Yuu froze, hand covered in red dustâright next to a white tablecloth, hand holding a white handkerchief, and surrounded by white decorations. She tried in vain to scrub it away with Azulâs kerchief. Opening her mouth to ask him if he knew how to get red stains out as well, she found him already gone, mingling easily with the other guests. He was standing in a circle not too far off from the ballroom pool, where several guests and diners had already congregated. She watched his cool, collected smile as he presented some sort of anecdote to a slender woman with green hair, and a boisterous man whose arm was still a monstrous crab claw. They laughed at whatever he was saying, trying to keep him in their own circle before he moved on to someone else.
âSilly thing,â she muttered, watching him go. âHe was so worried heâd be hatedâ¦â
Clearly, though, nearly everyone wanted to know the two strangers who had been posted as the brideâs very small party, and Azul was using that fact to his maximum advantage.
As Yuu watched his movements, she was careless about the cloth of red powder still on her lap, and an errant breeze sent some of it puffing into her face. She coughed hard.
âThis stuff gets everywhere!â she growled, tying it up properly, and stuffing it into her purse. âWas Mal trying to ruin her dress!?â
Grateful to be wearing black, Yuu wrapped her hand in Azulâs handkerchief, and, unsure of how much of the stuff had blown into her face, went to find her date, the only person here who could help her with it.
She stepped away from the bridal table, and made her way to the lower guest seating, weaving between guests. A blue and white-haired woman, flirting with a human shopkeep. A human shopkeep flirting with a red-haired mermaid who peered up at him from the side of the pool. Several people with the same tiger-striped markings on their cheeks as the groom milled across her path, all clad in finely tailored dresses and suits.
Azul had been at the far end of the pool earlier, but now, with the shifting of the crowd, Yuu found herself struggling to spot one head of white hair in a sea of color.
As she walked, she began to notice something oddâshe wasnât the only one who had been stained by red. In fact, several guests had little red marks on wrists, inner arms, or even faces. As she made her way to the far ballroom floor, there were even guests who had streaks of the stuff, looking around as though hunting for something. For some reason, Yuu did not want to be seen by them, and hurried her steps.
There, at the long end of the pool, she saw the source of the red dust. Waiters had stationed little pots of the stuff for guests to dip their fingers into. She was close enough to smell the stuff, its scent unfamiliarâearthy, with a sharp tang of crushed kelp and something metallic.
Was this some mermaid tradition?
She promised herself that she would ask Azul when she found him, and got the stuff off of herself.
At last, she spotted him, speaking in hushed tones with a tall, angular man, whom Yuu recognized immediately as Floyd and Jadeâs father. He stood to the corner, avoiding anyone marked in red, and Jadeâs father was one of the few who wasnât.
âAzul!â she called, making her way to him. âAnd Mr. Leech,â she greeted with a friendly smile.
âYuu,â Mr. Leechâs answering grin was mercurial, slippery, and as usual, entirely unreadable. The man put even Azul to shame. âHow nice to see you hereâ¦looking for someone?â
There was a meaning that she couldnât quite decipher in his tone, so she answered honestly.
âJust Azul,â she said brightly. âMal spilledâ¦something on me. I bet itâs all over my face. I was just hoping you knew how to get it off? How bad is it?â
Her question was addressed to Azul, but it was Mr. Leech who laughed.
âNow, that does sound like young Mallory. Your friend has, shall we say, made quite a splash in business down below.â
Yuuâs eyebrows shot up. âAlready? I guess Mal never was one to waste time.â
âCertainly not,â Mr. Leech agreed. âWell, it seems I need to leave you two to your plight. Best of luck to you, Yuu.â
âHave a lovely evening, Mr. Leech,â Yuu said in parting, before rounding on Azul. âWhat on earth was that about? Actually, donât tell me yet. Do I look like a tomato? Mal put this dust on me, and a breeze took it up to my face. I bet I look like a berry sneezed on me.â
Azul tutted. âSuch a visual.â
And then, he actually looked at her.
âOh my,â he said, examining her face.
âIâve probably ruined your handkerchief trying to get it off,â Yuu said apologetically.
âKeep it,â Azul said, hardly keeping the disgust from his tone. âWhy in the trenches did you touch the stuff in the first place? You donât actually believe what theyâve been saying about this dust?â
âWhat have they been saying?â Yuu asked, frustrated. âAnd, please, Azul, do you know how to get it off or not?â
Azul scowled, glancing around them, and eventually snatched a cloth napkin off of a table. He poured someoneâs nearly empty champagne glass on it, and began dabbing at her face.
