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Hey hey hey hey shark week it's shark week time, time for a shark week ask.
In dtttww, is Roman any specific type of shark? I'd been picturing generic great white/ mako type body, but since he's so big I think it'd be hilarious if he were one of the shark giants, all of which are eaters of krill/plankton.
happy shark week everyone (mandatory global holiday)
i didn't have a particular shark in mind as far as i remember, but i think i was picturing something more along the lines of a reef shark? i would embrace most shark takes though, all sharks are valid casting choices in my eyes <3
final chapter of dtttww :) i had a lot of fun with this verse so i may take requests set in it in the future, and this might receive some more copy editing later, but for now this is the epilogue!
warnings: mild injury, mild hypnosis, for once no miscommunication :)
-
[Several months laterâŚ]
Sunlight trickled down through the water in wavy bands, illuminating the shallows and growing fainter and fainter as the distance from the surface increased.
Virgil didnât spend much time in the shallows, too wary of being without escape, being made vulnerable to human vessels or poachers. Despite his dark and gloomy aesthetic, he couldnât go too far into the depths either, simply because his fragile fish bones weren't built for it. His eyes werenât built for it either, and down there where anything could be lurking, he would need more than speed to avoid danger.
So, on an average, sunny day like this, he could be found miles offshore, in waters that were easily too deep for unsuited humans to reach, but still well-illuminated by the light above.
There were a few old wrecks scattered about the ocean floor here, and though theyâd probably been stripped by a pod in the past, he figured heâd go through them and check for anything that was left behind. Things that werenât useful to a pod could certainly be things that were useful to him, after all.
Heâd been poking through the undercarriage of one of the larger ships for an hour or two, relaxed as he ever got. He could take his time. The only creatures around to judge him were the shoals of fish and layers of barnacles built up amidst the metal, wood, and rust.
Actually⌠Virgil paused in his inspection of an old cutlery set to glance around.
What had happened to the fish?
Through a hole in the shipâs hull, he watched as a broad shadow passed over the ground and ships alike, large enough to belong to a whale.
There hadnât been a single shred of whalesong above.
Virgil edged further back from the hole, eyeing the outside warily as the shadow receded, leaving behind only wavering sunlight on sand as though it had never been there at all.
There was nothing here that was worth sticking around.
He carefully made his way back to one of the other exits, in the opposite direction of where heâd seen the shadow head, the strokes of his fin cutting through the water with barely a whisper. The porthole was easily wide enough for him, and the ocean stretched out blue and vast before him, a promise of safety if he just moved fast enough.
A momentâs pause, to make sure he didnât hear or see anything out of place, and then he was out, flitting from rock outcropping to bone reef and scanning the seas above. Not for the first time, he wished his scales were a little less distinctive in the day.
Behind him, an ominous creak.
He froze, and watched with mounting apprehension as a shadow spilled over him, looming closer and darker than before. The silhouette of an arm stretched out, heading towards himâŚ
âVirgil, you must help,â a huge voice pleaded, âIâve been had.â
He twisted around just in time to see a huge arm flop down onto the floor next to him, kicking up a cloud of sand and panicked burrower fish in the process.
It was wrapped in heavy wire netting from fingertips to forearm, and behind it, a giant mer was pouting at him with the best seal pup eyes he could manage, which, considering who his best friend was, were fairly potent.
Roman was huge, and he was a shark, with teeth and claws designed to shred and tear, and hands that could enclose him entirely-- but his elbows were braced against the ground with delicate balance so he wouldnât crush anything, and heâd never grabbed for Virgil past that first disastrous encounter, and even now, his brow was furrowing with worry.
âPufferfish status?â he asked, voice lowered from the dramatic plea of before.
Virgilâs mouth pulled up at the corners without his permission.
Roman was huge, yes, but he was also theatrical and eager and witty, full of sharp return quips for every barb Virgil had to offer.
He could hurt him, but he wouldnât. Virgil believed that much.
