Splatonious: The Duck Who Meant Business



In the bustling metropolis of Pond Street, where lily pads were traded like stocks and frogs argued over real estate, there lived a peculiar duck named Splatonious.

Now, Splatonious wasn’t your average quacker. While other ducks were content splashing around in fountains or waddling aimlessly in parks, Splatonious wore a three-piece suit, a navy blue fedora, and carried a leather briefcase wherever he went. Some said he looked like a banker. Others whispered he was part of a very serious syndicate of waterfowl venture capitalists. But everyone agreed: when Splatonious walked into a room, deals got done.

He started young. At age 6 (duck years), he had already bought up 40% of the local worm supply chain. By 9, he had created an app called “Quackvest,” which allowed animals to crowdsource seed investments for their nests. By 12, he had filed 17 patents—one for webbed-foot loafers that didn’t get soggy in the rain.

Despite his success, Splatonious never forgot his roots. He grew up in the back pond behind Old McWaddle’s Farm, raised by a single mallard mom who always told him, “If you’re gonna shake a tail feather, make sure it’s in a boardroom.”

But Splatonious had one secret—one obsession that no one knew about. He wanted to be… a jazz saxophonist.

Each night, after the stock market closed and the last spreadsheet had been color-coded, Splatonious would sneak into his basement, shed the blazer, and blow his heart out on a brass alto sax. He called his style beak-bop.

One fateful evening, after a high-profile acquisition of Pelican Post, he was invited to a gala. Unbeknownst to everyone, the live jazz act had canceled. The organizer was in a panic. Seeing an opportunity, Splatonious calmly set down his briefcase, adjusted his tie, pulled a sax from the coat closet, and wailed.

By midnight, the audience was in tears. He hadn’t just closed deals—he’d opened hearts.

From then on, Splatonious led a double life: financial genius by day, underground jazz legend by night. He called his band The Liquid Assets.

And in Pond Street lore, one name echoed forever—Splatonious, the duck who dressed like a CEO, dealt like a boss, and played like no one was watching.
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