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Having fun with a bit of some thin lines :)
#it's nice to change from thick to thin every now and then#original art#artists on tumblr#miscellaneous#carpet's art#id in alt#described art#fantasy#siren#fantasy siren#harpy#harpy oc#mythical creatures#fantasy creatures#hiddencarpet#hidden carpet#2024#march#dnd#dnd art#fantasy art
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Norman Lindsay (1879-1969) - Shipwreck with Sirens
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Steve knows the kids are obsessed with the newest up and coming metal band, Corroded Coffin, even though their music is actually terrible. But when Robin of all people begs Steve take them to the band's next gig, he relents.
Everything starts to make a lot more sense when they walk up to the stage and there's an honest to god Siren behind the microphone, a guitar slung low on his hips with magic wafting off him in waves over the crowd.
The singer clocks him immediately and quickly schools the flash of surprise in his eyes into something more flirtatious.
Steve smiles, the cat that caught the canary. He was right. Their music really does suck, and he can't wait until tomorrow when he can rub it in his tiny human friends' faces.
Tonight, however, he's going to ruffle a pretty boy's feathers.
~~~
Eddie knows his music's horse shit, tailor made for humans- sue him, they needed the money. So he's always a little surprised when another creature finds their way to his concerts. It happens on occasion, and of course they're always welcomed. He's seen all sorts on their tour.
But something as beautifully unholy as a Nephilim?
The man with the auburn hair and hazel eyes surrounded by a gaggle of children glows with a golden aura so soft and warm Eddie's almost left speechless. Almost.
He's caught staring, but he can't take his eyes away. So Eddie does what Sirens do best. He preens, puffs his sleek black feathers just enough for only the man in the crowd to see and sings. A move typically saved for encores, the crowd goes wild with energy and pushes their way towards the stage.
The Nephi laughs, full-bodied with mirth at the antics. A beacon of golden light bursts from him, control of his halo slipping just the slightest.
It's unearthly, it's sinful, and Eddie falls to his knees in worship. The men and women caught in the halo turn to him, smiling and leaning in and touching what is Eddie's--
But the Angel relaxes, the halo draws back, and the peoples' hands fall away even though their eyes linger.
None of that matters when the Angel blows him a kiss. Eddie knows, deep in the hollows of his bones, that when he finds him after the show, he'll stretch his Angel's wings and show him just how bright his halo can glow.
#damn i really like this#like really really like this especially since im in a bit of a slump#this is right up their with my biker gang au#steddie#steddie prompt#siren!eddie#nephilim!steve#in case someone doesnt know: a nephilim is half angle half human#and i went with bird siren not mermaid siren#steve harrington#eddie munson#monster au#modern fantasy au#queenie's wips#queeniewritesstories
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Monster Mayhem: Siren's Song [Part 5]
Gender Neutral Reader x Vil Schoenheit Word Count: 6.8k
Summary: 'Rule 27: Itâs a poor choice to help a hare at high noon, but it will certainly appreciate you if you do.'
WARNING for some descriptions of violence
[PART 1] [PART 1.5] [PART 2] [PART 3] [PART 4] [PART 5]
Youâd first set foot on The Rose Queen when you were the tender age of eleven. Or, well, something close to that. It wasn���t like most peasant orphans were taught numbers, let alone how to interpret calendars well enough to mark the passing of years.
It was the first ship youâd ever seen up closeâsleek, and salt-stained, and creaking beneath your toes. The Boy King at its helm had turned his nose up at you in his too big coat, with his too big boots and tricorn hat that kept slipping down over his eyes. It was a ragtag crew that youâd wandered into, made of nothing but runaways and street rats. The ship itself was just as unusual and fresh-faced. It was built in a very impractical sort of way, with hallways that led to nowhere and portholes that opened up into endless seas of shadow where you could tumble down, down, down for hours and never see an end (or so youâd been warned). There were paintings on the walls, all off-centered and hanging on crooked nails that wobbled with every dip in the waves. The masts and rails were stained a deep, bloody red, in honor of its title. And no matter how the raging winds and waves battered at those petals, your Captain would have you out there the next morning to paint them anew. The Rose Queen was the finest pirate ship in all the ocean, and you only half-said that out of personal bias.
The vessel of the Silver Songbirds was⌠not like that.
It was grand, certainly. But there was a barren cleanliness to it that didnât feel lived in. Sure, Riddleâd had you literally scrubbing stains out of the deck with a toothbrush and pot of turpentine, but this was different. Sterile, rather than squeaky. The wood planks didnât whine with a weary, seaworthy groan beneath your feet that you could feel through the heel of your bootsâas if to reassure you it was there. The air smelled of salt, sure, and you could see a group of gulls circling overhead, but the whole of it felt⌠empty. Lonely.
The black haired man led you to a small, private room in the shipâs hull. That alone was strange. Youâd been sharing quarters for the whole of your seafaring career. This new little suite of yours had a bed, and white paint on the walls, and a porthole for a window. He gently coaxed you into sitting at the foot of the mattress and readjusted the coat resting along your shoulders. His smile was soft, kind. The sort of warm, pretty expression that you could read about in a love poem.
You remembered your Sirenâs vicious, pointed smirkâred, and haughty, and sharp enough to cut glassâand fought a pang of something you absolutely refused to put a name to.
When you blinked back into focus, his lips were moving in a slow, steady flow and you focused your best on the shape of them. It was hard, with how placid his expression wasâwith how little there was to make out of anything he was attempting to get across. And whether it be your furrowed brow or a sudden memory that oh right, youâd told him your ears worked as well as a three-legged horse pulling a one-wheeled cart, he startled into silence. His face twisted up with chagrin, and he offered you an apologetic smile with round, pink cheeks.
He fumbled around in his pockets for a piece of paper and scribbled out a hasty note to press into your palms.
âMy name is Neige Leblanche, and Iâll be taking care of you for this journey.â
You paused, fingers worrying at the sides of the neat, square bit of parchment. It felt right to offer your own name in return. That would be the polite thing, surely. But you paused, throat tight with uncertainty and a prickling, unpleasant sort of heat. Because youâd never even told your Siren your name, had you? Not even once.
And beneath that sudden, sour gut punch was something else.
âRule 116, your name is not a number, but it is your value. Do not offer it to any whose own interests are undue.â
The first time Ace had found himself with a wanted poster (âUgly,â heâd complained, bitter. âHow am I supposed to hook any tail with this? I look like a mutant potato. This stupid portrait is worse than prison.â), Riddle had taken your handwritten Book of Rules and underlined that one thrice over. You hadnât thought much of it until youâd had to cut a hangmanâs noose from around your idiot, foxy friendâs throatâthe handiwork of the tavern folk heâd been boasting to only an afternoon before. And then it had made sense. Ace had survived (with a new, grand tale of woe that he liked to repeat ad nauseum until you wished youâd left him strung up), but the lesson had remained.
Carefully you swallowed the words resting on your tongue and offered a polite-ish nod in their place.
âNice to meet you, sir. Thank you. For saving me.â
Neige shook his head in a panicked sort of rush, hands waving back and forth with a clear ânone of that! None of that!â before reaching back into his pockets to search for another note.
âIt was my honor,â he wrote, words jumbled and sloppy in his haste. âItâs the duty of all officers to help those in need.â
Your brow pinched. Officer? Officer of what?
Your Siren had called these Songbirds dangerous. âNot safeâ written into the sand over and over again with his curled claws. You didnât know much of mainland politics and other such nonsense, but maybe there was some sort of⌠Siren Hunting Order? Soldiers of the King sent out to scour the seas and keep them safe for a host of weary, would-be-merman-meals? That would make sense. It would make a lot of sense, actually.
Another note was pressed into your hands.
âHow did you end up stranded on that island?â
Islet, you wanted to correct petulantly. Riddle would have. Your Siren would have.
You opened your mouth and hesitated. Telling Nigel, or Nergal, or whatever his name was that your ship had been besieged by a pod of ravenous mers (and one fair-faced asshole who you already missed far, far tooâ) was as good as serving them up on a silver platter, wasnât it? Siren hunters probably traded information like how pirates traded maps or merchants traded gold. And youâd be damned if your loose tongue was what led to your friend companion co-strandeeâs family being hunted for sport just after heâd finally managed to make his way home again.
So you stiffened your upper lip and turned to look your savior in the eye.
âI fell overboard,â you said, firm. âBecause Iâm an idiot.â
He blinked, startled, and you could recognize the spluttered ââŚohâ shaping his lips.
He handed you another scribbled bit of parchment, gaze averted and awkward.
âIâm sorry.â
âNever apologize to the half-wit for whatever fallacy of their own led to them falling into the pit,â you recited naturally, and Nigel startled. His doe eyes went round with confusion and he tilted his head at you like a curious hound. Nothing intimidating, more like some kind of fluffy cocker spaniel or primped up lapdog staring up at you with too-long-lashes and too-few-thoughts.
You shrugged.
âJust a rule I was supposed to follow,â you shrugged off. You offered a slanted grin. âThough when youâre the idiot in question, it can be pretty hard to avoid.â
Neville smiled at you with a soft sort of laugh that you swore you could feel dancing along your skin.
Another note.
âIâll be back in a bit. Please enjoy the amenities here and get some rest. If you need anything, let us know and Iâll get it sorted personally.â
You dipped your chin in thanks and collapsed back against the small, flat mattress in the corner. It was soft, sturdy, probably good for your back and all that nonsense. The sheets were crisp and white, and they rubbed blandly at your weary hide. You could smell the lingering, sharp fragrance of some kind of tacky soap in the cotton. Totally not unpleasant at all. Theoretically, it should have actually been the best bed youâd ever slept in. But a part of you missed swaying back and forth in a net hammock, and an even bigger part missed plopping down in the sand with the heat of a crackling fire at your front and the even steadier warmth of the long, curling, press of gemstone scales at your back.
You flopped over onto your side and stared at the empty, carefully manicured surface of the desk opposite you and wished more than anything that youâd brought your shell.
.
.
The room was cold when you next woke, and you shivered into the jacket Neige had draped along your shoulders (because it was âNeige.â It had been signed on the bottom of the note heâd left you that morning alongside your breakfast. Which was stupid. The dumbest name youâd ever heard). The starched fabric of it all wasnât exactly comfortable, but it was better than shivering through the chilly ocean mists that were seeping in through the porthole.
You burrowed into the swathe of white and blue wool like a rabbit in a hole, and then winced in irritation when another of those stupid, gaudy pins dug into your cheek.
You plucked the first from its placeâthe duo of silver songbirds. It really was quite pretty, despite the ominous undertones and all. Two, graceful, delicate sets of feathered wings arching up into the skyâforever frozen in a dance to the clouds. You dropped it into the little, dark crevice between your bed and the wall. Good riddance.
Next came a crest that was familiar in a distant sort of wayâa memory that tickled that back of your brain from days long past. You hadnât noticed it before, what with the echoes of ânot safe, not safe, not safeâ blaring in your head like an alarm, but it was just as neatly polished as the birds pinned above. It was diamond shaped, the edges embossed in twining lines like the cut of a rope. At its head sat a strange sort of crown, with the arches and more familiar pointed designs replaced by the billowing arcs of sails. All of that gallantry surrounded a pair of rearing stallionsâhooves crossed along a golden edged sword and circled with blue ivy.
You twisted it between your fingers, watching the metal glint in the low light. You hadnât set foot in proper society since Riddle had let your young, dumb self abscond into the ocean all those years ago. You could hardly remember the flag of our home country, let alone the specifics.
You frowned and the edges of the badge pricked at your fingers.
You dropped this one behind the bed too, with a petulant flick of your wrist to make sure it really stuck.
.
.
âIâm sorry I havenât been around more often, thereâs some business Iâve been having to take care of.â
You handed the note back with a shrug.
âItâs no bother.â
Neige offered an apologetic grimace nonetheless and another of those smiles that looked a bit too sweet to be real.
âDo you mind if I ask you something?â
You bristled before you could help it, thoughts spiraling away to harpoons, and nets, and hunting parties. And then you settled your shoulders into a polite, easy line and offered one of your own too-put-together smiles in return.
