Chapter 2
Azul
Azul walked away from the note heâd planted in Yuuâs desk feeling reasonably confident his troubles would be put to rest by the end of the day. The invitation heâd received that morning through the Octavinelle mirrorâfrom a grumpy delivery merman far past retirement ageâhad brought with it a bludgeoning blow to his schedule, the ripples of which he would be dealing with for weeks. Had it been any other event, he would have sent a perfunctory gift and polite refusal right back with the delivery merman. As it was, there were⦠complications.
âFloyd, will you please get the new hires to stop hanging personal art in the lobby. This is getting⦠out of hand,â Azul grit through his teeth when he returned to the lounge.
The freshman, it appeared, thought it was funny to post pictures of the lounge food and drinks from around campus. On the west wall, a Mimosa was taking a nap with a gardening textbook. On the back of the counter, several croquettes were playing broom hockey, and a bowl of soup was out with friends. Azul drew the line, however, at a blue cocktail posed on a black leather couch in what was undoubtedly someoneâs bedroom, getting leered at by a cocktail stirrer.
âNah, itâs funny.â Floyd shrugged, already wandering away.
Azul glared at his retreating back, and caught a glimpse of several more photos of the same ilk peeking from his back pocket.
âTraitor,â he muttered. âJade? Jade. Please help me.â
But Jade, tying his uniform apron strings, only shook his head.
âI donât think so, Boss. Mostro customer approval is up by ten percent since we started this little advert.â
Azulâs eyes narrowed. âWe?â
Jade ignored him.
âThereâs a magicam page dedicated just to the new shots. Even Schoenheitâs laughed at a few. You wouldnât believe the free publicity.â
âThis is not a gag establishment,â Azul argued, though he could already feel in his magically-created toes that this was a losing argument. âThere is free publicity, and then there is the right kind of publicity.â
Jade bent down to look him in the face, and Azul, through his scowl, was tempted to shove him away.
âIn a year from now this âgagâ will have been forgotten, but the profit margin wonât. However⦠you already know that, Boss. So. Whose eyes are on the lounge right now that you wouldnât want seeing something like this?â
Azul resisted the temptation to roll his eyes, opting to glare instead. âThere is, indeed.â
Azul produced the thick merfolk-made invitation from his briefcase, along with the note that had followed.
Jade read the invitation and raised a brow. âFamiliar names, but hardly cause for concern.â
âNow read the other,â Azul instructed.
Skeptical, Jade opened the second parchment, also mer-folk-made, though far less ostentatious.
His eyes widened as he read, until finally, when he saw the signature at the bottom, his jaw opened, and he swallowed hard. Azul plucked the parchment from Jadeâs fingers the moment heâd finished.
âSoâ¦â Jade, never one to stutter, stuttered. âSo, youâyou wonât be with us this weekend, then.â
It wasnât a question.
âIndeed. Weâll be dealing with some complication. And while I do enjoy the idea of free publicity, perhaps you could arrange for the magicam site toâ¦disappear until then.â
âComplications,â Jade repeated dumbly. âYesâ¦yes, Iâll call in a favor from Ignihydeâ¦â
âAnd Iâll have to make arrangements not to be here this weekend. Much as I hate to say, with the new hires as they are, we may have to close up shop those two days.â
Jade blinked. âThose are our most profitable days. Youâre sure you want to do that? Youâre sure this isâ¦â He tapped the note in Azulâs hands. âThis is real?â
âOh, it is real. Iâd know motherâs signature anywhere. Even if someone did fake it, that is definitely her ink.â
âI thought something smelled familiar,â Jade said, wrinkling his nose. âAh, Nerissa⦠do give her our regards. And then, if you please, talk to her about us as little as possible.â
Azul gave a disdainful snort. âOf course. Iâm not the pushover with her that I used to be.â
âThe rest of the ocean seems to be,â Jade rebuffed.
âI am not the rest of the ocean,â Azul promised, hoping that he was right. âNow, Iâm headed to the office. Iâll need to redo this monthâs schedule if weâre going to make quota.â
He made for the upper stairway, Jade keeping stride with him easily. Nerissa Ashengrotto was the sort of woman one only associated with out of naivete, or hubris, or sheer desperation. She ran The Blue Pearl, a restaurant on the Atlantican border famous kingdom-wide for gourmet seafood, air-bubble dining, and a potion bar that the customers raved was nothing short of miraculous. However, though popular, Nerissaâs restaurant was similar to Azulâs in that it was merely a front for her more dubious business.