âIs it working?â Yuu asked quickly.
âAlcohol is supposed to remove it. Or make it worse⦠I donât remember.â
âWow. So helpful,â she grumbled under his fingertips, but let him work on her face all the same.
âThat⦠that is the best I can do.â he said at last. âNo one will notice, at least.â
She sighed in relief, touching his hand. âThanks. Really. You are a fantastic date. So⦠did you make any friends? Find anyone who needs a garbage patch removed?â
âYes, actually,â Azul smoothed down the front of his shirt, looking pleased. âIâve managed to findâfindâ¦â
âFind?â Yuu prompted, cocking her head.
Azulâs eyes had suddenly lost focus, and he was blinking rapidly, looking from her, down to her hand which had just brushed his. It wasnât until she followed his gaze that Yuu realized the hand sheâd touched was the one wrapped in his handkerchief, which had long fallen away. Her hand, still stained with red, had marked his skin as well.
âAzul? Hey, Azul, are you⦠are you okay?â
Azul was staring at his hands, clenching and unclenching them like heâd never seen them beforeâlike they werenât his own.
His eyes traveled up to the room, visibly dialating as he searched the guests, the bride, the groom, his relatives, before finally landing on her. His dilated again, this time the other way, and they didnât look like his, anymore. The color was the same, to be sure, but his pupils had elongated, like they were pulling apart.
âOh myâ¦â he said in the same level timbre as before, but his throat was dryer, and he still hadnât lowered his hand from hers.
He reached for her, fingertips just brushing her wrist where the powder had spilled, and though it had done nothing before, where his skin made contact with hers and the dust, it reacted. The dust flared with a sensation sheâd only ever experienced secondhandâfrom the backlash of magical duels when sheâd gotten too close, from the contact of healing saves and potions. It was a magical residue of some kind, but she was unfamiliar with this flavor of it. This stuff wasnât hurting her, but all the same, it burned.
âIâm going to talk to Mal,â she said quickly. âIâll find outââ
âI know what it is,â Azul said, in that same tone, without a trace of his usual sarcasm.
âYou do?â
She gasped, unbidden, when his fingers slipped higher over her wrist, wrapping around her hand as he leaned closer. His skin was cool, soothing the burning, and at the same time, making it worse. She made to move away from him, but a row of chairs blocked her from behind, and with Azul in front, she was boxed in. He, usually so gentlemanly, wasnât moving. Instead, he stared at her as though he hardly recognized her, intently, and searching, and as though there were several choice things heâd like to say.
âJustâjust tell me, then. Is it hurting you? Does it make you⦠drunk, or something?â She cast a furtive glance at the pool. âYou sound like you need water.â
âYou really didnât know,â he muttered.
Then, he tore his gaze from her, slowly, and deliberately, as though it hurt him to do so.
Now, she was truly frustrated.
âDidnât know what, Azul?â
But he never had the chance to answer, because at that moment, they were interrupted by a new voice.
âIndeed, Azul. Know what?â
The woman who approached their table had a deep and warm voiceâit was the kind of voice that should be on husky midnight specials, belonging to rich five-time widows, or fortune tellers with a mysterious past.
Azulâs snapped up quickly, as though by force of habit, and he drew himself back to his full height as he addressed the woman.
âMother,â he greeted. âI didnât think you would attend afterâ¦â he trailed off at her sharp look.
Mother? Yuu straightened her own spine as well.
Madam Ashengrottoâs dress was the blue of deep waters, skirts swirling about her ankles as though she was used to taking up far more space than she was. Her jewelry was tasteful, and practically dripped each syllable of the word âexpensive.â Now that she knew the relation, it was easy for Yuu to see that this was Azulâs mother. They shared the same pale, violet skin, white hair, and dissecting gaze. She was a slightly heavier-set woman, commanding every inch of herself with pristine elegance.
âAzul, my baby! I am always in a position to show my support to my family,â she emphasized the last word, managing to sound at the same time both poignant and condescending. Her gaze drifted, ever so briefly, over Yuu, but in that brief glance, Yuu had the feeling the woman had seen more than she should. âAnd I see youâve come following my instructionsâalbeit barely.â
Yuu bristled. She was never one to be anything less than human, but it sounded an awful lot like, to this woman, that was a very bad thing.