âYeah, sure. I mean, you saved me after all.â
Neige smiled again, easy and comfortable, and pressed another slip of parchment into your palms.
âWhere were you headed? When you fell overboard?â
Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck you with a barbed cactus branch dipped inâ
Ahem.
You cleared your throat in a way that was surely a Very Normal Person Thing To Do, and tried to ignore the fact that he was so brazenly attempting to map out his plan of attackâto pinpoint the route that the sirens had been chasing and run after it like hounds tracking a fresh scent. Which, to be fair, sirens were a scourge on the seas. Hundreds upon hundreds of good men and women had been lost to their crooning songs and wickedly sharp teeth. They were vicious, often cruel, and so much stronger than any mortal sailor that of course the world above would fear them. Youâd been very much of the same opinion until only quite recently, and nowânow you just couldnât.
âI donât know where we were going,â you lied, and Neigeâs brow pinched in a dour, rejected kind of way. âBut,â you tried, sprinkling in a touch of truth to make the lie go down easier, âI know we were coming from Port o'Bliss.â
He nodded, that uncongenial expression slipping off his face as easily as itâd settled there.
He rattled off something quick and bubbly, and you pointedly arched a brow. The brunette blushed bright pink and hastily scrabbled for another bit of paper.
âThank you for being so helpful. I know it canât be easy.â
Your neutral expression froze on your face and when you smiled it felt more like a polite bearing of teeth. Did he know? Could he see right through you? Or worse, was he getting all the answers he wanted from you either way, no matter how you tried to coat it in a veneer of misdirection.
âSure thing.â
He handed you another note, this time for his pocket. Crumpled and soft, the ink a bit smeared along the curling letters.
âItâs a poor choice to help a heron at high noon,â it said, âbut it will certainly appreciate you if you do. So my thanks to you.â
Something settled in your gut at the familiarity, something deceptively warm and homey.
âItâs a hare,â you said, without much thought. âNot a heron.â
Neige nodded with a polite, smiling mumble that looked like another apology, and then left you to your own devices.
That night, a veritable feast was delivered to your tiny, white-walled cabin. A grand spread of food fit for a king. There was roasted fowl, pools of thick, spiced gravies, mountains of vegetables that youâd never even seen before. And tarts. So many colorful, fruity tarts that were so sweet they almost made your tongue curl.
âWhatâs the occasion?â you asked as Neige took a seat at your desk to nibble at the meal alongside youâa cloth napkin folded neatly across his nap and a clear glass flute for wine placed a bit precariously by his elbow.
He smiled, honey warm, and offered you another note.
âFor helping the hare.â
.
.
Neige didnât come to visit you the next morning, and his absence had the hair at the nape of your neck standing on end.
You paced and paced around your cube of a barrack. It was maybe four steps from one end to the next, but the constant bumping your toes against the wall was better than just sitting there doing nothing. The worst part was the silence. Not the one in your head. Yes, yes, you were more than used to that. On and on, yada yada. But the silence of the ship. The Rose Queen had always felt like a living thing, a great, wooden beast with a pulse you could feel thrumming beneath your toes, your palms. All you had to do was lay a hand against its side and you could feel the rumble of the tide beyond, the rushing footsteps of sailors sprinting about to meet one of Riddleâs orders or other, the thump of heavy, wet mop heads smacking the deck overhead. It was quiet, but it wasnât quiet. This ship? No matter how you laid against the boards or pressed flat to the walls, there was nothing. And it made you feel like you were trapped aboard a vessel full of ghosts.
The sun had long begun to set by the time Neige returned, and by then you were nothing but a livewire of nerves.
Had they found him? Your Siren? Was he there somewhere, just a few floors aboveâstrung up like a fish in a net? Caught and displayed like a fine trophy? Or had they killed him outright? Had they found his pod? Had he put up a fight? Had heâ
A piece of rolled parchment was held out for you to take, a satin blue ribbon tied along its belly. Neigeâs soft, brown gaze was glued to the floor and you snatched the paper from his hands like a rabid cat and tore it open. You could barely keep your eyes steady to read it allâfine, pointed print done up in a neat hand.
ââdanger to those who ventureâ'
ââfor the safety of the peopleââ
ââtherefore, the decision has been madeâ'
ââwith the greatest considerationââ
ââwith immediate effectâ'
ââwe have declared the extermination ofâ'
âYou canât!â you wailed, and Neigeâs doe eyes darted up to yours and immediately away once more in guilt. âHeâsâheâs not bad. I swear! I know how things lookâandâand I know heâs notâthatâs heâs aâbut you canâtââ
Neigeâs wavering stared jumped back to you in open surprise, and you saw his lips twitch on one wordâdelicate brows pinching in question.
âHe?â
You frowned and fought the urge to stomp your feet. Because, okay, fine. Sure, you were arguing tooth and nail for someone whose name you maybe didnât even know. Someone who had swum away from your stupidly sentimental ass with all the power and grace of a beast fit to rule the depths of the oceans while you could barely flounder at its surface. And sure, sirens killed people and ate them. But this one wasâhe was special, and youâd be damned if you let some primped up fishermen try to reel him in on a hook just because heâd maybe eaten a few people. Andâ
There was a hand on your shoulder, and Neige was staring down at you with an expression not dissimilar to that of a parent about to tell their child that the cat had got out and met a terrible, squishy end beneath the wheels of your neighborâs carriage. He sighed, dark lashes brushing along his cheeks, and then reached out with his other hand to tap a finger between your collar bones.
âWhat?â you snapped, and he tapped again. âMe? What about me?â
He paused, gaze meeting yours with a pointed sort of melancholy.
Oh.
Oh.
You remembered the pins youâd dropped behind your bed, one by one. You remembered the strange coat of arms crowned with golden sails and bearing a great, shining sword. Something regal, something imperial that a commoner like you would have only caught fleeting glimpses of in parades, and marches, and war calls.
Something like, say, Pyroxeneâs Royal Naval Fleet.
You glanced down at the parchment again, crumpled between your fists, and smoothed it out into something legible beneath your fingers. You reread the text with careful focus.
âFor the Crime of Piracyâ it said. Right at the tippity top. In red ink.
ââŚah,â you blinked. âThat makes a lot more sense.â
.
.
You were to walk the plank on the âmorrow.
Which honestly, you hadnât even thought was really a Thingâwalking the plank, argh. Fiddly dee and a yo-ho-ho. That sort of storybook nonsense. The parables that parents passed onto their children to try and scare them away from a life of villainy. Real pirates were put to the rack, or hanged in the town squares to scare the adults away from doing the same.
But you supposed it was practical, at least. Blood was hard to scrub out of wooden decks, so beheading would have been a bit of a mess. Bullets were best to be conserved out on the high seas where stocks were already low, and honestly, your body would just have to be thrown overboard anyways before it stunk up the barracks. So, like, doing it all in one would be quite efficient. You could appreciate that.Â
Your hands would be bound at your back and youâd be given three breaths, three steps, and then youâd be tumbling down into the waves below. Claimed by the waters that youâd patrolled for so many years now. Fitting, honestly. Riddle would be proud (beneath the raging, spitting indignation of you being caught at all, but that was another matter). At least you wouldnât be going out from food poisoning or something mundane like that, so that was a win. And who knew. Maybe your Siren would find you again when you were nestled to rest in some seabed not too far from here, and he could finally make a meal of your dumb ass yet. Happy endings abound.
You wondered idly at the dual branches of fate youâd wandered along in these past weeks, and if it would have been better to hide away when youâd first seen those sails on the horizon. To keep to the little, crescent island youâd found yourself on and slowly starved to death. Alone, abandoned, and sitting in a forever stillness worse than any silence youâd known before. Forever staring out over the horizon for a glance of amethyst fins that you knew youâd never see again.
If given the choice between the two, youâd take the plank.
.
Neige brought you another feast that night, and you gorged on it merrily.Â
When he nervously kept piling your plate with choice cuts after choice cuts, gaze diverted to the floor and looking like a kicked puppy dog with its tail between its legs, you rolled your eyes and swatted at his fingers.
âUnclench yourself,â you huffed, and he puffed up stuttery and pink in horror. âItâs not the end of the world. Youâre just doing your job, right? If weâd met under different circumstances I bet I would have shot you first. So, really. Allâs fair.â
He worried his lower lip between his teeth, guilt still swimming heavy and warm in those doe eyes of his.
He said something under his breath, something that youâd bet even if your ears were working at full capacity you wouldnât have been able to parse out. He leaned forward to scrawl a note on the napkin beside your plate.
âYouâre happier now? After all this? I donât get it.â
You reached out to pat him merrily on the shoulder, more a smack smack smack then anything really pleasant. He could see him fighting a wince with all the trembling sort of bravery of a field mouse. Poor dear. What was the Royal Navy thinking? Hiring on someone who looked like they belonged on an advert for rouge and sweets. This was the last face a pirate was expected to jeer into? This one? Really? It was a wonder this little, squirrely man hadnât keeled over the first time someone spat on his boots.
âItâs a poor choice to help the fish at high noon,â you said around a mouthful of crumbs. âBut itâs my choice. And Iâm happy to do it.â
âFish?â you saw him mouth, brow pinched, and you batted at his shoulder again before reaching for another of those too-sweet tarts.
.
.
There was a whole procession for your execution. With speeches. Which even with the slowly encroaching panic worming into your guts, you couldnât help but think was at least a little funny. Â
The whole crew was lined up in solemn formation, listening stalwartly to some judge, or high ranking officer, or whatever rattle off who even knew what. Your crimes? A homily? The lunch menu? Fuck if you had any clue. And you were the one being fed to the sharks. There had to be some joke hidden in here, right? The scoundrel pirate who could never be tried, simply because they couldnât hear their own sentencing. You wouldnât even know when to stand up and shout âI object!â It would probably be pretty funny, right? If you just did that out of nowhere. And what was the worst that could happen? Oh, no. A fine. Please, sir. Add it to the list of debts I owe from beyond my watery grave. Amen.
A hand at your lower back gave you a gentle nudge forward and you shifted against the ropes binding your wrists. They were nicer than your own stores aboard the Rose Queen. Not nearly as itchy, the fibers neat and clearly expensive. Neige stepped up beside you and offered you a look that was likely meant to be kind, but your growing nerves had started to eat through your willingness to play friendly. You could feel the weight of the crew around you, even if you couldnât hear them. The creak of the deck beneath your toes as they shifted about, the way their bulk must have been shielding you from the worst of the wind. Unlike with your own mismatched family of castaways, their presence wasnât reassuring. And you kept your eyes locked forward and away from the field of sharp gazes eating into your hide.
The plank was narrow, and immediately you were fighting the urge to sway on your toes. Having your hands bound at your rear only made it worse. It threw off the whole of your center of gravity and had you feeling dizzy and seasick.
You took one breath, stuttery, and one step. The wood whined beneath your heels in a vibration you could feel all the way up to your knees.
Another breath, another step. You could feel the salt soaked board starting to bend now. Clearly it wasnât meant to support much of anything, let alone a whole person. And for some reason the idea of it breaking beneath you was so much worse than taking that last step all on your own. A sudden plunge that was out of your control. It had your heart hammering in your throat and cold nausea bubbling in your belly.
You looked down. You didnât want to, but it was like your gaze was a weighted, magnetic thing. Pulled down into the salty depths below. The water looked rougher than it had a moment ago, or maybe you were just really starting to panic. You could see the white froth of the wake breaking against the shipâs hull. It churned like the start of a storm, which was really, terribly inconvenient. Seeing as itâd been so still and calm just a few minutes before. And, yâknow, the fact that you had to fall into that mess of sharp peaks and rocking waves. You swore you could see dark shapes flitting about just beneath the surface, a flash of grey, or maybe green. It was hard to tell, with the brightness of the early morning sun in your eyes.
No one was poking at your back, urging you forward, which you thought was quite odd. Youâd been taking your sweet olâ time sauntering to your demise. Youâd assumed theyâd have less patience for a pirate with cold feet. Instead, the world around you was just silent and still. Shifting with the raging waves below, but empty and quiet as a tomb for all you knew otherwise.
You took your last breath, your last step.
