea-devil or song-thing, and he laughed, thinking she meant some great kraken or serpent. She did not correct him. Better he believe in monsters of scale and bone than in the truth—that something with a human face and a predator’s soul swam just beyond their reach.
Yet she could not banish the image that haunted her: hair like shadow trailing through the waves, eyes that reflected light like the belly of a fish, a voice like currents pressing against her skin. Watching her. Choosing her.
And though every tale told her to fear, she could not bring herself to throw them away. Not the shells. Not the coral. Not even the tooth. She kept them close, arranged in careful piles beside where she slept. As though, in some unspoken language, she was answering back.
As though she wanted the sea to know she saw.
As though she wanted it to keep choosing her.
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
Richard Grayson was not a man given to superstition.
The island demanded too much of his focus—too many practical, immediate concerns—to leave space for legends. He kept his hands busy and his mind sharper, always thinking of the next step: water, shelter, fire, food. If he paused to wonder whether some sea-spirit or devil had taken interest in them, they’d both be dead by now.
That was the part he couldn’t explain.
It wasn’t just that they survived—it was how easily. Or at least, how much easier it had become since the first week.
He remembered the first few days vividly: the hunger gnawing at their bellies, the salt making their lips crack and bleed, the exhaustion of carrying driftwood inland to cobble together something resembling shelter. The sea had been merciless then, offering them nothing but storms and silence.
But now—now the tide seemed to bend around them. The storms broke offshore, fierce squalls that never reached the sand. Fish appeared in the shallows in unnatural numbers, practically throwing themselves onto the line when Richard wove one together from scavenged cord. Coconuts fell more often than chance should allow, and though he’d never claim to be an expert climber, he found himself scaling trunks with a success rate that made him suspicious of his own luck.
Suspicious, but grateful.
The sharks were the clearest example. He’d seen their fins circling far too close more than once, the jagged shadows cutting through the waves. They should have been trouble. They should have pressed in on him when he waded out to spear fish, should have lunged for him when he braved the surf. But each time, just when they drew near, there was…movement. A flicker in the water. A churn of foam. And the sharks scattered, retreating as though chased.
He told himself it was coincidence. Predators preying on predators. A bigger fish out there. Something in the food chain keeping them safe. But the explanations sounded thin even in his own head.
And then there were the offerings.
He didn’t like calling them that. Kori treated them with reverence, her eyes bright with something almost holy whenever she lifted one from the tide. Richard tried to ground them in logic. Gifts didn’t wash ashore. Wreckage did. Flotsam. The sea carried odd things, strange things. A dagger with a corroded edge. A tooth from some creature’s jaw. A scrap of coral bleached white. He tried to make them ordinary. Survivable.
But there were too many. And they came too often. And they came when they needed them most.
When he needed a sharper blade than his crude stone knife? The dagger appeared.
When their rations ran low? A gutted barracuda washed up, fresh enough to eat.
When Kori worried about their defenses? The tooth, jagged and intimidating, perfect to mount on a stake.
It was hard to ignore the pattern.
Someone—or something—was helping them.
He didn’t want to dwell on what that meant. Legends painted the Syraethi as cruel, as monsters. And if that was true, then their luck wasn’t really luck at all. It was fattening before the slaughter. Herding before the kill.
When he looked at Kori, sitting on the sand with a necklace of sea glass at her throat, smiling in a way he hadn’t seen her smile since before the crash, Richard couldn’t bring himself to strip that hope away. She wanted to believe there was meaning in the gifts. That someone—something—was choosing them. Protecting them.
Maybe it was foolish. Maybe it was deadly. But survival wasn’t only about food and water and fire. It was about spirit. And if hope kept her strong, then Richard would play along.
So he sharpened the dagger against stone. He used the tooth to fashion barbs for traps. He cooked the fish that washed ashore, grateful for the meat even when his gut twisted with unease. He made every scrap, every strange token, part of their survival plan.
And in the quiet moments—when the tide whispered against the sand, when Kori’s hair blazed like firelight in the dusk—he admitted to himself what he could not admit aloud.
Something out there was watching.
And for reasons Richard couldn’t fathom, it wanted them alive.
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
The hunger has been gnawing at you for weeks.
It is not the kind that fish can truly quiet, though you have gorged yourself on them until your stomach swells, until scales glitter with the oils of silver schools. Flesh is what your kind are meant to crave—warm, soft, the thrum of blood still running through it when your teeth sink deep. That is what feeds the marrow. That is what makes a Syraethi strong.
