Chapter 3
Yuu
Yuu knocked on the door to Azulâs private office on the penthouse floor of Mostro Lounge exactly two minutes earlier than his note had requested. Then, after a whole minute of silence from within the room, she knocked again.
âStrange,â she muttered. âNever seen him late beforeâ¦â
Then, with the intention to leave her own note on his desk before looking for him, she pushed the door open, only to find him sitting there at his desk, as usual, behind a mountain of papers. Merfolk-made, parchment, A4, and a scrubby sort of material made in Savannaclaw. He had it all.
She cleared her throat. He didnât move.
âI thought I told you to get out,â he grumbled from between his fingers.
âWell, make up your mind, Zul,â she said, more cheekily than intended. âI have it in writing that you wanted me here.â
Azul snapped upright so quickly his glasses fell halfway off his face.
âYuu,â he breathed, âIâI apologize. I thought you wereâI didnât think it was you. Is it time already? I was justâjustââ
Yuu laughed. It was rare to see Azul Ashengrotto as anything other than pristine, so when he had a rare moment of being flustered, it certainly stood out. Azul was one of the schoolâs top students, and at the same time somehow managed to run a business, keep up with his schoolwork, head his dormitory, and by the looks of him and his flawless, smooth skin, got enough sleep. It was like the man had eight arms. Seeing him like this, so obviously nervous, he suddenly felt so much more human, and she forgot for a moment that he was a merman like the rest of the members of his dorm.
Before Yuu had stepped into his office, sheâd been a bundle of nerves over talking with him alone. When sheâd read his request to meet, it had seemed so formalâso stiff, which was why the questions had been circulating in her head since sheâd found his note.
Have I offended him somehow?
Is this a reprimand? An interrogation? A confession?
That last one was extremely unlikely, but he couldnât have been more vague in the request to meet.
Perhaps that was merfolk tradition? Give as little information as possible?
Her exasperation with the entire arrangement was how she found herself in his sleek, probably dubiously acquired office not an hour laterâteasing him.
âI was kidding,â she said, hands up in a placating gesture. âBut, if this really is a bad time, I can always come back later. Or you can just call mâ?â
âNo!â Azul snapped, too quickly, launching himself from his chair in his effort to keep her. He was halfway around his desk before he seemed to realize the behavior was unusual, and slipped back into his normal composure.
âNo?â she blinked, surprised.
He cleared his throat, shoving his glasses back up his nose, knocking off his hat in the process. As it hit the floor, his white hair spilled out in soft waves styled to give a sleek, polished look; however, his stiff posture and wrinkled jacket ruined the effect somewhat.
He cleared his throat.
âNo,â he repeated far more calmly, plastic placidity quickly replacing his earlier lack of candor. âPlease stay.â
He cleared his throat again.
âI find myself today inâ¦an odd sort of predicament. Iâahâeurgh, this is going badly already. I could truly use your help, Yuu.â
Despite his calm expression, she could already sense the slight bite behind his tone.
So that was why he was so uncomfortable. Azul Ashengrotto was used to people coming to him for help. When he needed something himself, he had an endless network of students who owed him favors to call on. The question was, what on earth he could want from her that a network of magic students
âIâll always help a friend,â she said, trying hard to keep the laugh out of her voice. ââif itâs within reason.â
He stared at her, not seeming to notice his fallen hat, nor even the way his white and blue collar had managed to turn itself crookedly on his neck.
âYuuâ¦we are friends, yes?â He asked the question like heâd been rehearsing it in his head, and scowled like it hadnât come out quite right.
She raised an eyebrow.
âAzul, youâve known me for three years.â
âI have,â he said, although by his expression, he clearly didnât think that was telling at all.
âI do consider you a friend, at least,â she sighed at last, taking the seat across from his without invitation. He took her cue, and reluctantly sank into his own. âThe thing is, I donât think you go through something as traumatic as an overblot with someone, or a complete memory loss, or a world-change, or three years of study without beingâ¦well, if not friends, then at leastâ¦connected?â
He cringed when she mentioned the overblot, but when he realized that most of the instances sheâd listed were her own experience, seemed to soften a little.
âI hadnât really considered it like that,â he said diplomatically. âI am somewhat ashamed to admit, I hadnât considered most of what youâve beenâermâ¦.â
He trailed off, however, and never finished that thought. She continued.
âWeâre also on a first name-basis, and youâve been responding to a nickname for months,â she pointed out before he could descend too far into his musings.
âIs that what that is?â he asked, appearing truly baffled. âIâd thought the name was simply cumbersome.â
âYep!â she said, a cheeky grin returning. âFriends, Zul?â
Azul steepled his fingers under chin. âYesâ¦yes. I suppose we are.â
âAlright then, friend,â she said, no longer holding back the mischief. âSince weâre established, could I offer you a smidgen of advice?â
âWhy not?â he groaned, leaning back in his chair. âThis meeting is already an absolute disaster.â
âOh, itâs not absolute yet,â she teased. âYou know, Zul, when you meet with friends, you donât need to send paper invitations and drink vouchers. You can call me. You can text me. You can say something when youâre passing in the hall.â
âIâm not sure if I have your numberâ¦â he said vaguely.