And then the ship lurched and you were plummeting towards the water. The dissonance between having something beneath your feetâno matter how frailâand then nothing was jarring, and it had you gasping on impulse. Hair whipping at your cheeks and lungs squeezing tight as the air screamed past your throat. It felt like you were drowning before you even hit the water.
When you did finally crash into the waves, it hurt. Youâd always been a fairly proficient swimmer, but whether it be the mind numbing panic or the ropes binding you tight, tight, tight, you just started to sink. The salt stung like an open wound, and the water was cold. Frigid. Like being tossed into the jagged side of a glacier. You at least had the sense not to gulp down a mouthful of water out of reflex, but that didnât make things much better.
You screwed your eyes shut, bubbles frothing at your nose, and tried to find that peace that youâd clung to all night long. A life for a life, one catch for another. No one was going to miss you anyways. And if you had to meet the reaper some way, then of all the ends the universe could have spun for you, at least this one had some meaning to it.
You sighed into the darkness, soft, but when your lips parted next around what should have been a mouthful of icy saltwater, all you could taste was air.
Your eyes shot open in the gloom to a mess of familiar golds and purples that youâd thought youâd never see again.
Your Siren pulled back, bubbles curling from the edge of his lips into a soft stream of warmth between the two of you. Nestling as deep as a full breath all the way in the tightest corners of your lungs. You could feel the dip of his claws as he settled his hands at your shouldersâkeeping you in place. And immediately you shrieked and flailed in your bindings.
âYouâ!â
You promptly choked on another mouthful of sea water and your Siren wailedâall that molten fondness in those lovely amethyst eyes of his sharpening into familiar, pissy exasperation from one second to the next. He dragged your face back to his, slotting his mouth against yours and pushing more air into your lungs. You leaned into it before you could help yourself. Half for the whole oxygen thing, and half, because, wellâ
When he pulled away this time he smacked a hand over your mouth with a sneer, his thumb and index finger hooked upward to pinch at your nose. He jabbed a claw in your face with a clear âstay putâ and immediately went to work cutting through the bindings twined along your arms. The ropes fell away beneath his talons like butter to a hot blade, and he fretfully ran his palms up and down your limbsâlooking for any stray bits of netting like a compulsion. Once he seemed certain that youâd been properly freed from your ties, he hauled you up against his chest in a grip that had you losing all the air in your lungs all over again. You could feel the cool jut of the sea glass around his neck pressing into your collar, and he buried his head down into your throat until you didnât know where he ended and you began. The frills of his tail fluttered in the water, and the bulk of those twining strands curled up and around your legs like a barnacle.
He was warm. Warmer than youâd been expecting, for a creature who spent his life patrolling the darkest depths of the ocean. It wasnât the same sort of heat that would beat off a humanâs hide, but it was more comforting than any youâd ever known. You burrowed down against his shoulder, nose scrunching against the side of his neck and the fins at his ears brushing your temple. You could feel his claws flexing at your sides, feel the shift of his scales against your skin. And just as your lungs were starting to burn, he ducked forward to pull you into another kissâfilling your chest with wonderful, wonderful oxygen all over again.
You blinked blearily past the sting of salt in your eyes and he scrubbed a thumb against your cheek.
Now that those high, wonderful, heart bursting emotions were settling back into something manageable beneath your ribs, you took a moment to look at him. Really look at him. Because youâd sent him on his way, hadnât you? Waved him off with well wishes and a hope for his happiness. And all that aside, how had he even managed to find youâ
Bubbles streamed from your nose as that newest shared breath began to run dry, and your Siren hooked an arm around your waist to propel you upwards.
You crested the surface with a gasp, paddling instinctively against the churning wake. When all that did was leave you smack, smack, smacking at your Sirenâs chest like a flailing toddler, he hissedâa spitting, pissy thing you could feel on the breezeâand hauled you back up against him. Just like he had all those times youâd swum together in your cove. You forced yourself to settle, bobbing gently against the tide as he kept you both aloft.
Once your body had managed to catch up with your brain to realize that it was, in fact, not drowning, all of the adrenaline rushed out of you like a broken spicket. You slumped against the Sirenâs chest, fuzzy headed and dizzy. Because heâd saved you. Which made no sense in the least. But youâd almost died, and heâd saved youâ
Your gaze drifted back up to the ship from which youâd only so recently taken your Cannonball of Doom and startled.
There was blood everywhere.
Staining the railings, splashed along the low flying flags, dripping along the deck. A macabre mess of gore and claw marks gutting the once grand vessel like a beached whale. Some of the crew still seemed to be hanging onto the life rafts, others were taking running leaps into the water like they were under compulsionâeyes glazed over and distant. There was a prickling all along your skin, something twisting familiar and strange in your gut, and oh. Oh.
One of the grander looking officers (the one who had been giving your pre-execution speech, perhaps? He looked similar enough) was shouting something from his place at the bow of one of the life raftsâarm extended in a grand show of valor and sword glinting into the light of the morning. And then a great, emerald siren was rearing over the side of that tiny vessel with a sharp grin on his face and sharper talons on display. The officer was dragged overboard, and the sirenâs tail came down on the guardrails with a force that had the wood splintering and the already haphazard little boat rock, rock, rocking until it caught on a high wave and capsized.
You could see the flash of colorful scales and the tips of even brighter fins all around. Cresting above the water just long enough to grab hold of another wailing victim and drag them down to the depths. There was enough blood in the water that you could smell it. Acrid and copper against the oceanâs already sharp, salty musk. And sure, you were a pirate. Youâd been in raids, youâd seen death. Plenty of it. But this. Well. It was unfamiliar. In a strange, detached sort of way. These assholes had chucked you overboard, after all. So you only really had a teensy, tiny pinch of sympathy for the fact that being eaten alive probably hurt like a sonofabitch.
It was more strange, you supposed, to be at the center of a sirensâ hunt and not be the one facing down the angry, bitey end.
You kicked in the water, nose scrunching when the red tide lapped against your chin.
âThis isnât going to attract sharks, is it?â
Because if you were saved from drowning at the hands of a royal militia only to wind up as a fishâs dinner, you would be terribly annoyed.
Your Siren rolled his eyes at you, like you were just the most ridiculous and stupid creature in all of creation. And then he made a languid swipe of his large, fully-healed tail and began to swim away from the literal bloodbath he and his pod had wrought. With you and all your silly, fragile humanness in tow.
It was far too relaxing, being pulled along against his side. The gentle rocking of his tail beneath you as he swam at the surfaceâalways ensuring to keep your head above the water as he did so. You could feel your eyes starting to dip, feel a yawn cracking along your lips. Maybe it was just the adrenaline crash hitting, or maybe it was the relief that you hadnât even wanted to address. Heâd come back. For you.
The earless pirate who never seemed to do much but stumble into one conundrum after another. Who had only annoyed him at best and shorn his fins to shredded, useless bits at worst. Who had thrown shells at his head and only nicked him a little when you cut the ropes from his hide.
Who had made him human foods with fire and taught him your language in a messy scrawl of sand and snark. Who swam with him in the bay and twined a necklace of shining, purple sea glass around his neck. Who braided his hair, and laughed at his pouting, andâ
There was a rough roll of surf that splashed in your face and you spluttered against the white froth.
The Siren paused and beat his tail against the deeper waters, propping you upright as you hacked and fretfully patting at your back. You could see his mouth moving as he mumbled something, brow pinched, and stared back at him with your own wobbly frownâconfused.
âWhy did you come back?â you asked, and the Sirenâs brows jumped up into his hairline. He looked startled, genuinely. And that only had you even more befuddled. âAnd how did you even find me?â
This time when he huffed, there was a subtle sort of irritation there that youâd learn to recognize well.
He was pouting.
Something brushed against your fingers in the water, soft and fleeting. You glanced down just in time to catch a blur of lavender flitting nervously below the choppy waves, never dipping close enough again to touch, but looking hesitant to keep much further either.
The Siren followed your gaze only to narrow his eyes, pointed teeth bared as he swatted at the poor, round, little octopus with his tail. A clear shoo, shoo if youâd ever seen one. The octopus squeaked, sending bubbles spiraling in all directions, and frantically looped out of the way of the merâs petulant tantrum. You whacked him right back, indignant on your teeny friendâs behalf. Becauseâ!
âYou followed me,â you burbled, and the little octopus spun in a fretful circle. If you didnât know better, youâd say the poor, little dear was wringing its hands. Your Siren bared his teeth and smacked out again. âHey! Donât be an ass! He saved me,â you argued, and your bitch of a merman just snapped his fangs in your face like a feral cat.
You gawked.
âNo way. You canât be annoyed that you were beat out by a baby, purple octopus the size of an orange.â
He huffed and turned up his nose, and you burst out into laughter for the first time since youâd watched him swim out of your cove all those days ago.
You laughed and laughed until tears were beading at the corners of your eyes, and your Siren was grumbling in complaint and pinching your sides with his curved claws. There wasnât real malevolence in that stern glare of his, thoughâjust more of the prickly, teasing sort of snide side eye heâd given you in your latter weeks together. Fondness, you realized. Thatâs what was softening it all. The same sort of warmth you held for him.
Your favorite, pissy, preening, self-righteous goldfish.
You snorted into his shoulder, still shaking on giggles, and you could feel his sigh against your temple. You burrowed down against his side, feeling his fins brush along your hips as he kept the both of you afloat.
âThanks,â you said, soft. âFor coming back.â
You were expecting another melodramatic sigh, another plaintive roll of the eyes. Instead, his fingers came up to twine with yours and tugged your hand to rest against the pendant at his throat. You blinked, confused, and he just curled your palm around that little, sand-smoothed piece of glass.
You arched a brow. âWhat does that have to do with anything?â
This time he did roll his eyes at you, and when he spoke he mouthed the word dramatic and wide so he was sure that you could see it.
âMoron.â
You whined in complaint and smacked his fingers away. âBut Iâm your moron.â
Another huff, soft against the nape of your neck. And you could see the barest twitch of a smile on his red lips as he turned back into the tide and continued his trek home.
.
.
.
[TAG LIST - CLOSED]
@marvelous-maxi, @ilikefanfics4, @jackalope08, @crocwork-clockodile, @cosmicobubisi, @buttplugs-stuff, @pomefleur, @decemebercircus, @ailynyan, @genzombie, @meliade-ot, @sunlightocean, @theofficialantitherapist, @hermiona18, @sailorenthusiast, @fantasy-dating-sim-trash, @thefiasco-onyourblock, @insideous-beez, @its-clockwork-princess
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#twisted wonderland imagines#twisted wonderland#twst x reader#Vil Schoenheit x Reader#Vil x Reader#vil schoenheit#Monster Mayhem#My Writing#vil shoenheit#Siren!Vil#Mermaid!Vil#Fantasy AU#Monster Mayhem Vil Part 5
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Siren! Darling: *stare*
Yan! Pirate: for the last time, you can't have my crewmates for snack!
Siren! Darling: *droop*
Yan! Pirate: fuck- fine! I'll catch you a nice guy to snack on once we port, okay?
Siren! Darling: :D
#yancore#yandere#yandere headcanons#yandere scenarios#headcanon#yandere x darling#yandere x reader#fantasy#yandere x you#pirates#siren
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The Large Maw Mermaid, or the more commonly known âTreasure Hoarderâ, is a medium sized mermaid found across tropical seas. This mermaid is well documented for gobbling up sunken treasures due its propensity for eating anything it can fit in itâs mouth. Caught specimens are commonly found with bellies full of gems, gold, and other sunken paraphernalia. Its why they are also known by another name, âNeptuneâs Purseâ.
#concept art#creature design#fantasy art#creature concept#concept design#monster#fantasy#speculative biology#Mermaid#mermay2024#mythologicalcreatures#creaturedesign#ConceptDesign#conceptart#speculativebiology#fantasyart#illustration#bestiary#digitalart#creatureconcept#seamonster#siren#worldbuilding#bioluminescent
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Happy MerMay đ§ââď¸
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illusorybeauty
25wThey hold the sounds of crashing waves and the songs that mermaids sing.
