Book Read Free

Resisting the Bad Boy - A Standalone Bad Boy Romance

Page 68

by Gabi Moore


  “Very nice,” The pool storeowner said to him. “Now let’s see what you can do with the tray of water.”

  Once more, Dion closed his eyes and concentrated. All he could think about was the water Naiads and how innocent they seemed. Of all the elementals he’d encountered in his time at the mall, they had been the easiest to work with. The Naiad sisters were so sweet, it made you wonder why humanity had to come in existence and ruin everything. They weren’t as innocent as they seemed; no sentient being could be clueless and survive in the reality that was Earth. He worried that the chess club would have more than it could handle adjusting them to the ways of the world. But to see the Naiads in their human form choose one boy after another was something he could be proud of all his life.

  As Dion thought about the innocent water nymphs, one of them suddenly appeared on the edge of the tray. The water stirred and from it raised a beautiful young woman covered by her long hair. She looked around as she surfaced from the tray and laughed. It didn’t make sense; there was very little water it the tray, but it was all the elemental needed to bring itself forth. Dion recognized the form of Cynae who turned to him and giggled. She blew him a kiss and vanished beneath the still water in the tray.

  “Now that was something else,” the hobby storeowner said to him. “I heard about those girls. I can’t believe they live over in the creek now.”

  Dion wanted to tell him that they wouldn’t be there much longer, but it was time to work his abilities on the final tray for which he had full elemental abilities. He closed his eyes and concentrated once more. There were a few sylphs in the room, they were always about if you knew where to find them. They were very easy to work and Dion had a few of them start up right away. They liked to help him whenever there was an opportunity.

  A breeze began to move around the room. Soon it turned into a light wind. Dion was able to get the sylphs to stop the air currents at this point because he didn’t want a hurricane unleashed in the restaurant office. The wind slowly died down and then it was calm again. There was no need to do anything elaborate with the sylphs as they could be counted on to make the air move. To create a humanoid sylph would be a waste of talent and energy and his judges would not look favorably on it.

  “Pretty good wind, son,” Michael Hades noted. He still wore his apron and chef’s hat. The wind had not blown it off his head. “Now if you will excuse us, please step outside the room we need to talk about a few things.”

  Dion stepped up from his chair, went to the door, unlocked it and let himself out into the dining area. He shut the door behind him. Now would be the time to render an opinion. All he had to do was stand there and wait.

  Very few people were in this part of the restaurant. Hade’s staff must’ve been informed to keep it free and away from interference.

  Dion stood in silence and waited. There was nothing else he could do. He hoped his demonstration of his ability and his performance would make the grandmasters look favorably on his quest. But he wouldn’t know until they made up their minds.

  He waited for a good fifteen minutes until the door opened and the face of the pharmacy owner peered out at him. “You can come back in, Dion.”

  Dion stepped back into the room and locked the door behind him. The pharmacist was back in her chair and he realized they wanted him to sit back in the one where he’d sat before. Dion walked back over to his chair and seated himself.

  “We have carefully considered your actions this week,” Michael Hades began. “There were some concerns about the flooding of the parking lot. We were also worried about the casual use of an earth elemental in the plastic bull in front of so many people, but the situation did warrant the use. Therefore, we have decided to award you the full abilities of the fire elemental. Stand up, Master Dion!”

  Dion stood up in his chair as the others did the same.

  Michael Hades walked over and took him by the hand. “Do you swear by the Master of Time not to use this ability for personal gain or to accept monetary payment for the gift which is about to be granted you?”

  “I do,” Dion replied.

  “Do you swear to use your skills to provide aid and comfort to those who need it?”

  “I do.”

  “Do you swear to use your talents to fight evil in all its forms?”

  “I do.”

  “Then make the fire in the final tray dance.”

  Dion closed his eyes and brought out the smallest fire elemental he could find inside the last tray. It was metal, so there was on danger of it burning through to the floor. He noted the tray was placed on top of a stone platform. The wood burst into flame and Dion made certain there would be as little smoke as possible from the burning wood. He allowed the flame creature on top of it to dance all over the burning wood, which he kept at a temperature so hot it was reduced to ash in seconds. A few minutes later, the flame was gone and the small fire elemental with it.

  “I hereby proclaim you a master of the fire element,” Michael Hades said. He gestured back at the chair. “Please sit down. And don’t worry, I’ll sign the forms today and you’ll get your copy in the mail next week.”

  “Have you thought about what to do with your abilities from here on out?” the pharmacist asked Dion.

  “My first order of business is to penetrate into the clock tower tomorrow and rescue my parents. I need to obtain the fifth and final element to do that. What can you tell me about the fifth element grandmaster?”

  “She vanished into the tower the moment it was built,” the hobby storeowner told him. “No one has heard anything from her since she was lured into the tower soon after it was completed. If you go in there after her, be careful. None of us knows what is inside that tower. All we know is that your uncle had it completed first and according to his personal plans, which are long vanished. But we do know she is still inside. We don’t know anything about her situation.”

  “You haven’t told me anything about the fifth element grandmaster,” Dion said to them. “You sit there and talk about her, but I have no clue who she is.”