âPrickly for a second, but Iâm smooth now,â he answered, shrugging away the last of the tension. âTry not to sneak up on me without a warning click?â
âYou have my word,â Roman replied, and if someone had told him months ago that heâd dare to ask anything of a giant mer, heâd have laughed in their faces. Now, Virgil knew that just like all the other requests, Roman would do his best to heed it.
âBut really, my fingers are starting to feel numb. Help?â he entreated with a tilt of his head, shifting his net-wrapped hand a little closer.
Virgil rolled his eyes, but his smile didnât go away, though it tilted more towards amused now. He darted forward, twisting in a spiral around Romanâs hand to try and see the extent of the damage.
âHowâd you even manage this? At least I had the excuse of being caught up in a storm,â he snarked, picking at a loose section with his claws. Romanâs fingers twitched a little, and he shot him an apologetic glance.
âI was⌠perhaps⌠trying to get a glimpse of those sailors that Logan mentioned patrolled the coast?â Roman offered, more than a little sheepish.
Virgilâs gaze turned sharp in a heartbeat. âDid they spot you?â
Logan had warned both Patton and Roman several times that not many humans would take as kindly to their long-term existence near human settlements as Logan himself had.
âNo!â Roman assured, âI was very stealthy, truly, I was just⌠so focused on being stealthy that I missed the other vessel and the nets it had dragging along behind it. It could have happened to anyone!â
âI seriously doubt that,â Virgil replied dryly. Heâd snapped a few of the looser wires with his teeth, but already his jaw was beginning to ache with the strain. âWell, you get to explain this to Specs, âcause weâre going to need his expertise in detangling for this one.â
Roman groaned in answer, dropping his head to plonk against the ground.
---
Logan carefully set one foot in front of the other, all of his focus on the thin strip of rock below him.
If he switched his gaze to even a few inches to either side, heâd be faced with the sight of a vertigo-inducing drop to the waves below, one that would have all but the most experienced tightrope walkers dizzy with panic.
His gaze didnât move, though, unerringly focused on the ground beneath him, and on his own body. There was no need to look at anything but the ledge, a soft presence confirmed in the back of his mind, because he wasnât going to fall.
Another part of him was skeptical, seeing as he wasnât known for a lack of clumsiness by most. There was just so much to get distracted by, and it was so easy to look away and miss a curb or accidentally trip over his own feet--
But not now. Now, he was focused on just this one task, a gentle voice dragging his attention back whenever it began to stray. He was hyper aware of where each of his limbs were and where he needed to put them to continue forward, step by careful step.
Only a little fartherâŚ
âLogan!â
The harsh call snapped him right out of the trance, and he was abruptly made very aware of both the distance he could fall and the effects that sudden instinctual terror had on his sense of balance.
âNewtonâs fucking Cradle,â he swore, and then wobbled again, precariously close to falling over.
There was the sound of water crashing against rock, and in the next moment, two giant hands had curled up on either side of him like the shells of an oyster. They provided him some much needed stability to lean his weight against, and he struggled to steady his breathing as relief swept through him.
âItâs okay, Virgil, I wonât let him fall! No cliffs, ands, or buts about it,â Pattonâs voice was muffled, but not enough to miss the pun.
Logan sighed loudly, but he also shifted to let his full weight rest against the curl of Pattonâs left palm, tapping twice to let him know it was alright for him to move.
His stomach still swooped slightly as Patton slowly shifted his hands away from the thin rock ledge, but there were some things that one had to adapt to when living with two very affectionate, grabby sea giants, and being toted around was one of those things.
Before long, he was level with the flattest segment of rock that made up their meeting place, which could be called an island if one was feeling gracious, but was really more of a collection of rocky spires and bridges that stuck out of the ocean.
Logan was barely able to sit up before Virgil pulled himself up at the edge of Pattonâs palm, expression thunderous but his hands gentle as he carefully checked him over for scrapes or injuries.
âNearly gave me a heart attack,â he grumbled, a phrase that he used much more frequently around Logan for some reason. Logan had already been reassured that it was an exaggeration and Virgil had no heart problems he knew of, so instead of worrying, he bore his friendâs fussing with good grace. âDid we or did we not agree that you need a spotter if you want to play around with bullshit sirensong magic?â
The mer paused. âNo offense, Pat.â
âNone taken!â Patton replied from where he had sunk further into the water to put himself closer to eye-level.
