by Gabi Moore
“When he finishes, I will be able to visit one more time. Perhaps longer, but the important thing is for him to rescue your friends. I don’t think it wise to send you to the same location he will be sent, but there is no arguing in this case. Both of you were taken from the last world, both of you must be returned to it as well and in the same general location. No, you will not be sent back to the mall, but very close to it. Dion, you know what you have to do. Lilly, you are not an elemental worker, I recommend staying close to Dion and learning from him, it might come in handy later. Also, do not look any of those women in the eyes or they will have control over you.”
“Alright,” Edward concluded. “Time for all of us to go. Dion, go join Lilly.”
Dion stood up and walked over to her, clasping Lilly by the hand. She looked up at him with her brown eyes and focused on his strong face. She was grateful to be sent back with him, but a little bit scared at the same time.
“You have the keys, Dion?” said Edward, who now stood in the center of the room. Lilly noticed he held a staff in one hand, but she hadn’t noticed one there before.
Dion held up the keys.
“Good. By the power of the rod!” Edward chanted and brought the end of the staff down on the floor three times. On the third rap, the two in front of him vanished.
“I just hope he listens to what I said,” Edward told himself as he left the room, the door closing behind him.
The scene faded back in and both Dion and Lilly felt the ground beneath their feet. Dion blinked and looked down at the blacktop beneath him. He could see the parking lot all around them and the white paint for the parking spaces. He glanced at his wristwatch and noted their actual time was three minutes difference from the moment they encountered the cheerleader elementals to their return. The sun was high in the heaven and he felt it on his back. Now he needed to locate Sean and Emily while he still had the time and ability to rescue them. Edward claimed the keys would work. It seemed silly, but Edward had never lied to them yet. And all of his advice was golden so far.
The cheerleaders were twenty yards in front of them. They were in the process of loading the dazed forms of Sean and Emily into the back of Emily’s car. Dion couldn’t tell from this distance if they had anything in mind or just wanted to get them out of the parking lot. What frightened him was the absolute look of serenity on Sean’s face and the calm face of Emily. He’d never seen them this way before and it told him something was definitely wrong. Now he understood the “cage of the mind” Edward had informed him about. These two were somewhere else entirely.
Dion counted twelve cheerleader elementals around the car. They would only need one to drive the car, one or two more could ride-along and the rest could transform into wind gusts. Edward was correct again; they didn’t plan to put them inside the clock tower where his parents were imprisoned. For some reason, the elementals had decided to take them off-site.
Dion had no way to know what they were up to, other than some other plan, which involved the abduction of his friends. It didn’t matter; they would use them as pawns again, pieces in the game to manipulate him.
They’d cornered him right outside the hobby store and used his need to make contact with the Air Elemental Grandmaster to trap his friends. He had to do something, but the only tool he understood he had was the Cadillac keys Edward handed to him before they were sent back to this world. It was a crazy idea, but the only one he could play right now. Whatever earth elementals he could summon would be useless against the ones from the air.
“Stay behind me and don’t look at them,” Dion told Lilly. “You heard what Edward said. They get inside your mind and make a cage out of it. Look what they’ve done to Sean and Emily. I can’t let them do it to you.” He dropped one hand down behind himself and let her clasp it gently.
The cheerleaders stopped what they were doing when they saw Dion approach them. The one called Randi was closing the door on the backseat where the smiling forms of Emily and Sean were seated. Another one of them nudged her and she turned around to face the advancing form of their nemesis.
Sean walked up to them slowly and continued to shield Emily behind him. In his fist, he held the Cadillac keys and made sure they could not see them. He had no intention of playing this right away. They might want to get Lilly too, but he wasn’t about to use her as bait.
“Hello, Dionnnn,” a line of four cheerleaders said at the same time. Their voices merged together and created a melody of venom.
Chapter 10
Dion realized the sylphs were the modern equivalents of the sirens, the deadly creatures from ancient Greece who lured men to their death on the rocks by singing to sailors when their ships passed by the cliffs. He didn’t need to put wax in his ears; his own will was powerful enough to resist them. But he understood they had tremendous power, which could be wielded against anyone else.
It wasn’t just the power of their voices. The cheerleader elementals radiated innocence and purity. Dion wondered how many men had been suckered by them. He could feel the charm they were radiating at him with their unblemished skin and bright white teeth. Their hair was clear and glowed in the sun. They might be of different races, but the bodies were a statement of perfection. They showed just enough of what they had to make susceptible men believe them to be the fountain of youth. These were the deadliest of the sylphs, those who were self-aware and saw humanity as a harvest to be sheered.
“Do you have something for us,” one of the cheerleaders taunted him as they began to take formation around him. Dion saw them do the same configuration they had done in the mall. Four of them approached in a line and the rest spread out.
