Chapter 1
Chapter by JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51)
Chapter Text
The skin was still warm.
Gojo looked up, trained eyes scanning the thick, intertwined dark trunks of centuries-old trees. Rough bark and gnarled branches greeted his sight, lacing each other in a complex spiderweb of wood that silently dared him to penetrate this warm, moist sanctuary of silent, breathy life. Crooked, uneven roots rose between gentle mounds of rich soil and moss-covered rocks. The undergrowth was bathed in dapples of silvery moonlight. Ribbons of shredded mist clung stubbornly to the rough cracks in the old bark. The forest was quiet.
He looked back at the skin, an abandoned piece of fur lying on the crunched leaves. Short, grayish hair ran along its length. He passed his hand across it once, twice, felt the softness of the fur, still slightly wet, and looked up again.
A seal skin, left in the middle of the forest. Inland. The attentive ears of the hunter picked on the distant, eternal song of the mourning waves, not far, slipping between the more reserved, hushed melody of the forest.
There wasn’t much space left for doubt. Slowly, very slowly, Gojo put the skin back down, exactly as he had found it, laying sheltered under the cover of curled ferns. His blue eyes darted here and there, precise and efficient, seeking other clues, which he found very quickly. Here, a broken twig, near grayish lichen. Blades of grass that had been delicately crushed in the shape of a foot, again and again. The track disappeared right before an ugly-looking, knobby root. The grass beyond it was lightly flattened, in a new footstep.
Gojo followed the appearing trail, his tall body gliding easily and silently among the sharp bushes of thorns and cracked ferns, one hand resting on his hip, where the sheath of his dagger laid. The branches swished gently above him, humming some discreet, unknown songs, but he paid them no attention. All his senses were focused on the life he knew was hidden there. Snakes coiling their bodies under rocks. Foxes darting under hawthorns. Rabbits fleeing hastily toward the safety of their dens. The airy but unmistakable bounces of deer’s hooves against dirt, retreating from their cherished clearings, far from men.
Then he caught it.
A fragment of a voice, fluttering delicately among the branches, shimmering in the half-light that was closing in on him.
A woman’s voice.
Gojo still, freezing completely on the spot, crouched low beneath a rotting branch. He waited for a beat. Listened. A bird tentatively tried its luck, before thinking better of it at the sight of the hunter.
The voice came again.
It flittered and flickered toward him, a timid piece of joy rippling through the deathly silence of the forest. He closed his eyes, focused on the pure, sheer happiness such a tiny sound contained, and the simplicity of the beautiful, fresh notes. Then his mind went over the sound, calculated it, separating the pitches, noting frequencies. From these analyses a picture rose in his head, then another, each more enticing than the last. The voice promised a great reward.
He crept forward, very slowly, careful to land each step on a soft patch of emerald moss. He ignored another seal skin, this time folded under a stump. He was getting closer.
Another voice rippled through the air, fluttering along the first one, followed by another. They flickered, twirled together in a curious, enthusiastic dance, swelling slightly as he continued. The forest was losing ground to a rockier terrain, with thinning trees. Trees thinned out, bushes grew scarce, moss evened out until there was nothing but sprouting rocks, flying grit, broken pebbles and bits of seashells. The gusts of wind brought to Gojo the characteristic, acrid smell of salt and the sharp, unforgiving coldness of the sea. Waves rolled languidly somewhere behind the rocks, their song breaking into dozens of chaotic notes, before reforming again under the strokes of the breeze.
And somewhere behind the rocks, a woman laughed.
Gojo carefully weaved between boulders covered in a thin sheen of coarse, gritty sand, his shoes sinking quietly into the soft ground. The laughter was swelling, bouncing off the rocks in happy littles echoes. All feminine voices, mingling together in a gentle chorus.
The sight that greeted him was more than he could have possibly hoped for. Beautiful, naked women, all laughing together, some sitting atop the boulders, some sprawled across the sand without a care in the world, their fanned-out hair lying on seal skins. He glimpsed some silhouettes playing among the sprays in the sea, calling for their comrades in playful shouts. His eyes went over the naked, vulnerable bodies, then they stopped on you.
Selkies were monsters. Incarnations of the devil, unholy temptations crawling out of the sea to snatch up the good will and virtues of men and women alike. Those were the multiple stories the elders liked to feed the village with. Selkies crawled at the very bottom of the depths, gleefully stealing from fishermen’s nets in their animal forms, luring men in when they shed those very skins allowing them to glide into the water.
