"I thought that was something... everyone like us... could do..."
"Not like that, we can't." He caught Hali's eye and his smile dropped from devious to polite. She tended to get... feisty... when he heaped too much attention on newbies. Maybe they could adventure through the kelp forests after this. After he'd dealt with today's consequences.
He turned back. "I am... truly sorry that you got mixed up in all this. I've... well I didn't really want the whole city gawking at me today. Worked out about as well as could be expected." He had his more 'princely' voice on now as reality worked its way back into his mind. Despite his best efforts, Ti'Jan was not a monster, and the guilt of causing Ana and Hali harm made his stomach turn sour.
Then, on a dime, his face resumed its mask of levity. "Still, more exciting than a parade, right?" he tossed the question at Hali.
Arva's sob story quickly put a damper on any attempts to raise the mood.
Petra had briefly looked upon Ana with a ravenous hunger when she felt the pulse of her siren's call, but since then had turned her attention entirely to Arva. The sea witch was not Kivren, and like all those beneath the waves she coveted their sacred gift.
"I see..." Her voice floated on the undercurrents like dark velvet. A single sucker-covered arm wafted upwards and stroked the side of Arva's face with terrifying gentleness. "You wish for me to restore your gift, is that it?" There was a weight behind her words, behind her eyes. The weight of a thousand traded secrets.
She brought her face close to the ray's, so close that Arva could see every fold in her oblong pupils. She whispered in between the ripples of the cave. "Such a thing would demand a substantial price."