âAllow me to introduce Yuu, of Ramshackle house,â Azul presented evenly, if a little stiffly. âShe is the personal guest of the bride, and her familial representative.â
âItâs an honor to meet the mother of my friend, Madam Ashengrotto,â Yuu voiced, cursing herself for her own stiffness. âI would shake your hand, but Malâs gotten some of her makeup on my wrist, and Iâd stain your dress.â
Yuu held up one hand apologetically, hoping the red powder would excuse some of the courtesy here, but instead, Madam Ashengrotto hissed at the sight of itânot the hiss of an elderly lady. It was an actual, guttural, animal hiss that would have put the evilest swan to shame.
Yuu cringed at the sound, and expected Azul to as well, but his usual diplomatic suavete had evaporated with his voice. In one neat sidestep, Azul placed himself between herself and his mother, teeth bared, answering with a hiss of his own.
It was a sound sheâd never heard from him.
Evidently, neither had his mother, who immediately adopted the sort of shocked expression usually worn by fileted fish that ended their lives stuffed with lemon. That expression, however, was gone in an instant.
âI see,â she said, anger gone. If anything, it had been replaced with cold concern. âI see. You need water. Now. And youââ she addressed Yuu, ââif you are indeed his friend, then you will perform your duties to the bride as neededâstaying as far away from my son the rest of the eveningâ¦perhaps longer.â
And then, Madame Ashengrotto simply turned and left them, without a backward glance to her son, or herself.
âYou snarled at your mum!â Yuu scolded, the moment Azulâs glamorous mother had disappeared back into the seething mass of guests. âWhat the hell is this stuff?â
Once more, Azul refused to look at her. He seemed to be composing himself, and doing badly. Without the distraction of his mother, heâd gone back to glaring at the guests.
âRight, right,â Yuu shook her head, feeling like a Grade-A Jerk. âYou need water. Now. Come on.â
She took his hand, pulling him without looking at him toward the poolâthe only source of water in the room, noticing on the way that she wasnât the only one, now, with red-stained skin. As they walked past the throng of chatting guests, tables, and at last, the few dancers who had chosen to keep their feet on the dry ground around the pool, she noticed several of the louder guestsâthe boastful kindâand the flirtatious guestsâthe drunken kindâtapping their fingers into tiny bowls of the red at the base of the bridal table. Little red dust fingerprints were spreading among the guests, some of which were pulling each other away from the main rabble.
Transformed mermaids, and regular ones in the pool alike, flirted heavily with men who wore the red dust, tugging them away into secluded corners. Yuu grimaced.
What was this stuff?
As she dragged Azul toward the pool, she noticed Mal across the way, returned to her perch at the bridal table, now contently curled into her husbandâs side, and pretending not to watch her.
Yuu didnât have time to worry about that, however. Before Azul could argue; before he could start complaining about his dry-clean-onlies, and before he could begin haranguing her about returning to whatever duties Mal might have in store for her, they reached the pool, and she pushed him in.
Azul landed with a shocked splash next to several pairs of dancersâsome human, and some merfolk, all treading water gracefully to the music. Azulâs head went under as easily as if heâd walked from one room to the next, staring up at her with his first breath of the cool water like heâd breathed his first in ages.
Intending to march straight up to Mal and demand what new drug she was using on her guests, Yuu was stopped by a firm hand on her shoulder. Whirling stiffly to get a better view, she was greeted by the sight of the groomâs father, his stripey scales slashed over his jaws as he stood before her, half-transformed.
âRude not to join your dance partner,â he said, smiling through pointed teeth. âIn you go!â
Before she could argue, or complain about her dry-clean-onlies, Yuu was pushed right in after Azul, landing nearly on top of him in her imbalance.
To her horror, his clothing had started to dissolve, along with his shoes and feet. Panicking, Yuu wasnât sure whether this magic pool differentiated between merfolk and humans, and wasnât about to risk her own dress dissolving. Unfortunately, panic is never the way to handle water. Before she could so much as turn around, her skirt had tangled tightly around her ankles, wet and weighted, and pulling downward.
Before her head could go under, Azul grabbed her around the waist, and pulled her into himself, stabilizing them both.
âCalm,â he said in her ear. âIf you thrash like that, you really will drownâas if this wedding didnât already have enough scandal surrounding it. Itâd be selfish to take the limelight like that.â
She grabbed his shoulders through his soggy suit jacket as he turned her around, and posed them like any of the other couples, floating about their watery dancing in the pool. Yuu quickly decided that she liked traditional ballroom floors much better than this.