Selkies were also beautiful, and incredibly fragile when they shed. Defenseless. They made good trophies. Bringing one back to the village might earn him a very decent amount of money, but golden coins were the last things on the hunter’s mind at the moment.
Gojo’s gaze was entirely focused on you, a selkie among many others. He watched as you slid off your own boulder in a sweet, mischievous jump, landing delicately on the sand, laughing as one of your playmates splashed you in an enthusiastic attempt to get you to join in. He listened to your light-hearted giggles, watched you scoop up some sand in retaliation. His eyes crawled over your skin, on full display under the veiled light of the sun, stared on the muscles tensing under the supple flesh of your thighs, on the wet hair flowing along your back, on the smile illuminating your face.
Well, if you were an incarnation of Satan as the elders said, he would gladly take his chance.
It would be easy enough. You and your companions hadn’t even detected the slightest hint of his presence among the boulders. Gojo was fast, and he doubted any of you would have time to recover any of the seal skins lying all around the boulders. You’d be in his arms in barely a matter of seconds, and he felt there were few chances for the others to put up a fight against him. No, they would scatter, scramble, screech, snatch up their skin, and dash into the sea as quickly as their human legs allowed.
You would be his easily.
The white-haired hunter advanced slowly, slithering along the shadows of the rocks, when a sharp cry made him stop dead in his tracks. He looked up, very carefully, and saw a taller selkie, pointing at approaching storm clouds in the sky. One by one, the little group broke, each member seeking out their seal skins, taking some draped over the boulders or under the shadows of sickly bushes, but Gojo didn’t pay attention to them. He was focused on you only and watched, with avid greediness, as you took dainty steps toward a sharp, pointy rock, half-covered in dried algae. There you bent; the simple movement was enough to fuel a desire he was already struggling to restrain, and your hands sunk in the sand, rhythmically, pushing away seashells and polished pebbles, digging further and further. Gojo leaned in slightly behind the safety of his own rock, watching you, with great interest, pull up then dust off with precise, deliberate gestures your own seal skin, which could conceal you from the world of humans, the one he so desperately wanted to bring you to. His sharp eyes immediately noted the dark, gray color of the pelt, mimicking the grayish shade the water adopted when it rained, and the three little patches of white near the tail. Gojo stayed perfectly still, even when you cloaked yourself with the skin, pulling it lovingly over your shoulders, feeling its softness with the tip of your fingers. Finally you pulled the seal’s head over your own, covering your luscious hair, and started walking toward the sea, following your companions. Many had already disappeared among the rising waves, fleeing the growing howls of the angry wind and the characteristic smell of incoming rain. Gojo forced himself not to move, to remain a statue among the rocks, his legs itching with the need to run to you, to carry you back toward his own, earthly realm, but he knew it was too late to attempt anything. Small drops of rain fell among his white locks just as you dipped a foot into the water, testing the temperature. Then, to his amazement, the seal skin closed seamlessly over your own body, covering the flesh, the supple thighs, the soft breasts, the harmonious back he had lusted upon, and you dove in, as gracefully as any normal seal would. A chorus of high-pitched, pleased cries greeted your jump. His eyes widened when you answered with a cry of your own, predatory jaws opening instead of a human mouth. Then you plunged, water gliding smoothly over perfectly adapted fur, and dozens of small heads disappeared in the growling waves.
The following months were a nightmare.
Gojo was going mad with want. The lust your gleaming, soft, bare skin had sparked within him had carved its way into his very bones. There wasn’t a single moment when a picture of you, careless and carefree, splashing your companions, wouldn’t play in a loop through his mind, before being replaced by a much more intimate fantasy, where your hands would glide over his skin instead of the sand.
The next days after catching sight of you and your group, he ignored the bitter regret blooming in his chest and set out in a thorough quest for information. It turned out that the local folklore books stored were greedier than he expected, with very few knowledge written down about your kind, or even your habits, and hunters relied greatly on their prey’s habits to catch them. He had no idea when you would get back on land, or if you ever would, for that matter. The fear of having missed the single opportunity he had encountered in his lifetime to capture a selkie, to capture you, fueled his desperation and fed his growing obsession. Selkies were a tale of whispers and awed eyes, so he changed his approach.
