Childe sat quietly in his small fishing boat, the hull gently bobbing beneath him as the sun glimmered lazily across the open water, casting golden ribbons of light that danced on the waves.
It was peaceful, the kind of quiet that settled into his bones and made him forget, if only for a little while, about the chaos and expectations waiting for him back on land.
Taking a deep breath of that salty sea air, he reached for his fishing rod, fingers moving with practiced ease as he adjusted the line and baited the hook. Then, with a smooth flick of his wrist, he cast the line out into the water, watching the bait disappear beneath the surface with a soft plop. He leaned back again, the wooden seat creaking quietly under his weight, and let his mind drift as his gaze followed the endless horizon.
But just as he began to relax, his thoughts trailing off into half-formed fantasies and memories, a sudden and unexpected jolt snapped him out of it. The fishing line went taut in his hands, the rod bending with a violent twitch. His heart jumped as his body instinctively straightened, hands flying to the grip.
"What the—" he muttered, blinking in disbelief.
The rod jerked again, stronger this time, pulling with a force that didn't feel like any ordinary fish. "Woah, wait!" he shouted, voice rising with a mix of alarm and adrenaline. Before he could adjust or counterbalance himself, he was yanked clean off the boat with a sharp tug, sending him tumbling headfirst into the water with a loud splash.
The cold hit him like a slap, knocking the air from his lungs. He gasped involuntarily, sucking in seawater as panic took hold. He kicked and flailed, twisting underwater, trying to figure out which way was up, which way was out. His vision tunneled, spots blooming at the edges. It was all noise and confusion. The more he struggled, the more disoriented he became, until the world felt far away, muffled and slow.
The surface, if it was even above him, seemed a world away. Everything inside him ached. He was sinking.
Then, in the stillness that came just before the edge of consciousness, something changed.
His eyes, still open in a desperate attempt to navigate, caught movement—graceful, smooth, and fast. A glimmer of motion above him, like moonlight cutting through water. At first, he thought it was a trick of the light, his fading mind conjuring images to keep him from giving in.
But it moved again, closer this time. A shape. A silhouette.
A fish tail, long and powerful, sliced through the water, glinting in the fading sunlight that filtered down from the surface. It shimmered, hues of silver and blue rippling across its scales like it was made of the sea itself.
For a moment, Childe thought he was trapped in one of his recurring dreams, the ones where he found himself face-to-face with a massive whale, its presence so immense that it stole his breath.
But this was no dream.
What he was seeing was not a whale, it was something entirely different, something he had never encountered before. It was a creature, or perhaps a person... No, that wasn't right.
Childe involuntarily gasped, losing the remaining air in his lungs as the realization hit him. Bubbles rushed from his mouth, rising to the surface like tiny screams, and his chest ached with the sudden, empty hollowness of no air.
Before him floated a figure with a fish tail, a being that seemed to exist only in myth and legend—a merfolk.
Was it really? It couldn't be. He had heard stories, tales of mythical beings that inhabited the depths, but he had never believed them to be more than legends. This had to be a hallucination, a trick of his oxygen-deprived mind.
But the vision before him was unmistakable.