âI figured you would be along shortly,â Logan defended, and then perked up at the reminder of his most recent experiment. âBesides, one of the things tested in this trial was if the siren song could overshadow significant fear or even terror, and I wouldnât have been nearly as afraid if youâd been there with me.â
âAw,â Roman cooed, curling his tail up and leaning against one of the larger rock outcroppings, his posture slightly off.
Virgil dragged a hand over his face with a sigh, and then flapped a âgo onâ gesture at Logan, distracting him. âSo, whatâd you figure out this time?â
Logan needed no further encouragement.
âEven the lightest application of a sirenâs song can overwhelm other emotions,â he started, recalling the utter honed focus he had experienced. âWhile in the past Iâve felt distant or removed from my body while under its effects, this time I had Patton focus on requesting a very specific task, and due to the intense concentration it took, I was very present in the moment while fulfilling that task.â
âYou didnât snap out of it until I called for you,â Virgil interjected, more curious than wary. âWas it harder than normal to use the grounding tactics?â
One of the first things Logan had investigated was what it took for him to resist and even break free from Pattonâs song, a task that Virgil had demanded in order to let him run any experiments with the sirenâs magic. Back then, Virgil hadnât expected Patton to agree, and heâd outright sulked for weeks to cover up the nerves he felt whenever the siren thralled Logan.
âIt was,â Logan said, his excitement growing as he considered the new information. âWithout significant outside stimulus, all of my attention was focused on the task, and so I couldnât pull away mentally to do my normal grounding techniques!â
âIâve never heard someone so excited about being hypnotized better,â Roman commented wryly.
âHe should get a hypnoprize,â Patton added, and Virgil grinned, because he was a traitor who enabled Pattonâs wordplay habits.
âIs there an award for smart people doing dumb things?â Virgil mused teasingly. âLogan could be voted âmost likely to throw himself into danger in the pursuit of knowledge.ââ
âThatâs why he has us, Finding Emo,â Roman countered, gesturing extravagantly with one hand. âWe would never abandon him to the cruel clutches of his own nerdiness.â
Logan couldnât help but feel a thrill of pride at the casual way that Virgil ducked beneath one of Romanâs sweeping gestures, no trace of the blatant fear or suspicion that had been present as recently as a month ago.
Theyâd really come a long way from the misunderstandings of that first encounter, all of them.
A glint of light at the edge of the shark merâs submerged forearm caught Loganâs eye, and he frowned. âRoman, whatâs happened to your arm?â
Romanâs prideful grin dropped into sheepishness immediately. âWell, about thatâŚâ
âPrincey here was abandoned to the cruel clutches of his own reckless dumbassery,â Virgil informed him, ignoring Romanâs trill of offense to drift back and shove at the hand in question until Roman finally lifted it, displaying the impressive collection of netting that heâd managed to get tangled in.
âOh, you poor thing,â Patton clucked sympathetically, and Roman soaked in the attention like a very dramatic sponge. Virgil rolled his eyes even as he sawed at a few of the looser wires, and Logan sighed in fond exasperation as he reached for his pocket knife.
warnings: injury, blood mentions, past psychological&emotional&physical abuse, ptsd, sickness
-
Virgil woke up, which was only unsurprising for the few moments it took him to 1. realize that his head was pounding and 2. remember the two very large reasons why.
His eyes flew open, and he found himself half-submerged in a shallow pool of cool water, surrounded by flat ledges of dry rock. The sound of ocean waves lapping against the cliffside echoed around the cavern, which was dimly lit by overhead cracks in the ceiling.
In one of these beams of paltry light, Logan was slumped over on his side, glasses askew. Virgilâs relief at seeing him was instantly overshadowed by terror at what could have happened to the human after Virgil had gone and gotten his skull knocked against rock.
His headache worsened, and he lifted a hand to press against the sore spot, pausing when he found more of those stiff bandage strips wrapped around his head.