âThank you,â she breathed sincerely. âCan you get me out of here before my skirt disappears, too?â
Azul was breathing hard over her head.
âToo? Ahâ¦â
His voice was less hazy, and his vision less wandering, but his shoes had disappeared into the water, and even as he tried to move them to a more secluded area of the pool, his suit trousers were washing away as wellâbut so were his human legs.
âYouâreâ¦â Yuu couldnât stop watching.
The muscles of his calves and thighs unfurled away into the water, replaced before her eyes like a heat-shimmer with reaching, curling black tentacles, three times his legsâ original length. Eight limbs replaced two, and she could see why heâd avoided the other couples. Azulâs mer-form was easily the largest in the pool. He was flexible. He was flawlessly balanced in the water, but despite having every advantage on her weak swimming, he was huge.
The hum of the music over the water dance floor waved itself back into her senses as the transformation of his lower half completed, and at the same time, any of the couples around them who noticed what he was began to give them a wider berth. Aware of the eyes on them, and now less afraid of falling under the surface, she finally managed to look back at his face, only to find that it wasnât just his lower half that had changed.
âOh my,â she found herself whispering the same words that he had before.
A violet hue had crept through his coloring, everywhere but his eyes, which no longer had the pupils of a human. His pupils had flattened out, meeting her gaze unblinkingly. His hair had hardly suffered from the dunking. If anything, in her opinion, it looked better, weighted back along his neckâ¦which was no longer bound in the color of a suit jacket and shirt.
His upper clothing had dissolved as well, replaced by a sleek, black patterning that spanned from the cuffs of his wrists to his neck, where the only real clothing remained. His dark suit had been replaced with a high collar, letting the skin of his neck plunge almost to his navel. He was a vaudeville villain, in every right, and somehow, managed to make the look come across entirely serious.
A case of literary theft: this tale is not rightfully on Amazon; if you see it, report the violation.
Something large and lithe brushed her ankles, and she jumped hard.
âItâs just me,â he said evenly, as though he was trying to soothe a wounded animal. âIâm untangling your dress so you can move. Iâ¦I did warn you, if you recall.â
âYou did,â she said, her voice weaker than she liked.
One of Azulâs long black tentacles undid the knot sheâd gotten herself into, and drifted away with practiced efficiency. She cleared her throat as his tentacle finished its chore, and then retreated once more to Azul holding himself as far from her as he could without dropping her.
âYou did,â she said again, stronger. âAnd, do you mind not pushing me away? Even when itâs untangled, Iâm not sure I can swim well in this.â
He stared at her a moment, unbelieving.
âYou were right, for the record,â she said tremulously. âIâm getting a swimsuit dress next time. For sure.â
He barked a surprised laugh.
âOf course I was right. Do you see anyone else drowning on the dance floor?â
Yuu had the good grace to blush.
âIâm not drowning. Youâve got me, right?â She curled her fingers a little more securely over his shoulders, and he didnât resist when she swam closerâenough to at least look like they were dancing, although Azul still refused to move. He was also looking at her, again, like she was slightly off her rocker, and she couldnât for the life of her fathom why.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â she demanded bluntly, inches from his nose.
âLike what?â he asked, cool breath fanning over her face. He smelled like the seaside airânot the salty, fishy kind, but the kind you catch in the morning right before the tide changes. He smelled like newly washed-in sand, and ozone, and magic.
âYouâre a little close,â he said, looking profoundly uncomfortable.
âOh!â She leaned back quickly, realizing too late for any proper sense of etiquette that sheâd closed what was left of the gap between them down to the last inch. âOh, Iâm so sorry, I just, um, Iâm not sure what that was. I was going to say, you were looking at me like I was insane, but, after doing that, I guessâ¦Iâm pretty sure Iâve lost the high groundâ¦..â
He said nothing, gaze unwavering.
âThis is a disaster, isnât it. Are there stairs out of here? Maybe you could just⦠throw me overboard?â she suggested.
He snorted, breaking the tension. âIâm fairly sure thatâs not how it works, and I donât think youâve done anything that warrants abandoning at sea.â
She blanched. âI didnât know that was an option.â
That time, he truly laughed.
âIt isnât. And, Iâm only looking at you the way anyone would look at someone trying to get close to a live cecaelian. Transformed. While in the water.â
âWhy is that?â
âBecause Iâm terrifying.â
It was her turn to laugh. âYou really are. Any minute now, youâre going to try and sell me a wageless shift at the lounge like itâs the next golden grail.â
He glared.
