Kelly's POV
Gerald-san taught us how to fish using fishing rods, one of the skills humans commonly acquire. It seemed that my children and Russell-san had got it a bit faster than I thought. So, as the sun sets beautifully, we are now fishing in the sea near Blareween on the ferry's viewing deck. The height between it and the water was high, but our fishing rods are strong enough to keep the fish from being loose and falling into the water. Half an hour, Russell had his first catch and pulled his rod as much as he could. What he caught was a big red fish. Not as big as the ones I ate as a dragon a long time ago, but it was pretty big for him.
"Woah, a red fish!" he said to us before unhooking the red fish from the fishhook.
"Ah, you caught a Red Tuna!" Gerald brightly responded back.
"Red Tuna?" Rai asked while her fishing rod hadn't caught anything yet.
"That kind of tuna was one of the most common in this area, alongside regular tunas. But the blue one was the rarest of them all."
Just hearing the last aforementioned tuna made us fantasize on catching that and cooking it as our meal for dinner. Adrian-kun and Cassius-san also thought of catching it and taking it home in the Southern Plains. Well…that would be a long trip before it would go bad and rot!
Our fishing time lasted for another quarter of an hour, but we caught more. I also noticed that it was low tide, so the chances of catching fishes increased significantly. Gregory-san and Aren-san seemed to have caught fewer ones than Russell-kun and my kids. Aren even used his Crows ability to grab his and take them to his side, much to the surprise and shock of Gerald and most of us. Russell calls it genius, which Aren was humbly proud of.
But we did catch a few Blue Tunas now, but Adrian and Cassius understood that taking them home in the Southern Plains would make them go bad, so they planned to catch more before we would go back home from Yanabara. Gerald also offered an ice box for that, which Adrian and Cassius were more than happy to accept fr their tunas.