Even though he said nothing to no one about his discovery of a pod of selkies living nearby, the elders of the village were more than happy to help the most competent hunter they had. Seals stole; seals preyed upon the very fish the village depended upon to get by. Seals were playful, and sometimes mischievous. They spoke gladly and very freely, and soon Gojo gathered a lot more information than he could have hoped for.
Of all that he heard, the hunter soon noticed one common point about all the sayings; some were very precise, some purely speculative, but all agreed on the fact that selkies came on land every full moon. Gojo remembered the moonlight dappling the forest during his trip, and the ache in his heart was soothed at the thought that he would be able to see you again.
From then on, most of his days were spent mapping the outcrops of rocks, inspecting the place, noting the hideouts, the thick bushes, the crevices running along the gritty boulders. He walked and walked, tested the ground, carefully memorized every inch of the spot. He focused particularly on the pointy boulder covered in dried algae you had buried your skin beneath. He crouched and mimicked your movements, dug up the soft sand, felt it slither between his fingers.
He thought about plans. Hiding bear traps beneath little mounds of sand. Crouching safely behind a boulder. In the end, another idea came to him, and all that was left for the hunter was to wait.
As the best hunter of the village, Gojo was usually patient, but this time waiting was agony. He watched, with anxious impatience, the moon gently change in the night sky as it hollowed its waxy body bit by bit, to become a thin slice of silver among the glittering stars, before filling itself again. He waited and waited.
Then the moment came.
Gojo was crouched behind a boulder, eyes locked on the waves, one hand stroking absent-mindedly the cold blade of his dagger. This time he had come prepared, with one bow and a quiver of arrows slung over his shoulder, should his plan fail and you would attempt to run back to the sea.
The night was moody. The moonlight flickered over the boulders, rays of wan white and pale silver dancing over the shifting crown of the waves. The wind was quiet, but the sharp, icy gusts told the hunter a storm could break out at any moment.
Gojo waited, the itch of his mind slowly crawling into his legs. He tightened his hold on the dagger, watching the waves with growing irritation, when he saw it.
One head peeked out behind a wave, before plunging back into the foam. Then another popped up, closer to the shore. Soon the sea was filled with bobbing heads and soft, whiny seal cries. A flock of slender, furry bodies swam effortlessly among the rippling waves until they reached the shore. Gojo held his breath as the first seal hopped on the sand, advancing as best as it could in that awkward, funny manner those creatures had on land. Then he froze completely when the fur parted in the middle, with two hands gently pushing it open from the inside. The head fell back, and hair spilt out on bare, glistening shoulders. The hunter’s eyes focused instantly on the face, but it wasn’t you. Disappointment welled in its chest, and his eyes darted from one selkie to another, as more of them shed their skin as naturally as a butterfly would. Most held their own tight in their arms, rolling it into a bundle of wet fur as they walked toward the outcrops.
That was when he caught sight of you. The three little patches of white near the tail were impossible to miss as you hauled yourself upon the shore, still in animal form. Then you rose, and you shed, and that was truly the most beautiful sight he had ever laid eyes upon.
You walked delicately on the sand, holding your skin close to your heart, and followed the rest of the group toward the boulders. The wind carried the many sounds of happy chatter and heartfelt laughter, completely oblivious to the danger. His gaze didn’t drift, not for one second, while you came, just as he had hoped, toward your favorite spot. You bent and crouched under the algae-covered boulder, burying your seal skin, just as usual, pushing back dug-up sand and seashells over the mystical part of yourself, before going back cheerfully toward your companions.
Gojo waited a bit more, letting you fully enjoy yourself, laughing and running around, having obviously fun. He checked the rest of the group. Not a single trace of wariness.
He used that time of joy and games to make his way, very slowly, toward the pointy boulder. Whereas his ears were focused on your shouts and cries, his eyes never left the algae and the boulder. Excitement sparked in his legs as he got closer, the boulder growing in his sight, but as he had pushed the itch to snatch you up, he pushed back the slight quivering of impatience in his flesh. He knew that thrill well; the delicious, feverish feeling always flowed over him at the end of an excruciating hunt, when he knew his prey was trapped. He relished in it while he very carefully sank his fingers into the sand, pushing apart broken seashells until his pads brushed against something soft and wet. The feeling exploded all over his body, and his hands shook when he pulled the seal skin out of its prison of dirt. He held the most precious, important piece of you between his fingers. The skin gleamed timidly under his ravenous gaze, and he brought it to his nose, smelling the imprint of the sea, its depths and its mysteries.