She rolled her eyes. âYou have the number of everyone in this school.â
His plastic smile didnât shift, but he shifted in his chair uncomfortably.
âAm I to take it thatââ
âIâm giving you permission,â she interrupted, taking pity on him. She leaned forward in her chair, parallel now, to him. âSo, what can a magicless, studentless, connectionless dorm head do for you today?â
âI wouldnât exactly call you without connection,â Azul muttered under his breath.
âHm?â
Was that it, then? He wanted her to ask a favor from someone else?
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Before she had to ask, however, Azul rummaged at his chairâs side, and from his briefcase, pulled a familiar white-and-pearescent invitation, which he set in front of her.
âIâve received an invitation to an event, and I find myself in need of a companion.â
She stifled an unladylike snort. âA companion?â
He pushed up his glasses, though they no longer needed adjusting.
âMy connections have informed me that attending with a companion will make me more approachable at the event. My family has aâa well-known reputation at these sorts of things.â
âYou need a date to the wedding so that the other guests donât think youâll bite their heads off?â she joked, but if possible, he paled even more than he already was. âIâm kidding,â she rushed. âOf course Iâll go with you. Actually, I was hoping to ask you a bit more about it, myself.â
She pulled out her own invitation, and laid it next to his.
âHow in the depths did you manage to get one of these?â he demanded, his mage stone flashing in his front pocket.
She held up her hands. âIâm at the bridal table with Mal.â
Azulâs jaw opened and close several times. âYouâre at the bridal table? Youâwhy?â
She examined the dark wood trimmings on the ceiling around the office bookshelves in an attempt to hide an eyeroll.
âDid you even look at the brideâs name?â
âIs this the other student from Ramshackle last year? I confess, that after the overâerm, your first year at NRCâI was a bit detached from everyone outside of my own dormitory. There was business to rebuild. Trust to regainââ
âA thirty foot glass wall to repair?â she asked blithely.
He nodded. âThat.â
âAnyway,â she gushed, before he could pull back into whatever tension he thought there had been between them, âIâm so relieved youâre going. I thought I wouldnât know anyone there but Mal, and I donât know what any of the traditions there are. Or etiquette. Or even what this date and time mean! And, I mean, I doubt I can just magi-map my way there. It looks like something you have to justâ¦know.â
âOf course itâs not plotted on magi-map, itâsâYouâve never heard of the Pearl Arch?â Azul exclaimed, before he could stop himself.
She crossed her legs over the velvet in her chair and cocked her head at him. âThree years ago, I hadnât even heard of NRC, remember? I take it you know?â
Azul ran his fingers through his hair.
âThe event is mixed-species, so I doubt youâll offend anyone,â he said at last. âAnd as the Brideâs representativeâitâs quite the honor. You will be playing the part of the Brideâs Head-of-House. Apropo, as you were her dorm leader, but the position is typically filled by the matriarch of the family line.â
Yuu threw her hands in the air. âNow that she definitely didnât mention in her noteâand Iâd call that a crucial detail!â
âShe is the brideâ¦lots of things going on this week, I imagine.â
âThis week?â Yuu deadpanned.
âThe happy day will occur in the evening, between seven and nine on Friday.â
âItâs three days away?â
âThree days is the usual notice for merfolk,â Azul explained quickly, watching Yuuâs face heat up. âItâs standard for contracts, deadlines, noticesââ
âAnd weddings?â
âIâm aware that humans usually give several monthsâ notice for such an event, howeverââ
Yuu found herself kneading her forehead, and leaning heavily on one arm of the chair. âHowever, sheâs not marrying a human,â she completed for him. âGreat. Just great. And what is the head of her matriarchal line supposed to wear to this sort of thing?â
Azul cocked a brow. âYou are the human representative. Those traditions should be in your repertoire.â
Yuu groaned. âWell for us, usually the bride at least assigns a color. And itâs usually anything but white. And of course, Malâs putting me at the head table without even telling me that.â
âThe bride assigns colors?â Azul asked, mildly interested. âWhat other duties does one usually fill?â
âThe women in the bridal party usually buy the bride a new set of tupperware. And maybe cooking knives. And clothing.â
âClothing?â he prompted.
âErm, sexual clothing. Anyway,â Yuu rushed on, not wanting to dwell on THAT topic with Azul. âDo mermaids not get assigned colors?â
Azul shook his head once more, and though he seemed confused, mercifully didnât ask any more questions.
âMermaids are assigned their own scale colors at birth, I suppose. They are born or hatch with them. It is both expensive and magically intensive to change it, although that could become easier in futureâ¦â
âThanks for telling me the time,â Yuu exhaled deeply. She wanted very much to know why some mermaids hatched, and some didnât, but discussing merfolk birthing practices with Azul didnât seem like the right call, either. âYou never did say: is the Banejaw Lagoon far from here?â
âBanejaw Grotto,â Azul corrected patiently, though he still looked scandalized at the question. âUnder the Atlantican Pearl Arch. And it doesnât matter how far it is. I imagine the Banejaw family will have set up mirror transport for anyone in possession of one of these invitations.â
Yuuâs jaw dropped. âJust how powerful is this family Malâs marrying?â
Azul made a show of stacking the papers in front of him, though they were already as perfectly aligned as they would be.
