Not a sound. A pressure. A displacement. The entire school of sardines—thousands of them—imploded into a single, dark sphere and shot straight down. The jacks followed, their silver bodies turning into vertical rain. The surface, for one heartbeat, went still.
The gap between the root-entangled shore and the boiling kill-zone was twenty feet. He covered it in three desperate, splashing strides, his wings half-cocked for balance. As his feet left the bottom, he plunged his dagger-beak into the froth.
The gulls settled on the water, bickering. The pelicans floated, fat and sleepy. The shark’s fin traced a lazy circle and vanished. Kael looked at his reflection in a patch of calm water. The eye that stared back was wild, ancient, and slightly ashamed. But only slightly. feeding frenzy rapid rush
It started with a single swirl—a dark shape coiling beneath the glassy skin of the lagoon. Then another. Then ten. Within seconds, the placid blue erupted into a churning, white-water apocalypse. This was the feeding frenzy: nature’s chaos engine switched to “overdrive.”
Miss. A jack’s flank slid off his mandible. Not a sound
Kael’s stomach clenched. The rapid rush was a drug. It was a sound—a wet, percussive slap-slap-slap of thousands of tails—and a smell, sharp with blood and brine. His own long legs began to tremble. Not with fear. With the urge.
The rapid rush was over.
Miss. A shrimp tail disintegrated in the chaos.