The soft sloshing of water seemed to be enough to startle Logan into wakefulness, and the human brightened slightly at the sight of him. âVirgil. Itâs good to see you awake. Are you feeling any pain or nausea?â
âWhat happened?â Virgil replied in lieu of the real answer, which was âeverything hurtsâ. âWhere are we, I thought we were dead for sureâ!â
âTake a few deep breaths,â Logan advised, shuffling closer to the pool and offering a hand. Virgil took it gratefully. âWeâre not currently in any danger. I believe weâre at the home of the seal-hybrid mer, ifââ
âWeâre what?!â Virgilâs voice dropped to a horrified double pitch, his grip on Loganâs hand instantly turning crushing.
âOw,â Logan said in a pointed monotone. Virgil eased up before his claws could turn the humanâs palm into bloody ribbons. âLet me finish, please. Iâve managed to work out a rudimentary method of communication, and as far as I know, weâre not currently at risk.â
âFrom the giant mer-eating monsters that literally kidnapped us, you mean?â
âYes, that was the potential risk I was referring to.â Logan pulled Virgil further upright, reaching out with his free hand. âMore importantly, youâve been out for some time. Will you allow me to take a look at your injury?â
Virgil shuffled a little closer, allowing the hand to make contact with him. He had traversed currents of all temperatures, but in chilled still waters like this, Loganâs warmth was more than welcome. âI dunno how thatâs more important than our inevitable, rapidly-approaching deaths, but sure, fine. Knock yourself out.â
âI will not? You are already dealing with a likely concussion, I see no reason to double that number.â Logan squinted at him like he was concerned that the head wound had taken a worse toll than heâd thought.
âNo, itâs-- itâs just an expression. Donât actually pass out, or Iâll freak out.â
âAh,â Logan acknowledged, his hand twitching like he wanted to grab something before returning to carefully peeling the bandages away. âMy apologies. Colloquialisms are not my strong suit.â
Virgil blinked back at him, because five syllable words were a little much even when he wasnât concussed. âNo worries?â
Logan continued to gently probe the back of his head. A sharp pang made him jerk away with a muted hiss, his vision blurring with pain as the sharp motion only agitated all his other cuts. He waved off Loganâs apology before it was fully formed. âSâfine. Whatâs the damage?â
âThe bleeding has stopped, which is a good sign. Itâs swelled significantly, but the cool water is hopefully helping reduce that as well. The best course of action now is for you to rest and recover in a dark, quiet place, ideally for at least two full days.â
âYeah, but thatâs not happening unless we get away first,â Virgil shot back, irritably twitching his fins down as Logan rewrapped the injury. The human let out a slow breath.
âVirgil. I believe the situation isnât as dire as you think.â He settled back on his heels, back stiff as he spoke. âOur captors have shown no signs of aggression or hunger, even with the significant bleeding from your head wound. Itâs possible--â
âItâs not possible!â Virgil cut him off, scowling fiercely. âThat doesnât mean anything. Theyâre playing some kind of sick game the way they always do, and if you let them trick you, youâre going to lose!â
Logan looked back at him inquisitively, still not getting it. âWhat evidence are you basing this off of? I was under the impression that youâve spent only marginally more time in their company than me. Have they attempted to trick you in the past?â
âYes, no, I mean--,â Virgil groaned, pulling at his bangs. âThey donât have to say it. Thatâs just how giants like them operate. Weâre smaller, they can do what they want to us, we donât get a say in it. You escape or you die.â
âYet, weâve been in their admittedly less-than-ideal care for over 24 hours, and they havenât hurt us or made any indications they intend to hurt us.â Logan gestured expansively, his hand a bit wobbly. âThatâs a rather long time to pretend, and for what purpose? If it was what they desired, we have been easy targets for a meal from the moment they relocated us.â
A rather long time to pretend. Virgil swallowed down a hysterical laugh, feeling dizzy. If a day of false niceties was all it took to buy his trust, heâd have never gotten away from his first encounter with a giant mer. âYouâreâ youâre human. You donât know anything about this.â
Logan frowned. âI may be human, but that does not make me an idiot. Even with a language barrier, body language and expression are invaluable tools for communication, and Iâve been doing very little but observe them while you were unconscious. Virgil, if you just tried talking to themââ
âNo!â he snapped, curling in even as his fins flared wide and threatening. He wouldnât do this again, wouldnât be subjected to the worldâs most torturous game of catch and release, wouldnât be lured back into too-tight hands by false promises and meaningless apologies. He couldnât do that again.