He realized this was the classic envelopment strategy used on battlefields for thousands of years. The cheerleaders were going to surround him slowly until he couldn’t find a way out. This was the deadly bowl of doom, which would turn into a trap he could not escape unless he did something. Right now, he had one weapon which was supposed to work. Dion didn’t want to depend on it, as the keys might not work. Granted, Edward had never lied to him, but there was the possibility someone had lied to Edward about what these Cadillac keys could do to the sylphs who confronted him right now. It was poor strategy to depend on one weapon form, no matter how good you might be with it.
They were starting to surround him and he could feel it. The four cheerleader elementals in the front slowly began to walk to him as their eyes began to shine. Even in the bright sunlight, Dion could see the light from their eyes. It could only mean they were powering up, the same way they had done it in the mall.
Lilly began to see things in her head she hadn’t thought about in years. She heard her sister arguing with her parents about who she could go out with tonight. She saw her sister asking Lilly to cover for her while she went outside the window to meet some guy. Her parents asked her where she was and did they know where her sister had gone. She was terrified for her older sister’s safety and felt guilt that she’d help her leave the house. Her sister was married and everything was all right, so why was she scared something would happen to her? All she could think about was what might happen to her and it was all her fault.
Dion heard the crying sounds from behind him. The elemental had breached Lilly’s mind too. He used his peripheral vision and could see four cheerleaders on each of his sides. As he expected, they’d left Sean and Emily in the car and were focusing their attention on him. It was just what he wanted, but could he stop them before it was too late? Dion had lured himself right into a trap, but he was ready to spring one on them. If Edward was correct, all he had to do was let them get close enough to see the keys. Just a few more minutes.
He could see them on the sides. There were only two on each side right now, which meant two more were moving into the rear. They thought he was cut-off and had no means of retreat. Dion heard the pair of elementals behind him sliding into position. The next thing they would do would be to advance on him until they were just close enough from each othe
r to trap him in a circle. They would cause something to happen to Lilly and break his concentration long enough to capture them both.
He didn’t know exactly what they planned, but he could pick up the strands of communication between them to realize what they were up to. The four cheerleaders in front of him joined hands and he could feel the energy crackle in the air. They were very close to the point of complete entrapment, which had been their plan all along.
Dion looked across the parking lot and realized they were in a section which had little, if any, traffic. The cars and pedestrians found reason to go somewhere else every time they drove too close to their part of the lot. The cheerleader elementals once again created a bubble around them no one could penetrate.
When he saw out of the corners of his eyes the last of the cheerleaders join hands, Dion raised the keys over his head. In that instant he felt the energy around him decrease.
The cheerleaders lifted up their heads and looked at the shiny Cadillac keys. They saw the limited edition emblem dangle from the ring. Dion could see the look of fascination in their eyes. The light, which shined from their faces, focused on the keys and what it represented. He could see them drop their hands and stare at the ring he held.
“You like this?” Dion began to taunt them back. “It’s the keys to a 1953 Eldorado Cadillac. A convertible. The best one ever made. It has chrome all over it. There is tire kit in the back with big chrome straps on it. You know what the best part of it is? The color. That’s right; the caddy is a nice powder puff pink. You want to drive it? Think about how nice you’ll look in it. All your friends will look at you with envy. You’ll be the most popular girl in school.”
Although the elementals needed nothing to travel in, Dion realized they’d been captivated by the images of the cheerleaders and everything they represented. The elemental sylphs were just as susceptible to the same wants and desire as any human in that form. All he had to do was play on those wants and desires. It was why Edward gave him the keys. So long as he kept them out of their reach, he had control over them.
There was just one small problem: he didn’t really own a 1953 Eldorado Cadillac. He didn’t even know where he could find one. The keys would eventually lose their ability to bind the elementals once they realized there was no real Cadillac around them. He had to use the keys to keep their attention until he had Sean and Emily out of the car. Until then, he needed to keep their attention.
The bull was easier to control. It was possessed by a single elemental which wanted to get out of the plastic statue it was imprisoned in. It was animated, but his onyx stones could be used to make it focus away on something other than what it was charged to accomplish. He needed to place the onyx stones around its neck and the bull would revert to its original form. Today he’d managed to coax more earth elementals into it for a few minutes, but it was a simple task. Now he had a good twelve elementals to control and keep away. Should he lose his power for just one minute, they would unleash themselves on him and Lilly. It was a much more dangerous situation he found himself today.
“Okay,” he shouted to the assembled cheerleaders, “Who wants to play catch?”
Dion sent the keys high into the air in an arch, which would take it as far as possible from the car where Emily and Sean sat. The cheerleader elementals saw it fly up in the sky and ran to be at the place where they expected it to land. At that very moment, Dion grabbed Lilly’s hand and ran with her to the car where his two friends were sitting.
“I hope she left the keys in the ignition,” he huffed to Lilly as they ran across the distance. “Because I need to get that car close to the mall in a hurry.”
The key chain came back to earth at the bottom of the cheerleader elementals that were fascinated by it. One let out a squeal of joy when she grabbed the keys, but the real excitement was yet to begin.
