Chapter
One
Iason the
Hunter swam through
the murky waters of
the dark ocean. The
sound of drowning
victims echoed in his
head. No matter how
often he heard such
despair, it never
became easier. He
wished he could save
them, but all he could
do was push the humans
toward the surface and
wish them luck.
Besides, by the time
he and his fellow
hunters got to the
ship, the hull was
sinking down into the
ocean’s depths. It had
been too late for many
of the mortals and
there was no land for
miles.
Though,
honestly, perhaps
saving them was
crueler than letting
them drown. They were
in the middle of the
ocean, no sign of
rescue vibrating in
the water. Chances
were their bodies
would weaken and they
would die. If they
managed to float on a
raft, the hot sun
would kill them just
as surely. But, what
else could he do?
Seeing a
flash of silvery black
fins in the water,
Iason frowned. That
was not the creature
they hunted. He
watched carefully,
seeing the subtle
flash again.
‘I think I
see Brutus or Demon,’
Iason said to his
fellow hunters, using
their mind link. All
the Merr could
communicate by
telepathy in the
water.
Caderyn,
to his right, looked
at him in surprise.
‘Where?’
Iason
pointed down toward
the ocean’s floor.
Iason was
part of a team of
three Merr
hunters—himself,
Caderyn and
Solon—known simply as
the Hunters. There
were twelve Merr
hunters total, split
up into four teams of
three. Three brothers,
Rigel, Demon and
Brutus were another
team, the Warriors.
Rigel, the youngest
and smallest of the
three, led the team.
There were also the
Knights led by Cain
and the Soldiers led
by Hrafn. Both the
Knights and Soldiers
were taking a much
needed break from
hunting while the
other two teams took
up their duties.
Solon was
the leader of the
Hunters because he
chose to carry the
vial around his neck.
It was filled with a
liquid that would
paralyze the scylla so
they may catch it. The
liquid was the only
way to stop a scylla.
Unfortunately, if
spilled, it could
paralyze the Merr as
well. Carrying it was
a job that took much
concentration. Solon
had to have final say
when it came to
capturing the creature
because it was he who
needed to get into
position.
The three
Hunters had worked
together for years and
none of them had black
tails. Caderyn’s was
purple. Iason’s was
green. Solon’s was
green-gold.
Iason
motioned his hand. In
the distance they saw
Brutus emerge to push
a drowning human
toward the surface.
The mortal man was
still alive and
grabbed a floating
piece of the ship’s
debris. Brutus swam
quickly under his
legs, making a current
that would drift the
survivor away from the
shipwreck.
‘Rigel
must be close,’
Caderyn said. His dark
brown hair drifted
around his head,
floating briefly
before his stark
purple eyes. The
silver purple of his
tail whipped once,
pushing him up higher.
Like all Merr,
Caderyn’s tail and
fins matched the color
of his eyes. ‘What are
they doing here? Were
they sent to aid us?’
‘They
track a scylla, same
as us.’ Solon joined
them, gliding his arms
back and forth to
hover in the water.
His hazel eyes glowed
slightly as he looked
around, trying to
track their prey. The
vial around his neck
drifted easily with
his movements. ‘Rigel
says it’s been evading
them. I told him we
have the same
problem.’
‘That
means there are two
old ones in the water
this night.’ Iason
frowned.
The
scyllas were dangerous
creatures. They were
spirits of the water,
mindless, reckless,
forever searching. Two
scylla together would
be strong enough to
push any one of them
out of the water. One
of the only things
that could kill the
Merr was surface air.
It would burn the
skin, but if breathed
it would destroy.
‘Aye,’
Solon answered.
Caderyn
swam toward Brutus,
his long tail waving
in the water to propel
him forward. Iason
could hear him calling
out. Brutus turned in
surprise. Soon, all
six Merr were gathered
together.
