Bottled

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Bottled Page 1

by Carol Riggs




  Bottled

  Carol Riggs

  Contents

  Copyright

  Praise for Bottled

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  About the Author

  Untitled

  Bottled

  by Carol Riggs

  Published by Clean Reads

  www.cleanreads.com

  * * *

  This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and events are fictitious in every regard. Any similarities to actual events and persons, living or dead, are purely coincidental. Any trademarks, service marks, product names, or named features are assumed to be the property of their respective owners, and are used only for reference. There is no implied endorsement if any of these terms are used. Except for review purposes, the reproduction of this book in whole or part, electronically or mechanically, constitutes a copyright violation.

  * * *

  BOTTLED

  Copyright 2016 CAROL RIGGS

  Cover Art Designed by CORA GRAPHICS

  ISBN: 978-1-62135-540-3

  Praise for Bottled

  “Adeelah Naji is a character to believe in. There are moments of sweetness, moments of adventure, and times when you will gasp (at least I did!). I can’t recommend this book enough.”

  ~Jordan Elizabeth, author of Cogling

  * * *

  “Wish for a great book and here you go! It was lots of fun to be part of this roller coaster ride... You’ll want to read every last page.”

  ~Julie Fugate, author of Betrayal

  * * *

  “Bottled is a charming look from inside of the genie’s bottle.”

  ~Janice Hardy, author of The Shifter (The Healing Wars trilogy)

  * * *

  “Bottled has everything you could want in a story: humor, suspense, action, and romance. The twists kept me glued to the pages.”

  ~Elizabeth Langston, author of I Wish and Whisper Falls

  * * *

  “Adeelah’s adventure swept me along, keeping me turning the pages of this beautifully written tale of magic wishes, evil masters, lovable characters, and sweet romance.”

  ~Rachel Morgan, author of The Faerie Guardian (Creepy Hollow series)

  ~With love to my family and friends, for their support of my writing and imagination.~

  Chapter 1

  A disturbance scrapes the edge of my awareness.

  I stop twisting the rings on my fingers and concentrate on the intrusion rather than my new master who sits in front of me. Five humans have reached this shabby Arabian hotel, clustering like scorpions in the street far below our room. A niggling sense of them rises up in my mind.

  They make their way closer, feet scraping on pavement, their eager breaths rapid and shallow. I get the impression it’s me they want.

  While that’s no surprise, the approach somehow disturbs me more than it should, plagues me like a dense thundercloud under my skull. Why is that? The harm is already done. After a century of seclusion in my former master’s crypt, I’m in servitude again. It doesn’t matter if someone challenges my current master for possession of my bottle. One self-centered human master is just as unappealing as the next.

  “This is excellent food, genie girl,” my master Bello says, licking mango chutney from his fingertips, ignoring the drips plopping onto the saggy mattress. He’s quite young as masters go. My guess is about eight years older than the seventeen I appear to be, the age I became immortalized.

  I frown at his big ears and smacking lips, not caring a half-spittle that I’ve impressed him. Unless perhaps it would endear me to him so I could gain some time off for my own private goals.

  That’s an option I’ll have to pursue if he remains my master.

  In my peripheral focus, I detect the approaching humans again. They’re surging upward in the strange nomadic room Bello calls an elevator. Their anticipation is so intense, it ripples against my skin. One man in particular leads the way.

  Who is this man? I have no idea, but I envision this driving force as my beloved Karim, coming to retrieve me at last. The silky blackness of his hair. The passion of his gaze, the long curve of the scar on his forearm. Perhaps he heard about the powerful blast that unsealed my former master’s burial vault earlier today. Perhaps he knows how Bello stumbled through the debris, claimed my bottle, and wished himself away from the site.

  But alas…it can’t be Karim. If it were, I’d be feeling hope and elation rather than the ominous pressure that crowds my skull.

  Maybe I should try to hide my bottle from this imminent invasion, but my options are limited. It’s the one physical object I can’t handle or alter. It would be useless to conceal it with the faded blanket that’s wadded upon the bed, since it would be found too easily during a search. I scan the room for other ideas. My attention snags on a doorway to a small bathing area, and a booklet on the wall that shows it’s April.

  April 1977.

  I gape. It hasn’t been a mere century I’ve been locked away from the human realm in that vault. It’s been more like three.

  Bello scoops up my slender but sturdy glass bottle from the bed, greed churning behind his eyes. “So you can give me whatever else I want? Gold, whiskey? Foxy women?”

  “I’ll grant you any wish within my ability, Master,” I say.

  He frowns. “What’s that supposed to mean? Are you all-powerful or not? It doesn’t matter if I have endless wishes if all I can get is chutney, cold beer, and pita.”

  I hold back a sigh. I prefer to tell him I’m unable to fulfill any of his wishes, limitless or not, but the bottle won’t let me lie. “My powers are restricted only when the wishes involve people. I can’t materialize people who don’t exist or bring them to you against their will. I can’t make them alive if they’ve died, or directly kill them. I also can’t change their bodies, minds, or personalities. But I’m able to take you places, modify objects, and grant you many tangible things.”