Measured, rhythmic tapping on the back of his hand slowly brought him back to the present, cool air and Loganâs steady voice by his side. His throat was closed-up-too-tight, his gills too far out of the water to switch lungsâ but the rhythm was counted out over and over, breathe in, hold, and out.
âThere you go,â Logan said as Virgil took in another long, shuddering drag of air. âWell done.â
The air smelled like iron. He realized that somewhere in the past few minutes, heâd dug his claws into the soft sides of the humanâs hand, drawing blood. He pulled away as though heâd been burned.
Logan didnât even twitch, still searching his gaze intently. âAre you with me?â
âNo, I shouldnât have pushed you. I didnât realizeâ but I should have.â A deep, resolved breath. âItâs okay. Iâll find you a way out that doesnât involve interacting with them.â Loganâs gaze went distant and hazy with thought, and Virgil hesitantly drew closer, pulling a bandage free to wrap around his bleeding hand.
⌠He was really warm. Clammy, too, and heâd been sitting in a cold, wet cave for hours, hadnât he? Had been completely drenched for even longer.
âYouâre sick,â Virgil said, and Logan took a moment too long to refocus on him. How had it taken him so long to notice? âThatâs why you need me to talk to them. You need to get home.â
âMy illness is no more severe than your injuries,â he deflected, adjusting his glasses clumsily. âRight now, the priority is getting you away from triggering circumstances. If my suspicions are correct, I will be fine regardless.â
Right. His suspicions, based on his willingness to trust his own abductors. Heâd trusted Virgil, too, back in those tunnels. Heâd known that he might be abandoned and heâd freed Virgil anyways, taken his hand anyways. Gotten hurt for his trouble.
Heâd get hurt worse if Virgil left him here.
â... Yeah,â Virgil said, tucking the edge of the bandage in carefully. âBut you should sleep for now. We both should. You said they havenât done anything yet, right?â
âYes, butâŚ,â Loganâs brow was furrowed slightly, as though he knew something was off, but wasnât quite sure what. âI mean, you do need rest. If⌠If youâre sure.â
âI am,â Virgil replied, curling against the edge of the pool and pillowing his head on his arms to hide their shaking. âGet some sleep, Specs.â
â
It was early morning when Patton woke to the splash of something small dropping into the water from his air room.
The room wasnât overly large, being designed only for occasional use when he needed some extra oxygen in his system. It was also quite a few caves up above his sleeping den, but with two delicate little guests staying over, his senses were on high alert. He disentangled from Roman, who had been clinging to him for extra warmth, waking the shark mer in the process.
âMwhaâhuh?â he asked groggily, and Patton chuckled at the way one side of his hair had been pressed into a tangled bundle.
âI think they may be awake!â he reported quietly, and Roman perked right up. They had originally hovered in the room over the two of them, only leaving after the human-- busy tending to the tiny merâs wounds-- had gotten too fed up and used charades to shoo them away, leaving them with nothing to do but sit around and think about how badly theyâd messed up. As such, they were both more than eager to start fixing things.
Upon popping up into the air room, however, they found only the human, lying completely still apart from the slow rise and fall of his chest. Deep in sleep, with an empty pool at his side.
Roman and Patton exchanged a panicked look, and ducked back underwater to search through his home and see where, exactly, the injured mer had gone.
It didnât take long to spot him. The mer had practically every fin and frill puffed out, even the ones that were still injured. The threat display as eye-catching as they got.
He was hovering in the opening of a vent crevice, one that helped circulate seawater through the caves. It was small enough that if he vanished through it, they wouldnât be able to stop him or see where he was headed. He knew it, too, staring them down with sharp defiance rather than absolute terror.
