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Resisting the Bad Boy - A Standalone Bad Boy Romance

Page 67

by Gabi Moore


  A large puddle of water gathered around Dion and friends were they stood and turned into a small pond. It encompassed the elementals as the water began to flow up from the ground. They were in a part of the parking lot where there weren’t too many cars, but it was plain to see the water had cooled the fire elementals to the point where they couldn’t do any further damage.

  “You want this to continue?” Dion asked them. “You know I can freeze each of you in place if I desire to do so. I’m thinking it would be a good time for all of you to leave.”

  There was a flash of light and the fire elementals were gone. Dion closed his eyes, concentrated some more and the sky began to clear as the clouds dispersed. In a few minutes, the storm was over and the rain ceased. The clouds rolled back and the sun returned to the sky. As the water sank back into the earth, the ground around them began to dry.

  They were soaked. All four were in the midst of the storm which Dion had unleashed. Sean and Emily knew better than to complain because Dion had saved them all. Had the elementals increased their heat output, they would have all cooked by now. Once again, he’d found a way to thwart the elementals, although this time it appeared they weren’t under the control of Dion’s uncle.

  “What are we going to do about our appearance?” Lilly asked Dion. “We can’t go back in the mall soaked the way we are.”

  “Give me a second,” Dion said. “There have to be a few fire elementals left around here. The salamander’s display should have attracted some attention.” He concentrated until he found one nearby and made a deal with it.

  A small fireball leaped from the ground and into the air. Seconds later, it had bloomed over them and sent radiant heat down on all four. With the help of a few air sylphs, Dion was able to direct enough drying heat on him and his three companions to get the water out of their clothing. It felt as if they were in a big clothes drier, which in fact they were.

  “I assumed you would use that censor against them,” Lilly said to Dion. “But you didn’t. Care to tell us why?”

  “I don’t think the censer will work more than once,” Dion explained. “Plus, I don’t think I could have made it work in enough time. In any event, we still have it to use if we need it.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind,” Sean said. “I don’t want to tangle with those creeps again.”

  Dion felt the warmth from the small fire elemental pour over him and considered what his next move might have to be. His uncle was deadly serious about taking him down or at least keeping him away from the final elemental grandmaster. The salamanders might be running independently, but they still wanted him out of the way. They didn’t trust anyone and held him responsible for the loss of their comrades. Where had those other elementals gone when Lilly banished them with her fire opal ring? He assumed the realm of their birth, but might they have decided to venture somewhere else? There was no way he could know.

  “Is everyone dry?” Dion asked his friends. They nodded.

  “I’m dry,” Emily told him, “but I feel like a mess. I’ll have to have my hair redone soon. That storm ruined it.”

  Dion looked up at the small elemental over him and gave it permission to leave. The fireball condescended into a small sphere and then a flame no bigger than a lit match. A single spark fell to the ground and rolled away. He watched it as the trail of smoke zipped across the parking lot and was soon gone.

  “Of all the elementals you’ve run up against here,” Lilly told him. “Those have to be the worst. They are the most dangerous ones. You can’t argue it.”

  “They’re all potentially dangerous,” Dion said. “It all depends how you work with them. I’ve done it on a small scale all my life, so I know what to watch out for. An ordinary person and could get into some very bad trouble.”

  “Lilly,” Dion continued. “You’ve been with me the entire week through this quest. You could have left at any time, but you’ve stayed with me. Why?”

  “I can’t help but notice how you’ve carried yourself all the time,” she told him. “I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.”

  “You’ve got college already planned, haven’t you?”

  “Of course, haven’t you?”

  “Depends on what happens today. So much has to do with rescuing my parents. I don’t think beyond what happens until I can get them out. And I want you to keep that ring, by the way.”

  Lilly looked up at him and didn’t know what to say. “Why? Don’t you want it back? It’s expensive?”

  “You can keep it until I get you one of gold.”

  Lilly threw her hands around Dion’s neck and kissed him. “That is the most wonderful thing anyone has ever said to me.”

  “I figure it gives you and Emily enough time to start planning,” he told her. “We can make it a double wedding.”

  Lilly held on to him and didn’t know what to say. Although she’d known Dion the entire school year, she hadn’t been close with him until this week. What would her parents’ say? And did she care?

  At that very moment her joy was so intense she failed to notice the swarm of flies, which appeared out of nowhere.

  The flies buzzed all around them, but failed to land on any one of them. Soon, the cloud of flies was so intense it was hard to see and the noise they made drowned out any sound over five feet away. They were still alone in this part of the parking lot and didn’t have to worry about anyone else. The cloud of flies pulled back and formed a shape next to them as it condescended into a human form. They stood and watched as the manikin made of flies slowly transformed into a human.

  It was Officer Karanzen. He was still in his uniform.

  “You don’t have to worry about me anymore, Dion,” he told them. “Your uncle no longer needs my services. He’s decided to replace me with some fool named Matt, who’s an elemental himself. I guess he thinks it will save him money. He even got rid of my staff and replaced them with that crew with red hair.”