âOh, they are quite influential. Enough to give my own mother, and the Leechâs parents healthy competition this past decade. Enough to give anyone competition, actually.â
âAnd the groom, is he decent? Or do you think heâs just singing Mallory the siren song of success to get her to marry him?â
That sent Azul sighing into the back of his seat.
âI havenât seen or spoken to Varun in many years, but when I did know himâ¦.he seemed like the sincere sort. You never know, though, with the Banejaws. They always seem to be something.â
There was a touch of bitterness in the way he said it, and Yuu wanted to ask more, but there were more pressing things to decideâand sheâd have plenty of time the night of to question him more thoroughly.
âIâll catch you here then, after your shift. Is five okay? Iâd like to be early enough to help Mal if she needs it.â
Azul nodded, looking more relieved than heâd been their entire conversation, though whether that was because it was ending, or if he was simply glad to have âa companion,â as heâd put it, she couldnât say.
âI, myself, wouldnât mind being early enough to greet certain guests,â Azul answer vaguely.
The memory of Malâs note flashed in her head. âSome of the Banejaw guests terrify me,â sheâd written. That was another thing sheâd have to ask him about closer to the event. Until then, it wasnât about her own concerns. It was about Mal, and digging up what on earth she was going to need at this thing.
âGood,â Yuu said quickly, wondering how much longer Grim could be without her without causing destruction. âAnd what will you be wearing? If I donât have a color, we might as well match.â
Azul blinked.
âIs that a human tradition?â he asked.
She nodded, smirking.
âItâs custom for âcompanions,â who go to âeventsâ together to wear the same color. So what are you?â she asked, realizing.
Yuu had sort of seen Azul in his merman form when heâd overblotted, but sheâd been too far away to see anything but corruption, dying magic, and broken glass. Now that she thought about it, NRC was a quick bus ride from the beach, but sheâd never even seen Azul near the water. She cocked her head, examining him. His hair was a perfect silver white, with touches of blue. So were his eyes.
âAre you blue?â she asked.
âI am not exactly a merman,â he admitted uncomfortably. âI am cecaelian, which means that if I were blue, I would be extremely poisonous, and probably hunted for sport.â
âOkayâ¦â she stared, not sure if he was joking. âThen what color are you?â
âOkay?â he asked, regarding her as though sheâd just sprouted a second head. âJustâ¦okay?â
âWell, yes,â she huffed, getting impatient. âIâm really just happy to be going with someone I know. Who knows people. Who knows the traditions. I donât think I could ask for better.â
He stared as though she had sprouted a third head.
âEurgh, Azul! I need to get back to Grim. We only have three days! Give me a color, and I will be here and ready before five.â
âBlack,â he said flatly, surprising her. âSince we evidently canât wear white, itâs elegant enough for these sorts of things, and weâll both do fine with it.â
âBlack,â she repeated. âItâs a little strange for a human wedding, but at least itâll be easy to find. Wonderful.â
Somewhere below them, a glass shatteredâa typical sound for a drink restaurant, but it was a stark reminder that sheâd left Grim practically unsupervised, and she didnât exactly trust Ace and Deuce with the job. She stood.
âIf you have time before then, would you message me? Iâd like to know more about what usually happens at these things⦠and Malâs worried about the guest list, but she couldnât have possibly been more vague.â
Azul nodded as she collected her bag, invitation, and checked around the seat to make sure she hadnât left anything. Her nerves returned somewhat as he scrutinized her movements, studying her closely enough that she felt like she was some new specimen heâd been assigned in one of Professor Divusâ hundreds of petri dishes.
âI will try, but I warn you my schedule might not open up until late at night. And you should perhaps know me a bit better⦠some of the âguestsâ that Miss Jean mentioned might have questions for you, and Iâd rather you hear the stranger things from me.â
That made her pause. She glanced up at him as she rose from her chair, unable to stop the smirk
âI do know you, Zul,â she said, the nickname sounding heavier in her mouth now that heâd acknowledged it, but she was determined to press on, anyway. âI know that you work yourself to the point of breaking, that you have some strange vendetta against all things chicken, octopus, or crustacean, and I know all about your potioneering through last year. Mallory was obsessed. At one point there, you probably could have gotten her to marry you.â
She laughed at the stunned look on his face.
âStill kidding. Donât worry too much about the questions. Iâm not the sort to believe crazy rumors from strangersâ¦But if you thought you had any mystique, Zul, you should knowâ¦your vice house warden posts your schedule on the back of the office door.â
Surprising herself, she winked at him over her shoulder.
âIâve been meaning to say. Your hatâs on the floor.â
With that, she escaped through the office door, leaving Azul looking downright disheveled.