Brutus and
his twin brother,
Demon, were two of the
largest of the Merr
race. They were
identical in every
aspect, from their
long black hair to
their matching dark
eyes. Even their fins
were the same silvery
black color. It made
them nearly invisible
in the deeps waters,
even to their own kind
sometimes. Their
younger brother, Rigel,
was a lighter version
of the twins. His hair
was dark, but not
black, and his eyes
were grey. When the
sunlight shone through
the waves just right,
his silver fins looked
like ship metal
floating in the water.
‘You’ve
been away from Ataran
longer,’ Iason said to
the other team. ‘We
will help you catch
yours and then go for
ours. You need to get
home before you lose
your way.’
The
Warriors nodded. All
knew they could only
stay away from Ataran
soil for two weeks
before going mad. Once
madness set in, they
would never find their
way back alone. Even
going past a week was
pushing it.
‘He’s a
big one,’ Brutus said.
‘Slipped
by us twice already,’
Demon added. ‘Tore up
this ship, though I
see now that he had
help. We were
wondering why it went
down so fast for as
big as it was.’
A cold
rush of current,
colder than usual,
crept over them. They
turned to the man
Brutus had helped to
save. The human’s legs
kicked violently, and
they saw the shadowed
form of a scylla
beneath him.
‘By All
the Gods!’ Solon
swore. ‘It is huge.’
All six
men swarmed into
action. Rigel tore the
vial from his neck,
ready to blow. The
creature began to
drift, nothing more
than a dark spot in
the water. It was a
near shapeless,
faceless shadowing. It
made a dash past
Brutus and Demon. The
two brothers cut it
off. Iason and Solon
crowded its sides as
Caderyn swam below.
Rigel blew the vial.
The creature bucked
up, knocking the human
up, tossing him high
above the surface.
Iason heard the man
scream but ignored it.
Both
Brutus and Demon
latched onto the
scylla, fighting it as
they dragged it deep
into the ocean. The
creature soon became
subdued and the
hunters were able to
drag it more easily.
Rigel
waved at Iason. ‘Go.
Find the second. I’ll
push this mortal up
and will follow my
team.’
Iason
looked at Caderyn. His
friend closed his
eyes, sensing the
water. Suddenly, he
pointed into the
distance. ‘That way.’
‘What is
that noise?’ Solon
asked.
‘Another
boat?’ Iason frowned.
He reached out his
hands, feeling the
small vibrations of
the water.
‘Not
another one,’ Caderyn
growled in
frustration. ‘What are
they all doing out
this far to sea? Why
tonight? This should
have been an open
water hunt.’
‘Come on,
let’s bag it and drag
it before it takes
this ship down as
well. I’m ready to go
home.’ Iason waved his
hand and pointed to
where he detected the
ship. His companions
nodded in agreement.
Swimming as fast as he
could, he pushed into
the distance.
* * * * *
Cassandra
Nevin saw her life
flash before her eyes
as the freezing water
surrounded her. She
had a bad feeling
about this trip, but
then she had a bad
feeling about
everything since the
doctor told her she
was dying of cancer.
Bone cancer. Not much
to be done for it, not
as late as they had
caught it. She’d
refused treatment,
refused to prolong her
life only to live in a
bed withering away.
Already, she’d
outlived her initial
prognosis, perhaps by
sheer will, perhaps by
dumb luck. Waiting for
death to come for her
had become her own sad
little game, and she
honestly knew that,
when it did, she
wouldn’t be surprised.
Her parents didn’t
understand, or maybe
they did, but they
didn’t agree with her
choice.
No one on
the ship knew except
Ned Devenpeck. He was
the head of the
scientific expedition
she was on. Cassandra
was sure he just felt
bad for her and that
was why he let her tag
along with only a few
years of college
science under her
belt. She wasn’t one
for charity, but in
this instance she had
taken it and gladly.
She knew
that the other
scientists were
irritated with her
because she didn’t
know what she was
doing. Cassandra
didn’t care. Why
should she? Life was
too short to care
about anything. It’s
why she left school
before graduating with
a degree. Everyone she
knew cried when they
saw her, even her
parents. She preferred
the angry scientists
to the constant pity,
preferred to be yelled
at and hated than to
be treated like a dog
on its last leg.