âDonât move,â he said, as though they hadnât both frozen at the sight of him. âIâm going to-- to make a deal with you.â
âA deal?â Roman asked, and received a sharp, wild-eyed glare for his troubles.
âYeah, a deal. The other one is sick,â a slight jerk of the head toward the air room, âso he wonât last long here. Probably already too far gone to even play a single game.â
Patton was torn between concern (the human was sick?) and confusion. Game?
âBut Iâm fine. Iâve had much worse than this.â The mer drifted back slightly, closer to the crevice. âIf I leave now, youâll never find me, and then Lo-- the human will die, and you wonât have anything to play with.â
A creeping sense of dread overcame Patton. He still didnât know what was going on, but it was sounding more and more like something was seriously wrong here.
âSo, a deal. You take the human back to where you found him, and Iâll stay-- Iâll stay here,â his voice cracked painfully, but he ignored it, staring at them with a desperate sort of intensity. âWith you. I wonât try to get away or anything. I-- I swear.â
âGet away?â Roman asked, his voice going high with the same sort of horror that currently swamping Patton. The mer ducked back at the sound, gaze flitting between them, some of that terror returning.
âI will! Iâll leave, if you-- you can either have one or none, thatâs the deal, Iâm not kidding. Iâm not!â His fins flared wider, blood beginning to leak from some of them. âHeâs human anyways, he can barely even swim, you donât want him--â
âKiddo,â Patton cut in urgently, raising his hands peacefully and trying not to wince when the mer flinched, âif heâs sick, of course weâll take him back to where he can get help. No deals necessary, okay?â
The little guy didnât look reassured at all. âI want to watch. I have to see you put him back, where other humans will find him, or else the dealâs off.â
He didn't believe them. Patton exchanged a helpless look with Roman, who finally nodded.
âOf course,â the shark mer said, âYou are more than welcome to accompany us back to the mainland where Patton found him, provided that youâre not exacerbating your injuries.â
The mer hissed at him, a tiny, reedy sound. âAnd whose fault is that?â
âIrresponsible human fishing vessels?â Roman tried, and then wilted under both Patton and the merâs looks when the joke fell flat. He cleared his throat. âIt is, of course, mine. I wanted to apologize for the way I manhandled you before. Regardless of my intentions, it was unbefitting behavior, and it hurt you. I am truly sorry.â
He bowed with a little flourish, moving slower than normal. The mer stared at his bowed head apprehensively, and then covered the look up with a distrustful scowl.
âIf youâre sorry, get Logan out of this place before he gets any worse,â he finally replied, and Patton nodded and went to retrieve the human-- Logan, presumably.
Glancing over his shoulder as he left, he could see the way the tiny merâs fins had settled just slightly, not quite as frantically overextended as before.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Patton and Roman went in circles for a moment on who should carry Logan, eventually settling on Patton, since Roman was the quicker between the two of them and they were alarmingly unsure of what the small mer was planningâ or how negatively that plan would affect the little guy.
Roman couldnât help but be a little jealous anyways at the sight of the human pressing his tiny face against the palm of Pattonâs hand, still mostly unconscious despite the jostling. It was unfairly adorable, and he never got to hang out with humans that werenât terrified or fled at the sight of him.
Logan had started off scared too, sure, but after theyâd cleared that little misunderstanding up, the human had shooed him away with an itty bitty stern look.
Heâd listened, of course, he certainly owed these two that much, but internally he was gleeful at how bold Logan was when hanging out with them. Maybe heâd even come back and theyâd learn more of his language and he could needle the nerd into telling him more about surface lifeâ!
But of course, that required that he get better first.
It seemed obvious now, with the feverflush to his skin and the subtle tremor even as he slept, but the signs were so tiny on him, they might not have noticed for ages yet. He was inordinately grateful that the little mer had brought it to their attention, even if it also meant learning just how lowly the little guy thought of them.
When they returned from the air room, the tiny mer hadnât twitched from his spot, though he looked as though he wanted to vibrate right out of his skin.
