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Lagoon: Sharks

“Right. Invisible sharks. Very scary.”

The old pier at Sharks Lagoon didn’t creak anymore. It had given up creaking years ago, settling instead into a weary, permanent groan, like a sleeper trapped in a bad dream. Maya knew every weathered plank by heart. She’d spent every summer of her fifteen years here, watching the water turn from jade to ink as the sun dipped behind the mangrove forest. sharks lagoon

Maya didn’t move for a long time. The crickets on the shore started their evening chorus. A fish jumped somewhere behind her. When she finally rowed back, Leo was waiting with a flashlight. “Right

The shark blinked—a slow, milky slide of nictitating membrane. Then it sank, as quietly as it had come, and vanished into the black. It had given up creaking years ago, settling

Not a fin. Not a thrash. Just a slow, deliberate ripple, traveling against the light breeze. Beneath the surface, a shape detached itself from the darker deep. It was massive—wider than her boat, older than the pier. A bull shark, the color of tarnished silver, with one cloudy eye that had gone white with age.

Maya smiled. “They’re there. You just don’t see them.”

The shark circled once. Twice. Then it rose. Not to attack. Just to see . Its snout broke the surface, barely a whisper of water, and for one long heartbeat, Maya stared into that ancient, scarred face. She saw the torn edge of its dorsal fin, the hook scar by its gill, the patient emptiness of its gaze.

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