âYou fold your socks and carry handkerchiefs, Azul. Forgive me if Iâm not trembling at the sight of you.â
âI am not that unfair,â he exclaimed indignantly, discomfort all but forgotten.
âAre you saying you wouldnât let people work there for free?â
âI donât expect anything for free,â he huffed.
âRight. And that stunt you pulled with the anemones, that was just plain generous.â
He growled under his breath, sending the nearest mermaid skittering for the opposite edge. Yuu couldnât stifle her smirk.
âDo that again. You might scare a goldfish.â
âA goldfish?â he groaned, rolling his eyes, âReally, Yuu?â
âFine,â she admitted with a shrug that nearly brushed his chest. âShe was bigger than a goldfish. By at least two inches.â
âIf anyone overhears you, youâre going to get us thrown out.â
She winked. âTheyâd have to get close to you, first.â
It was true, the circle around them in the pool was getting wider. So much so, that they were beginning to have their own corner to themselves.
âYou look like youâre feeling better,â she said, seriousness returning. âAre you feeling alright, Azul?â
He nodded stiffly. âI am fine. It was a momentary lapse, thatâs all.â
âIâm glad to hear it. I wasâ¦worried,â she said sincerely.
âMany thanks, but you do know your friend. I donât believe she would serve anything that would do true harm.â
âYou say thatâ¦â Yuu grumbled.
They spent a moment in silence, drifting in the water. To Yuuâs relief, the red on her hand had washed away somewhat. It was sticky stuff, but at least some good had come of getting pushed in here.
âSo,â she said, after Azulâs attention returned to her, âwhy are people giving us so much space in here? I mean, youâre massive, Azul, but we donât really need it.â
He arched his high, pointed chin over her, at a level above the water she couldnât hope to reach with her water-weighted dress.
âBecause each and every merman and maid in this pool believes that my kind is capable of eating them at the first sign of vulnerability.â
She snorted. âYou donât even like sushi.â
He sighed. âIndeed, but the rumors revolving around my mother claim that she ate my father after his disappearance.â
Yuu was laughing loudly before she realized that there was no levity in his expression.
âYouâre not joking. Well?â her voice lilted in genuine curiosity. âDid she?â
He spluttered in indignation. Tentacles agitating the water beneath them.
âOf course not! He ran off with a human. On land.â
She âhmâedâ in quiet understanding.
âThose human relations. It seems like they donât cause much but trouble for the Atlantican world. Mallory did say that there might be someâ¦trouble from the guests over her being human.â
âYou hardly know the half of it,â he huffed. âHowever, things are already so mixed, any prejudices are largely hypocritical. As for myself, I wouldnât mind staying out of the water the rest of my life.â
Yuu was baffled. She truly couldnât understand why someone who could do what Azul did would ignore so much of what he was. Or why anyone would want to. The sea was dangerous, and overly political, butâ¦where wasnât?
âWhy?â she asked bluntly.
âTruly?â he swung her to the side, suddenly, when a particularly drunken coupleâtoo drunk to care if there was a giant octopus in the waterâhustled past them, giggling and bumping into surfaces that were hardly there, as they did.
âIâd like to know,â Yuu insisted, from the protective ledge beneath his chin. When he responded, he didnât have to look at her to do so.
âI would give many things not to beâ¦this,â he gestured down at himself, holding her waist close as though they were dancing, although he was really just keeping her from sinking.
âWhy?â she repeated.
âCecaelia are shunned by other merfolk. Reviled. We may be strong, but we are heavy, cumbersome, and slow. In the natural order, our source-species relies on ambush to catch its prey, but they themselves are often caught by humans who can power-walk across a tidepool. We are a strong species, but a vulnerable one in many ways. At least on land, there are more equalizers. More⦠tools.â
âI see,â she said, still pressed underneath them. They were closer, to be sure, but it felt safer, somehow, not to have her face read when they spoke. He must have felt the same, because he made not attempt to shift them.
âSo if I power-walk across the lounge, Iâll catch you?â
âYuu.â
âWhat? Youâre certainly not doing badly on land. Your prey still comes to you in a sense, I suppose,â she laughed softly. âI have to say though, it seems a waste not to prize your species moreâ¦â
He snorted softly into her hair. âYou would be the first to think so.â
âWell, Iâm not from this worldâ¦but as a magicless student in a magic-filled world, I donât often have to differentiate between danger levels. There simply is, and there isnât. But you are my friend. And as for species⦠I can still recognize beauty when I see it. Iâd wager not many humans have seen anything like you.â
Reaching up, she flicked his nose without looking, earning a tiny hiss from him, which promptly died in his throat.