#black beauty#ai#ai generated#ai photography#sirens#mermaidcore#seacore#black mermaid#mermaid#black women#natural hair#sea shells#beach#fantasy#black woman#bridal#beauty#dark skin#fantasy art
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Acrylics for fun. :D
That's it. :D
That's the whole reason. :D
Prints and Commissions HP - BSKY - KofiÂ
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Your Puppy Siren!: When a Siren becomes a House Husband
PART TWO
NSFW
Obviously, when Baby got his legs, you couldn't just abandon him. You weren't sure exactly what was next for the two of you,, so you took it one step of a time. Baby had an issue with that, as balance wasn't necessarily a skill he could magic up with his oceanic enchantments.
He leaned on you the whole way home, taking jerky steps through the grasses.
When you showed him around the house, and the first thing he did was ask where you slept. You had shown him your bedroom and he immediately made himself comfortable about the blankets and pillows. You set him up with a copy of âThe Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobeâ, before going to make him dinner: mild Japanese curry.Â
It was mostly vegetables, as you had only had a few ounces of ground beef left, but you hoped his stomach was as human as his now legs. His whole body had changed, leaving him now almost albino pale, with large dark eyes that were still a bit too big for his human face.
When you went to walk him to the dining room table, you found him standing, holding the book to the ceiling as he read. He was leaning back and forth on each foot, as if the movement kept him upright. Perhaps he still had his sea legs under all that new skin.Â
He still needed your help to get to the table but his steps were more sure now. He ate the food happily, making sure to compliment you whenever possible. On the way back to your room, Baby could now keep his balance as he went. The first thing he did was gather as many pillows and blankets as he could from the living room, before leading you by the hand to your room, and arranging them further on the bed.
âDo you like it?â He asked, eyes eager. It had never occurred to you that Sirens may nest, but you took it in stride.
âIt looks very warm.â you apeased, tired.Â
Sleeping on the nest didn't go as bad as you thought, but Baby had been a bit confused when you had tucked a blanket around the two of you
âIt's to keep us warm.âÂ
He had responded by pulling you to his arms and wrapping his legs around you.
âI can do that just fine.â He beamed. You laughed and let him hold you as you fell asleep. You could figure out Baby's fate tommorrow.
You had always pushed off the deciding of Baby's fate to tommorrow. You couldn't face it. Going to your part time job, then nursing school had been difficult for you. You were exhausted everyday you came back home.
Baby made himself as useful as he could. You had taught him some of the basics of cleaning the house. He had seemed somewhat confused by the idea of cleaning, but he took it upon himself to make sure the place was gleaming when you got home. You had taken him to the library a day after his legs sprung up, and he had carried home a pile of books, one of them being âMartha Stawarts Complete Guide to Housekeepingâ.
 You hadn't resided in the place long, but places you hadn't even realized were dirty were suddenly sparkling and smelling lightly of lavender and orange peels.Â
He had also brought home a whole pile of fish. It seemed that he could now shift his form back and forth at will. You remember coming home, sweat covered and in need of ibuprofen, when you found a pile of fish on the kitchen table. He had looked so proud if himself.
âWe can keep them all in the freezer! What a useful device!â
You had gently taken his arms in hand and explained that humans weren't able to eat fish whole like sirens could. They had to be stripped of their scales and deboned. He seemed a bit tired by this, yet another a strange human quirk, but had taken it in stride. Per his request you had set him up with an instructional video on the subject.Â
He seemed to catch on pretty quickly, the only difference was that rather than using a sharp knife, he had preferred to use his talon like nails. They were retractable, he clarified later, and arguing they were cleaner than any knife when you had demanded he washed his hands before working.
âThey will only get dirty again anyway!â He had argued, one of the few times he had ever done anything but smile at you. The concept of germs was met with raised eyebrows and apprehension.Â
For the first time in your life, you gave him âthe lookâ. As this seemed to be a communication move that spanned species, he gave in, washing his talons? Claws? Before going back to his work.
A silent system had begun to flesh itself out. You brought home the money and groceries, and did most of the cooking, he did everything else. And anything you asked of him. Which wasn't much, but he became more and more useful by the day.Â
You couldn't help but feel a bit proud for Baby. The more you learned about him and Siren Life the more different the two of you seemed. But he had been adjusting so well, you almost didn't have to worry about him. Plus, it was hard to be mad at someone who made a point of taking care of you, like he did.Â
He gave you shoulder messages, microwaved old dinners when you didn't feel like eating. Hed shush you, and sometimes carry you to bed, petting your hair and singing you to sleep everytime everything felt like too much. And that was often.Â
It had been a week since he had taken up shop in your bedroom, and reality reared its big fat head like a snake. You had been whisked away to bed, and instead of cooing at you and humming that impossibly sweet voice of his, he had started to nibble on the side of your neck, hands reaching towards your pajama shorts. His tongue felt so incredibly good, and his touch was like silk, but you knew where this would leave.
âStop. We don't have any protection.â
He had frozen and blinked at you, expression changing to the barely concealed mask of an adult trying to not laugh at a child's sudden declaration.
âIf I sense any danger, I will deal with it immediately. Now come hereâŚâ His voice grew husky. You trailed back.
âI know we haven't talked about this before but what if⌠well you're a human so im not sure if it'll be the same but⌠I can't get pregnant. I don't know if it works the old fashion way or you might lay eggs in me or something but⌠we need to be careful.â
He was still smiling but he was biting his lip. âWhile I DO lay eggs, that part of me hasn't changed, I don't understand why it would be an issue. I am your husband, after all, shouldn't it be normal to have children at some point?â
âH-husband? Why do you think you're my husband?â
Babys face changed, the closest you had ever seen him get to upset. âWe mated, we share a nest, how am I NOT your husband?â
âWe had sex, yeah, but we didn't get married. Do Sirens mate for life? Is that why you think this?âÂ
His expression grew animated and confused.
âSirens do not mate for life, we have breeding seasons. But Humans mate for life, do they not? Why do you think I have been doing all this? I mean, I even made you a nest and you slept with me in it! How much more is their to a human marriage ritual?âÂ
You stared at him, the realization dawning. You slowly put your hand over his and arranged your expression to one of patience.
âHumans used to mate for life. But ita a bit different now. We can have sex, even spend years courting before we agree to marry.â
Baby just stared at you, his confusion and anger turning to one of hurt.
âB-but what does that mean? I told you, I love you. I want to be with you.â He leaned forward tears starting to glisten at the corner of his eyes.
âI wanted a life with you. I threw my old life away the moment I got these legs. I have no idea where my pod is now, I can not return to them. I do not wish to return. I want to stay here, with you and be your mate.â He nuzzled his nose against yours and then took your cheeks in his hand. He gazed into your eyes, filled with longing.
âI may be new to being your partner; at being Human too. But I will do whatever you ask of me. Please. Be mine?âÂ
He started to kiss your forehead. Then your eyes. Then your cheeks. His gaze strayed to your lips and he whined out, full blown tears now streaming from his eyes.Â
âI'll be so good. So good for you.âÂ
Your heart went out to him. You had to admit, life had gotten so much easier to bear since he had entered it. No one could make you laugh like he could, could make you as curious as he could, could kiss you like he could.Â
You thought about it. Genuinely thought about it. You had a job, and nursing would pay you enough to pay for both of your lives once you started. You'd have to teach him how to properly navigate human society but he was so smart and charming, you were sure he would do so well. You came up with so many reasons why it could be doable, but the most important one was you didn't want to let him go.
âIt'll be really hard for you. Are you sure you want this?â You whispered. âWant⌠me? You could spend the rest of your life sharing your season with mate after mate. Are you sure you would want to spend the rest of your days with me?â
He looked at you with intensity, the light finally dawning across his features.Â
âIt will always be you.â And then he was on you. Was kissing you.
He was quick to take off your clothes, and did the same. His mouth was hot and needy, the feeling of his tongue in your mouth being everything you could ever want. That was except for one or two other places.Â
As if he could read your mind, he grinned, pulling himself down to stare at your groin, fingers grasping, teasing and exploring every sensitive curve and crevice. Then he got to work with his mouth and you groaned, your core turning molten. You could hear the noises of his mouth on your flesh, and it made your cheeks overheat.Â
His tongue glided around you as he sucked with his full mouth, making you shake and jerk under him. He made sure to pin you down with his hands now, before he started to trill and sing around you.
You chocked, pushing your hips up against his big string hands, which were now a mix of grey and white. It seems he had been riled up to, as his form was caught halfway between human and Siren. It was a new sight and he was absolutely gorgeous and one long note made you crash over the edge, toes and fingers curling.Â
The whole time his eyes were on you, gauging your reaction. He continued to auck you through the high but now started clawing at your entrance, circling slick little shapes. He seemed to take great joy in this, teasing your ache, before he plunged his fingers in making you choke and sigh all at once. When he was certain the area was worked enough, he gave you big puppy dog eyes.Â
âCan I be yours again?â He whispered huskies slowing the rate of his fingers. You nodded and he pulled himself up, pumping his own cock a few times making sure it was properly slick. His cock was half transformed too. It was extremely veins and the ridges weren't as pronounced, but he was thicker. You licked your lips as you remembered how he felt inside you.
Aware that you were watching him he keened in pride. He then slowly inserted himself, pushing further and further until you took every inch of him. You gasped out and clawed at the sheets in pleasure as he pumped you, his own eyes glazing over as he unleashed low, pornagraphic moans. He was louder than he had ever been, snapping his hips into yours, fingers clutching deep into skin. He looked completely blissed out as he rocked himself into you, huffing and moaning.
âSound. So. Beautiful.â You breathed, knowing he was getting close. You could feel a heaviness now in the air. He wouldn't be able to help it. He'd be so drunk he'd use that song of his and you'd cum and cum for him until he was too far in exctasy to make any noise. And you were right.
You could tell he was holding it in. But he couldn't help but hum out, a song that seemed to cup and penatrate your very soul, making your entire mind stuffy and silly. You didn't want him to stop, going over the edge as another one of his moans turned into a full blown note. He kept bucking into you, skin slapping skin, as he keened and hummed and sang out for you. He wanted you to feel good. Wanted you to cum and feel good only for him. Because you were his.
When you felt his cum splash inside you it was warm, and more sludge like. It took a while to seep put of you. A comedic point in the back of your mind noted, âNo eggsâ.Â
He pulled himself to your side, pulling you tight to him. âCan⌠can I stay in you for a while?â He said it in a light begging tone. You nodded, a pulse of faraway pleasure as he pushed his soft dick inside you again. It felt nice, being one with him in this sweet comfortable moment.
You wanted to ask him about the magic, about the song and how for just a moment, it was like you could read his mind. But their was something so special about the moment, you didn't want to push him too far. Maybe next time, you could egg him on to use that power on you, to be completely encompassed by his pleasure and song.Â
âI know your tired, and we can wait but⌠can we do it again?â He pushed his nose to yours and traced it up and down, his eyes watery and begging. You could feel his dick twitch inside you.Â
âPlease just let me spoil you. It is our wedding night after allâŚâ
You had to stop yourself from correcting him. Tomorrow you would explain vows and wedding ceremony, but for now you'd just give in. But you had to admit, now a big piece of you belonged only to him.. So, in a way he had been right.