Not when you patrol the edges of the reef and find the scent of the humans lingering in the current. Not when the other Syraethi come gliding from the depths, eyes silver and hungry, their jaws flexing as they taste the same scent. They chatter in the tongue of the tide, asking why you keep your territory unwatched, why you have not feasted already.
Every fight is a test. You are bloodied more often than you like, your body marked with shallow cuts and bruises from fin-blades and claws. But you always win. You must. You let their carcasses drift into the deep, refusing the urge to tear into them the way your body screams for. Even the taste of your own kind would be safer than this starvation.
Because when you lift your head above the waves and see them on the beach, the hunger quiets. Just a little.
The woman with hair like fire, who glitters like the sunset when the last light kisses her skin. The man with eyes like the endless blue, who is wary and sharp but still chooses to stay beside her. They are wrong and they are fragile and they are alive. Something deep inside you wants that to continue.
You pull sharks away, your teeth sinking into their soft bellies until the sea runs red and your jaw aches from the effort. You leave their carcasses where they cannot be found, and you drag the fattest fish toward the shallows where they will wash close enough for the humans to take.
You gather tokens—proof of your kills, relics pulled from shipwrecks, the ocean’s bones. You leave them on the sand, close enough to be claimed but far enough not to frighten. A dagger with a blade ruined by time, crusted in barnacles but still sharp enough to cut. A tooth from a sea-beast’s jaw. A necklace of sea-glass, smoothed by years of tumbling current.
Never weapons. Not truly. Your kind do not give weapons. To arm prey is foolish. To arm prey is madness.
But you are already mad, aren’t you?
Every night, you circle the island. Every morning, you slip into the tidepools and watch. You tell yourself it is vigilance—that you are ensuring no other Syraethi approach. But the truth digs deeper than vigilance.
You want to understand why your chest tightens when you hear the woman laugh, or why you cannot look away from the man’s careful, precise hands as he builds shelter from broken wood. You want to know why their presence has made this spit of sand and rock feel like something holy.
That word has no place in your tongue. The Syraethi know no paradise. Only hunger. Only blood.
When the man sharpens the dagger you left for him, when the woman strings sea-glass against her throat and wears it like a crown, you feel something stir in you that is older than hunger.
You feel the marrow shift, as though it is remaking itself into something new.
And though the hunger still claws at you, still begs for blood, you deny it again and again. You fill your belly with fish and salt, you sink your teeth into shark instead of human, and you tell yourself that this ache will fade.
Because you have decided.
This island will not be another grave.
And you will guard it, until the marrow cracks and the sea itself takes you.
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
The storm had left the beach in chaos.
Palm fronds littered the sand, the tide had clawed higher than it should have, and the air still hung heavy with the scent of brine and churned earth. Dick had been combing the shoreline, eyes sharp for driftwood or anything salvageable, when Kori froze beside him.
“Richard,” she murmured, low and urgent, her hand on his arm.
At first, he thought it was a seal washed up with the storm—a dark shape half-draped across the rocks where the surf lapped in weak, foamy pulls. But then it shifted, twisting with slow, painful effort, and the light caught across a body that was far too human.
It—or rather, they—were sprawled across the stone like something both broken and unearthly. Their skin was pale beneath a sheen of seawater, marked in places with iridescent scales that gleamed faintly blue and green. Their chest heaved with shallow, rasping breaths. Every inch of them was marked by wounds: ragged bites along the arms, claw scratches across the ribs, deep punctures down the side where flesh had been torn and hastily knitted closed by the sea’s own salt.
But it wasn’t the wounds that rooted Dick to the spot.
They opened slowly, like the weight of the world pressed them down. When they met his, he felt something cold and bottomless sweep through him. Blue, but not like the sky. Blue like the abyssal trench, blue like drowning, blue like the endless dark of the ocean that swallows light and sound.
And in them—something older than words. Something that stared into him and through him, peeling away the layers until he felt naked to the bone.
“Syraethi,” Kori whispered, reverent and fearful at once. Her grip on his arm tightened. “It is—”
“I know,” Dick cut in, though his voice cracked as he said it.
He didn’t know how, but he did.
The pieces clicked together in his mind with almost terrifying clarity. The gifts. The fish that had washed up just when they needed them. The shadows in the water, the sense of being watched, the constant, inexplicable survival when they should have starved. And the word Kori had spoken again and again in her stories, always with warning in her voice: Syraethi.
That was what she had meant. Not kraken, not monster. A siren. And this one—this wounded, scarred thing before him—had been the one circling their island all along.