âThe dust,â he said stiffly. âItâs still on your hands.â
She looked. âWhy hasnât it washed off?â
âThe strings of fate donât simply wash off,â he said bluntly.
âThis isnât string. Itâs dust. It should have been gone the moment I fell in.â
âYou should know, I supposeâ¦â he said, his voice constricting.
âAh, yes.â She maneuvered her head enough to face him again, and it occurred to her once more, how close they were in the water. But he was no longer looking at her. In fact, he seemed to be struggling to look anywhere but. âWhat is this dust? Why did Mal put out pots of the stuff?â
âThe red string of fate is a sacred object,â Azul grit out, and this close to him, she could see the morphed points of his teeth. Interesting.
âRed string of fate. That exists?â
He nodded. âAnd the Banejaw family has discovered not only how to source it, but has apparently decided to refine it into dust for those who want to search forâahâ¦how to put this. The string of fate pulls us to enemies fated to cross our paths. Friends. Partners. They have not, as I take it, actually tested it as widely as it should have been for side-effects.â
âRight,â Yuu said flatly. âNo Food and Drug Administration in the ocean.â
âPrecisely.â
âSuddenly, I can see why Mallory is marrying him,â she said. âShe puts the find-your-worst-enemy dust in the wedding party and sits back to watch the show. I love her, but⦠well, thatâs exactly the sort of thing sheâd do.â
âYour friend may have put another agent in the dust. I cannot tell. I can only tell that it influences instinct.â
âInstinct?â
âLook around us,â Azul instructed.
The lagoon around them was a bit raucous, but nothing Yuu hadnât seen at any party with alcohol. Groups of mermaids frolicked beneath the waters, pulling tails, and snatching human guestsâ shoes if theyâd been foolish enough to wear them in. There were plenty, however, as sheâd seen before, who had pulled off into quiet corners. Some conversed. Some borderline shouted at each other. Othersâ¦. Yuu quickly looked away.
âMated pairs like Varun and Mallory happen so quickly because for mermen, bonds donât form over time. They simply are. Relationships come into being and begin making demands. Itâs because of this that many simply donât understand the idea of a human âcourting period,â or even âlong-term noticeââ although in my opinion, taking time to âread the contract,â so to speak, is a point in human traditionsâ favor.â
âSo the fact that so many pairs are around us meansâ¦â
âSeveral of these âpairingsâ came into existence tonight. Itâs likely that they will owe the bride and groom favors for making the introduction so easy. Being from the Banejaw family, I doubt Varun will waste much time in collecting those favors. Itâs a pattern of efficiency.â
âTo force pairs?â
âTo help them recognize potential relations faster. Weddings like this are actually quite rare in the oceans. Fortunately, thatâs not at all how things work for my species, or I likely would have been tied to the depths somehow by my motherâs machinations years ago.â
âI thought you said this helped you find enemies.â
âMore than enemies,â he said, a wealth of insinuation in his tone.
âIâm sure your employees are greatly relieved,â she deadpanned.
âI would appreciate, however, if you kept anything dusted of yours away from me once weâre out of the water. Itâs already difficult toââ with that, Azul quickly closed his mouth.
âAm I heavy?â She asked quickly, misunderstanding. âIâm soaked, so, probably. And youâve already kept us up for the whole song. More than one song? Itâs hard to tell with this selection.â
âMm,â he hummed noncommittally. âAs I said, Iâm fine, but you⦠shouldnât you be checking on the bride?â
She shook her head, groaning inwardly. Mal had probably loved watching this exchange, but that didnât mean she didnât still want answers.
âYouâre not wrong. Could you help me find the stairsâ¦? How long is this wedding supposed to go?â she asked tiredly.
âToo long,â he practically hissed, but just then, as if summoned, the waiters surrounding the bridal table, and at each of the food stations ceased their service, and produced bells from suit pockets, filling the air with a tolling, ringing.
âHear ye, hear ye! The sun has set!â the head butler announced, as everyone, the music, and the bell-ringers fell silent.
âAre those⦠dolphins?â Yuu whispered, still tucked beneath Azulâs chin.
There was something comforting about the light fading over the lagoon. Azul seemed less self-conscious about the people surrounding them as his dark tentacles faded into the blackness of the water. She found herself pulling back underneath his chin as a a large magical wave arced from the surrounding sea and connected with the lagoon. The dorsal fins of what she very much hoped were dolphins rode the wave up to the base of the pool in front of the wedding table, and Mallory and Varun, without so much as bidding their guests goodbye, were already clambering on.