#monster fucker#monster lover#monster x reader#terat0philliac#teratophillia#monster#fantasy smut#fantasy romance#siren#siren smut#siren x reader
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from the sea // pirate!rafe cameron x mermaid!reader
summary ; he was the too scary captain of the ship, and you were the too gorgeous mermaid of the sea. you were on his way, he was on your territory.
but mostly, you were not allowed to go on the surface alone since your mother's death because of dangerous and killer men like him. so when you unfollowed the rules of your father, you faced the consequences.
genre ; fantasy blurb. siren x captain dynamic.
warnings ; fantasy story ? possession. rafe has whip scars/and one eye. fear enthousiast. slight of violence. reader is a mermaid with tail. light gun play mentions and using. smut. gaslighting. dubcon. no shells on breasts reader. webbed fingers. lust as a sin.
author's note ; it's a 3k words. no songs inspiration for this one. i just wanted to make a fantasy au.
you were that kind of beauty that aspired to make all men go crazy over you, and it was for this reason that you had taken so many pirates adrift, to their bodies to their ships. you were beautiful and indeed the bewitching and seductive creature that legends and tales spoke of, but you were also the dangerous monster that the captains with monstrous scars on their faces and marks on skin who had survived your man-eating canines were whispering about in the back of a tavern to overly curious and drunk sailors.
you were the wife of all the gods but above all, those who defended their oceans. but only since your mother's death, your father firmly forbade you from going to the surface, either alone or accompanied. you were forbidden by the all-powerful sovereign of the seas. and his law was indisputable because he was the king and the monarchy. one day as his daughter, you will also be the head of the kingdom, and hold the power as him, even if you're not interested in it.
but like all girls your age, you had trouble listening to your father. no, you had this innocent and blind thirst to chase men. and, you had never had an incident before, so what could stop you ? you only had to slip into the clear waves, and let your magical and fairy body disappear through the eddies of the water which made your flowing silhouette as fast and shiny as a shooting star. the feeling of diving into the soft waves that play hide and seek with your sparkling and enchanted tail while the water gently embraced your mermaid skin was always the best.
you were the only dazzling thing of the perfect blue. the sweet and salty waves kissing your nakedness and long mermaid tail illuminated with colorful reflections ran alongside the rest of your bared chest in the flapping of a fin. you looked nothing like a fish that fishermen wanted to eat, but you looked like an underwater creature that captains wanted to capture.
one stormy evening, you decided it was time to go to the surface. you needed to break the rules to survive. with all the youth and rebellion of your free will, you had left the abyssal depths to face the dangerous world.
the sea was raging, and the waves were decidedly uncontrollable and violent. the shadow of a boat disturbed by the marshy assault of the storm on the waves wavered from one end to the other. that meant you were going to be able to have fun. you could also hear from here the agitation of the crew, the fear and the tension building. you easily spotted the captain because he was much taller and broader, the one who didn't frown a single eyebrow, and who remained calm as if it was the storm that should be feared. his voice shouted orders that you couldn't hear because of the raging sounds of the hard weather. he had a parrot on his right shoulder, and bangs stuck to the sweat of his forehead lightly sweeping his face. he looked delicious, you licked your bottom lip, flicking your mermaid tail to move.
you barely lifted your head out of the water in a crashing entry, emerging from the water by sending your hair flying back, a splash of water falling noisily into the waves and attracting the attention of the sailors above of the boat.
â captain, captain, look !! thereâs a siren ! â said a sailor who pointed a finger toward you.
â she's gorgeous ! â replied another.
â those titsâŚâ
â stop being horny, that creature can kill you. i don't pay all of you to do all the work so everybody on the ship move his fucking ass before i throw you all on that storm. am i clear ? and if i don't hear a yes right now, i will let that siren eat every single piece of yours. . â warned the captain with a deep and somber tone.
â captain yes, yes captain. â echoed all the sailor voices.
â man, you can't say that when you have a fucking boner while looking at her. â commented a sailor.
â shut your mouth, barry. it's not her at all. â
â do you think i'm dumb to think it's one of the men on the ship ? come on, you can lie with that mouth but that hard dick in your pants betrays you. donât worry, nobody is immune to tits, especially when they're wet as a fucking pussy.â
â mind your business. â
â as you want, captain. â
a smile appeared on your soppy lips, as you disappeared again into the tormented waves. you had surrounded the ship, swimming only around the boat. you loved it when everyone was fascinated by you, catching with their eyes all your flawless moves as a show.
water being your domain and your home, you took the initiative to do some twirls by immersing your entire body in the water to bring out only your tail as you leaped to the surface with some back flips and observing your audience. you stood on an icy rock, resting your webbed and manicured fingers against the stone.
â someone is gonna fucking do his work here ? â shouted the captain. he was actually running out of patience because of his crew being so attracted by the siren. âare you all dumb on purpose ? this is exactly what she wants, to get all of your attention, and kill you. â
â captain accept there is nothing you can do. that woman is too stunning. â cutted one man, literally drooling over his huge beard, giving up his activity for you.
â do you think she cares about you ? you're just a prey for her. but right, this is not my problem. you can leave my ship and die. â
once comfortable on the rock, , you begin to open your mouth to sing a sweet song that would bring them as well as this storm to their doom. your voice was just a trap to lure men.
you had no shells on your breasts as the tales loved to tell. actually, you were completely naked from the top, water running down your chest to your mermaid glowing tail. your skin was still cold and damp, like your eyes. but it shone through the moon, and the white pearls on your body lit up every inch of your flesh like stars. you were of a beauty that had thrown more than one sailor into the water. you were in the image of no god, no man, no woman, you were the angel of the sea. you had a throne in every wave, a kingdom wherever you swam.
your hair fell deliberately on your shoulders, and your angelic voice currently pierced all the foam. the storm was raging, and you appeared as their savior, a halo of light projecting above you to cover your superb figure. you were beautiful and unrealistic like a work of art.
when you weren't expecting it, one of the men you had guessed to be the captain had lowered a boat. he was certainly tall and imposing, a long coat covering his entire frame, and immense leather boots with roughly tied laces on his feets as he approached you. he had a pistol stuck in his glistening and leathery belt, and above all an eye patch over his face. you took a look at the cross scar hidden in his shirt of which you only saw the scary top of the burned mark of the probably iron.
he rowed up to you, until you felt his scent replacing the salty smell of the sea. you quickly understood that there was nothing like the other men you had managed to charm. not unlike the others, this man seemed to be able to corrupt anyone, men and women, humans and mermaids alike.
he placed his boat near the rock to look at you more closely.
âdidnât your father warn you not to come near men like me? iâm sure he did gorgeous, i bet youâre just not smart enough to listen to him. â
you backed away but he put his gun on the tip of your tail to stand you still, making you shake. âyâknow what that means? Iâm in charge here. â
âlet me go!â you responded, waving your tail limply, but he pushed his finger against the trigger of his gun to scare you.
"you'll leave when i decide. so stand still because from now, all your rules are made by me. â
âyou should fear my father, he will kill you.â you replied.
he laughed in a mocking tone, and moved closer to you with a smirk. âyou could kill me too though, couldnât you mermaid ? but look at you, shaking like prey ready to die by my hand.â
âare you going to kill me?â
â is this a question or a wish ? or maybe a dirty mermaid fantasy ? â
âi donât want to die.â
âIf that pretty mouth can sing like it does then it can beg too, donât you think? If you want me to spare you, youâre gonna have to be a bit more convincing.â
he lowered his gaze towards your glossy and watery body, his weapon buried in the flesh of your stomach, before slightly moving up to your breasts, your nipples arching against the gun. you shivered at the contact of the metal against your skin.
he slid the gun up to your throat, pushing the barrel against your vocal cords. you coughed, and placed a hand around his.
he had sworn "oh fuck...legends don't tell all the things siren can do to a manâŚ"
your webbed fingers, surrounded by tiny fins, had found their effect on him. you looked so sweet and innocent, but you were a creature who knew how to be machiavellian so he had to keep an eye on you.
âyou donât want to die?â he asked, repeating your words.
rafe was not a man of morals, he made fun of laws and conventions. and above all, why would he deprive himself when a beautiful mermaid was willing to do whatever he wanted just to be spared.
you were desperate, and frighteningly attractive. rafe would be lying if he said it didn't stimulate him. his cock was clearly hard and painfully stretched against the leather of his pants, forming a bulge just below his belt. and it was starting to be so uncomfortable. he only wanted one thing, it was to fill your soppy mouth surrounded by divine dripping lips until he felt your throat tighten around his dick, because his girth prevented the air from passing into your cavity.
oh yes rafe cameron was cruel. he wanted you to die, but in a completely different way.
and what he wanted, he got. he was a captain admired and respected by all and who had a high reputation both on the seas and on land. he was rich and miserly. he had as much money as he had girls.
he pulled down his pants, freeing his thick length to reveal it before your eyes. you'd be lying if you said you'd seen one before. It was the first time you saw something that big, it was terrifying. you didn't even know what this sailor wanted you to do with it so you looked at him with curious and desperate eyes.
oh that innocence burning in your gaze had shot a charge through rafe's body and his cock had twitched, letting precum drop on your face and the blood inside him completely heated.
"open your mouth...yes, like that. show me your tongue, i'll help you, gonna tell you how to do it.â
he had thrust himself into your mouth before giving you instructions, telling you how to make him feel good, while his dick found a way to your throat. you were even wetter inside than a real woman and it felt perfect and insane. you started to suck him, your lips vibrating around his throbbing girth that stuffed you real quick.his tip was slightly salty from the precum dripping from it that you had swallowed, making the ship captain above you groan.
pushed by his grunts and his tight grip through your hair, you pumped him faster because you were starting to understand how it worked. he never tired of your lips that foamed, and fully encircling his cock which as you licked got bigger and bigger, your naked tummy spiraling as the growing feeling.
with one hand, he had plunged himself completely into you, your head completely trapped between his firm fingers, and your nose buried in his pelvis. you gagged on him, a spurt of drool coming out of your mouth when he pulled out, as you gurgled strongly . your saliva hung from his glistening tip down the length of his hardened dick, all the way to his heavy balls.
he re-positioned himself inside you, his massive dick now dripping inside your soaked mouth as you continued to suck and lick with the fear knotting in your stomach of being killed. but you could feel that his body was relaxed, his muscles were loose, and you could hear every deep sound of pleasure coming from his lips.
he was both fascinated and over the moon, because your wetted tongue twirling around his hot cock was perfect. oh if he could have fucked you, he would have. he couldn't help but fantasize about how he would have fucked you on this rock, his large hands on your tits caged them like bra and pressing them against his thick fingers that would easily crushed them.
he also loved how your throat was so capricious, clenching around him while your tongue hungrily brushed his entire growing bulge. the feeling was intense, and you could hear his breaths become harsh.
that's what he liked about corruption, you were too good for him, a creature blessed by all the gods who had nothing to do with a mortal as rich as him, because you were too divine , too wonderful but at that moment, you were in the same rank. you were at his mercy.
you placed your wet hands on his hips, leaving trails of water on his body and impressive marks of whip that left scars on his skin. rafe could have sworn it was the gentlest touch in the world. the tiny fins around your fingers, tracing the straight line of his waist, down to his firm ass as you sucked him to death, drove him so crazy with your long soaked tongue that made him gasp.
and even if he was not a believer, he was convinced that heaven could not be so wonderful.
a few minutes later, his dick had convulsed around your mouth, and you felt large hot streams filling your throat down to your tummy. you swallowed, and he smiled before stroking your hair gently.
â good job, little mermaid. donât you deserve a reward for that ?â
you didnât really know what that meant but you nodded.
he had taken a long pearl necklace from his pocket. âturn around. let me help you. â
and you complied. he had hung the expensive and luxurious jewel around your neck, the length of which was so long that he had to make several turns until a hundred white pearls covered the entirety of your bust, dangling around your handsome tits.
âdo you know what that means?â
you moved your head to say no, and he responded. âthat now you belong to me. youâre my prized possession. you need to understand that now you can't leave. without me. â
he had found a treasure and he was going to keep it. after all, he was a pirate, he stole everything the ocean had. and sirens were not an exception to the rules.
âi want to see my father.â
âmermaid, you are mine, and mine only.â he responded while caressing your soppy cheek. â you don't need your dad anymore, just me. â
you lifted your gaze to meet the most beautiful blue eyes you ever met. he was handsome as the devil, and you couldnât deny it. but you were a mermaid, you belonged to the ocean, not to a man.
you tried to run away but he stopped you by placing his leather boot on your mermaid tail with a smirk, before leaning forward to grab you by the throat, your upper body was arched, his biceps caged your vocal cords tightly, his thick fingers pushed further in your mouth to forced you to behave, your drool dripping over your hanged jaw.
âwhat did I tell you about making silly moves, huh? behave, unless you want to die. you know whatâll happen if you act up? what you did earlier, with that pretty mouth, weâre gonna do it again. except this time instead of my cock, itâll be my gun and if you stop, I shoot. And I know you donât want that, right?â
" noâŚâ
â yea ? better to be alive. â
you nodded. because it was true.
