After Darkness Falls: Chapter 16
‘All right, here’s the list of requirements to get your MBA,’ Blair stated, slapping three stapled pieces of paper on top of the breakfast table. ‘The entire prerequisites and curriculum.’
Chloe swallowed a mouthful of bacon and sausages before beaming at her mentor.
‘Thank you for getting it to me so fast.’
Blair shrugged and slid into a seat at their table, plate in hand. ‘Of course. That’s my job.’
To her right, Gwen groaned as she massaged her temples. ‘Can you guys just stop being so loud and cheerful?’
Chloe mouthed, ‘Hangover’ to Blair, who winced on Gwen’s behalf.
‘Hang on, I have a cure for it somewhere…’ She shuffled through her bag before saying triumphantly, ‘Ah! There you go.’
Blair handed a small flask of green liquid to Gwen, who grabbed it eagerly and downed it in one go, moaning in pleasure.
‘Thanks!’ She gave them a sunny smile, back to her cheerful self. ‘That’s a great brew. My aunt made something like that, but it didn’t taste nearly as good.’
‘Oh, I didn’t make this.’ Blair took the empty bottle back from Gwen and pointed at a G and V engraved in small letters on it. ‘This is from Greer Vespian herself. She’s an artist. She’s still here, because she wants to study from the best before opening her own store, but anything she spells, hexes, curses, and brews is marvelous. Hell, she makes acne-removal salves smell good.’
Admiration poured out of every word.
Gwen looked around eagerly. ‘Is she here?’
It was eight in the morning, and at least a hundred students were sitting in the cafeteria—a third of the entire student body. Blair shook her head.
‘She’s on a night schedule because she’s shadowing Alexius Helsing.’
That name certainly rang a bell. How many men named Alexius could there be here?
‘The blond vampire?’ Chloe asked.
‘The one and only. His kind aren’t typically into magic the way witches are, but Alexius is an alchemist. That’s a bridge between magic and science, in a way. Greer is learning everything she can from various branches of theurgy.’
The two witches began babbling about different magics, so Chloe redirected her attention to the documents in front of her.
Blair had handwritten the three pages in blue ink, and she’d made liberal use of colorful pens to underline and circle certain points.
The contents of the first page were simple enough to understand: every course required to receive an MBA.
Prerequisites: Undergrad degree including completed courses in accounting, economics, management, and statistics.
Chloe had all that.
Post-grad courses required: advanced accounting, human resources, system information, managerial finances, operations management, legal business issues, global strategy, planning and decision-making.
That was…some list.
The witches were still talking, so she continued reading rather than asking questions. Next, Blair had written down the courses taught at the Institute that would help her meet the requirements.
‘Leadership, nine weeks, Mr. Crane.’
‘Advanced Business, twenty-four weeks, Mr. Silver.’
‘Law: an Introduction, six weeks, Mrs. Wade.’
‘Business Administration, twelve weeks, one internship, Miss Paxton.’
‘Advanced Management, nine weeks, one internship, Mr. Everett.’
The list went on and on over most of the three pages. At the very end, Blair had added the names and contact details of alumni who’d graduated from the Institute with an MBA.
Chloe had truly struck gold with her mentor.
‘Ready to run the other way screaming yet?’ Blair asked when Chloe put down the papers.
She smiled, shaking her head. ‘No way. This is so helpful, Blair. How can I repay you?’
‘How about you send me a text next time you’re hanging out at the pub with arm candy? The phones do work in Adairford, you know.’
‘I know, sorry, I didn’t want to bother you.’
Blair rolled her eyes. ‘I live here. Bothering me is doing me a favor.’
Chloe loved this place, but she supposed that after years, one could get used to it.
‘How many courses can I take at once? I want to see how long the degree is going to take me.’
‘That depends on various factors. How much you like your sanity, how many extra classes you’re taking just for fun, stuff like that. The average MBA takes about three years full time, but…Margaret Lowell, here,’ she said, pointing to one of the alumni, ‘finished it in one. She was doing sixty hours of classes per week, fulfilled the requirements in nine months, and took her internship the last three.’
Chloe grimaced. She did love studying, but that sounded like a recipe for a one-way trip to the madhouse.
‘Right. And if I don’t want to extinguish my desire to exist?’
Blair laughed. ‘I’d say only take one problematic teacher at a time. It’s impossible to avoid Silver. You need Advanced Business, and that’s his jam—but the guy is a massive a-hole. Paxton is severe, but fair. However, Silver and Paxton at the same time? You’d get gray hair.’
She’d met Miss Paxton before—she’d seemed nice enough.
‘I have to take Paranormal Introduction this semester so I stop feeling quite so out of my depth,’ she said. ‘And maybe Advanced Immortal History, too.’
Everything here seemed to revolve around the vampires, and if the last couple of days had taught her anything, it was that she knew nothing at all about their kind. Hell, she hadn’t even known the history of their creation before Blair shared it.
‘Ah. Well, Paranormal Introduction is just an hour per week for eight weeks, and there’s, like, no homework, so that’s not a problem, but AIH…let’s just say it would add to your workload. There are a bunch of names and dates you have to memorize.’ Blair grimaced. ‘Between the fae, the scions, the dragons, the vamps, the gods, and everything else, that’s a whole lot of work for something that won’t really help your MBA.’
Chloe frowned. Blair was right, of course, but her MBA wasn’t the only thing that mattered. She wanted to know the world she’d be part of for three years. If she wanted to belong here, she couldn’t forever stay the newbie who asked a billion stupid questions.
‘How many hours? How long does it last?’
‘Two hours twice a week for two semesters.’
She bit her lip.
Blair sighed. ‘Hey, if you want to do it, I’m not here to stop you, girl. So many people come here with a clear idea of what they want to do and then change their mind one or two years in. Taking a few courses outside of your schedule is smart—it leaves the door open for other things. I was just going to advise you to take a language and at least one irrelevant, fun course per semester. AIH just isn’t all that fun.’
Again, Blair was the voice of wisdom.
Chloe quietly stated, ‘I’m good with dates. They just stick in my head without much effort. I mean, it could be fun.’
‘It won’t be,’ said Blair, grimacing. ‘But you quite obviously want to do it. Besides, you can always drop it later.’
“Right.”
She’d never dropped anything in her life and wasn’t going to start now.