  “Her name is Mary Phologostron,” the pharmacist said. “She ran a travel agency, but she turned down every attempt your uncle fielded to get her to relocate her office from Scipio to the mall. A few months ago, he lured her into the clock tower on the pretext of a meeting to discuss travel plans for his employees. This is the last we have seen of her.”

  “What does she look like?” Dion asked. “It would be helpful if I have some idea who I’ll need to find in this place.”

  “She’s a white lady,” the pharmacist told him. “About thirty years of age. She wears horn rim glasses and is of medium build. Nothing special about her. She has long black hair if this helps you.”

  “At least I’ll not be trying to find a bald man in his fifties,” Dion told them.

  “This meeting needs to be adjourned,” Hades announced as he stood up from his chair. “I have a business to run and I’m sure the rest of you are in a similar situation.”

  The grandmasters shook Dion’s hand and welcomed him to their ranks. In a way he was about to become a grandmaster himself, should he could obtain the powers of the fifth element. The title was more of a courtesy than anything else.

  His friends knew what had taken place the moment he met them outside the restaurant. Lilly had a look of relief on her face. Both Emily and Sean congratulated him by pumping his hand and slapping him on the back.

  “Where to now?” Sean asked him. “You have all four powers. Will you try and get the final one today?”

  “No, too much to do before I try to enter that tower. We need to get back home now that I’ve fulfilled today’s objective.”

  “I think we might have to put a delay on that,” Sean said. “Look who’s back in action.”

  The grey suited security guards poured down the grand concourse in their direction. This time they didn’t even bother to try to act as if they were in the mall on official business. They pushed people out of the
way and marched in step toward them until they reached Dion and company. The grey security guard fire elementals surrounded them and glared in anger at the four young people who stood in the concourse.

  “We found them,” the elemental who appeared to be the leader of the pack said. “Your little trick sent them into another circle of time and it took us a long time to get them back. We just cut a deal with the man who owns this mall. All four of you are to come with us this very minute.”

  “We aren’t going anywhere,” Dion made clear. He looked at the crowd of security guards who surrounded him and smiled. They had no idea he’d been awarded full fire elemental powers.

  “I think you will,” the salamander said and the air began to heat up around them. Dion could feel the subtle energy shift from the salamanders in human form into the air.

  Dion raised his hands and the room became cooler. Much cooler. Soon the atmosphere in the room was back to normal and the salamanders stood there in amazement.

  “Do you understand now?” he said to them. “It doesn’t matter what kind or form of deal you have made with my uncle. I have the full powers of the fourth element and can bind you in any way I choose. Now why don’t you just leave before I find some volcano to send you into for the next ten thousand years?”

  The security guards looked around and saw the crowd of people watching them carefully. There would be no way they could merely vanish and leave the room. Too many people would see it happen up close where it couldn’t be explained. The lead elemental turned and walked back the way he came, followed by the other fire elementals. This time they didn’t shove people out of the way, as they had done before. As they vanished around the corner, the final elemental in their grey suited uniform turned back and looked at Dion before he continued on his way.

  “Looks like your uncle will need some new security for this place,” Sean said to Dion. “And he better get it soon because it won’t take very long for every booster thief in town to learn the mall is wide open. The local cops will get tired of doing the job for him real quick.”

  “My uncle isn’t thinking past this week,” Dion said. “He wants to keep me away from the tower for a few more days. I don’t know what he’s planning, but it involves this mall and the abyss. I need to get into that clock tower tomorrow, find the grandmaster of the final element, and free my parents. I’ll deal with him along the way.”

  The light began to fade around them once again, which meant they were about to be transported to somewhere else. Dion was used to it by now, just couldn’t figure out who made it all happen. If it was his uncle, he needed to be ready for a challenge. But he didn’t think so. There was a limited amount of things a person could do outside this time circle and if his uncle wanted to do him harm, it would happen in this time circle.

  “I’m starting to get sick of this,” Sean told to his friends as the light of the mall faded and became dark.

  “Me too,” Lilly agreed. “I wonder who wants us this time?”

  Chapter 14

  No sooner had Lily spoke the words than the light began to return. It grew in brightness and, as Dion expected, he felt the warm sand beneath his feet. They were in the Ancient Egypt of another time circle with the pyramid construction in the background.

  Dion looked down and found the clothes of an Old Kingdom court official on his body. His friends were dressed the same, with the girls wearing the sheer wraparound dresses from his time. Their hair was layered and coated with a fine sheen of oil for protection from the hot sun. Lilly held a staff in one hand and had a bright feather in the headband that kept her hair in place.

  “You are quite the vision of an Egyptian landscape,” he said to her. “I wonder what time it is?”

  “Ask him,” Sean said as he pointed up at the sky.

  Dion looked up at the heavens and saw the large beetle pushing along the solar ball. Directly behind it was the boat with several figures in it. He couldn’t tell, but the boat was cutting to the left of the bug, as if it wanted to find a way to get around it.

  “Four in the afternoon,” Dion said. “Right on schedule.