He didn’t bother after this. He stood up from under the boulder at his full height, looking over at the group. A few seconds passed, then a cry erupted; a selkie, sprawled on a rock, pointed toward him. Soon the beach was full of shrieking, writhing bodies, wrenching their skins from the bushes, snatching pelts laid on the rocks. The voices, which had been shouting in playful happiness minutes before, were now echoing in panic screeches off the outcrops, trapped between spiky, rocky edges. Gojo watched, slightly amused, the poor creatures running all around, dashing toward the sea. He didn’t care much. His attention was entirely focused on your face.
You run toward your hideout, just like the others. Not a second was to be wasted when it came to men, you knew that. Then you stopped dead at the sight of the white-haired man and the smug little smile on his face. He was holding your own skin, as preciously as you would have, in his arms. To see a piece of yourself, so dearly cherished by nature, being cradled and chocked between the arms of that infuriating man, sparked something in you. Your features hardened, anger overtaking fear as you stood in all your glory, indifferent to the lust in his gaze or the harsh, unforgiving bite on the wind on your naked body.
Seconds passed. Silence filled the emptiness left between the rocks, sliding between edges and gaps and cracks, where screams had echoed minutes ago. Then you spoke.
“Give me back my skin.”
His eyes widened slightly at the sound of your voice, so sweet and lovely, directed at him, and him only. Human words, shaped into the air from a mystical creature, and meant for him. He was the first to hear them, alone on this desolate beach, and his heart swelled with pleasure. His arms tightened around the fur.
You frowned when he didn’t respond, waited some more, and took a step forward. Gojo smirked when he recognized your stance; eyes darkening, body stilling in building aggressivity, hands curling in fists, legs poised to strike. He loved it, to see such a delicate thing, ready to tear him apart. Before you could make any move, however, the dagger was out in a flash of silver, its tip pressed against the grayish hair on the fur. All fury melted from your face, replaced by genuine fear.
“No!”
His only answer was to press the tip of the dagger a little more. You winced upon seeing the iron bite inch by inch into the abandoned flesh, felt the ghostly sting of the blade kiss your skin.
“Wait! Please!”
He looked back at you, with that infuriating, infernal smirk on his lips. You knew two things about men. One, they were the most twisted species to have ever walked upon this earth. Two, they would stop at nothing to get what they wanted. An image slowly floated to your mind, of your seal skin, ripped in two, with flagging, bloody pieces of flesh being tossed carelessly over the sand. You schooled your features into a pleading expression, pursed your lips in a desperate plea, pushing back a sneer at the obvious, perverted lust dancing in those blue eyes.
“Please. I’ll… I’ll come.”
Gojo smiled. He took off his coat and tossed it to you. You looked at the foreign object, a grotesque parody of sewn, cotton fur, lying at your feet, disgust twisting your lips.
“Don’t make such a face,” he said playfully, his cheerful voice a clear contrast to the dagger still nestled at his side. “Put it on.”
You crouched and slowly picked up the item. The rough fabric stung between your hands. The shape was wrong. The color was wrong. You shivered as it groped your shoulder, clung to your ribs and squeezed over your arms, trapping your body in unknown, itchy fabric. The hunter laughed, a gentle sound that made you seethe with rage. You couldn’t stop a hiss as he bent to put a loving kiss on your seal skin, pressing his lips against the wet fur, spoiling it with his human touch.
“Don’t touch it! It’s mine!”
“It’s mine now,” he said softly but firmly, as one would when correcting a child. “And so are you. Come on.”
He turned, leaving you fuming on the beach. You stayed still for three solid seconds, anger fighting over despair, the sea calling pitifully behind you, mourning your absence. You looked behind you, watched with agonizing terror the waves crashing against the shore, feeling the pull of the water into your very bones.
Then you walked reluctantly behind the hunter, refusing to meet his triumphant stare.
Chapter 2
Chapter by JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51)
Chapter Text
The walk back to the village was quiet.
You followed Gojo in sulky silence, eyes cast downward, and ignored stubbornly his insistent gaze. The skin was securely tucked over his shoulder, the dagger purposefully displayed on his belt should you try anything. You walked over dewed leaves, stepped on damp moss, hopped lightly over tree stumps. Once he turned back toward you as you stumbled, not very used to this human form yet, and you shoved him back with a rough snarl. He let you, simply gazing with wonder at the way such a vulnerable body didn’t hesitate to push back against him, despite its obvious weakness.