  “Tangible. What’s that?”

  I must say, this guy isn’t the swiftest camel in the caravan. “Things you can touch. No wishing for things like happiness, true love, and infinite world peace.”

  His glance bounces around the room. “Touchable stuff. Okay.”

  The group of determined humans close in on us, now on our level of the hotel. Even so, I’m not obliged to mention anything to Bello.

  And yet…I take another reading of the group, and my awareness tightens into an abrupt knot. My breathing ceases for a moment.

  There’s a strong presence among the newcomers. A dark force, a human evil I haven’t felt for centuries, striding down the narrow halls with this group. He’s the leader, the instigator.

  Faruq. He’s here, and he’s searching for me.

  The thought burns through me. No. Faruq can’t take over as my master. I won’t let him. The type of wishes he desires should never be fulfilled. All at once this stocky, ignorant African sitting before me looks like a wonderful option.

  “Someone’s coming,” I hasten to say. “If you don’t act soon, my bottle and my services will be snatched from you.”

 
Alarm spikes across Bello’s face. He clutches my bottle in a death grip. “Take me to Kenya, genie. Quick!”

  I skip the pleasantries of an “as you wish.” With the sound of someone’s fist pounding on the door, we swirl from the room in a massive flash of wind and dissolving particles. I probe his mind and acquire the location. It’s there in the forefront of his memory: a remote area near the place he grew up, thick with pungent cedar and podo trees. We begin to merge back into normal dimensional space. Fear lingers on my tongue as a bitter metallic aftertaste. Is it the African’s fright, or mine? As the transfer comes to an end, I whisk back into my bottle.

  It’s always better to stay out of sight after a location change.

  Air rushes into my lungs as I regain form. I lean against my cushions, head down, hands trembling against my knees. That was too close. Much too close.

  The leader of the group had to be Faruq, alive after all this time. I’d know the taint of his essence anywhere. I can’t believe he has found me, even though my former masters spent decades on uncharted islands in the South Seas. Even though they retired to remote castles in Scotland. It doesn’t matter that I let them store my bottle in caves of poisonous asps, or that my last master ordered me to mask his Arabian palace with invisibility.

  All irrelevant. After almost three hundred years, Faruq has managed to trace me. I assume Bello helped as part of his crypt-opening team, happening to reach my bottle before he did. Faruq will hound Bello to the ends of the earth in order to find me again.

  I curse my infuriating luck. Out of the corner of my eye, I catch a glimpse of my wild-eyed sneer in one of the mirrored panels lining my walls, and freeze. Who is the girl with the fierce eyes and curled lips? How have I ended up like this?

  Something scrapes on the glass above me, near the stopper.

  The summoning.

  I have no choice. My thoughts spin away like a stretch of dunes sucked into a windstorm. The sound of a gong ripples the air, vibrating my body into a thread of dark smoke. I rise and materialize into a dry, baking heat not shaded by trees of the nearby woods. My embroidered slippers crunch over scattered twigs.

  “Those location-change trips are crazy, genie!” Bello says, round-eyed and radiating awe.

  I see he’s still calling me by my impersonal title, even though I told him my name was Adeelah when he first summoned me. And while it’s charming he’s enjoying himself, we can’t stay here long. I hope I can divert his selfish desires long enough to secure our safety.

  “I’m assuming this location is temporary,” I say. “Since Faruq might guess you’d come here.”

  He squints. “Wait. You know him?”

  “Unfortunately, yes. So if you please, I suggest we go somewhere else.”

  “Not to worry, pretty miss. He doesn’t know where I’m from.” He steps closer, reeking of sweat and a rash of prying questions. “How do you know him, anyway? Hah!—if he was one of your old masters, I bet he was a mean old buzzard to please, a heartless son of a—”

  “I’m ready to grant another wish, Master. What’s your immediate desire?”

  He eyes me with renewed interest. Too late, I regret my choice of words. I can tell he’s thinking of the “foxy” women he mentioned earlier…and whether or not I qualify as one.

  “Er, perhaps you’d like another beer after your journey?” I amend. “Or a delicious dessert?”

  He shifts his gaze from my figure and shades his eyes from the sun. “Sure, another beer. I’ll need a lounge chair and a big beach umbrella, too.”

  “As you wish.”

  I begin to interpret his order, sifting details from the denseness that makes up the rest of his consciousness. I can’t read his entire mind, nor do I care to. I concentrate on the wish. In the air beside him, I move my hands. A monstrous red umbrella and a small table begin to appear, colors shimmering and shapes solidifying. I fashion a stout mug of golden beer. The remainder of his furniture follows.

  After taking a slight bow, I motion to my bottle. “I’ll wait for you Inside while you relax.”

  “No, stay put. I might need you for another wish.” He deposits my bottle on the table and grabs his beer mug, not bothering to sit before he guzzles.