The realization hollowed his chest.
Because sirens were not meant to protect. They were meant to lure, to feed, to sing prey into the sea and feast on what remained. That was what Kori had tried to explain, and now Dick finally understood the fear in her voice when she spoke of them.
Here it was. Bleeding. Broken. Its hands trembling as it tried to lift itself higher on the rock, seawater dripping from long, webbed fingers. Its jaw was set tight, its body sagging from effort, but its eyes never left theirs. Not wild, not frenzied, not hungry. Watchful.
“Look,” Kori whispered, her other hand lifting, pointing faintly at the jagged wounds down its side. “These marks—they are from its own kin.”
Dick swallowed hard. The cuts, the bites—yes. He had seen enough fights to know what they were. Too clean, too precise for the wild chaos of sharks or sea beasts. These were wounds from battle. From defending something—or someone.
The thought struck him like a stone to the chest. This creature, this Syraethi—this siren—had fought others of its kind. Fought and bled and nearly died. For them.
He took a half-step forward before instinct yanked him back. The Syraethi’s gaze sharpened, ancient and wary, but it didn’t move. Didn’t attack. It only breathed, ragged and low, as though the effort of simply existing here on the rocks was almost too much.
Kori’s lips moved, her voice low and reverent, the cadence of her language threading soft into the air. He didn’t understand the words, but he knew the tone. Awe. Gratitude. Fear.
And Dick—he couldn’t look away.
Those eyes still held him, bottomless, endless, drowning. Siren eyes. And yet, instead of pulling him under, they seemed to hold him steady, as though anchoring him in place. As though demanding he see not just the danger, but the truth.
This was no monster of legend.
And suddenly, for the first time since washing ashore on this cursed, blessed island, Dick felt the true weight of what it meant to be alive here.
They hadn’t been surviving alone.
And it was bleeding out on the rocks before them.
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
Dick’s boots scraped against the sand as he shifted forward, heart hammering. The logical part of his brain screamed at him not to—this thing was dangerous, this was the predator Kori’s stories had warned him about, this was the reason sailors whispered prayers before setting out to sea. And yet the sight of it bleeding, struggling to breathe, barely clinging to the rocks…
“Kori,” he murmured, almost pleading, though his eyes never left the Syraethi.
She understood what he meant without the rest of the words. Her hand still clutched his arm, but her grip softened. He felt her war inside herself—the battle between instinct and compassion, between all the legends she’d grown up with and the undeniable truth laid out before them.
Finally, her shoulders sank, and she let go.
“Go,” she said softly. Not a command. A permission.
Dick stepped into the surf, boots soaking through as the water rose around his ankles. Every movement he made was slow, deliberate. He crouched low as he drew closer, palms visible, like he was approaching a wounded animal.
The Syraethi tracked him with those fathomless eyes, unblinking. Its chest rose and fell in sharp, painful heaves, salt water mixing with dark blood that trickled from its side and turned the waves faintly red. When Dick was close enough to see the fine filigree of scales at its jawline, he stopped, breath catching.
If it struck—if it lunged, dragged him down into the surf—he’d have no chance. He forced himself to accept that.
But the Syraethi only shuddered, a low sound in its throat that could have been a warning, could have been pain. Then its head dipped, just barely, as though acknowledging him.
An invitation. Or maybe a surrender.
Dick moved. Carefully, he peeled off his shirt and pressed the fabric against the worst of the wounds, just beneath the ribs. The Syraethi hissed, a sharp sound between teeth, but didn’t push him away. The skin beneath his hand was cold, slick, strange—part human, part something else entirely. He tried not to think about it.
Behind him, Kori was moving too. She tore strips from her own tunic, stepping into the water beside him. Her hands trembled as she knelt, but her face was set with fierce determination.
“Hold,” she said, and Dick pressed harder against the wound while she tied the cloth tight.
Together, they worked in silence, binding what they could with their pitiful supplies. Each time Dick’s hands brushed against the Syraethi’s skin, he felt it twitch, but never once did it lash out. Its breathing stayed ragged, but steady.
When at last they finished, Dick sat back on his heels, shirtless and soaked through, his hands streaked with someone else’s blood. He looked at the Syraethi again.
It was still watching him. Always watching.
Up close, the scars were even clearer—jagged marks across its shoulders, its throat, its chest. Wounds from old battles, layered on top of the fresh. This was not the first time it had fought for its life. And probably not the last.
But for some reason—reason Dick couldn’t begin to understand—it had chosen to fight for them.