  “You may not believe me, Officer Karanzen,” Dion said, “but I am sorry to hear this. When did you get the word?”

  “About fifteen minutes ago. Right before those bumpkins tried to take you out in the parking lot. When I found out they were in charge, I left the office.”

  “And now they work for no one,” Dion said. “Something my uncle has done made them very angry. You really don’t want to get a creature made of fire mad at you. Even if you have the power of the fifth element.”

  “That corporate kid Matt is one of them too. Not from the fire elements, but from the abyss, the realm of the aether. He’s a sphinx in human form, I found out. I think he used to guard a pharaoh’s tomb until you uncle found him and made a good offer.”

  “Something else I will have to consider. So where do you plan on going next, officer?”

  “I’m not sure right now. Because of my condition, as I like to call it, I can go just about anywhere I please. I want to get out of this place as soon as I can. Too many bad memories.”

  “I can understand how that would happen. It doesn’t have many good ones for me either.” Dion looked at Lilly. “Well, a few, but not too many.”

  Lilly beamed back at him.

  “You take care, kid. And watch out for your uncle. The man is terrified of you, but he won’t admit it.”

  Karanzen began to melt into a diffuse form that turned into the cloud of flies a few seconds later. They stood and watched as the cloud broke down into its individual parts and swarmed across the parking lot. In a few minutes, it was over the field, which surrounded the mall, and then it vanished.

  “What do you think will happen to him?” Lilly asked Dion.

  “I really don’t know. But I do know one thing.”

  “What’s that?” Sean said.

  “I need to get to the Hades restaurant and chili parlor. Right away.”

  Chapter 13

  By the time they were back into the mall, the crowd watching the engagement between the security guards and Dion was gone. Once the security guard fire
elementals vanished, so did the onlookers from the concourse. People would go home and talk about some kind of “altercation” in the parking lot, but it would die down in a few months. No one really had the time to worry about such things.

  They walked through the entrance door to the mall and continued in the direction of the chili parlor.

  Even without the map, Dion could find the Hades restaurant where the best chili in Ohio was served, as the advertisements proclaimed. The smell of cumin filled the air as they approached it and the scent of cooked red beans mixed with the brown meat scent in the air. As usual, there was already a line formed outside the place.

  The exterior of the restaurant was designed to resemble a small cantina far south of the Rio Grand. Michael Hades claimed he’d passed such a place on his way north when he fled from the vengeful army of Don Gordo after he’d memorized the sacred recipe. On some nights when the place was slow, he would elaborate on the story and tell people in the restaurant a most amazing tale.

  In the elaborate version of the story, Hades had two horses shot out from under him by the guapos who vowed to bring him back to the Padron’s justice and restore his family honor. Under the light of the full moon, he’d crawled across the barren lands outside a remote town near Savona where he happened on the lone cantina. Once inside he was forced to use his charms and impress a mere kitchen maid who worked there. She hid him in the basement for the night until the gunmen from Don Gordo had passed by and no longer searched for him. From there he returned to Ohio and soon had the restaurant up and running, he paid coyotes at the border tenfold the money they usually received to smuggle people across the Rio Grande to bring her to El Norte. He celebrated her arrival with a huge wedding where peace was declared between the various factions in her town. Even Don Gordo was so impressed he called off his guapos.

  If you lingered around the restaurant long enough, after Hades left for the day, the help might tell you their version of the story. They would tell you how he found the cantina design in a comic book and used it as the front piece for his restaurant. His lovely senora wife was from Albuquerque and her family had lived there six generations. Far from being a lowly kitchen maid, her father owned the largest grocery store in town and she’d attended private schools until leaving for college. Mr. Hades was forced to promise his future father in law many grandchildren before he would even consider the marriage. They had three children who worked in the family restaurant, two more at home and another one on the way.

  Michael Hades was out arranging the menu display when Dion walked up to him with his friends. The other three hung back as they knew this was a private affair between him and Hades.

  “Hello, Mr. Hades,” he announced himself to the restaurant owner. “I’m Dion. I’ve been trying to reach you all day.”

  “I’ve heard a lot about you, Dion,” Hades spoke to him. “So is it true your uncle had you create this entire mall at night by levitating blocks of stone from the big quarry in Scipio?”

  “If I could do that, Mr. Hades,” Dion said, “I wouldn’t need to come and see you about obtaining full authority for the power of the fourth element.”

  “I see. So where do you come from?” He placed both hands on his hips and tried to look the part of an elemental grandmaster, although it was difficult as he wore a white apron and a chef’s hat.

  “California, sir. My parents were abducted by my uncle who owns this mall and are held prisoner inside the clock tower. Only I can rescue them.”

  “Why is it only you who can rescue them?”

  “I will have all four elemental powers should you decide to grant the last one to me. I have possessed the ability to manipulate all four elements since I was a young child, but nothing I ever did had much power. Until I met the other elemental grandmasters, I could only make small things do casual manipulations. Now I have full authority over the first three elements and I will have the fourth with your approval.”