  There’s no telling how soon Faruq will discover where we’ve ended up. I must gather my wits to convince this pebble-brained master that we need to go somewhere less obvious. If only I didn’t feel so weary, I could think more clearly. My wrists ache for some reason. I flex them, but stop when my bracelets jangle and Bello looks over at me with beer froth foaming on his top lip.

  “This is outstanding brew, genie. You deserve a big hug.” He reaches for me with his free arm.

  I cringe. Here it comes. The unpleasantness of human touch. “I prefer you didn’t do that, Master—”

  He chuckles. And then his arm passes right through my waist.

  The sensation is a viscous wave through my gut, like a spoon through a vat of yogurt. I clench my teeth against a surge of nausea. My master yelps and twists in his sandals. His beer sloshes on the ground while his curses fill the air.

  “You’re not solid!” he cries.

  “I warned you not to try.” I never tell my masters ahead of time about this particular quality of mine. Not anymore. One early master had a cruel bent and enjoyed my discomfort a little too much.

  “You look solid,” he mutters. He switches his mug to his other hand and shakes beer from his fingers. “You know, I think I’m gonna let you build me a palace right here by the Aberdare mountains, and fill it with gold and whiskey. You can hocus-pocus me a fiery red Corvette and some snazzy new clothes.”

  An unpleasant sensation congeals in my stomach. “Won’t Faruq look for you here?”

  “And I want lots of women. Like, a harem. All super foxy.”

  “I’ve told you. I can’t materialize people. Which includes women. And we should go somewhere that Faruq won’t think to find us.”

  He swaps a glare with me. I don’t break eye contact. The heat of my emotion feels hot enough to melt his face. Sadly, it doesn’t work.

  “I’m the master here,” he says with a growl, snatching up my bottle. “Start building, genie. Now.”

  Chapter 2

  Eighteen days. I’ve spent eighteen days in a tangle of brittle nerves, knowing nothing is as secure as I’d like.

  I gather the silken folds of my dress and climb the curved staircase toward the rooms where Bello’s women reside. He has invited seven of them here, hand-picked from the surrounding towns. Beneath my free hand, the marble railing is cold and hard. Two uniformed guards stand at attention on the landing above me. The entire palace is fortified, with armed sentries at the stone walls surrounding the grounds.

  Bello may feel safe with all his hired protection, but I don’t. His foolish stubbornness will be his undoing. It’s only a matter of time before Faruq tracks me down and finds a way past the guards. He’ll kill Bello without a scrap of remorse, and my powers will be at his mercy.

  My gaze sweeps out over the vaulted expanse beyond the staircase. If I were the owner of this vast dwelling, I’d have the sense to build it elsewhere. I wouldn’t fill its rooms with treasure chests or statues of charging bull elephants. I wouldn’t gold-plate every visible surface. No, I’d hold grand costumed balls. I’d serve dainty lamb börek and sweet baqlawa. I’d have Karim by my side. Music from stringed instruments would flow like the spiced tea and cinnamon-milk I’d serve. Those things would replace Bello’s obnoxious “rock” music and liquid-fire whiskey.

  Perhaps I’d have a small pet. A ferret or a capuchin monkey.

  I would press my lips to Karim’s at night, and hold him.

  There, I would smile and laugh.

  My hand slides from the railing and curls into a fist at the top of the stairs. I’ve already attended to Bello’s gluttonous stomach, and it’s time to serve the midday meal to his women. While the hired cook serves the guards and other hired help, it’s my duty to conjure quality food for Bello
and his female guests. Reaching the first ornate door, I knock, rapping hard. A squawk that could rival a peacock’s comes from inside.

  The forceful wind of the opening door makes my hair tendrils fly forward.

  “What?” Rehema stands there in lacy crimson undergarments, holding up a mascara wand like a tiny dagger. Her ebony hair is braided into Medusa-like ropes. “I’m trying to get dressed.”

  I bow and keep my face bland. “It’s time to order your midday meal.”

  She brandishes her dagger-wand. “Fine. Just give me my usual nyama choma. With goat meat instead of beef this time. I’m feeling extravagant. Some ugali, too.”

  “Yes, Rehema,” I say, and turn to leave.

  “Oh, and Adeelah?”

  I pause but keep my back to her.

  “There was a burnt taste to the ugali yesterday. Stir it more often so it doesn’t stick to the pan and scorch. I don’t want to have to tell Bello you’ve been a poor servant.”

  “Yes, Rehema.” I stalk away. On the contrary, I bet she’d love to complain to Bello. And that porridge dish came from her own mind, so how can it be scorched? It’s true the details of her wishes and those of the other women are murkier, harder to read. Maybe she has memories of the dish being scorched. Her wishes are secondhand since I am ordered by Bello to attend to her desires. She’s not my wish master and has no idea of my abilities.

  Thankfully.

  The memory of her words continue to blister under my skin as I go from spa room to bedroom to game room, taking orders from Bello’s six other young women. Rehema was the first to join him, and she’s been his steady companion despite his professed goal of possessing a “harem.” The others wallow in his wealth more than his affections. It never fails to astonish me how the lure of unspeakable riches can make even the most odious man appealing.

 

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