Dion threw open the car door. There were no keys in the ignition or anywhere else inside the car. He looked at the floor and then ruffled through the glove compartment. The keys were gone. Emily might know, but he had no time to wait for her to leave her mind cage. Dion, as Lilly looked on, threw open the passenger door to the back seat and grabbed Sean by the shoulder. Lilly saw what he did and went to the other side and took Emily out of the car.
The elemental cheerleader who grabbed the keys was holding them up in triumph when another one of the cheerleaders tried to grab them from her. She snarled at the one who tried to take them and let loose with a solid push, sending the imposing one to the ground. However, this allowed a third cheerleader to grab the keys from her. The original holder of the keys jumped on top of her and soon the entire squad of cheerleaders was a solid mass of elementals striking and poking at each other.
If anyone had watched, the mob of cheerleaders turned into a whirlwind as the keys were sent out and beyond their ability to grab them. The cheerleaders turned into a swirling cloud of dust, which rose into the air before the parking lot and ascended to the air as the elemental merged into one continuous sylph that had lost its collective identities in a mass of anger. The cloud soon reached the sky and broke up as the sun baked it apart.
“Just keep walking them,” Dion said. “We need to get them someplace they can sleep this off. The charm of the elementals won’t last very long now that they’ve dissipated into the air. We’ll take them to the furniture store Edward told us about and see that they are sound asleep in a few minutes.”
“What happens if those cheerleaders return?” Lilly asked him. “Why wouldn’t they try and get them back?”
“They’re out of power. They exhausted everything they had today on us and the keys finished off what was left.”
It only took them a few minutes to take their friends to the furniture company and find the contact Edward had mentioned when they were in his realm. The walked both Sean and Emily into the store with ease and asked for the name they’d had memorized. The saleslady they met nodded and went back into the back of the store and returned a few minutes later with an older man who wore a suit and tie. He introduced himself as the manager of the store.
Most of the people shopping in the store were couples looking to buy furniture for their new homes or apartments. Lilly noticed the sales staff would take them through an entire sales procedure, which involved selling them the most expensive item and gradually working their way down the less expensive models. There seemed to be a whole technique to what they were doing, but she couldn’t figure out what it was. The mysteries of the sales world were almost as dense as the elemental one, but not so flamboyant.
“Edward gave me your name,” Dion told him. “I was informed you were someone we could trust to take care of our friends until they’ve had a chance to sleep. He told us you have a waterbed in the back which people sometimes use for demonstration purposes.”
The man looked at them, and then looked at the mesmerized couple with him. Dion could tell he was weighing something in his mind.
“Alright, I can help, follow me.”
They turned and walked with him as he disappeared into a door in the back.
It was a small room beyond the storage area, which was designed as a bedroom. The waterbed was resting on the floor with several brochures about its use around it. The fluorescent lights in the ceiling were subdued and designed to give it a soft glow and served as an additional selling point.
Lilly led Emily to the bed and laid her down, while Dion did the same to Sean. In minutes, they were peacefully asleep. The manager led them out of the room, turned out the light and shut the door.
“They’ll sleep undisturbed in there,” he told them. “But you have to come here by the end of the day and pick them up. I’ll let the staff know they’re not to be disturbed.”
“Thank you,” Dion told the man as they left. “You’ve been a great help. I’ll make sure to come back by then.”
“No problem. Edward and I go back a long ways and he’s helped me a lot in the past. I owe him quite a few favors.”
&nb
sp; Outside the store, they found a bench to sit down on and think about what to do next. It was still the afternoon, but the encounter with the cheerleader elementals left them both exhausted. Dion worried about Emily, as this was her second abduction by the elementals in two days. He hoped there would be some way to keep her at a distance from the mall in the future.
“And you’re sure we don’t have to worry about them while they’re sleeping?” Lilly asked him once again. “I worry about leaving them alone, even under the watchful eye of that manager.”
“Edward recommended him. If Edward trusts him, it’s all I need to know. So far, he’s helped us every step of the way. I can’t complain about the assistance he’s given us.
“So what do we do now?” It was a warm day and she’d worn a casual outfit. Lilly liked to appear a little better when going to the mall. But today was not another shopping expedition to the department store.
“Let me think of something. I need a way to get to the hobby shop and meet with the Grandmaster. We don’t have to worry about those cheerleaders for a while, it will take some time for them to reconstitute now that they’re in their original form. They’ll be back, I can guarantee you that, but not today. The mall builder worked to bring them here and I’m sure he has more trickery to show us.”
Although Lilly was worried about her two friends, she was glad to be with Dion. To watch him take on the cheerleader elementals twice in one day was the subject of legends. It still made her upset with the knowledge they’d been inside her head, but at least the elementals were gone. If only there was some way to get the next few powers Dion needed with ease, but it was useless to think in those lines. He had to fulfill his quest before he could truly become a master of all the elements. And what was the fifth one he constantly talked about?
“Should we go back to Hobbs?” Lilly asked him. “Does he have anything else you could use?”