Nerissa Ashengrotto, unlike Azul, was willing to deal in prices far steeper than Azul or the Leech brothers were comfortable with. Nerissa was rumored to accept years off of mer-folkâs lives in exchange for cures, beauty, and rare ingredients. In other cases, she took actual body partsâfins, tails, an eye or twoâfrom those she really hated. Azul and Jade had once made the mistake of swimming into her trophy room one afternoon out of curiosity. The memory still haunted both boys. Though Floyd had later begged to know what was in there, Azul had added his own protection charms on the door, and neither he, nor Jade had ever let him see.
The only true competitors for the magic that Nerissa peddled, were the Banejaw familyâa business with such a thorough chokehold on the oceanâs rarest potions ingredients, that even simple gardeners usually had a contract or two with them. They were also family, on his fatherâs sideâyet another reason that relations were tense. Varun Banejaw was Azulâs first cousin, and if his motherâs note was to be believed, he had just been named heir to the Banejaw family. This wedding was to be the first in a very rare set of opportunities in repairing their estrangementâa wise move if Azul was to be dealing with him the rest of his life.
Azul could attend a wedding. He could be a perfect guest. He could even push through the awkwardness that oneâs mother having eaten a member of a prestigious family would inevitably bring to conversation.
However, he was doubtful of one thing: his mother had demanded he bring an escortâa dateâto the event, on pain of pain.
âSoâ¦â Jade snickered behind a log book once theyâd situated themselves behind the new schedule. âHow do you plan on meeting Nerissaâsâ¦other request? Not many mermaids will go out with you since Perse got munched.â
âThose were scurrilous rumors spread by crabs,â Azul gritted darkly. âPerse Banejaw chose a life on land, and deserted Atlantica. The Ashengrotto family is cecaelian, not octopus. We donâtâ¦â
âEat your mates?â Jade teased, ducking in time to dodge the ink bottle Azul threw at his head.
âShut it.â
âBet Floyd would dress the part if you asked nicely,â Jade continued with faux-seriousness. âBuy him a nice wig, promise him free drinks for lifeââ
Azul lobbed a pen at him next, which Jade also managed to neatly dodge.
âSo messy, Azul,â Jade sighed. âThink of the carpet.â
âWe have cleaning magic, you trout,â Azul snapped. âAnd we both know Floyd would make a terrible escort. How many mermaids can eat half a wedding cake before realizing itâs rude?â
âYou do have a point.â
âYou could do it,â Azul remarked half-heartedly.
âI donât have the complexion,â Jade dismissed. âYou could always ask one of the Pomfiore puffs. Plenty of them owe you favors.â
âYou and I both know Mother will see through any disguise they haveâand I donât like the idea of the rumors that sort of favor would cause on campus, either.â
Jade shrugged. âDesperate times?â
âNot that desperate,â Azul huffed, straightening the papers in front of him. âIâll have you know, I already have a contingency plan in place.â
NRCâs selection of women was nearly 70-30, females having fled the campus during the death-toll rise of 1368. The number that he knew outside of his own dormitory was negligible, and nearly all of them were in Savannaclaw, simply because they were too tough to be scared off. There was one, however, that met all of the potential standardsânot so ravenous that she would make a scene, not terrified of new situations, even though the occasion often called for it, and most importantly, 100% female, as per his motherâs request.
âOh, this should be entertaining,â Jade said, putting his finished paperwork on Azulâs desk. âWhen was the last time you spoke to a girl?â
âI sold thirty chocolate carousels to a group of them just last week,â Azul snipped.
âOh, that is right,â Jade rolled his eyes. âWell, just sell this event to her like youâre selling sweets, and we might even turn a profit! Whole evening with one of them? I bet youâll have her in debt for a year.â
âI am capable of normal conversation, Iâll have you know.â
âAzul, youâre half fish, and youâre the driest piece of toast Iâve ever met.â
âI am not dry. I am professional.â
âUgh, itâs like talking to a vending machine!â Floyd mock groaned.
âI am notââ
âWould you like the fruity soda? Itâs thirty percent off!â
âGet. Out.â
âOh, he says it just like a card-reader!â
âJade,â Azul hissed in warning.
Jade sighed. âWell, at least you say my name with feeling. Perhaps thereâs hope for you, yet!â
Azul reached around his desk for something else to throw, but apart from the papers, he was out of ammunition.
âIâm off, then!â Jade announced cheerily. âSome of us have important things to do. Homework. Cooking. Meeting with friends and having normal conversations with women.â
âI should fire you,â but Azulâs words were wasted on the heels of Jadeâs spats, as he disappeared through the door.
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