Chapter 10 - The Songs Beneath the Shore

It is almost night. The tribe has set camp near the edge of the ocean—silent, still, after the storm that swallowed their ship. The survivors are tense. Grieving. The wind tastes like salt and moonlight.

Tiger Lily stood at the edge of the camp, the waves lapping at the broken stones just beyond. The fire behind her hissed as if it feared the sea. She didn't blame it.

The night was too quiet.

No crickets. No birds. Not even the gentle hum of sea wind. Just… a song. Faint barely heard. Like the wind was breathing in the voice of someone who wasn't there.

She turned.

Behind her, half the tribe slept. The others sat with closed eyes, still mourning the ones they'd lost to the storm—and her mother. Tiger Lily's fingers curled into fists. She had not cried. Not yet. She would not, not while her people watched.

A soft laugh rippled in the wind.

Tiger Lily's heart froze.

The sound came from the shoreline—just past the rocks. She slipped past the campfires and down the sloping beach. The sky was half-clouded; the moon's light fractured into silver veins on the sand.

And there—standing knee-deep in the water—were three girls.

Their backs faced her, their long dark hair moving like it had a mind of its own. They were from her tribe. She recognized one—Kina, the youngest daughter of their healer.

Tiger Lily took a step forward. "Kina?" she called softly.

None of the girls turned.

Then one of them began to sing.

It wasn't a song she recognized. It was slow, wordless, like water being poured into crystal. It shivered through the air, through the bone, through memory.

Tiger Lily blinked.

She saw her mother—standing tall, smiling, alive. Reaching out.

No.

She shook her head, heart pounding. "Stop!" she shouted, running forward.

As she reached them, the three girls turned to face her—and Tiger Lily stopped dead in her tracks.

Their eyes glowed like moonlit water, pale and endless. Their skin shimmered, as though the sea had kissed every inch of them. And around their necks were strands of seaweed braided with pearls too dark to be real.

Only Kina spoke. Her voice was not her own.

"They came, Lily. They showed us the way. We heard the truth in their songs."

Tiger Lily grabbed her hand. "What truth?"

"That your mother still swims below. That if you come to the Twilight Lagoon… you'll see her again."

Then the tide surged suddenly, soaking them both.

When Tiger Lily looked up, the other two girls were gone. Only Kina remained—and she had fainted, her lips still moving in silent song.

The sea had gone silent again.

Tiger Lily ran through the camp, heart slamming in her chest. Her footsteps sounded too loud—louder than the waves, louder than the wind, louder than the scream she was trying to swallow.

She reached the fire ring. No one stirred.

One of the elders had fallen sideways, eyes shut. Another lay curled on her mat, unmoving. Every man, every woman—all asleep, breath shallow, faces slack, as if dreaming the same dream.

Even her father—the Stone Chief, always watchful—sat slumped against the tall rock behind their fire, his spear fallen from his hand.

"No," Lily gasped. "No, not again…"

She dropped to her knees in front of him, shook his shoulders, called his name. No answer. Her fingers trembled as she pressed her forehead to his chest—his heartbeat was slow, but strong. Still alive.

They were alive.

But not present.

Not here.

Like her mother, moments before the sea had swallowed her whole.

Tears stung her eyes. Not again. Not all of them.

She reached up—hands steady now—and pulled the feather from her braid.

It shimmered even in darkness, catching threads of moonlight like it remembered the sun. Her voice cracked as she whispered:

"Please… I know you're gone. But if you're still watching—if your spirit hears me—bring them back. Bring him back."

She placed the feather on her father's chest.

The wind rose. Soft at first, like a breath. Then stronger—spinning, curling through the camp like a living thing. The fire flared. The trees hissed. Sand swirled into silver rings.

And then—

Light.

The feather glowed in her hand—not golden, not silver, but something older than both. A soft pulse. A heartbeat.

One by one, her people began to stir.

A cough. A breath. A groan.

Tiger Lily's father gasped and sat upright, eyes wide. His gaze landed on her, on the feather glowing in her palm, and he whispered her name—this time, not like a chief. Like a father afraid he almost lost his daughter too.

"Lily… What happened?" She clutched the feather to her chest, then stood—shaking but strong.

"They came from the sea. Mermaids. "They've taken Kina," Tiger Lily whispered. "And Amaiya… and Zalika. They walked into the sea like it was calling them home."

Silence.

Then the elderly women from the tribe began to weep—except one: Elder Muniya, The chief's mother.

Tiger Lily looked her father in the eye.

"We have to go after them. Now—before the tide turns."

As the tribe stirred and grief turned to dread, Elder Muniya rose slowly from the edge of the firelight. She said nothing as she stepped forward, her bare feet brushing against the sand, her back bent but her eyes sharp as blade-tips.

Tiger Lily turned, surprised. "Grandmother?"

Muniya didn't answer. She walked past the gathering, down to where the tide kissed the shore.

There, in silence, she bent down and picked three shells—one for each girl taken.

Then, from within her long braids, she pulled a fourth shell, smooth and black as night. Not a seashell—a spell shell. One she had not touched in decades.

"You told us magic was dangerous," the Chief said, stepping forward.

Muniya's voice, when it came, was low and ageless.

"It is. But it is not evil. Not like the ones who took our daughters."

She placed the shells in a circle, pressing them into the wet sand. Her fingers trembled—not with fear, but with release.

Then she lifted her arms and began to chant:

"Oh powers of the Sea, I ask Thee—

Be it the corners or the core,

Bring all the Mermaids to this Shore."

The words carried, like drumbeats in the tide.

The wind halted. The waves went flat. Even the stars blinked, as if turning their gaze toward the island.

Then the water boiled.

Not from heat—but from presence.

A ripple. A shadow. Then many shadows.

One by one, figures rose in the distance, silhouettes dancing beneath the moonlight—mermaids, hundreds of them, pulled by an ancient call they could not resist.

The tribe backed away, murmuring in awe and fear.

Elder Muniya stood unmoving, the shells now glowing faintly at her feet.

"I didn't call them to speak," she said coldly. "I called them to choose: Return what they've taken… or we take it back."

 The waves had calmed. The wind was still.

The tribe stood at the edge of the sea, their torches flickering like uncertain hearts. Across the waters, the mermaids hovered, moonlight catching in their silver-scaled arms and solemn eyes.

Tiger Lily's voice cut through the silence.

"We demand the truth. Where are our sisters?"

The mermaids did not stir. Then, one by one, they shook their heads.

Thaliena, with eyes like moonlit silver, their princess came forward, her voice calm but weighted like deep water.

"We did not take your daughters."

A murmur rippled through the tribe.

"Our kind does not lure the innocent. That is not our way."

Tiger Lily's hands clenched. "Then who?"

Thaliena hesitated—just for a heartbeat. Her gaze drifted to the horizon, where clouds churned like bruises in the sky.

"If they followed a voice into the water… then this is darker than we believed."

She turned to Elder Muniya.

"The borders of Neverland are fraying. Something has slipped in—something old. Something twisted."

"Not just shadows. Not just whispers. But dark magic… in the form of sirens."