Agonizingly, he only seemed to get more stressed at the sight of Pattonâs cupped hands, gaze darting between them for a moment before he flitted forwards and pressed an earfin to the makeshift airseal, staying in place only long enough to catch the sound of Loganâs little raspy breaths.
Roman opened his mouth, arms sliding up to gesture, and the tiny mer shot all the way back across the room like quicksilver. He had a moment to realize that with that speed, theyâd never have âcaughtâ him in the first place if he hadnât been trapped by that net, and then he felt immensely guilty for clearly spooking the little guy.
âHow about you lead the way?â he asked, trying to distract their flighty little friend before he started tearing hair out. âThe exit is one cave down, weâll follow to wherever you think is the best place.â
He was shaking his head before Roman even finished. âNo, Iâll follow, youâ whoever stole him, you have to take him back to that beach. You remember... right?â
Roman turned to glance at Patton, who nodded firmly. âIâll get us started then, kiddo.â
He cradled his cupped hands to his chest and swam deeper, easily twisting through the exit tunnel into the open ocean. Roman nodded at the little mer and followed, hoping that the little guy wouldnât just vanish.
Only a moment later, he flitted out after them, and Roman caught the desperate longing that crossed his expression for a moment at the sight of wide open terrain. It vanished after a single glance at Pattonâs cargo, replaced by a grim scowl.
If it werenât for the human, Roman had the feeling that the mer would have turned and vanished, too quick and small for them to ever see again.
Instead, he hovered carefully out of lunging reach as they traveled, watching their every move with narrowed eyes. Every unconscious twitch of Pattonâs hands seemed to make him flinch in response, as though he was expecting something horrible would happen to the human at any moment.
Normally, Roman would have been quite offended about this implied slight against Pattonâs character, since his friend was just about the gentlest guy he knew. With circumstances what they were, however, he remained silent. He knew that this wasnât really a reflection on Patton, but rather someone else entirely, a phantom presence that was still haunting the small mer.
Roman let out a breath of relief when they finally resurfaced, a human beach visible nearby. Patton unfolded his hands as soon as they were above water, and they both peered nervously down at the human.
âHe doesnât look like heâs gotten any worse,â Patton murmured, angling his hands so their small tagalong could see as well. âThis is fairly close to the beach I found him at!â
âIt seems the early hour has served us well,â Roman added, making sure not to gesture as he usually would. âThere doesnât appear to be anyone else around. Should we set him on the beach?â
The tiny mer jolted when he realized that they were both looking to him, flitting back and forth in nervous motions. âUh, yeahâ Yes. But be careful. And make sure you put him high enough that the tide canât drag him back.â He continued in an undertone, âWith his luck, itâll be ages before another human appears.â
âIâll do it!â Patton announced, already pushing forwards to shallower waters. âRomanâs likely to beach himself if he goes too far inland, and thatâs shore to make things difficult!â
Roman groaned, flicking his fingertips at the siren. âThat was one time! One-time incidents donât qualify for pun-based bullying!â
Pattonâs muffled laughter got quieter as he shifted to lay vertically, scooting forwards until his chest was scraping the sand and his arm could extend to set Logan gently against the beach incline. Loganâs head lolled to the side, but he seemed unlikely to go anywhere, and was in plain sight of anyone passing by.
Roman glanced down at the tiny mer, who was staring over the waves at the human, finally looking a little less stiff and stressed.
Patton wiggled back until he could tread water upright again, sharing a little cheer with Roman at a successful quest. Their guestâs tension returned immediately, that little shadowed gaze snapping back onto them.
Roman and Patton exchanged a glance, uncertain of how to proceed, but before anyone could speak, they heard a small, hacking cough.
Logan was awake, just a little too late for him or Patton to say goodbye. He probably wouldnât have understood, but it would have been nice anyhow. Roman watched as he rolled to something resembling upright, his limbs trembling weakly. He was looking back and forth, not just noticing the new decor, but searching.
Roman glanced down to the small mer, who had set his shoulders and continued looking firmly away from the beach. He sunk a little lower in the water, trying to make eye contact. âWould you like to go and say goodbye before he leaves? Or, tell him whatâs going on, perhaps?â
He shook his head once, sharply, and Roman felt a little pang of sympathy at the way his ear fins kept angling back at every noise the human made.