The rest of the walk was dull, without any further incidents. However, once out of the shelter of the forest, Gojo immediately picked upon your restlessness. You kept looking here and there, throwing furtive, wary glances at the meadows and the sheep grazing peacefully inside the safety of fences, wrinkling your nose at the flow of strange, unknown smells. He looked back at you, at your frail body wrapped in his coat. You were holding the fabric tightly against you, enduring without a word the itch of artificial fabric rubbing against your skin, which was still gleaming with fat drops of sea water. The coat managed to hide your frame, and the hunter’s heart swelled with pride at the thought that this would be his soon. He waited for you as you carefully scanned the clearings, staring suspiciously at those walking balls of wool you had never set eyes upon before. Only when you were sure they represented no threat did you walk over to him, shivering slightly from the rising wind singing plaintively between the trees far behind. He offered his arm to you. You ignored it.
“You’re going to freeze,” he said, with a faint smirk at your insistent rejection of his presence.
Your only response consisted of a huff. Gojo chuckled softly and started walking ahead. The weight of the seal skin felt warm and comforting on his shoulder.
The gates of the village stood open, like steely jaws lined with crooked teeth of rusted iron.
You stood here, frozen on the spot, the cold of the stony path seeping into your bare feet, but you didn’t care right now. The restlessness you had felt upon leaving the cover of the forest tripled at the sight of this new, strange piece of foreign architecture, staining the harmonious line of trees around it.
Of men you had seen little, except for maybe boats. It was funny to watch from afar, with your pod, the great, hollow husks of wood drift silently across the water, sometimes fighting to no avail against the waves. There was an odd, strange beauty about these hand-made wooden bodies gliding over your personal home and playground, as though they were nothing but ghostly visitors. They intruded quietly, creeping behind rocky ledges, hiding behind cliffs, but you were too swift for them to catch on, and men’s harpoon seldom reached the depths you sheltered in. A gust of wind, a snarl of an incoming storm, and men retreated just as quickly as they had come. To you those ships were big, useless structures, a blatant proof of men’s arrogance and their constant will to dominate anything they set their eyes on.
Now? One was forcing you to step in in his own world.
The hunter turned back toward you, giving you the same cocky, horribly irritating look he had had for you since the forest. The lust had dimmed inside, but you knew it was still there.
“I’m not going in that… that place,” you sharply asserted.
The white-haired hunter simply smiled, as if your apparent fear was nothing but a child’s tantrum.
“You are,” he simply countered, with that same soft, gentle voice, meant for especially rebellious things.
He gave a small tug to the skin, and his hand drifted toward the dagger, whose silver blade barely caught the dull sunshine managing to break past the heavy cover of rain clouds. Your stomach immediately churned with fear at the sight of the weapon and you scowled. The orangish teeth of crooked metal stood perfectly still over the beaten earth. Eventually, after a reluctant growl, you walked behind the white-haired man, trying to mask hot panic as best as you could under irritated features.
The hunter walked confidently among the bizarre constructions of stone and wood. You couldn’t help but squeeze the coat tighter around you, feeling suddenly very vulnerable in the open, among those odd, perfectly geometrical-shaped dens. Suffocating smells of smoke and faded hay drifted out of them. Everything was enclosed, contained, shaped and rearranged according to the whims of the creatures walking around you, from the brisk angles of plunging roofs to the timid flowers, trapped in little jars of dirt, where they ought to have grown freely in meadows instead. The dens were scattered all around, some bigger than others, but all containing weapons of some kind, and all fenced. Your shoulders hunched as you retreated further into the rough fabric covering you, eyeing warily the lean, polished blades used to tear inside your food and rip the skins of your kind off their bodies. You didn’t see the hunter glancing back at you, evaluating your fear, quietly assessing your frightened state now that he had finally brought you into his realm. You scowled at the sight of exposed, raw muscles of slaughtered cattle, and dried, emptied bodies of fish aligned on sticks. A dog barked at you. You startled a little, hissing. A scrawny, furry creature laid sunning its thin frame on a roof, lazily swiping a paw over its head. Everything was new and horrifying in this new world of order, contrasting so sharply with the gentleness of nature, where waves carved your den, shifting algae held you safe, changing currents brought you prey. You received. Men took.
Just like the one in front of you.