"now i have my men waiting for me. but don't worry, you're coming with me.â
â that's a kidnapping â â
â do you think i care ? because listen to me, i don't fucking care. do you know what it means ? that you can pout, cry, scream, whatever tantrum you want to shout, it will not change anything. â
you shivered when his hands stroked your shoulders, the icy metal of his silver rings brushing your skin. â don't you want to be cherished ? see that world ? look up, because it can be yours. â
â you're not afraid that i can eat you ? â
â didn't you see my scars ? i fear nothing, even if you dig those canines in my skin, you will be the only one to be scared of what i can do to you. because babe, be mean to me, i dare you to, and i will be meaner. â
â where are your scars coming from, they're huge. and it's not sirens. â
âoh, itâs a horrible story for a little mermaid like you. stick to your fairytales. so are you gonna come with me willingly or do we have to do things the hard way?â
â sound like a trap. â
â sound like you're smart. â he mocked.
â i'm gonna follow you. but don't be too happy, my dad will find you before sunrise. so you're soon a dead man. â
â such a mean baby, already wishing that i'm dead. but careful, don't make me correct that mouth myself. it's not the kind of thing you will like. â
â because there is a good thing you can do with my mouth ? â you were curious.
you turned your gaze toward him, and he lifted a brow, not believing your words. â mermaid, you never kissed a man ? â
â show me what kissing is. â
â Why would I kiss the mouth that curses me ? â
â Should i ask those men on the ship? â
because of his possessive side, categorically refusing to share you with his crew full of grotesque men, he had leaned down to grab your jaw and press his lips against yours.the feeling was so strange, but your mermaid tail was waving on the cold stone. âseems like you enjoy being kissed. â he said, as his tongue swirled with yours. â want to be kissed endlessly ? yea ? then don't make me repeat myself and move that fucking tail to the ship. â
#dividers by anitalenia#and sillkholand#rafe x reader#fantasy au#rafe cameron x reader#pirate!rafe#obx au#rafe cameron x you#rafe cameron smut#rafe cameron x y/n#rafe cameron x female reader#dark!rafe x reader#dark!rafe cameron#mean!rafe#siren!reader#mermaid!reader#obx smut#rafe cameron fanfiction#rafe x y/n#rafe x you#rafe cameron concepts#rafe cameron blurb#rafe cameron fic#obx fic#rafe obx#mermaid aesthetic#mermaid core#fairy tales#fanfiction#obx fanfiction
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Mermaid in bathtub
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Norman Lindsay (1879-1969) - Sirens
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Siren by dariuszkieliszek
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Monster Mayhem: Siren's Song [Part 4]
Gender Neutral Reader x Vil Schoenheit Word Count: 7.2k
Summary: It is very, incredibly important not to get attached to someone who will no doubt be leaving you high and dry to die stranded on an island any day nowâbe they man or fish. And you are definitely, definitely following that rule. For sure.
đśď¸ Obligatory Warning for Mild Spice
[PART 1] [PART 1.5] [PART 2] [PART 3] [PART 4] [PART 5]
The next morning, there was a conch shell set beside the familiar offering of half-mauled fish.
The insides were a shining, pearlescent pinkâsmooth and sleek. You picked it up curiously and turned it over in your palms. Youâd never seen such a complete one before. Normally they were at least a bit dinged, cracked here or there along the thin edges. But this one was practically perfect. It sat heavy and warm in your palm, and you brushed a finger along the rough ridges.
You looked up and the Siren was lounging at the shoreline, waiting expectantly.
âThank you,â you said. âItâs really pretty.â
He preened, the fins along the side of his head fluttering wide and colorful. You huffed, amused, and set the shell neatly at the forefront of your slowly accumulating corner of Things. Youâd rebuilt the little shanty shelter that heâd had his seagull minions pick apart into useless nonsense that first day together, and it wasnât much, but it was enough to keep some of the sun off your shoulders at the height of the afternoon and would probably (maybe) hold up under a bit of rain. And that pleasantly cozy hovel of yours was where youâd been keeping your Stuff. The best sticks for poking at the fire, a rock that youâd found with a dip in the middle that made it sort of, almost a bowl if you squinted hard enough, bunches of drying beach grasses that youâd been tediously twining together into bits of rope and other nonsense. That sort of thing.
You placed the conch shell on the roof of it, prodding at it with the tips of your fingers until it sat just so. Like a figurehead on a ship. The crown jewel on your little mess of ferns and driftwood.
âWhat do you think?â you asked, turning back to the Siren. âReally brings the room together, huh?â
He puffed something under his breath and rolled those amethyst eyes of his, but there was a curl to his lips that looked far more amused than irritated.
You trudged back over and plopped beside him in the sand, the soft, low roll of the waves playing against your toes.
âToday feels like itâs going to be gross again,â you sighed, squinting up at the sun overhead in distaste. The big ball of glowing fire had barely crawled its way over the horizon and already it felt like the world was beginning to steam.
The Siren curled his claws around your ankle and tugged.
You arched a brow at him and he pushed his stupidly, perfectly shaped ones up right back. Like he was positive that he could out stink-face you with ease.
âItâs too early to swim,â you complained.
He tugged again.
âI canât be in the water that long. Youâre going to turn me into a prune.â
He said something back, mouth quirking in irritation, and you focused hard on the shape of it. His expression smoothed with that familiar, near-eerie perception of his and he was reaching forward to dig his free fingers into the sand at your hip.
âDonât know what that is.â
âItâs like aââ you frowned, waving your hand around your head. âYâknow. A fruit, thatâs gone pruney. A prune.â
He looked at you like you were the dumbest human heâd ever met, and to be fair you very well could have been. You doubted it was an extensive list. And even if it was, you tended to have a proclivity for landing near the top of those illustrious sorts of rankings either way. At least thatâs what your Captain saw fit to remind you ad nauseum.
So, like the very mature and intellectually competent person that you were, you kicked a mess of seawater right into his face. And then the Siren was screaming something silent and mad that had all the goosebumps on your arms popping up to say hello, and he was dragging you into the shallows ass first. You skidded along the wet sand and landed in the white surf with a laugh that you had to swallow real fast. Because if you drowned in three inches of water just because you couldnât manage to not choke to death on a giggle fit, youâd never forgive yourself.
.
.
That night, you were lounging by the fire with a belly full of seared snapper and the Siren curled just as contentedly only a few feet away. His fins were splayed out across the damp sands, and you couldnât help but compare them yet again to some of the finest, spun silks youâd ever seen. Even when theyâd been pinched and shredded beneath the prickly teeth of your ropes, theyâd still been lovely. But now that they were near-fully-healed, the spread of them was truly impressive.
And they were. Almost healed, that is. You could barely make out the trailing, scar-puckered lines of even the biggest tears anymore. Which was good! Great, even. Because that meant heâd be able to begin his journey home soon, didnât it? And then at least one of you would manage to get away from this barren mess of rocks and sand.
There was a thump against your thighs that had you jolting back into focus, and you looked down to see a pair of familiar, gem-cut irises staring back in the dark.
The Siren was glaring up at you like there was a Purpose to his sudden loss of personal boundaries, and you blinked down at him in confusion. After a long moment of nothing but your silent gawking, his brow started to pinch and the skin around his eyes went tight with irritation. The fins along his ears rippled like a pissy cat raising its hackles in preparation to lunge, and you cautiously placed a hand against the edge of one. The grumpy fluttering stopped all at once, and if you were a touch more sun-poisoned you would say that those delicate, purple pins relaxed against your palm. Either way, you were clearly on the right track. So you let your fingers trail down towards his temples, and then to the salt-curled waves of his hair. His eyes slipped closed with a pleasant rumble that you could feel all along your skin, and you puffed in half-hearted irritation. Prickly, fussy, bastard man.
You werenât really sure what he wanted, but for now the gentle scratch of your nails against his scalp seemed to do the trick. After a few cycles of lazy petting, you let your fingers catch in some of the softer, pale hair beneath his fins. It was a bit tangledâpossibly from all that frilly posturing of hisâand you carefully began picking apart the small knots there one by one. Once those were cleared away, you found yourself with little else to do but sit and play with the newly freed waves of lavender-tipped gold. You tucked one strand over the next, twisting the familiar pattern of a simple braid beneath your palms.
âDeuce grew his hair out at one point,â you chattered idly as you wove those silky locks together beneath your fingers. âThatâs someone from my ship, by the way. Deuce. Anyways. He thought itâd make him look more rugged, or whatever. But he just ended up looking like some rogue, sea elf, and everyone was teasing him about how heâd gone for âwindswept sailorâ and ended up with âfoppish, little lordling.â So he chopped it all off again.â
The Siren hummed, and you could feel it against the pads of your fingers.
âWhich was a real shame,â you continued. âBecause obviously I spent all that time learning to braid it, but also because it actually looked pretty niceâOUCH! What is your problemâ"
You yanked your hand away from his sharp teeth and cradled your smarting fingers to your chest. Because the stupid fish had bitten you! Not hard, or anything. Just a little nip. But itâd still hurt. If less as a genuine injury and more as a sting to your pride.
The Siren spat something quick and harsh under his breath, turning up his nose like youâd been the one to err here, and not his wandering fangs.
âWhat?â you huffed, reaching out to flick at those purple fins in irritation. They twitched against the side of his head to smack at your fingers. âOh, Iâm sorry, am I not allowed to call anyone else pretty, your highness?â
The Siren rolled his eyes with a look that screamed âwell, duh,â and you forced your irritation to override the little, bursting bubble of fondness in your chest. So silly, so silly. This ridiculously primped fish of yours.
âWell, too bad,â you grouched, tugging at the end of that half-bound braid. âJust because you win âmost attractive specimen on the islandâ doesnât mean you get to tell me to pretend Iâm blind on top of being deaf. Let me have something, you prick.â And it wasnât like it was much of a competitionâseeing as the entrants were you, him, and the octopus (if you were being generous). Less of a contest and more of a merciful slaughter, perhaps. A kindness that you were even allowed to share the same stage at all.
The Siren muttered something low and amused under his breath, the amethyst in his irises twinkling with the crackling, orange light of the embers beside you. He reached up to twist his claws along your palm and snatch the hand heâd so viciously nippedâbringing it down to eyelevel to observe it more closely in the dim glow of the fire. There was a steady trickle of blood bubbling up along your thumb. Honestly, not much worse than a papercut. Nevertheless, his brow quirked at the soft trail of red and his gaze jumped up to yours with a pointed sort of curiosity.
âWhat were you expecting to happen? Humans are fragile,â you huffed. âAt least more than you are. Itâs not like I have scales or things to keep me safe.â
His mouth tucked down on a frown, and his tail swept irritably back and forth through the sand.
âWhat? Itâs not like you didnât know that,â you tried, awkward. Because he ate stupid, little flesh bags like you for breakfast. Surely he ought to be well aware that there wasnât much there. Just skin, and muscle, and all the gory, gooey bits beneath. Just like how you knew what it felt like to bite into a piece of bread, or the crunch of an apple. Solid enough to survive in its own right, but something that would give beneath your teeth easily enough that calling it anything other than âdelicateâ would have been a gross exaggeration.
He turned your palm this way and that, brow pinching down more and more with each fresh prick of crimson. His tail beat against the sand and his talons curled up and away from your skinâlike he was worried just touching your fragile, little, egg-shell of an exterior would burst it.
