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Pretty in Pearls: A Forgive My Fins Novella (HarperTeen Impulse)
Pretty in Pearls: A Forgive My Fins Novella (HarperTeen Impulse) Read online
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Excerpt from Forgive My Fins
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
About the Author
Back Ads
Copyright
About the Publisher
1
The Thalassinian Marketplace is, in my opinion, one of the wonders of the underwater world. Held on the open sands of the old town square, the market boasts vendors of every kind hawking their wares. Farmers come from the rural regions, beyond the edges of the city, with barrels of sweet smelling sand strawberries, fresh kelp, and pickled sea fans. Lobstermen put the fattest of their herd on display. Breathtaking bouquets, tasty delicacies, and even the odd salvage stall selling human treasures that have been found on the ocean floor—a mergirl could get lost in all the options.
But I know exactly where I’m going. I swim past the food and flower displays, over the organic sea-life stalls, and around the tables of trinkets. I make straight for my favorite vendor: Paru’s Pearls.
Pearls are plentiful under the sea, and many girls consider them ordinary. Plain. Common. To me they will always be the most beautiful things in all the oceans. I love the way that some gleam and others sparkle. They come in all the colors of the rainbow, from bright white to soft pink to inky gray to the blackest black I’ve ever seen.
I can’t wait to browse the latest collection.
As I turn a corner, an older merwoman loses her grip on her shopping basket, sending a dozen live starfish tumbling across the aisle. I swerve out of the way as the woman dives after her lost bounty, then turn around to help. Most of the starfish remain within reach, and the woman quickly gathers them back. One is making a gallant bid for freedom.
I retrieve the wayward starfish and return it to the woman. “This one almost got away.”
“Such a sweet dear.” Her face crinkles into a bright smile. She reaches up and pinches my cheek. “Thank you.”
I smile back before turning and continuing toward my destination. The pearls are calling.
I approach the stall, swimming with such momentum that I stop kicking and float the rest of the way. If I weren’t so excited, I might have noticed the trio passing in front of the stall.
Of course I crash hardest into the meanest of the three.
“I’m so sorry,” I blurt, kicking myself out of the way, out of reach. “I wasn’t looking where I was—”
“Swim much?” Astria asks, sneering.
“Yeah,” Piper chirps. “Swim much?”
Venus snorts.
I stare wide-eyed at the terrible trio. Astria, Piper, and Venus have been awful to me since guppihood. They take great delight in making me feel as small and worthless as possible. They try to belittle my best friend, too, but Lily is the princess. They can’t be as cruel with her or there might be repercussions. With me, though, they act without restraint.
It doesn’t help that they’re gorgeous. Astria has beautiful red hair and perfect alabaster skin. Piper looks more like a California mermaid, with sunny, blond hair and a fake tan that almost matches her golden tail fin. Venus is the most exotic, with dark skin, waves of midnight curls, and rich mahogany scales.
I feel dim in their presence. With my boring brown hair and brown eyes, I practically fade into the shadows. Only my tail fin, a bright copper in a thousand shining shades, makes me feel special.
Looking down and away, I mutter another, “I’m sorry,” and try to swim past.
Astria never lets me get away that easily.
“Shopping for pearls?” Her upper lip curls in a sneer. “Again?”
I just shake my head and dart into the stall. I hear them laughing and making fun as they swim off into the market. No matter how many times I tell myself not to let them win, their barbs and mockery always sting.
Closing my eyes, I take a deep, cleansing breath.
“You’re better than those three put together,” a male voice says.
Startled, I spin around. Riatus.
Usually Paru works the stall herself, with occasional help from her daughter Coral—who is a couple of years younger than me and just about the sweetest girl in all of Thalassinia. Pearl harvesting is a time-intensive business, and Paru can’t spare any of her workers to hawk beads to tourists and shoppers when they could be gathering more.
On my last visit Paru told me she was leaving soon for a trading tour of the southern hemisphere. Off to seek out the rarest pearls ever found. She hadn’t told me her son would be taking her place in the stall.
I haven’t seen Riatus in over a year, not since he left on his grand adventure to explore the world’s oceans and make contacts for the family business. His departure had been so sudden. One day he was in the stall, the next he was gone and Paru was telling me about his big trip.
My heart pounds and my breathing quickens. In a flash, my guppihood crush splashes back to life—years of pining and longing and excitement just to see a glimpse of him in the stall or when he delivered orders to the house.
He looks even more like a dashing pirate than he used to. His hair, black as squid ink, is longer and held back by a red-and-black scarf. Where it flows out the back, I can see tiny, silvery shells woven into his locks. His tail fin has darkened into a deep navy that fades to a green-blue at the bottom. I’ve been dreaming of those dark eyelashes and the pale silver eyes they frame since my first trip to the pearl stall with Mom all those years ago.
But today, it’s his mouth, quirked up to one side, that I can’t stop staring at.
“Wh-what?” I stammer.
He jerks his head after the terrible trio. “I’ve seen the likes of them plenty,” he explains. “Your sort is worth ten of them.” He winks. “At least.”
“I—yeah—they—”
Come on, Peri, say something.
