2,99 €
It's Sereia's 18th birthday and she does something that she hasn't done for five years – she falls out of bed, waking her up ten minutes before her alarm is due to go off.
Her duvet is wrapped around her when she falls and she assumes that this is why she can't move her legs. But when she disentangles herself from the duvet, she is in for a shock – her legs have disappeared and, in their place, she has grown a fish tail overnight.
She's supposed to be meeting her friends for a night out – how's she going to explain that she's turned into a mermaid overnight? What's going to happen to her?
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021
FISH OUT OF WATER
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GREG KROJAC
This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Please note that this story is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locales is purely coincidental. The characters are productions of the author’s imagination and are used fictitiously.
Copyright © 2021 Greg Krojac
All rights reserved
Language: UK English
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Dedicated to Martin Frowd (martinfrowd.com) for his help in making sure my books are as good as I can make them
Title Page
Copyright Page
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
THANK YOU
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
NOVELS BY GREG KROJAC
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A Birthday Surprise
God that hurt!
Sereia hadn’t fallen out of bed for months – no, years – not since she was thirteen years old. She lay on the bedroom floor for a few moments, allowing herself time to wake up properly and take proper stock of what had just happened.
At least I don’t appear to have hurt myself. That’s something. Embarrassing though.
She looked up at the bed. The duvet was missing. She must have had it wrapped around her when she fell. That would explain why her legs didn’t feel right – they were trapped inside her duvet.
She glanced down and saw she was right.
A quick look at her bedside clock informed her that it was ten minutes before her alarm was due to go off. Sereia was terrible at waking up, being in that teenage phase where sleeping was a priority, superseding pretty much all other activities.
Ten more minutes. Is it worth it? It might take most of those ten minutes to go back to sleep.
She decided against going back to bed and unfurled the duvet from her legs. The scream that followed was loud enough to wake the whole street, let alone the neighbours.
She closed her eyes tightly and shook her head, convinced that she was hallucinating and that when she opened her eyes again, all would be well.
Here goes.
She opened her eyes and looked down at her legs again.
A second scream.
Where are my legs? What have you done with them?
Nobody was going to answer her. She was the only person in the room.
She looked down at where her legs should be.
I must still be dreaming. That’s it. I’m still asleep. I’m still in bed and I’m dreaming.
She slapped her face hard.
Ow! That stings.
The sound of footsteps running up the staircase distracted her from her now throbbing cheek.
She called out.
“Mum. Dad. Don’t come in. Please.”
Sereia’s mother, Rebecca, knocked on the bedroom door.
“Are you okay, Seri? We heard a scream.”
Sereia was understandably flustered yet still managed to come up with a plausible explanation for her yelling.
“It was a spider, a really big one.”
Her father called out through the closed door.
“Don’t worry. I’ll get rid of it for you.”
Sereia’s panic ramped up a notch.
“No Dad, stay there. It’s gone now. I’m fine.”
Sereia’s mum wasn’t convinced.
“You don’t sound fine, Seri.”
She sighed. If her daughter wasn’t fine, it was her duty to help her.
“I’m coming in.”
Sereia shouted. The last thing she wanted was for her mother to come in and see what had happened to her.
“No. I’ll be okay. Really.”
It was too late. Sereia’s mother opened the door to be confronted by her daughter sporting a large golden fish tail, whose scales shimmered as the morning sunshine occasionally settled on them.
Sereia hurriedly covered her tail up with the duvet.
Rebecca bent down and pulled the bedding away again, showing her daughter’s new appendage in all its glory.
“Honey, it’s... it’s...”
Sereia interrupted her mother.
“I know. It’s freaky. I’ve turned into a freak overnight.”
Her mother shook her head.
“No. It’s beautiful. It’s a beautiful tail.”
Sereia gave her mum a questioning look.
“Why aren’t you freaking out, Mum?”
Rebecca looked at her husband.
“I hadn’t expected it to happen so soon. We need to explain what’s happening, Liam.”
Sereia’s father nodded.
“That we do, Rebecca. That we do.”
Rebecca’s Revelation
With a little help from her parents who picked her up from the floor and hoisted her onto the bed, Sereia was now propped up against her pillows, her new tail supported by the mattress and occasionally flapping involuntarily. She looked at her mother.
“How come you’re so cool about this, Mum?”
Rebecca glanced downward, a little embarrassed, before looking at her daughter again.
“Well, we hoped it wouldn’t happen but there was always a sneaking feeling that it might.”
“A sneaking feeling that what might happen?”
Her mother gestured towards Sereia’s tail.
“This.”
“This? That I might turn into a fish?”
Her dad looked sheepish.
“You’re not a fish, darling.”
Sereia flicked her tail fin.
“What d’you call this then, Dad? The latest fashion in leggings?”
Her mother came to her father’s rescue.
“You’re not a fish, Sereia.”
“Well, what the hell am I then?”
Rebecca took a deep breath.
“You’re a mermaid, Seri.”
“A what?”
“A mermaid.”
“But mermaids aren’t real. They’re a myth. They don’t exist.”
Her father smiled at his daughter.
“Your current situation would appear to prove the opposite.”
Sereia was confused.
“But how? I mean, why? No, I mean how?”
Rebecca sat alongside her daughter on the bed and removed her denim jeans, and her panties until she was naked from the waist down. Sereia was mortified.
“What are you doing, Mum? Put your clothes back on.”
Then Sereia was mesmerised as her mother’s legs merged together and her feet disappeared. Within the space of ten seconds, Rebecca sported a mermaid’s tail just as splendid as her daughter’s.
For a few seconds, Sereia was speechless. Then her voice returned.
“You’re a mermaid too?”
Rebecca smiled.
“Yes, Seri. I’m a mermaid too. I always have been.”
“But how come you’ve never told me about this before?”
Rebecca’s smile turned into a grin.
“It’s not the kind of thing you can casually drop into a conversation, Seri. You were born human and we thought you might stay human all your life, as you appeared to be perfectly normal, normal for a human, that is. But it appears that we were wrong.”
Sereia nodded towards her father.
“Is Dad a mermaid...“
She paused, wondering if her vocabulary was correct.
“I mean merman, too?”
Her dad chuckled.
“Me? Good heavens, no. I’m completely human.”
This was a lot for Sereia to take in. She looked at her mother’s beautiful golden shimmering tail.
“How do you do that, Mum?”
“Do what, honey?”
“Turn your legs into a fish tail.”
“I don’t know, really. I just think about whether I want legs or a tail and it just kinda happens.”