âItâs fine,â you blurted out, still far too confuddled over his progressive panic. You pulled your hand away from his claws and popped your finger in your mouth. âSee?â you garbled around the faint taste of copper. And then pulled it out with a pop to show him the slowing trickle. âTotally fine. Just a scratch.â
The Siren watched that little bubble of red with all the vigilance of a hawk eyeing its super, and then he was snatching your wrist back between his talons and dragging your hand down towards his own mouth. And oh my God, this was it. Heâd finally decided to eat you after all. What was it? Had your oh-so-breakable human foibles finally pushed him over the edge? Or was it the blood? Were Sirens like sharks? Driven to hungry frenzy by the very scent of yourâ
There was a gentle, wet warmth along your skin and you blinked through your hysteric descent into adrenaline-manic-mania to see the Siren carefully cleaning the blood along your cut, just as you had only moments beforeâhis tongue running smooth lines along the teeny wound until the sore skin was tingling and spotless. Granted, his endeavors were carried out with a great deal more delicacy than your earlier example of just shoving your whole finger into your mouth like a gremlin, butâŚ
âUhmââ you spluttered, too gobsmacked to come up with much else. âYouâahâyou donât have toâuhâ"
The Siren grumped something at you that you could feel the shape of against your palm, and then returned to diligently wiping away each new drop as it appeared. It was a strange sort of sensation. Not bristly like a catâs tongue, but certainly not all human. There was a sting to itâsomething hot and prickly. Poison, maybe? Or⌠something. Whatever it was, it had the hair on the back of your neck rising to attention and a shiver working along your shoulders. He kept at, silent and meticulous, until finallyâfinallyâthe bleeding slowed to a stop. He hummed and turned your palm this way and that, looking over the drying nick in your skin like an artist admiring their work.
Once he was content with whatever it was heâd been searching for, he tucked your hand back along the fins at the side of his head and butted up against your palm in as blatant of a âget back to workâ as youâd ever seen.
You swallowed the weird mess of something that had clawed its way up to tangle your tongue and dug your nails back against his scalp just to give yourself something to do other thanâthanâ
âI hope you donât expect me to do that for you,â you babbled, still far too out of your head with What In The Fuck Was That to do much but gawk like an absolute imbecile at the fact that heâd actually, factually, justâ
The Siren rolled his eyes and reached over to drag the point of his talon along the sand at your hip.
âNo need. Already healed.â
You barked out a startled laugh and tugged at the ends of his hair. Your fingers caught at the edge of the braid youâd been weaving, loosening one of the twining sections, and he was hissing and swatting your hands back into placeâpoking around with his dark claws at the little end youâd fussed with until it was exactly how it had been. And then was dragging your hands back to the half-woven bulk of it with a pointed snarl that was clearly an order to finish what you started, human. Or else.
âOkay, okay, jeesh. Iâm on it.â
The Siren trilled low and rumbling under his breath, and beneath the weight of your palm it almost felt like the steady drone of a catâs purr. Warm, and pleasant, and comfortable in a way you couldnât quite place. The thin strands of chain-twined-rope youâd woven to make his necklace pressed into your thighs with a scratchy tickle, and the pretty piece of sea glass at its end reflected the low light of the fire in a kaleidoscope of purples. His fins flicked against your fingers in a steady tempo, and when you gave in and pinched one he was rolling onto his side to shove the full weight of himself into your lap. You whined, and bitched, and complained about suffocation, and the stupid bastard of a fish just smacked his tail indignantly against the wet sand and draped over you even more.
Seven, he was such a nightmare. And you were going to miss him so, so much.
.
.
The next day passed in much the same way as the one before, and the day after that, and the day after that. And as pleasant as it was, you couldnât help but feel like the headsman's axe was hanging over your neck. Always thereâjust a breadth away from falling.
You were fixing your Sirenâs hairâredoing that braid of his that he insisted you tuck into his golden locks each and every morningâand normally he was quite responsive to your prattling. Flicking you with his fins and curling his tail along your ankles as you rambled. A silent, steady way of expressing his interest when you couldnât hear his own responses in return. But today he was⌠distant. Amethyst eyes locked on the grand expanse of the ocean before you with a forlorn sort of expression on his face. The water was still and quiet today, with sunlight bouncing off the low, rolling waves in a pretty glimmer like the glow off his own, shining scales.
You trailed off, fingers falling from his finished braid to twist in your lap. And he just kept staring. Fins half-pricked along the side of his head and gaze heavy with focus.
You swallowed around the tightness in your chest and forced a smile. You hopped to your feet with a merry, little bounce and reached down to pat him on the shoulder.
âIt seems like a nice day for a swim,â you said, and ignored how you could feel your nerves eating through the words. The wobble of them in your throat.
The Siren startled, as much as someone as grandly majestic as he could really do such a thing, and turned your way with a fondly exacerbated huff. He held up a hand, like he was expecting to drag you along with him into the lulling tide, and you shooed away his fingers. His brow pinched and his mouth turned down at the corners.
âFor you, I mean,â you clarified. Like your blatant stepping away from the waterâs edge wasnât an obvious rejection in its own right. You turned back out towards the ocean beyond your little cove. âYour fins are doing a lot better, arenât they? You could probably stretch them a bit, right? With how smooth the waters are today.â
He hummed, considerate, gaze skirting out to track your own. You swallowed around another ball of prickling ice in your throat and kept your grin buoyant and encouraging.
And then he turned back and offered you his hand again.
You frowned, confused. âI canât follow you out there.â
He rolled his eyes and leaned forward to dig his talons into the damp sand.
âI will swim with you.â
A pause, where he reached out to poke at your ankle with a pointed jab, jab, jab before finishing off with aâ
âLike always. Stupid.â
âOh, yeah? Well, I wonât be so stupid when you ditch me halfway out and I drown in the riptide,â you harrumphed and his eyes narrowed grumpily.
He dragged his claws through the sand in short, angry jerks.
âWonât leave.â
âUh-huh,â you drawled, swallowing stiffly again when that curl of awful something tightened behind your ribs. Hoping you could manage to choke it down. It sat heavy and unpleasant on the back of your tongue, like food gone off.
He underlined the âwonâtâ with hard, pissy strokes.
âHow about this,â you tried, because man oh man, you couldnât do this. It was going to turn you into a ridiculously weepy, clingy mess if he kept talking (writing?) like this. âProve that your fins work well enough to keep you up and alive before I risk it. And then we can go from there.â
The Siren huffed, sending the longer ends of his hair flipping out to the sides. But those gem-cut eyes of his kept flicking out to sea, and you could see the tip of his tail twitching back and forthâlike he was itching to just leap forward and swim. The fins along his ears pricked up again, and then he was turning his nose up at you with some petulant comment under his breath and diving forward into the surf. He smacked his tail down with a splash!, drenching you in a mess of salt and seafoam. You spat, and hacked, and scrubbed the water from your eyes.
âGreat way to prove you wonât try and drown me!â you called, hands cupped over your mouth and still spluttering around lingering saltwater. He reared up quick enough to swipe another wave your way before slipping back under, and you laughed through the spray of mist.
You settled yourself back in the sand, ankles crossed and chin pillowed in your knees, and watched the shadow of him dance just beneath the surfaceâstarting in his familiar, looping circles before slowly venturing towards the mouth of the cove. He paced along the breakwater, pectoral fins cresting above the waves to glint bright and sleek in the light of the morning. And then he was darting forward with a great beat of his tail, spraying salt behind him as he dove towards the depths. You waited, anxious, as one moment faded to the next, and thenâfinallyâthere was a burst of frothing bubbles as he broke the surface with a great, curling leapâfins flared wide like the wings of a great bird and scales shining like jewels. It was nearly effortless, how he crested over the water. Diving back down in a mess of spitting mists with a flick of those long, trailing fins. He leapt up again, twisting in the air to crash down on his back and it almost looked like he was dancing. You could see the white flash of his grin even from all the way where you were sat. You didnât think youâd ever seen him so happy. Truly, a sight worthy of every grand tale youâd heard of the Sirens of the Sea.
He circled the mouth of the bay at least a dozen times moreâfast, and wild, and breaching the waves in a burst of seafoam like he was trying to give every pod of dolphins out there a run for their money. Gradually, he began to lose steam, and those grand leaps melted into soft curls of his tail in the tide. And honestly, this was the part where you expected him to sink beneath the surface and glide off into the sunset. You braced yourself for itâfor the moment that golden head of his would vanish beneath the water and never pop back up againâbut instead he bobbed closer.
The Siren rolled in with the waves, panting, and flushed, and looking like someone coming off of a marathon. The muscles all along his torso were jittery with the strain of it, and he looked positively exhausted. Ecstatic beyond compare, but exhausted. He slipped up the damp shore with wobbly arms and came to a stop at your side before very gracelessly and rudely flopping the entirety of his sopping wet bulk onto your person and squashing you into the muck.
You squawked, rightfully indignant, and he just puffed against your neck and let his tail smack harder against your flailing legs.
âYouâre going to crush me!â you wailed, shoving at his shoulder.
He rolled his eyes and curled his fins along your hipsâspreading himself out in the sands like your complaints held no merit whatsoever. You could feel the rapid rise and fall of his chest against yours, and the rabbit-fast thump-thump-thump of his heart. His skin was so warm. You could even feel the heat of it off his scales, which you hadnât even thought was possible. Werenât all fishy, scaly things supposed to be cold? Slimy, and gross, and like poking a wet blob of some unmentionable gunk scraped off the hull of a ship? Instead it was just⌠smooth. Glass-polish sleek and all warm muscle twined along your much, much smaller self.
You cleared your throat and turned to blow a frustrated raspberry against the sand.
âYou do realize if you break all my bones that there isnât going to be anyone to cook your stupid fish for you anymore.â
The Siren grumbled something against your shoulder that almost felt like the breathy puff of a laugh, and then he was collapsing all over again with a sigh that ruffled all the soft, short hairs at the nape of your neck. He scrubbed his cheek against the curve of your throat and you froze. Because it almost felt likeâwas he purring?
A deep, low, tremulous thing that you could feel rumbling against your skin. Like laying a hand against a mast strung too tight in a storm. Or maybe more like that one time youâd found a stray cat lounging in the sun by the docksâthe sweet, old thing chirping softly beneath your palm in a lulling drone that tickled all the way up your arm. Â
The Sirenâs purr wasnât quite like either of those things, but perhaps a mix of the two. Dangerous but warm, powerful but cosseted. More predator than pet, and, well, thatâs what he was, wasnât he? And honestly, it was pretty nice. A language you could feel rather than hear, something just for you.
So you let yourself relax beneath the weight of his scaly bulk with a sigh that wasnât quite as aggrieved as you would have liked, and his tail twisted another loop around your calves. His fins spread around the pair of you like a roll of fine silks, and while the texture wasnât exactly soft, they were delicate enough not to feel suffocating or coarse either. Sleek and cool to the touch, and maybe the thickness of canvas. And there were just so many of them. Long, and trailing, and ruffled along the edges like the folds of a fine-boned fan. Your weird, purple blanket. If Riddle ever found out youâd been using a Siren as bed linens, heâd probably have an aneurism and scrub you in one of the scullery buckets for a week straight.
It was stupidly easy to fall asleep like thatâwrapped up in lavender and plum, with the thrum of his heart next to yours. You napped all through the afternoon, and only woke up once the sun had set over the horizon.
You blinked awake to stars in the sky and a strange, scratchy sensation at your hip.
The Siren had apparently finished up whatever little bout of insanity that had made him think youâd be the perfect impromptu pillow. He hadnât gone farâor even anywhere at all reallyâbut he was propped up at the hip now instead of crushing you into the shore. His hand was resting just beneath the hem of your shirt, right over the origin of that bizarre, ticklish feeling. You blinked again to clear the salt and sleep-grit from your eyes, and realized it was his talons. Not ripping, or tearing, or rending. Just very, very carefully tracing a set of shapes into your skin. The same three symbols, over and over. Up, and down, and up, and curled.
He traced those shapes again, and again, and again. It was almostâyouâd think it was letters, if not for the strange, swirling pop of them. Almost like the words heâd written in his own language all those days ago. His claw dragged along the skin there in the faintest prickle, leaving slowly growing streaks of red in their wake with each repetition. You opened your mouth, ready to ask him what exactly he was so painstakingly etching into your hip, and paused.
Youâd realized over the past however many weeks youâd been marooned on this little crescent of sand and stone that maybe Sirens werenât all youâd thought them to be. And that maybe you really didnât know much about them at all. Something about the slow, cautious way that his claws were tracking along your skin made you think that this was another of those things that you just didnât get. And going by how quiet he was, how stalwart and careful he was being not to let the knife-sharp curves of those talons dig too deep or do anything other than trace back and forth, and back and forth, it might be something⌠Something important. Or at the very least something that you had no business bothering him about.
Least of all if heâd be leaving any day now.