Kori exhaled shakily at his side. “You see now,” she whispered. “The stories tell us only of their hunger. But this one…” Her voice faltered, awe and disbelief tangling together. “This one bleeds to shield us.”
Dick swallowed hard, his throat tight. He could feel the truth of it in his chest, thrumming deep and low.
“I know,” he said, voice low. His eyes never left the Syraethi’s. “That’s why we can’t let it die.”
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
Dick crouched in the shallow surf, still pressing the cloth against the jagged wound, and for the first time let his mind wander beyond survival.
He glanced at Kori, her hands busy tying the last strip of cloth, her brow furrowed as she worked with a mixture of fear and fascination. He took a slow breath, letting the salt sting his lungs, and began to speak, words spilling before he could second-guess them.
“Legends,” he murmured, voice low, almost reverent, “I’ve heard a few over the years. About…sirens. Not the Syraethi name, but the stories sailors tell.”
Kori tilted her head, listening, eyes wide and flickering with firelight from the driftwood pile.
“They say they’re born from dying souls. Souls lost at sea, drowned and broken, rising again in the foam. They say the first thing sailors notice is their beauty. Eyes like endless depths, hair like the color of sunlight on the waves, voices that can bend a man’s will without him knowing it.”
Dick’s hand flexed against the cloth, pressing lightly to keep the bleeding steady. He swallowed hard, fighting a pang of disbelief and awe. “They lure sailors,” he continued, “singing until the men can’t tell up from down, until they’re in the water before they realize it. They beguile, seduce, charm…or they drag you under.”
Kori shivered, wrapping a strand of damp hair behind her ear, her lips barely moving. “And yet,” she whispered, voice trembling, “this one—this one fights to protect us.”
Dick nodded, eyes never leaving the Syraethi sprawled across the rocks. The legends flooded his mind, every tale he’d half-dismissed as superstition now feeling alive, reshaped. He compared them to the reality in front of him—the scratches along its arms, the jagged bite marks on its side, the way its chest heaved even while it let him and Kori tend its wounds.
“See these marks?” he said softly. “These aren’t sailors. These aren’t victims. These are fights with others of its kind. It’s…protecting us. Risking itself. And yet…” His chest tightened. “…it’s beautiful. Even like this. Even bleeding and scarred, it’s impossible not to see why the stories exist at all.”
Kori’s gaze flitted from the Syraethi to him, eyes shimmering. “It doesn’t sing,” she whispered, almost disbelievingly. “Not for us.”
“No,” Dick agreed, shaking his head slowly. “Not yet, maybe. It doesn’t need to. Its eyes…they say enough. Look at them, Kori. Those eyes—they’re endless. Old. Intelligent. Patient. Like the sea itself, watching everything and nothing at once. They’re…” He trailed off, chest tightening again. “…they’re mesmerizing.”
Kori swallowed hard. “And dangerous,” she breathed.
Dick let out a slow exhale. Dangerous. Absolutely. But not in the way the tales had warned. The danger in the stories had always been immediate, seductive, and inevitable. The danger here was different. It was intelligence, awareness, and choice. It had chosen to shield them rather than consume them.
He pressed another piece of cloth over a smaller cut near its shoulder, and the Syraethi’s gaze flicked toward him briefly, calculating, almost cautious. Its hand twitched minutely but did not strike. Dick caught a hint of acknowledgment, like the faintest nod in the abyssal depths of its stare.
“You know,” he said quietly, almost to himself, “I never believed the legends. Never thought they were real. I thought they were…myths to frighten sailors into staying on course. But now? Seeing this…” He gestured lightly at the creature sprawled before them, still ragged, still dangerous, still undeniably alive. “…I can see why they told these stories. Why they needed them. Because if you ever saw one like this—like this—alive—you’d understand.”
Kori’s lips parted, and for the first time since the crash, she didn’t look so much like a survivor clinging to logic as a witness to something almost holy. “It’s…” she began, then faltered. “…more than a story.”
“Yes,” Dick said, voice low and steady. “More than stories. And still real. Right here, right now.”
He let his eyes linger a moment longer, tracing the scars, the scales, the injured grace of the Syraethi. The reality, the rawness, was almost more beautiful than the myths. Dangerous, yes. Terrifying, yes. But also…protective. Alive. And impossibly, stunningly, aware.
The legends spoke of enchantment, of voices that could bend a man’s will. And yet here, before him, the Syraethi needed no song to captivate him. Its presence alone was enough to pull every thought into focus, every instinct into stillness, every heartbeat into shared rhythm with the tide.
