Ariel’s Possessive Prince – Filthy Fairy-tales Read Online Loni Ree

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 33
Estimated words: 31279 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 156(@200wpm)___ 125(@250wpm)___ 104(@300wpm)
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She gathers the cans with a sweep of her hands and flings them back toward the surface. I hear a faint thwack and a human yelp.

Salina giggles. “I think I hit one in the face.”

I roll my eyes, adjusting the gold-flecked cylinder in my bun. “We should live in harmony with the humans, not hurt them.”

Her head snaps around. “We should live in what with the humans?”

“Nothing,” I say brightly. “Nice shot.”

She narrows her eyes but lets it go. Miracles do happen underwater.

On our way back, I spot Grandmother drifting near the plaza. She always looks like a long story I want to sit in. I slip to her side.

“Glum?” she asks softly, as if we’re discussing the weather at a very dignified tea. “Patrol again?”

“Apparently forever,” I murmur. “I just think… couldn’t we use our power for something more than scaring people who don’t even know we exist?”

Grandmother’s mouth softens. “You sound like your mother, Gods rest her soul.”

Hearing her mention my mother always triggers a brief pang of loss in my heart. I barely remember the gentle, flame-haired woman who sang me to sleep with sweet lullabies. I only know that she died as a result of what the elders called human carelessness and that my father blames them and misses her to this very day. They never told me details when I was little, only that she ventured too close to the surface and was caught in a storm she couldn’t outswim. But as I grew older, the whispers filled in the rest.

Oil on the water. A chemical slick that burned through the shoals. The current carried it for miles before it found her. They said it wasn’t anyone’s fault, that the humans didn’t mean to poison the lake, that it was “just the way of their world.”

But I’ve seen the wreckage since, the broken bottles and plastic nets, the shimmer of gasoline rainbows that choke the sunlight. Every time the surface ripples with that unnatural sheen, I see her face again in my mind, fading beneath it.

Grandmother watches the storm gather behind my eyes and sighs. “Your mother wanted peace between our kind and theirs. She believed we could teach them. But her heart was too open. It cost her.”

I nod, though a part of me still wonders if peace is possible. “Maybe she wasn’t wrong,” I whisper. “Maybe it just wasn’t the right time.”

“Keeping them away keeps us safe,” Grandmother insists. “They’re dangerous, little starfish, no matter how charming their smiles.”

“I’ve never seen one up close,” I lie. “How scary can a smile be?”

She gives me a look that says she’s lived long enough to know. Then she pats my cheek and floats off to rescue another mermaid from Salina, who’s cornered her with a barrage of truly upsetting gossip. The mermaid’s expression suggests she’d rather be eaten by a carp.

Duty: done. Sanity: fraying. Which means it’s time for the cure. I slip away, away through corridors of waving grass and past the gentle hum of the vents where warm water rises until the lake grows shallower, the water sweeter, the light like poured milk.

I shouldn’t be here. It’s very near the line where “Ariel, you’re reckless” becomes “Ariel, you’re banished.” But the world here tastes like new adventures, and I’m weak.

I hover in the reeds and wait.

The purr of an engine arrives before the boat does: a low thrum, different from the big, snarling motors that chew up the shallows and spit oil like insults. This one is almost… respectful. I lift my head above the surface for a breath and catch a flash of white hull, ropes coiled neatly, gleaming instruments I haven’t learned the names for.

I lift my head above the surface and glimpse him as he cuts the engine and drifts: broad shoulders framed against the darkening sky, hands steady on the controls. He’s tall in that way humans sometimes are—long lines, long reach, built like he could plant his feet on the deck and hold a whole storm in place out of sheer stubbornness. Big, too, not soft-big but solid-big, like he’s been carved with the intention of being leaned on.

Dark hair, wind-ruffled and damp at the edges, curls over the back of his neck and falls across his brow in a way that would annoy a lesser creature. He just shoves it back, distracted, like he genuinely forgot he’s beautiful. And his eyes—when he glances down at the readout of one of his instruments and the light hits just right—I see the green. Not flat green. Lake green. Forest-after-rain green. Green with gold caught in it like sunlight on shallow water.

And he’s careful, my human. Never tosses his trash. He coaxes samples of water into containers and lowers quiet contraptions on elegant lines. He has a way of frowning at the lake that says he loves it and is terrified for it at the same time. It makes my chest tight and fizzy, which I’m told is how love works in romance stories and indigestion in the bad ones.


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