“Thanks,” I finally manage with a lame smile.
He shakes his head and lowers his gaze as if it’s no big deal. When those pale eyes pause at the base of my throat, his grin widens. “That’s beautiful,” he says. “One of ours?”
With a gasp, my hand goes to my throat, to the spot where I know a big, fat pearl—the size of a ripe kelpberry and the exact coppery shade of my tail fin—hangs from a simple gold chain. He doesn’t remember. Why would he?
One day, years and years ago, I’d been too sick to accompany Mom to the market. I was devastated, of course, because that meant missing a chance to see Riatus. Mom had the pearl order sent to our house and he had been the one to deliver it. I was asleep in bed when I heard a soft knock at my window.
Riatus was floating outside, a sheepish grin on his face.
“Here,” he said as he handed me the pearl. “Feel better.”
Then, without another word, he swam away.
We never spoke about that moment. I never even wore the pearl—I was too afraid he would know what it meant to me, and too afraid I would lose it—until he left on his adventure. I started wearing it as a reminder, a way to feel closer to him when he was who-knew-where in the world.
“Yes, one of yours,” I answer cryptically. “It was a gift.”
The bemused look on his face gives me more satisfaction than it probably should.
“Peri!” Coral whips across the stall and pulls me into a tight hug.
Riatus frowns. “Peri?”
“You remember P
eri,” Coral says, releasing me and spinning to her brother’s side. “She’s Mrs. Wentletrap’s daughter.”
His frown transforms into a wry smile. “Little Peri?”
My cheeks burn. This was always our problem—well, my problem. He’s only two years older than me, but he makes it feel like a decade. A century. He sees me as the little guppy who comes to his stall with her mommy.
“She’s emissary to the princess,” Coral brags. “Not so little anymore.”
I feel Riatus’s pale gaze sweep over me from head to tail fin.
“Little Peri,” he repeats, his expression turning curious, interested. “All grown-up.”
His bemusement deepens as he realizes who I am. It’s only been a year—I can’t have changed that much—but I feel older, more mature. Maybe he sees that, too.
He studies me for what feels like ages even though I know it’s only seconds. There is something different about how he is looking at me now, different from moments ago and different from before he left. Like I’m watching him mentally erase the “little” he used to place before my name.
“It’s been a while,” I say, trying to diffuse some of the tension. “How was your grand adventure?”
He smiles, but not before I notice a brief tension in his jaw. “Grand,” he says vaguely. “How about you? Emissary to the princess—that’s pretty impressive.”
“She’s my best friend.” I shrug.
“She’s not stupid,” he argues. “You wouldn’t have the position if you couldn’t do the job.”
Coral gasps. “Are you helping plan the Sea Harvest Dance?”
“No,” I answer. “The dance committee is in charge of that.”
“I hope I get to go this year.” She twists into a dreamy swirl. “I hear it’s magical.”
“Is that coming up soon?” Riatus asks.
Coral stops and gapes at him. “In less than a month!”
“Hey, sea squirt,” he says, playfully thumping her on the shoulder, “I’ve been gone for a year. I didn’t know.”
“But it’s always the night of the August full moon,” she replies. “Always.”
She looks at me, as if seeking support.
“It is,” I admit.
“Traitor,” Riatus teases me, but there is no venom in his voice.
Coral starts dancing around us in a twirling spiral, lost in her dreams of the dance. It’s true, the Sea Harvest Dance—the culminating event of the Sea Harvest Festival—is positively dreamy. Lily and I have gone together since we were old enough to attend. This year, though, she’ll be going with Quince.
“Are you going?” Riatus asks. “To the dance.”
My breath catches in my throat.
“Yes,” I manage. “I mean, probably. I always do.”
We float in silence—except for the sound of Coral humming as she dances. I’m trying not to stare at him—which is really, really hard when I haven’t even seen him in a year. And he’s . . . I don’t know, trying to act like this isn’t the most awkward moment ever.
“Are you?” I finally ask. “Going? To the dance?”
Lord love a lobster, when did I lose all ability to ask a complete question?
“I’ve never been,” he says.
“Never?”
“But there’s always a first time.” He shrugs, a casual gesture, yet full of meaning. “I’m trying to make some changes in my life. Maybe I’ll start with the dance.”
“Great,” Coral exclaims, swimming up next to us and smacking us both on the shoulder. “You two go together. Now we just need to find me a date.”
“What?” I stare at her like she’s lost her mind. Turning to Riatus, I try to assure him that this was not my idea. I don’t want him to think it’s a setup or anything. “No, you don’t have to. I mean, I didn’t think you meant—”
“It’s perfect, Peri,” Coral says. “Do you have a date?”
“No,” I admit. “But that doesn’t mean—”
“And my brother has been gone for a year.” She looks at him adoringly, batting her eyes. “He’s practically a feral fish. How will he ever find a date in the next four weeks?”
My throat makes a noise that’s some sort of cross between choking and crying. What has gotten into Coral? We’re friends, sure, but I’ve never asked her to set me up with her brother. Maybe she knew about my crush. Maybe she’s just trying to help me out.