âI donât believe those are dolphins,â Azul said quietly, his voice rumbling through her skull.
âSo dramatic,â Yuu mumbled into his neck, still clinging to his shoulders, as the wave, which had hardly made contact with the lagoon, reversed its current, sweeping Mallory, Varun, and the two not-dolphins with it.
âThey didnât even take luggage,â she said aloud.
âIâm sure theyâll be met with an entourage down below.â
âAnd she can breathe?â
She felt Azulâs soft laughter, and he reshifted his arms around her for ease of carrying.
âIf she hasnât learned to breathe underwater in last year sheâs been living in Atlantica, then thereâs no helping her now.â
âWas your collar always this high?â Yuu said, tracing the line of the collar, the lone piece of clothing the pool had seen fit to let him keep. The back of it went all the way to the top of his neck, and the front tapered down so sharply at the front of his neck that all that was visible of his violet-tinged skin was a few inches of taught tendon in the middle.
âThe magic loves its drama,â Azul said simply.
âHm.â
âYuu, would you like to get out?â Azul said stiffly.
Yuu pulled her fingers back from his collar like sheâd been stung.
What are you thinking, Yuu? Pull yourself together! she scolded herself. What was she doing? Azul didnât need this. He was there as her friend, and heâd been downright helpful until sheâd put the enemy dust on his skin. Now, she was fingering his collar, and holding herself against him in the water like a drowning victim. If she had any shame, she should be mortified.
Trying to summon up the correct amount of embarrassmentâthat didnât seem willing to come, at presentâshe nodded, leaning away as surreptitiously as she could manage.
Then, she gasped, as Azul arced them both out of the water, setting her on the ground, standingâand HE was standing, right next to her.
âYou can walk on those?â she heard herself say before she could stop her mouth.
âI am one of the few species who can walk on land, Azul said, standing a little taller than his human legs usually let him.
âAmazing. Thatâs⦠thatâs really incredible,â she blurted.
He stared, silently before responding. âThatâs going to take getting used to⦠Didnât you come with a purse?â
âItâs by my seat. This way.â She walked back to the table, him wading on his many feet beside her. It was far easier this time to cut through the crowd. Again, no one seemed to want to get near the giant octopus.
âThat is so convenient,â she muttered once theyâd collected her things.
âCall it what you want,â Azul said blandly.
âThe rest are changing back,â she looked around at the rest of the partygoers stepping out of the pool. And theyâre dry? âWhy not you?â
âBecause the rest brought changing potions, intending to dance in enchanted water. I hadnât exactly planned to get in.â
âOh!â she realized. âOh, that was⦠that was absolutely my fault. Sorry for that.â
He merely shrugged. âIt was better than the alternative.â
What the alternative was, she didnât ask. This, at least, was enough to bring up the requisite social embarrassment.
âI really am sorry. I didnât know what ti was, I promise. I still donât really, if Iâm being honest.â
âItâs no matter,â he said stiffly. âAt this rate, the mirror will be swamped with outgoing guests for some time.â
He wasnât wrong. Already, the throngs were heading for the mirror portal. If their entry had been accompanied by other guests incoming an hour early, thenâ
âItâs probably going to be an hour before we can leave. At least there are still places to wait. Are you going to dry out?â
âIâll be fine for several hours out of water; howeverââ
âWeâll sit by the pool,â she decided for them. âI donât want to have to tell Jade and Floyd the reason they have to run the lounge themselves for the rest of their time at the academy is because I let you turn into an octopus raisin.â
âFair enough,â Azul murmured, for once, not arguing.
He was no longer looking at her, either, and she could only assume that the dust, the wedding, and the transformation had all taken a toll on him.
She offered a hand to help him back down from the upper table setting, though he hardly needed it. The man had a longer reach than she did, and she ended up relying on him on the dark steps. Together, they sat peaceably on the side of the darkening pool. He, sinking most of himself into the water immediately. She was already wet, and the breeze was starting to push a chill over the lagoon.
âWhat are you doing?â Azul asked suddenly, ans she gripped the sides of her skirt.
âThe guests are mostly gone,â she reported matter-of-factly. âAnd Iâm a better swimmer when Iâm not in heels and my clothing isnât trying to drown me.â
As she talked, she pulled the fabric apart, ripping it up to her thighs, and knotting the skirt so that she could actually move. Azul watched in morbid fascination as she hopped into the water, laughing and pushing herself deeper in.