Gojo looked back at you, stroking the skin absent-mindedly with one hand, and your face shifted into a quiet snarl. He smiled. The many looks of respect the men and women threw him as you made your way deeper into the village told you enough about his status. The spark of absolute wonder in their stare when they caught sight of you next was impossible to ignore.
The seal skin carefully folded over Gojo’s shoulder, his proud stride, your obvious nakedness under the oversized coat you were draped in were all details to a story the villagers instantly caught on to. The myths elders whispered about, the stories children searched for in their free time had shaped itself through your upset face, your shivering legs, and the grayish pelt secured tightly onto the hunter’s body, both a proof and a trophy for all to see.
Nobody spoke to Gojo. The perfect silence of complete awe was enough for him; his feat was instantly recognized. The blacksmith stopped, fishermen looked up from their nets, women peeked out at windows, children stilled in the gardens. Some tentatively took a few steps toward him, but no one was bold enough to walk toward you, nor that you wanted them to anyway. The lingering lust in the man’s eyes had been a trial to endure. To feel dozens of curious eyes on your skin was the last thing you wanted.
Eventually the white-haired man brought you to a house, a bit apart from the others. It seemed to fold in the forest, with branches brushing the damaged tiles of the roof. Many animal pelts were aligned on large, smoothed planks of wood, with colorful feathers standing out alongside them. You shuddered at the smell of dried blood and torn flesh. Gojo noticed but stayed silent.
“Here,” he said. He opened the door and watched you enter with small, careful steps as you gave quick, anxious looks at the inside of his house.
He went upstairs and you followed, glancing at the wood, forcefully bent into furniture, and at the heads of animals hung on the walls.
You walked the stairs one by one, wincing as your sore, bare feet touched the rough surface, shuddering as the cold finally caught up to you. You threw away the coat in a swift, spiteful gesture as soon as you entered the bedroom, relieved to be free of the weight of human fabric pressing in on you. Gojo watched you without a word.
You didn’t know how long you stayed facing each other. He had subtly walked behind you, blocking the door, and you had no choice but to stare at him, silently baring your teeth, ready to fight at the smallest suspicious gesture. He took his time, let his gaze travel over your shape, once, twice, took notice of even the tiniest moles, the faint cuts on your ankles, the sea water drying on your arms. The old lust that had fueled this whole chase sprung to life when he looked a third time. His eyes roamed over the shoulders, the breasts, the belly you weren’t in the slightest bit ashamed of displaying. You had trouble understanding how something as natural as a simple body could trigger the burning intensity he was now looking at you with, but men were greedy creatures. You frowned slightly at the small hitch in his breath and tensed when he took a step forward. Then changed his mind.
The bed was just behind you. A simple push, and he would have what he had been craving for over a month now. But Gojo, as a hunter, was patient, and he reined in the urge, to instead take the seal skin in his hands. Your eyes immediately locked on it, on the pelt hanging helplessly mid-air. Gojo waited a few minutes and gave a few, lazy strokes to the head of the seal, dragging his palm over the grayish hair, which had you bristling. He pulled it close to his heart, and it took all your will not to simply lunge at him. Finally, he decided to speak.
“This,” he said, slowly, taking the skin and holding it in front of your eyes, “is mine.”
Your lips twitched.
“That makes you mine. Now…”
He grabbed his dagger and pulled the tip close to the skin. You took one step, eyes widening in alarm.
“If you ever try anything, I will cut it. Rip it to pieces. You’ll never feel the sea again.”
You snarled, hands clutched tightly at your sides, longing for the protection of your other self on your back.
“Behave, and I’ll keep it safe. Just like I’ll keep you safe. Do you understand?”
You scoffed, refusing to meet his gaze.
“Yes.”
“Good.”
He tossed the skin over his shoulder.
“Now, I’m going to put it somewhere where I can take care of it. Then we’ll talk some more.”
A plea suddenly torn from your throat, born out of the sharp panic hammering in your chest.
He smiled.
“No! Please, don’t take it away from me!”
“I won’t. Just stay calm, I’ll be back soon. Okay?”
You nodded. To try and hide the burning tears flowing over your cheeks would have been useless. Your skin stung all over, your body crying for your other flesh. The seal’s eyes stared at you, empty, terrified.