Dick straightened slightly, running a hand through wet hair, and nodded toward Kori. “We help it,” he said, resolute. “We survive together. That’s what matters now.”
Kori met his gaze, the fire in her eyes steady. “Together,” she agreed.
The Syraethi’s chest rose and fell with ragged breaths, eyes following them both, fathomless and ancient, and for the first time, Dick understood what all the tales had meant by sirens. But this one? It was a story rewritten in real time—and it had chosen them to write it with.
· · ────── ·𖥸· ────── · ·
The sand is cold beneath you, strange and unyielding against scales and wet skin. Your lungs burn from air, your ribs protest the unfamiliar weight of gravity on land. Every fiber of your body longs for the embrace of the water—its pull, its rhythm, its infinite coolness. Yet you do not dive. Not yet.
The humans. The ones with eyes that do not lie, that do not waver in fear or awe. They move clumsily, fumbling with cloth and salt and frayed fabric, yet every motion speaks of care. You sense it instinctively. Not hunger. Not fear. Not challenge. Care. And it is alien, like a song played on strings you did not know existed, but it resonates in your marrow.
You hunch low, the sand grating against wounded skin as they approach. Your instincts scream at you: retreat, retreat, flee into the tides. But another instinct—older, deeper than hunger, sharper than fear—keeps you still. Protect. Protect. Preserve.
The humans kneel beside you, hands warm against your cold, slick body. They press cloth against wounds, knot strips around torn flesh. It is awkward, clumsy, and yet precise in its own way. You feel it. The intent behind each motion. The intention to help, not to harm.
And for a moment, just a moment, the ocean calms within you. The waves that have been clawing at your senses all night soften, ripple lazily, like they are mirroring your understanding: they do not mean you harm.
Your eyes track the horizon, scanning the sky for movement, the water for predators. You sense every current, every stir of life in the shallows, every bird’s shadow cast against the waves. You are tuned to these things, aware in ways neither human can comprehend. You feel the shift of wind before it touches their skin, the slight ripple of tide before it nudges the sand around their feet.
Yet here, on land, you are vulnerable. And they know it. That awareness sends a thrill through your chest, strange and unfamiliar, but you do not lash out. You let them touch, you let them tend, because you understand that to survive, you must trust—cautiously, instinctually.
The man—the one with eyes like the sea—presses a strip of cloth tighter, tying knots with methodical hands. You flinch once, almost instinctively, but he does not falter. He meets your gaze, steady, unwavering, and something deep inside stirs. Recognition. Understanding. A promise made in silence.
The woman—hair like fire against the dull gray of storm-scoured sand—fumbles with a bundle of fresh leaves and herbs. She hums softly, a sound that somehow does not jar your instincts, does not mimic the siren song you know, does not try to coax, only to soothe. Your chest tightens, and you realize it is not the hunger that twists there. It is curiosity. It is wonder.
And still, the ocean calls.
You stretch a hand, fingertips brushing the tide that laps weakly at your feet, tasting salt and cold. Your tail twitches, muscles flexing in need, longing, memory. The sand is foreign. The air is sharp. But the humans remain steady. They do not recoil. They do not reach to dominate. They attend.
Another ripple of instinct pulses through you: protect. Preserve. Keep them alive. And the thought carries weight, deeper than blood or hunger. This island, the strange sprawl of sand and rock, the shelter of palms and driftwood—it is no longer simply your hunting ground. It is theirs.
You watch them work, the motions awkward but certain. You feel their fear, their awe, their determination. And you make a choice—not with words, not with song, but with the quiet, primal decision of your body. You will endure. You will remain. You will heal here, because the humans need you, because the island needs you, because instinct has pressed your marrow into a new rhythm.
The waves lap again, softly this time, as though the sea itself acknowledges your choice. You do not dive into them, not yet, but you sense their pulse, their heartbeat, their awareness. The wind brushes against your scales, carrying scents and distant movements, and you adjust minutely, ready to respond if the need arises.
You are still a creature of water, still attuned to tides and storms and the pull of the moon. But now, on land, you are tethered to something else. Something strange, fragile, human. Something that calls your attention as surely as any current, as sharply as any predator.
Because they need you alive.
Because instinct has shifted, and something older than hunger, older than blood, older than even the ocean itself, insists you protect this fragile paradise and the humans within it.
Author’s Note Part 2: I just think it’s neat when we’re dealing with something a little inhuman. Feel free to comment asking for certain scenes or events to see play out. (No grantees, but I’d love to know what you’re thinking about!)