As the
boat sank, hit from
below by some creature
the scientists
couldn’t name, she’d
been scared—scared of
dying alone at sea,
scared of that final
icy breath of water,
scared of the unknown
beneath her in the
darkness.
“Aliens?”
someone had suggested
as the boat was nearly
tipped over on its
side.
“New
species of Deep Ocean
fish rising to the
surface to feed?”
another scientist had
proposed.
They were
all great minds,
rational minds, but
the truth was they
didn’t know any more
than she what attacked
the ship. The
scientists had tried
to catch the creature
in a net. They had
some success, but the
creature had gotten
free before they could
pull it up.
Cassandra
had gotten a small
peak of their attacker
in the water. If she
had to guess, she
would say the creature
looked like a merman.
But who would believe
such a wild story from
the woman who didn’t
know the exact
procedure to draw
basic surface samples?
So, she’d kept the
observation to
herself. It was quite
possible that the pain
meds were starting to
affect her mind
anyway. Since it was
nighttime, she’d
already taken her dose
so she could sleep
though the night.
So, yes,
she’d been scared of
dying the instant the
water took her body.
But now, as she
stopped struggling and
let the black ocean
have her, a strange
acceptance came over
her. She was dying.
What more picturesque
means than at sea? Her
body drifting forever
in the ocean? It was
poetic, in a
beautifully sad way.
The black
water surrounded her,
blackened by the night
sky. She watched the
spotlight from the
boat glancing over her
head as she was pulled
down and saw the faint
outlines of scientists
fighting for life.
Cassandra felt bad for
them and had to look
away. The cold stung,
but it was better to
feel than not to. Soon
numbness would set in
and it wouldn’t hurt
anymore. The cold was
nothing compared to
the deep ache in her
bones, the constant
agony, the lethargy of
pain pills.
A glimmer
came from in front of
her, a green
shimmering light
unlike anything she
would have expected in
the dark Abyss. Hands
reached for her, human
hands. At first, she
waited for them to
touch her, but then
they did and she
struggled as they
grasped onto her arms.
They were real, too
real to be a
hallucination.
‘No! I’m
ready. Let me go!’ her
mind screamed. She
struggled against the
hands, fighting them.
‘Let me go! Save
someone else. I don’t
want to wither away. I
want to drift.’
‘Let me
help you,’ a voice
ordered in her head.
It was a male voice, a
voice she didn’t know.
‘Stop struggling,
woman. I won’t hurt
you.’
Cassandra
opened her mouth wide,
ready to take the
water into her lungs,
ready for it to be
over. Let him save
someone else, someone
with a chance. Instead
of the ocean, warm
lips pressed to hers.
In her shock, she
stopped struggling. No
one had kissed her
since she was
diagnosed. Her
boyfriend had left
her. Oh, he tried to
stick around, but he’d
been too creeped out
by it all and soon
found the tiny excuse
he needed to bail.
She
wrapped her arms
around the man’s neck,
slipping her tongue
past his lips. He
tasted sweet, like
fruit wine. Her body
was starved of
contact, for a feeling
beyond that of sterile
examination gloves and
clinical exams. So
long had it been since
someone just held her.
Her
would-be rescuer
jerked as she kissed
him. Why wouldn’t he
be surprised? She was
dying in his arms,
selfishly taking one
last moment for
herself.
The man
tried to swim with her
body. Cassandra didn’t
care. She let him pull
her. Her lungs were
burning and soon it
would be too late for
her. It felt good to
be held, even as the
darkness threatened.
She clung to the
warmth. Death was
close and she welcomed
it, thankful that she
wasn’t going to be
alone when it finally
came for her.
Her lungs
burned, on fire with
the need for air. A
hand thrust into her
hair. The mouth
against hers widened,
his lips slipping over
hers. Then, blackness
consumed her and she
smiled. She would
never have to feel
another thing again.
Amazon ASIN:
B003VIWOU2
Electronic
ISBN:978-1-4524-1068-5
Release
Date: July
2010
Word Count:
50,440
Heat Rating:
5/5