  “And with these four elemental powers you will be able to free your parents?”

  “No, sir. I need the fifth element to free them. I can only gain the fifth elemental power by entering the clock tower where they are held. But to do that I need all four elemental powers.”

  “I see. And where is this fifth elemental grandmaster you hope to find? In the clock tower I assume?”

  “No one knows. It is so rare anyone masters the fifth element that few people even know there is a fifth element grandmaster. My uncle gained the power of the fifth element when he by-passed the other four. All he knows is the fifth element. If there is a fifth element grandmaster, he or she will have power over the aether and the abyss. I will have to find him or her inside that clock tower before I can locate my parents.”

  “But what if he or she isn’t in the clock tower?”

  “Where else would that person be?” Dion asked him. “My uncle lured the other four elemental grandmasters to this mall so he could trap me. He must have the fifth one concealed inside the tower too. I wouldn’t be surprised if he has the fifth elemental master trapped in it too.”

  “Well and good, Master Dion,” Michael Hades said. “But we must attend to these matters in private. It’s not a good idea to talk about them in front of the uninitiated.”

  “I agree, sir. Give me a few minutes to talk to my friends.”

  Dion walked over to the other three. “This should only take an hour,” he told them. “Just wait out here, my uncle won’t dare to try anything while I’m inside with the Fire Grandmaster.”

  Lilly put her arms around him and gave Dion a big hug. “You come back to me safe!” she whispered to him.

  “Don’t worry. I will.”

  Dion walked back and vanished inside the restaurant with Hades. Lilly stood and watched him go. When he was inside the restaurant, she turned to Emily. “He wants to marry me,” she said.

  “What? That’s wonderful! We can make it a double wedding.”

  “That was Dion’s idea too,” she told her, tears streaming from her eyes.

  Dion followed the restaurant owner through his chili parlor as they headed for the back office to complete the interview. He stopped at a young man about Dion’s age and spoke a few words in Spanish to him.

  They continued on down the restaurant.

  “That was my oldest boy,” he explained to Dion. “I told him to leave us alone for an hour as I have some important business to attend. He favors his mother in temperament, but I think someday he’ll be a good fire manipulator someday. It takes time, as you well know. But right now, I have him to the point where he can summon some lesser fire elementals and they’ll roast an entire slab of lamb in the kitchen. Saves a fortune on gas bills.”

  Hades opened the door in front of them and allowed Dion to enter his office in front of him. He turned on the light and allowed Dion a chance to see what was inside the office while he locked the door from the inside.

  “Take the seat in front of the others,” he instructed Dion. Dion walked over to the single chair situated in the middle of the room and seated himself.

  In front of him were the other elemental grandmasters. He’d met each one over the past few days and obtained the full elemental powers from each one. Today he hoped to obtain the fourth one.

  “Welcome, Dion,” the pharmacist said to him who gave him his first elemental power, that of earth. “We’ve waited for you today. None of us worried you wouldn’t make it this far, we’ve been very impressed by your performance. But we need to see a final demonstration of your new abilities before we can allow Mr. Hades to give you the full fire elemental power.”

  “There is a reason the final elemental power we can bestow on you is fire,” the hobby storeowner announced. “It is the most dangerous of the four. We cannot allow you to have this ability unless we are certain you will use it to establish balance in this reality. We cannot give the ability to set the world on fire to the wrong person.”

  Dion sat in the chair and nodded.

  “In order
to allow Mr. Hades to give you this ability,” the woman who owned the pool supply shop told him, “you must show us what you can do with the talents bestowed on you so far.”

  “Note that there are four basins in front of you,” Michael Hades told him. “The first has earth in it, the second has water, and the third is empty as you have plenty of air in the room to work with. The fourth and final one we will tell you about if you satisfy us with the first three. We want to see what you can do with the first three basins, before we proceed.”

  “I understand,” Dion said. “Give me some time and I will do what I can.”

  Dion sat in the office before the four grandmasters and closed his eyes. This was the final test of sorts. He needed to prove his good intentions before they would allow him the fourth power. Sitting here in front of them in this small restaurant office was not quite as glamorous as the storybooks would have it, but he’d come far to obtain this fourth ability. His parents were dependent on him and he needed to get them out of the tower.

  Dion concentrated hard. There came a grinding sound from the first tray and as cloud of dust began to rise from it. Soon, the dust condensed into the figure of an animal. The animal was visible as a bull, the same one that Dion kept running into, since he contacted the same earth spirits that were originally trapped in the bull to animate it. They created a bull made out of clay, which, due to the small amount of dirt, was life size, but hardly weighed anything. The bull walked out of the tray looked around the office, bowed to the grandmasters, turned to Dion, bowed to him, and then returned to the tray. Once it reached the tray, it returned to its form as a cloud of dust and descended into it. There were no dust particles anywhere in the office after it settled into the tray.

 

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