The closer I looked, the more unreal it became.
And broken it was—yes, beaten in ways that spoke of long, slow cruelty. But not broken where it mattered. Not in the eyes.
They stared, wide and gold, and they didn't blink. Didn't flinch.
They burned.
Not with fear.
With fury.
And Compliance.
The demon yanked hard on its hair, dragging its head up for me to see. Like he was showing off a trophy. Like he expected a reaction—revulsion, sympathy, something. Anything. But the creature didn't cry out. Didn't bare its teeth.
It just looked up—straight into my eyes.
And what I saw in that look wasn't a plea. It was a challenge.
Defiant.
Angry.
This one thinks I am the demon's crew. Stupid.
But I didn't blame him.
Because it was still chained. Still bound at the wrists and ankles, iron biting into flesh, old rust caked into the joints. It had suffered.
But even that told a story.
The wooden wall it was chained to…
It was splintering.
Not broken yet, but close. A few more tugs—just a little more time—and it could give way. I could see the cracks spiderwebbing through the grain, see the screws jutting from the frame, rattling every time it shifted its weight.
But it hadn't tried.
Hadn't pulled again.
It could. I knew it could.
But it didn't.
And that was what chilled me.
Because it wasn't ignorance or defeat that kept it still.
It was restraint.
It was waiting.
For something.
For the right moment.
For someone to bleed.
Or something else.
But that wasn't even what held my attention.
No. It was the light.
The way it hit his skin—not like light on flesh. Like light on water.
It reflected. Bent. Shimmered.
Orange. Black. Red.
A shifting palette of dusk on fire.
Scales.
I saw them now—cut through bruises and caked blood.
Scales like koi tiles, slick and alive, catching every flicker of lantern-glow and throwing it back in shades of molten gold and volcanic red.
They weren't just armor.
They were defiance.
His body was humanoid—mostly. Strong arms. Muscled legs. Broad chest. Built like something that had to swim through storms and survive them. But his sides told a different story.
The delicate curve of something soft, something other, folded close to his ribs.
Fins.
Worn. Torn. But unmistakable.
They moved faintly in the air, like memory of the ocean still clung to them.
A merman.
No—more than that.
Something old. Something feral.
Something that shouldn't be locked in a fucking cell like some pet on a leash.
My time in the waters had taught me many things.
The silence of drowning.
The taste of rot in the salt.
The weight of things that don't stay dead.
But this?
This creature?
This wasn't just sea-born.
It was sea-bound.
And if the system words were to be believed.
A siren, maybe.
Its sub species?
It didn't matter.
I gazed into its eyes—those gold-flecked, furious things—and forgot, for just a second, where we were. They were beautiful. Not in a delicate, polished way. No. They were raw. Wild. The kind of beauty that comes from defiance that refuses to die. The kind of beauty you only find in things that have suffered, and still stand.
It was battered. Bruised. Chained like a sideshow exhibit in a traveling freak circus. And still—those eyes didn't break. Didn't beg. Just stared. Angry. Proud. Silent.
This demon. This greedy, sadistic bastard.
He wasn't just a murderer.
He was a trafficker.
A collector of flesh. Of pain. Of stories that no one would ever tell, because he made sure no one left here alive enough to tell them.
The sins keep piling. Higher and higher. I'm running out of fingers to count them on.
This thing—this prisoner—it could escape.
I can see it. Anyone with half a brain and two good eyes could see it. That body is muscle wrapped in scale and spite. The chains around its wrists strain with every breath it takes. The wood they're bolted to? Splintered. Fragile. One good pull, and it'd break.
Then what? A leap through that rusted hatch, a dive into the water, and it'd be gone. Back to the ocean. Back to where the demon couldn't follow.
Untouchable.
Free.
But it hadn't moved.
Why?
Why in all hells was it still here?
It wasn't fear. I could smell fear. Hell, I wore it once like a second skin. And this thing? This sea creature? It didn't stink of fear.
It stank of restraint.
And that's when I knew.
It wasn't staying because it was weak.
It was staying because of something else.
I scanned the cell again. Let my eyes drag over the filth and ruin like I was reading a book written in rot and dust. Stools broken in half. Garbage piled like offerings. And bodies—pieces of them—stacked like they'd been forgotten by time.
Each time I glanced at those limbs, at those stumps and empty sockets, the anger flared in my gut. Hot. Raging. But I swallowed it. Pushed it down. Held it like a knife I wasn't ready to use yet.
Then I saw it.
Behind the merman.
Deeper in the dark.
Movement.
A figure. A women.
Curled up. Still breathing, . Hidden behind the shadows and the broken boards. A human—skin pale, movements weak. But alive.
That was why the merman hadn't run.
He wasn't waiting for a moment to flee. He was choosing to stay.
Choosing to protect.
That was his anchor.
That was the reason he stayed in the chains when he could've been gone, could've left all this behind.
He'd chosen to be a wall between the demon and someone who couldn't defend themselves.
And something about that…
Something about that felt right.
It made sense.
It made this creature—this bloodied, scaled, silent thing—more human than anything else I'd seen on this cursed ship.
He wasn't a prisoner anymore. Not in my eyes.
He was a shield.
And shields like that? They don't get forged easy.
That kind of resolve, that kind of fire—it doesn't just burn. It consumes.
I didn't smile.
There wasn't anything worth smiling for.
But deep inside, I felt the smallest flicker of something I hadn't felt since I saw the first girl's body on this deck.
Hope?
No.
Something sharper.
Something useful.
Purpose.
This merman and I—we weren't the same. We weren't allies. Hell, we hadn't said a word.
But we had a target.
And sometimes, that's all it takes.