Gojo turned toward the door, ready to go. He stopped. Then he suddenly whirled. His lips were on yours, pressing, his hands at your waist, pulling. You barely had any time to react, too stunned while his mouth stole precious seconds of a moment he had dreamed of so many times. You raised your hands to push him off but he had already stepped back, eyes burning, chest heaving, desperately fighting the need to just act on the itch roaring beneath his flesh. You watched him, ready to sink your nails in his body, your muscles coiling at the little twinge of mad lust dancing in his irises.
With a small, bitter scoff, he finally turned and left. A shriek of utter despair clawed its way in your throat, pushing past small, terrified whimpers. The hunter closed the door with a final, decisive click, locking you in as he took away the most sacred and important part a selkie ever cherished of her own self.
He came back a day later.
You lifted your head from the pillow at the sounds of old doors creaking downstairs. It had taken hours for you to feel even a shred of ease, locked between human walls, with human smells crawling over on you, drowning the bittersweet, cutting smell of the sea. The white-haired hunter’s smell in particular wouldn’t leave you, clinging stubbornly to your arms, your back, wherever the coat had touched you. Now human smells were gaining ground, and you had feltthem, a strange mix born out of the acidity of the smoke outside and the sweetness of the forest. You had growled softly, frantically pressing your nose against your wrists, seeking the familiar tang of rocks and sand and drifting algae and shifting waves. You had finally curled on the bed, which reminded you of a white, spongy overgrown anemone, waiting, listening, pushing back tears. You missed the fur on your shoulder, its comforting softness swirling over your back and legs as you swam playfully in the waves.
The door opened, and you straightened immediately. The hunter’s eyes darkened at the sight of your helpless body laying over his own sheets, but he said nothing. Instead, he held something small between his thumb and his index, and you stood up cautiously.
Gojo watched you inspect the golden ring with careful eyes. You bent slightly, to get a better look at the jewel he had ordered the day before. The gold felt fresh and stable in his hand. He took your hand in his. You looked at him sharply, surprised at the sudden move, and blinked when he slipped the ring on your ring finger.
“What is it?”
“It means you’re mine. As my wife.”
His heart beat faster as he pronounced the words, as they solidified even further the fantasy he had wanted to build. You frowned.
“Wife?”
Gojo chuckled at your puzzled face and he paused, searching for a word your species would be more likely to understand, or would at least give you an idea of the status the small circle of gold had just given you.
“Yes, my wife. Like… my mate.”
Your eyes widened in stricken horror, and he smiled. So he had chosen well.
“What?! No!”
“Remember your skin.”
The simple sentence immediately cut short any protest you might have had. You stared at him, seething, giving him a look of pure rage which he gave back with a loving one of his own. He brought your hand to his lips and kissed first the finger adorned with the ring, then the back of your hand, slowly, softly. You watched him with consternation, struggling to understand the shift between the possessive lust and quiet love this man seemed to bear for you.
“Tomorrow we will be wed. And you will be my wife.”
A swirl of panic and confusion washed over you. Each word the hunter uttered spun a new tale, a new human tradition you had no idea about, cutting more and more the ties you had with your own world. The white-haired man tilted his head and watched your dismayed features with a calm smile.
“I never told you my name. I’m Satoru Gojo. What’s yours?”
Only silence answered him. Obviously sharing your identity with the man who had already stolen such a big part of your identity did not bring you any joy whatsoever, but the memory of your seal’s head, bobbing helplessly on his shoulder, came in your mind, and with it Gojo’s confident threat.
“Y/N.”
“Y/N,” Gojo instantly repeated, rolling the precious, almost magical syllables on his tongue, again and again.
“Y/N. We shall be happy together.”

ghostix on Chapter 1 Sun 10 May 2026 06:52PM UTC
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JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51) on Chapter 1 Sun 10 May 2026 09:18PM UTC
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Luckyclovr2 on Chapter 1 Sun 10 May 2026 08:10PM UTC
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JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51) on Chapter 1 Sun 10 May 2026 09:18PM UTC
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Blmnt88 on Chapter 1 Mon 11 May 2026 02:44PM UTC
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JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51) on Chapter 1 Mon 11 May 2026 03:15PM UTC
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kitkatalicious on Chapter 1 Mon 11 May 2026 04:51PM UTC
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JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51) on Chapter 1 Mon 11 May 2026 09:20PM UTC
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Alice_99 on Chapter 2 Wed 13 May 2026 08:42PM UTC
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JujutsuGirly (TheLittleCheshire51) on Chapter 2 Wed 13 May 2026 08:55PM UTC
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