âYouâre the fish!â she laughed. âAre you coming? I think we have time.â
âItâs dark,â he pointed out unhelpfully. âYouâre going to drown.â
âThe stars are coming out. Youâre here. Iâm not going to drown.â
âI charge for life-guarding services,â he shot back, as though he couldnât stop himself. âIâthat is to sayââ
She laughed hard, feeling carefree for the first time that night.
âAnd yet,â she said, swimming up to the curve of where his knees would have been. âAnd yet, I donât think even you would charge for services rendered on a date. Come on, Azul. No more giggling mermaids. No more skittish goldfish. When was the last time you had an hour to justâ¦be?â
He sighed, letting her pull him into the water, and despite his size, made far less of a splash than she had.
âIâm not a fish, Yuu,â he grumbled warily.
âI know. Youâre a workaholic octopus who really needs a break,â she said, tugging him farther out into the water.
âYou are a terrible swimmer,â he grumbled as soon as she was out there. âIâm a bad swimmer, and youââ
âYou are NOT a bad swimmer,â she argued hotly. âYou grew up in the water. Itâs literally your air.â
âAir is my air, Yuu,â he said, and though he didnât swim any closer, he was close enough that one of his tentacles wrapped around her middle, and hoisted her a little higher in the water. âAnd youâre making me nervous.â
âI didnât think anything could make you nervous,â she said.
âI was quite nervous in coming here tonight, if you recall.â
âSo nervous that you managed to talk to half the wedding guests, and strike deals with at least a few of them?â
âIt helpedâ¦â he admitted at last, floating next to her in the warm water, and still holding her aloft. âIt helped that you put me on the high table. There was certainly no end of curiosityâ¦â
âYou were family to the groom and friend to the bride,â Yuu pointed out.
âBoth positions are tenuous.â
Yuu huffed a half-laugh, unable to believe her ears.
âFamily is never tenuous. Thatâs what makes it family. Like them or not. Hate them or not. They are yours.â
Azul seemed taken aback.
âDoes that matter?â
âYes,â she said, just as hotly, moving closer to him in the water. âYes, it does. Because even if you never see them, even if they are apart from you, none of us is completely disconnected.â
âWhat was your family like?â he asked suddenly.
âI donât remember them perfectly. The mirror between our worlds fuzzes some of those memoriesâ¦â she said with a shrug, âbut what I do remember, I live with every day. As Iâm sure you do. Your mother seemed⦠protective.â
âThatâs certainly one word for it,â Azul said through gritted teeth.
âYou donât have to tell me about it,â Yuu said quickly, sensing his discomfort. âBut, thanks for keeping me from getting cursed earlier.â
âIt would be poor form to let my date get cursed,â he said, a little more gently.
âI suppose I owe you for that.â
âIâve heard that itâs rude to charge for services rendered on a date.â
She laughed, dispelling any leftover tension between them. She reached through the water for his shoulders again, although he seemed reluctant to let her out of his longer limbed grip.
âIâm not going to drown, Azul. Believe it or not, this is just how humans swim.â
âIâve still seen better,â Azul huffed.
She reached up and tapped his cheek petulantly.
âIâm flattered.â
âYuu,â Azul hissed suddenly. âYuu, did you⦠touch anything with dust?â
Yuuâs thoughts flew to her purse, which still contained Malloryâs âgift.â
âIâmâ¦not sure,â she said, wary of the heavy grit to his tone. âWhy, weâre in water arenât we? Arenât youâ¦â
Azul took a deep breath, put his hands on her waist, and pushed her back from himself, as though it cost him a great effort to do so.
âIâll swim away, if youâd ratherââ she started.
âDonât,â he hissed again. âDonât, just⦠just give me a moment.â
Yuu recalled what heâd said. Red Dust acted one way on merfolk, but on cecaelia? What did it do?
âYou said it made you act on instinct?â she said quietly, leaning in to see his face. Her voice trembled as she asked: âSo it makes you want toâ¦what? Fight me? Eat me?â
âSomethingââ he breathed hard, letting his forehead fall onto hers. His white hair tangled with her damp, brown ones, and she got an up close view of his eyes, slitted and dilated, roving her face and searching. Breathing her in. ââSomething like that.â
The dusted place on his cheek brushed hers, and her breath stuttered. The sensation was different than before. Heady, warm, and pulling her forward. Right into him.