Logan was calling out now, the same word repeated at increasing levels of urgency. âVirgil?â
The mer still refused to glance back. âIâm not breaking the deal. You upheld your half, and youâre going to keep upholding it, and Iâll uphold mine. Iâm not going anywhere.â
Heâd drifted closer to Roman as he spoke, but it didnât feel like any sort of progress. Heâd tucked all those extra flares and frills away, smoothing himself down as though he was calmâ or resigned.
Roman glanced up at the beach, where Logan still called. As he listened, that little voice cracked midword, desperation slowly turning to despair. He moved to cup his hand underneath the little mer, his heartstrings pulling at the way he let out a slow, shaky breath and closed his eyes, even as Roman lifted him up from the ocean entirely.
Patton opened his mouth as if to speak, but Roman met his eyes and shook his head, promising with his gaze alone that he knew what he was doing. His friend glanced down at the little guy worriedly, but held his tongue.
With one strong push, Roman slid up to the beachâs edge, grimacing slightly as the water became shallower and shallower. His arms were longer than Pattonâs, though, and so he had little trouble reaching over and depositing his handful of seawater & tiny mermaid directly next to Logan.
âVirgil!â the human said, relieved, and he reached out to latch onto the mer, confirming Romanâs name suspicions.
âVirgilâ had yelped like a baby seal upon being upended onto the beach, and he was now blinking between Roman and Logan with an air of extreme bewilderment.
âVirgil,â Logan said again, now in a very different tone. He wore a tiny, furious expression as he launched into what sounded like a somewhat-feverish lecture. He also reached over and pulled the mer into a hug, confirming Romanâs âhe had no idea Virgil was going to pull thisâ suspicions.
Roman was so right about so many things today. Everyone should listen to him all the time!
He wriggled back a little, intending to give them some privacy to talk, and made absolutely no progress. Uh oh. He glanced down at the others.
âI am just a little bit, slightly, somewhat, completely beached again,â he told them, his face growing hot. âI hope you two appreciate that I did this even though Patton is absolutely never going to let me live this down.â
âNeed me to reel you back in, kiddo?â Patton called, right on cue. Roman sighed, planting his face in the crook of his elbow for a moment.
âJust a moment,â he called, and then met Virgilâs wide eyes from over Loganâs shoulder. âIt seems like thereâs still much for you both to discuss, my undersized acquaintances. We shouldnât stay so close to land for long, but I imagine youâll feel better if you keep him company until someone comes for him, right?â
Loganâs brief spark of energy seemed to be flagging, but every time Virgil attempted to disengage from the hug, he clung on tighter. After a brief moment of hesitation, Virgil conceded to the clinginess and simply nodded at Roman, still half-braced for something awful.
Roman gave him his most reassuring smile. âThen thatâs what youâll do. You know where to find me or Patton, if you need us!â
âReally?â Virgil asked, hands fisting in the back of Loganâs shirt. âYouâll let me-- youâll leave us alone? Just like that?â
Roman nodded, lips twisted in sympathy. âJust like that.â
Virgilâs eyes narrowed suspiciously, fins flattened against the sides of his head-- and then he took a deep breath, loosened his grip just slightly, and nodded back.
There were a few old wrecks scattered about the ocean floor here, and though theyâd probably been stripped by a pod in the past, he figured heâd go through them and check for anything that was left behind. Things that werenât useful to a pod could certainly be things that were useful to him, after all.
Heâd been poking through the undercarriage of one of the larger ships for an hour or two, relaxed as he ever got. He could take his time. The only creatures around to judge him were the shoals of fish and layers of barnacles built up amidst the metal, wood, and rust.
Actually⌠Virgil paused in his inspection of an old cutlery set to glance around.
dtttww: logan is currently attending college! heâs gone on late night beach strolls to stargaze before, but heâs never ever been gone long enough to miss class, so his roommate is kind of freaking out about his disappearing act atm!Â