So you tossed your head back on a very loud, very dramatic yawn and used the ensuing stretch to gently swat his hands away.
He didnât look put out by your ridiculous show of flopping around and scooching out of his grip, so that was good at least. You sat up and rubbed at your eyes, and he just kept staring. Kept to his place in the soft, wet sand not a foot away and eyes sharp in the lowlight of the evening.
âWell,â you chuffed on another yawn. âIâm starving. Dinner?â
The Siren rolled his eyes and dipped his chin in what could perhaps generously be classified as a nod. He reached up to flick at the mused braid in his hair with a pointed scowlâtwisted and tangled from the salt of the sea and his earlier rambunctious tomfoolery. You sighed, overly put upon, and hefted your way to your feet.
âYes, yes. And Iâll fix your stupid hair.â
Another nod, this one far more pleased, and the Siren settled himself neatly back into the low roll of the waves to watch you work.
.
.
The next morning when you clawed your way back into consciousness, the Siren was already awake and staring off into the distance.
The fins along his head were pricked in that same, focused way from before that made you think of a hound dog catching a scent. There was a strange sort of energy about himânot quite nervous, but certainly not anything comfortably at ease either. Unsettled. Jittery. The end of his tail flicked against the sand, and the fins along his spine curled and arched to an unsung tempo.
You followed the path of his leer and didnât see much of anything yourself. Just an endless stretch of blue in all directions with the occasional white crack of a wave breaking along its surface.
His tail smacked at the muck again and you felt something tight and stupidly, stupidly selfish curl in your stomach.
You swallowed it down, just like youâd said you would. Because youâd meant it when youâd told him he deserved his happy ending, and you werenât going to let the rotten, nervous thing growing in your guts stop him from having that. Not that you could even if you wanted to, but it was the principle.
ââŚare you going to swim again today?â you asked, and one of those fins swiveled in your direction. You came to stand at his side and curled your toes in the sand to keep yourself steady. âYou should, you know. To make sure everything is really all fixed.â
The Siren tore his gaze away from the sea to cant his head at you with a sharp, suspicious narrowing of his eyes.
You held your hands up in defense. âIâm just saying. You want to be able to go home, donât you? Back to your pod?â
He frowned, tight, but his glare flickered back out to the mouth of the bay like he couldnât help himself.
After a long, long moment, he reached out and dug his claws into the sand.
âNot safe yet.â
You arched a brow. âOh, come on. Iâm sure itâs fine. If anyone could make it back, itâd be you.â
He turned back your way and arched a brow, looking entirely unconvinced.
You huffed and crossed your arms. âDonât get all modest now. Youâre the most obnoxiously proud person Iâve ever metâfish or otherwise. Iâm sure you can do anything you set your mind to.â
His brow pinched again, and there was something almost like worry sparking in those amethyst eyes of his.
âLookââ you said, reaching out to plant a palm against his shoulder. âIf it doesnât work out, you can always just come right back here, okay? Itâs not like Iâm going anywhere.â
You werenât going to think about how nice that sounded, and how absolutely, bitterly selfish it was to hope that heâd turn right back around and head back. You werenât.
The Sirenâs brow pinched and he turned back to the open water, fins rippling against his sides and mouth twisted down at the corners.
You tugged at the braid in his hair.
âDonât make me tie you back up again just so I can drag you out.â
He scoffed and spat something at you that looked like it was properly bitchy, and it had your lips quirking on a smirk. But prissiness or no, heâd started to let himself slip down against the surf, to lull deeper into the shallows and flare his fins at his sides for balance rather than a show of irritation.
You swallowed the last, lingering bite of dread at the back of your throat and offered him a winning smile.
The Siren huffed, and right before he sunk all the way into the water, he set his talons by your feet and scribbledâ
âDo not do anything stupid.â
âYeah, yeah,â you waved off. âSure.â
He underlined the âdo notâ with a harsh sneer that could have made paint curl and the fiercest of generals quake in their boots, and you burst into peals of too-fond laughter.
âOkay, okay. I promise. Swear.â
He nodded, firm, and finallyâfinallyâsunk beneath the surface with a grand, sweeping beat of his tail.
He circled the whole of the bay once, twice, thrice, and then set out past the breakwater with another of those bounding leaps that looked like something straight out of a painting.
You sat and watched the rolling waves until the sun was high in the sky, and then long after it had begun its creeping descent. Fat and sluggish over the horizon, dripping gold along the water like the strokes of a paintbrush. Until there were no shadows in the tide, no purple fins popping up from beneath the surface to smack at your ankles. There hadnât been for hours now. The glint of his tail had slowly grown further and further away, and youâd been staring out at nothing for longer than not.
You stood with a sigh, legs wobbly and prickling with static as you stretched out of your scrunched up crouch.
You moved towards your little shanty hut and carefully readjusted the conch at its helm so that it sat just so. You stepped back with a soft nod and began your familiar trek towards the other side of the island, dutifully ignoring the stutter in your steps and that tight, miserable something twisting in your guts that you refused to name.
It was fine. Heâd be home soon, surely. With his podâhis family. Which was what youâd wanted. And now⌠well, you had to go catch some dinner for you and your octopus. And there was no use waiting around.
.
.
You fucking sucked at fishing.
Which was a lesson learned with miserable, sopping wet consequences. You sat in front of your stupid fire, ringing out your stupid, soaked shirt, and sneezing in the chill of the night air. Youâd never been responsible for hauling in food on The Rose Queen, and the Siren had basically been feeding your stranded ass from day one (whether intentional or otherwise). And so now here you were. Fishless, friendless, and freezing.
You sighed, miserable, and carefully made your way back to the familiar, little tidepool in the crags. You knelt down by the teeny pool of water there and the octopus inside was immediately scurrying for cover. When no tasty treats rained down overhead like the gift of some benevolent god, it slowly creeped its way out from beneath the stones with a trudging sort of paddling you wanted to call pouty.
âSorry, little guy,â you huffed. âI donât have anything for you today.â
You reached forward and the octopus panickedâtrying to flee so fast that the poor thing wound up twisting itself in knots. Its stubby tentacles curled and flailed uselessly in its puddle, and you tutted in sympathy. You scooped the blob into your palms and immediately four sets of tentacles were curling around your fingers like a lifeline. Its little suckers pulled at your skin with sticky smacks as it tried to burrow away into your skin. And SevensâOW! What the Hell!
âChill, chill!â you squawked, trying to wrangle the thing more securely into your hands and stop it from pinching the flesh clear off your bones. âIâm justâwould youâlook, I donât want to drop you, okay? So would you justâ"
The octopus screamed, and you didnât even think that was possible. You could feel the sharp, yowling vibrations of it all along your fingers and a few of the gulls nesting along the rocks took off into the air with a harried flurry of feathers and scrabbling claws. Their wings thwacked the back of your head and you swatted them away with a shrill scream of your own. Why did everything on this stupid island have to be a no good, dramatic, serenading, piece of shiâ
âFine!â you shrieked, feeling your molars ache with it. âBegone!â
And hurled the thing as far as you could over the edge of the rocky shore. It landed in the water with a lackluster plop of fat bubbles and immediately darted away like a prisoner fleeing captivity. And not, you know, the benevolent hand of the very lovely pirate who had been feeding and caring for it all these weeks.
You kicked angrily at a mess of pebbles, and then swore loud and furious when all it did was scuff up your toes and prick bruises into your heels.
You trudged back to your stupid, little hovel and collapsed miserably into the sand.
Here you were, trying to be noble, and kind, and give all of these ridiculous sea creatures the second chance at life that you would never have. And what did you get for it? An empty stomach, an aching heart, and gravel in your fucking feetâ
âWell,â you chattered to yourself. Pleasantly poisonous and tendons jumping in your jaw, âI suppose at least it canât get much worse.â
Which should have been the universeâs signal to do something truly petty. The skies opening overhead in a torrential downpour. Your little, stick home collapsing under the sheer weight of your patheticness. A crab scuttling up from the depths just to pinch your toes. Something like that.  Â
Instead, there was a gentle breeze that tickled your cheeks and coaxed you into looking out over the horizon.
There was something thereâsomething in the distance that you couldnât quite make out from where you were curled up suffering in the sand. You sniffled past angry tears and scrubbed the back of your hand over your nose, and then let that touch of wind guide you forward on wobbly legs. You had to climb all the way up the salt-slick rocks to get a good look at it. But there it was. Not too far at all actually.
A ship.
Large, and wooden, and cresting through the low rolling waves with all the ease of the monstrous vessel it looked to be. There was a silver insignia emblazoned on its side, but it was still too far away to make out the particulars. But you didnât care, because it was a ship. An actual, factual ship.
You waved your hands high over your head and shouted at the top of your lungs.
And holy shit, holy shitâmaybe the universe didnât actually hate your poor guts. Maybe thereâd be a happy ending to this whole thing after all.
You watched in the distance as an anchor dropped, and you had to stop yourself from tumbling off your rocky perch in your excitement. One of the small dinghies was lowered into the water and a gaggle of crew climbed down to man it. Slowly but surely, that little boat grew closer, and you sprinted down to the shoreline to meet it.
A man with short, dark hair climbed over the side and met you halfway. His eyes were soft, and brown, and kind, and he offered you a warm smile when you nearly tumbled straight into him in your hasteâcatching a hand around your arms and helping keep you upright.
He said something polite that you assumed was the usual sort of greeting and intrigue into how exactly youâd managed to find yourself in this state of affairs, and you hastily made to explain your situation as you always did.
âThank youâI canât hear, but I can write and readâAnd Iââ
Your train of thought cut off sharply, and your rambling explanations with it. The brunette was already nodding your way in sympathy and rattling off instructions to his crew. They were all decked out in slightly differing variations of the same, white and navy uniform. With golden buttons and sashes glinting in the low light and silver pendants pinned to their breast pockets. Your doe-eyed savior turned back your way and offered you his arm with another of those sap sweet smiles that lit his cheeks in a merry, rosy pink.
You hesitated, throat bobbing around something tight and cold that curdled along the back of your tongue.
Twining songbirds, wings frozen in flight as they soared up towards an endless sky.
The intricate, little emblem stared back at you proudly from its place on his chest, and you couldnât help but think of the Siren whoâd only just left your cove a few hours before.
âNot safe,â heâd demanded, dragging you away from the wreck so frantically youâd nearly drowned from it. âNot safe.â
The brunetteâs smile wavered at your hesitance, and he wrapped his hand around yours to tug you into the boat.
You climbed in on wobbly legs, becauseâwhat else were you supposed to do? Stay stranded on this little patch of sand and stone until you starved to death or went mad from loneliness? Run? From sailors with swords on their belts as long as your arm? To hide on an island that you could traverse in its entirety in a half hour or less? You were always one to happily snatch up the weird and wonderful opportunities life could present to you and run them into the ground, but now⌠What else was there?
You were settled against one of the small, wooden benches and the brunette shucked off his jacket to drape over your shoulders and the silver songbirds glinted in the low light. He offered you another of those warm, warm smiles before turning to call an order to his crew.
You sighed, miserable, and slouched against the sidingâfingers dangling down to brush along the surface of the water.
âDo not do anything stupid,â your Siren had said.
And youâd really been hoping to last more than twenty-four-freaking-hours before inevitably breaking that promise, but it seemed the universe really was out to get you after all.
.
.
.
[TAG LIST - CLOSED]
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#twisted wonderland imagines#twisted wonderland#twst x reader#Vil Schoenheit x Reader#Vil x Reader#vil schoenheit#Monster Mayhem#My Writing#vil shoenheit#Siren!Vil#Mermaid!Vil#Fantasy AU#Monster Mayhem Vil Part 4
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Siren! Darling: *staring at her captor*
Yan! Pirate: what do you want today, love?
Siren! Darling: *aggressive gestures*
Crewmates:
Yan! Pirate: of course love, right away *leaves and brings back a betta fish*
Siren! Darling: :D *eats it*
Yan! Pirate: so cute...
#yancore#yandere#yandere headcanons#yandere scenarios#headcanon#yandere x darling#yandere x reader#yandere x you#fantasy#siren#pirates#cute
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