herâ again âwhen Quince notices our visitor.
âCalliope?â He throws me a questioning look. âWhat brings you to our fair shores?â
Everyone around the table suddenly clams up. Quince walks behind me and places his hands on my shoulders. He starts rubbing, like he can sense how tense the situation is making me.
âWhat?â he asks. âBad news?â
I try to force myself to relax, to urge him to relax, too. The tension swirling around the room doesnât help. I catch Doeâs eye and lift my eyebrows in a suggestive gesture. Amazingly, she getsâand takes âthe hint.
âBrody, didnât you need some help with your econ homework?â Doe asks.
She reaches down and scoops Prithi into her armsâI knew she was developing a soft spot for the cat.
Brody shoves back from the table. âOh, right. Yeah, letâs go work on that.â
In a flash, theyâre both gone.
âI need to get going,â Shannen says, stuffing her laptop into her backpack. âI have a ton of calculus homework to do. Youâd think, with there only being a couple weeks left in school, Mr. Kingsley would lay off, but I think itâs his mission to keep us drowning in busywork right up until graduation.â
She heaves her backpack onto her shoulder, gives me a sympathetic look, then says good-bye and slips out the kitchen door.
With the table empty except for me and Calliope, Quince drops casually into the seat Shannen vacated, resting his arm on the back of my chair.
âOkay,â he says, sounding calm, âjust tell me. Whatâs going on?â
Calliope starts to explain. âWell, you see, according to ancient mer law, when a mer prince or princess falls in loveââ
I touch her on the arm, and she stops. This is my guy. Iâm the one who got him into this, and Iâm going to be the one to tell him about it. Itâs my responsibility.
âItâs called the Trial of Truth,â I say. âItâs a test of . . . worthiness, I guess, that the ancient founders of mer society dreamed up for situations like ours.â
âWhen a mermaid princess and a human fall in love?â
I twist in my chair and lay my arm over his, smoothing my fingertips across the soft leather. I shake my head as I explain. âWhen they are already in love when the mermaid princess bonds to another merman.â
His Caribbean-blue eyes study me, unblinking. I force myself to keep the fear hidden. The trial is going to be hard enough for Quince. I donât want my worries to stress him out even more.
âWhat do I have to do?â he asks.
For this answer, I turn to Calliope. She knows more about what exactly everything will entail.
âIt is a series of three tests, designed according to specifications written by the ancient rulers of the original five mer kingdoms.â Calliope pulls out the kelpaper scroll and searches for the part that explains the process. She reads, ââThe human mate must complete the three tests within one lunar cycle of bond formation to prove worthy of the merfolkâs love.ââ
âOne lunar cycle,â he repeats. âThatâsââ
âFour weeks,â I say. âFrom the time of the bond. From my birthday.â
He nods. âOkay, so three weeks from now. What are the tests?â
âThat I canât tell you,â Calliope says. âThey will be delivered to you when the time is appropriate.â
âInstructions will be sent by messenger gull,â I explain. âDirectly from the royal chamber at the palace.â
Quince lets out a humorless laugh. âDo I get any hints?â he asks, and though heâs trying to play it light, I can tell heâs worried. âDonât tell me I have to go into this totally blind.â
âNo, of course not,â I say, giving Calliope a meaningful look.
âNo, no,â she says. âI