Whatever the case, I just want to swim and hide. I’ve never been more mortified.
I force myself to look at Riatus.
If I expected outrage or amusement—maybe even disgust—I’m stunned when I see . . . blushing. He’s not scoffing at Coral’s suggestion. My jaw slacks as I realize he might have actually been getting ready to ask me to the dance.
I can’t think, can’t speak. Can barely breathe.
“I’m a genius.” Coral applauds her efforts, her dark curls bouncing in the current. “You can thank me later.”
Riatus shakes his head, but he’s smiling. “I’ll thank you to be—”
“Well, well,” a male voice says, interrupting whatever Riatus was going to say, “if it isn’t my old friend Riatus. It’s been, what? A year?”
I see Riatus stiffen—his shoulders straighten and his jaw tightens. Slowly he turns to face the merman who is entering the stall from the other side.
He’s a year or two older than Riatus, around twenty or twenty-one. And there is something . . . unsettling about him. What is it? His tail fin is nothing unusual—a steely gray with no scars or markings. His hair is also gray. A soft gray he was born with, not that he earned with age. It’s not quite short, but it’s not long either. Like maybe he’s only been growing it out for a little while.
He’s wearing a dark jacket with lots of pockets and military details. A few ratty tears give him a tough look, but that isn’t anything you couldn’t get at any of five clothing shops in town.
“A year exactly,” Riatus says, with little warmth in his voice. “What are you doing here, Prax?”
Maybe not such a good friend after all.
“I heard you were back in town,” Prax says with a disarming smile. “I’ve missed you.”
“I’m sure you have.”
“And don’t tell me,” Prax says turning to face me, “this is Coral all grown-up.”
There is something too familiar about his expression—way too familiar for anyone who confuses me for Coral. Behind him, I see Riatus’s jaw clench even tighter. Whatever Prax is to him, he’s not thrilled for him to be here.
Or for Prax to be paying attention to his sister.
Coral smacks him on the shoulder. “I’m Coral,” she says. “That’s Peri. She’s my brother’s friend. How come we’ve never met?”
“How come indeed?” Prax muses. “Let’s remedy that right now. I’m Praxis Hake.”
He extends his hand and, when she takes it, bows low before her. I try to meet Riatus’s gaze and roll my eyes, but he is staring daggers into Prax’s back.
“I’m Coral Vulsella.” Her smile lights up the whole market.
Riatus’s scowl could blow the whole place up.
“Excuse me, young man,” a customer says, oblivious to the tense scene playing out here as she taps Riatus on the shoulder. “Could you help me choose a selection of pink pearls for my granddaughter’s first necklace?”
“Of course, ma’am,” he says, shedding his black mood in an instant. He turns to Coral. “Show her the Conch Shell Pink collection.”
When she starts to argue, he adds, “Please.”
“Fine,” she says with a huff before swimming away.
The moment she is on the other side of the stall, he’s in Prax’s face.
“Leave. Her. Alone.”
I shiver at the menace in his tone, and it’s not even directed at me. For a girl without an older brother, it’s exhilarating to see one so protective of his baby sister. I appreciate that, even if I don’t understand what’s going on here.
Maybe it’s tha
t Prax is several years older than Coral. Or maybe it’s a guy thing, that they don’t like friends hitting on their sisters. Who knows?
Prax lifts both hands in surrender. “I was just being nice. Don’t go all great white on me.”
“I don’t care,” Riatus snaps. “Coral is off-limits.”
“Whatever, man.” Prax smirks as he shrugs nonchalantly. His gaze drifts to me and his smile deepens. “Seems like you’re surrounded by lovely, delicate merladies. I’m just trying to even the numbers.”
Me? Delicate? Hardly.
With a single kick, Riatus shifts his position to place me kind of behind him—to place himself between me and Prax.
“Leave Peri out of this, too.”
“Look, I can take a hint,” Prax says, floating back. He looks at me over Riatus’s shoulder. “Nice to meet you, Peri. I hope we run into each other again soon.”
I smile because I’m not sure what the right response is. Clearly Riatus has a problem with him, but I don’t know what. Prax nods and then, before I can figure out if I should say something, anything, he swims away.
Riatus turns to face me with an apologetic smile. “I’m sorry about that.”
“It’s no big deal,” I say. “Obviously you have a history and—”
“Ri, which ones are South Pacific,” Coral calls out, “and which ones are Indian Ocean?”
“Just a sec,” he answers over his shoulder. Then, to me, “I’d better help her.”
“Yeah, I need to get going anyway,” I say quickly. “With all of Mom’s preparations for the Sea Harvest Dance, I’m sure I’ll be around again soon.”
Even if she doesn’t need me to visit.
“I’m counting on it,” he says.
I can’t quite bring myself to swim away just yet, letting my eyes follow him across the stall. Which means I’m caught staring when he turns back around. “Hey,” he says with a half smile, “I’ll bubble message you.”
“Great!”
As Riatus swims away to help Coral with the customer, I’m overflowing with excitement. When I left home this morning, I had no idea what the market would have in store for me. I’m not usually a big fan of surprises. This kind, though, I could get used to.