Disclaimer: I don't own it. Everything you recognise
belongs to Disney. No infringement
is intended and I'm certainly
not making any money from this story.
Summary: An encounter
between the Black Pearl's crew and a mermaid.
Author's
note: Written for Fabu's Halloween Challenge.
Maid
of the Sea
by Hereswith
She bore no regret for those she had lured to an early grave.
The song carried her, even as it
bound them, her voice and her
tone and her promises the links of the chain that would hold
them
fast and bring them to her. Old or young, frail or sturdy, meek or
arrogant, it mattered
not, she took them all, and they were all
alike in her mind, she could not tell them apart. Out
of the
multitude of faces, there was but one she had not forgot.
Mist
had lingered on the sea, that day, and the sun had shone pale and
sickly in a colourless
sky. She sensed the ship long before it
was possible to see it, she heard the faintest whisper
of it in
the water and began to hum, sweetly and gently and softly, at first,
then ever louder,
weaving words into that lilting, ancient
melody.
She did not break the flow of the tune, until the
mists parted and a man stood before her. At
the sight of him, she
drew a sharp breath and the air was still, in that single moment, and
as
brittle as it was still.
He shadowed her, this sailor
with his buckles and belts and the plume in his hat. He did
not
reach for his sword or his pistol, but he smiled, and that served
him as well as any
other weapon.
"Sought to drown me, did
you now," he said, as he approached, absently petting the
small,
furry creature that clung to his arm. "I fear I must
disappoint your hopes. The ocean won't
have me."
He
claimed the whole of her attention; she noted the others only when
the net came down
upon her, and she fought, twisting her voice
into an ugly thing, but had to swallow defeat in
the end, like a
poisoned draught, as bitter as the tears she did not shed. Her breath
staggered,
fury stole it from her, and she could do little except
watch as the motley crew of men circled
around where she
lay.
"Are ye sure about this, Capt'n? I mean, it's a—she's a—"
"I know what she is," her captor
replied, and he leaned down, stroking the blade of her
shoulder.
"I'll teach you to come to hand, my pretty." His eyes were
barren, like the cold
rock beneath her, where the slanted, faded
sunlight fell upon them. "And you shall sing at
my
bidding."
She spat at him, lashing out, and his laughter
grew heavy with a dark and terrible purpose,
but he straightened,
relieving her of his touch. "Take her to the ship!"
"Aye, Capt'n!"
They lifted her up and they carried her across
the isle, tangled in their net like a fish. The mist
had cleared,
on the northern shore, and she spotted their ship: black of hull, it
was, and black
of sail, a cage of wood from which there would be
no escape. And she clawed at the cordage,
thinking she was lost,
but fickle Fate gave her a tiny sliver of hope. When she chanced to
meet the gaze of one of those who hefted her weight, he stumbled
and quavered and swiftly
looked aside.
She kept her
silence, though her heart beat fast and faster yet, and she bided her
time, waiting
with scant patience until they stopped, near the
edge of the sea.
"I live," she said, as they made to
lower her into the rowing boat, and she said it quiet, but she
said
it clear, "but you are as the dead."
The tall, gangly man
started, his grip half loosening, and she tensed her body and jerked
violently,
flicking her tail and, "Me eye!" he cried out,
letting go, letting go, to run stooped after a round
object
that rolled towards the ragged cliffs.
She tore herself free
of the net, ignoring the shouts and the curses, ignoring the burning
pain
of hitting and scraping against the stones. Her skin was
slick, all their fingers slipped where
they might have grasped,
and she scrambled away, sliding beneath the waves with a sigh.
It
was a mere illusion of safety, she had listened and she had learned
as much, but they had limbs
like common mortals had, and surely
that would be a disadvantage here, should they follow.
She
rose to the surface again, at a distance, daring a last glance at the
man who would have
made himself her doom. She saw him, and he saw
her, in turn, easily identifying her shape,
somehow, amidst the
churning blue and grey and the white of the foam, and the plume
trembled
as he threw his head back and roared.
She dove
quickly into the deep, leaving them behind, and she swam as far as
her strength would
allow her, mindful of sharks as long as her
shallow wounds bled. She imagined, on occasion,
in the dusk, or
at the dawn of the day, that they searched for her, that she could
make out the
sound of oars and the flicker of a lantern. And she
dreamed about walls that were solid and
strong. When they did not
find her, the fear dimmed, but it never entirely vanished.
"You will remember me!" had been his final threat.
And she had.