  “Hello, kids,” a voice said on front of him. It was Mr. Jehuti once again with his wife. They were dressed the same and stood directly in front of them. Mr. Jehuti held a scroll in one hand, while his wife held a case of pens. It had to be something to do with their station.

  “We needed to bring you for the final confirmation,” Mr. Jehuti said. “We can’t do this part anywhere near your time circle. It has to be done here.”

  “I thought it was all over and done with once I obtained the fourth element,” Dion said to them. “At least this is the impression they gave me.”

  “We still have a few more things to do,” he explained. “I know you are ready to go into that tower tomorrow and need to plan for it, but we have to go over a few formalities so the first four elements will be under your control back on your home world.”

  “So what do I need to do?”

  “You don’t need to do a thing. All you have to do is accept their loyalty.”

  “Loyalty of whom?” Dion asked.

  “Their loyalty,” Mrs. Jehuti said as she stood next to her husband. She pointed in the direction of the approaching procession.

  The procession was made up of all kinds of figures who were barely visible at the distance. The procession was chanting something, but at the distance, it was impossible to hear what they were saying. It was only when they came into hearing range that Dion could hear what they were saying. The column was chanting his name over and over again. In the rear of the procession, three women slapped cymbals together to keep the beat in sequence.

  In front of the column were figures made out of dirt, the representatives of the earth elementals. Behind them were the air sylphs who bounced around in the form of dancers. Directly bringing up the procession were the water elementals who appeared to be some kind of river nymphs and were singing in Ancient Greek. Finally, the fire elementals, in their human salamander form, came in from the rear. The cymbal players were salamanders.

  “We offer our support to the man who has attained the four elemental powers,” the earth elementals spoke to Dion as they marched forward. They bowed and broke apart as they became part of the sand on the ground. Dion gave him his thanks as he watched the ground break apart and rumble as they continued on their way.

  “Just let us know when we’re needed,” the dancers chanted as they bounced on the ground in front of him. Seconds later they took to the skies in their sylph form as Dion thanked them and accepted their support. He watched them travel to the sky as air currents.

  “Hello, Dion,” the water elementals said to him. “We’re here for you too. Do you think you can find us some nice young men like you did for our Naiad cousins?”

  “How could I refuse such beautiful women?” Dion laughed at them. “I will find you some virile young men who would be clad to offer companionship to you. The world is full of such men.”

  They clapped their hands for joy and poured into the ground as they took liquid form. Dion watched the water return to the desert and wondered what would become of the world if every young man knew he could have a companion of such beauty.

  When it was the salamanders’ turn, Dion realized they were the same fire elementals who’d caused him such trouble in the mall. They stood there with folded hands until the cymbal players quit clanging their instruments together.

  “We are sorry if there were any misunderstandings,” their designated leader said. “We were only doing what we knew how to do to protect our own interests. Know that you will always have our support in the future.”

  “All misunderstandings are in the past,” Dion told him. “Let’s move onto the next level.”

  He watched as the salamanders burst into flames. The individual fires merged together and rose to the sky in a series of pillars, which were soon blended into the sky in a rainbow of brilliance. Dion sat there and watched the fires turn into flaming roc
kets as they rose higher than the solar boat chasing after the sun bug. The flames reached up to heaven and soon were beyond the visual range.

  “But you know,” Dion said as he turned to Mr. Jehuti, “this still leaves one more series of elementals which I need to reach. And I have to encounter them tomorrow. What form will they take?”

  “The aether elementals have the form of a sphinx,” Mr. Jehuti explained. “They are ferocious and the ancient pharaohs used them to guard the tombs and treasure. For some reason, they disappeared in your circle of time and the remains of the kings of Egypt were plundered. That has not happened here. Come with me. It is okay to leave your friends alone for a moment?”

  Dion turned and looked at them. Lilly was playing with the ring he gave her. Sean shrugged.

  “I don’t see as there will be a problem leaving them here,” he told the newsstand owners.

  The couple came over to him. Each took a separate hand. Dion flew across the sands of the desert. He flew across the Nile River and passed more barges with building material headed up the river. They passed over the sands where the traders rode their camels across the hot sun to deliver their goods to the remote settlements across the Northern African landscape. The colors melded into endless patterns of yellow and red. This was not the same smoke-filled polluted landscape you would find on Earth, but an entirely new place that was outside the realization of normal humans. Dion closed his eyes and felt the wind rush on his face as he flew along with the couple who carried him aloft.

  “What are you?” Dion asked them. “Are you from Mt. Olympus too?”

  “No,” Mrs. Jehuti told him. “We are from another place. We are from the Abode of the Blessed. It’s the same idea for a different class of immortals.”

  Soon a vast necropolis rose up on the ground before him. The couple who held him flew down to circle around it, as they searched for a particular location.

  Dion could see many of the tombs below him were intact, although there were a few locations, which were crumbled into dust. For some reason, this vast tomb complex was not plundered like the ones back home. Dion felt they were about to show him why this was as the two found a large tomb and began to circle it. Satisfied, they swooped down to the ground. When the ground was beneath their feet, they let loose of Dion and allowed him to relax for a few minutes so he could see the landscape in front of them.

 

‹ Prev