by Jae Vogel
“Of course! That’s the solution! Reduce the angle of inclination so that it bends inward! Thank you, now I know how to fix the project!”
He ran back to the work crew with the plans under his arm. Dion could see the man was excited by the news Mrs. Jehuti gave him. In the distance, more carts pulled by oxen moved the stones toward the structure at a slow pace.
“It is time to return,” Mrs. Jehuti announced. “Dion has the map and needs to resume his quest. Pleased don’t lose it again because there is not another one.”
The air temperature changed while the scene about them slowly shifted.
Emily had a glimpse of herself in a medical lab coat as she supervised a nurse and then she found herself back in the mall. She looked at her friends who were in the middle of some experience themselves.
The looked down and discovered their clothes were the same as they were when they left. They were still next to the waterfall. Mothers were playing with their children next to the pond where the waterfall descended.
Lilly looked up and saw the departing form of the bird, which had delivered the map to Dion. It was almost gone and soon the sky was devoid of its form. She looked down and wondered if there would be any sand on her shoes, but they were clean.
“Mutual hallucination?” Emily asked the rest of them.
“Only if you believe it happened in the detail,” Lilly said. “I don’t recall having the same dream with anyone. Ever. What happened to us can’t be explained by any logical terms.”
“You mean we really were all transported to ancient Egypt?” Sean asked. He looked over and noticed Dion holding the map to the mall. “Okay, guess we were.”
“I’m sorry for the way I ran off yesterday,” Emily said to Lilly. “But that experience in the basement was just too much. They kept me locked up down there all the time you were running around trying to find me. I don’t ever want to go back to that place.”
“No need to apologize. I can’t even imagine how horrible it must have been to you.”
“I thought they were going to build the theater into the mall,” Sean said as he looked at the form of the cinema beyond the parking lot. Why did they put it on the other side over there?”
“If you looked into it,” Dion said, “someone would give a very logical reason on paper which would make all kinds of sense. But I think the real reason was that it would have conflicted with how the mall was built. They don’t want it to take up too much space that the rest needs.”
“The cheerleaders are supposed to be here today,” Sean announced as they started to leave the waterfall. “Something to do with a fund raiser for a football team. I don’t think the football team is supposed to be here, but you never can be sure.”
“Never had much interest in football,” Lilly said. “Even when I was dating a football player. I must be the only girl in school who doesn’t follow it.”
Emily had a better experience with the team from the guy she dated who was on the starting line-up. She would go and experience the lights of autumn. She liked to watch the guys line up and be psyched over their game. She had fond memories of sitting on the bleachers and allowed to watch the games from up close. It was a different experience for her, but, now that she’d broken it off with the guy, she wasn’t so interested in the game. Besides, it was spring and the sport wouldn’t kick in again until the fall.
Sean couldn’t understand the fascination the male part of the school had with cheerleaders. He wasn’t impressed with their routines and thought they weren’t very attractive. Granted, the professional ones who ushered in the pro games resembled perfection, but the ones at their school were far from attractive. They weren’t even very athletic. He couldn’t recall a single routine any of the girls had done which captivated him. Perhaps it would be different when he went to college.
Even the school didn’t have that much spirit. He recalled a “pep rally” where his homeroom starred at the proceedings with bored amusement. They were supposed to get up and cheer every time someone ran around and waved a stick. They stood there and watched the guy who held it run in circles. For some reason, school spirit was in short supply at the high school. He thought it might have something to do with all the imports into the student body from the air base, university and general transfers with all the companies in the area. It was hard to feel much about a community when you just moved to it. You could tell who’d relocated into the area just by who they associated with at the high school. It was the sound of the crowd, which attracted them.
Dion rolled up the map and placed it under his arm. He knew the air elementals would try to keep him from his destination. Not all of them. Most of the elementals didn’t care who mastered the elements, but he knew there were a large number of them who didn’t relish control by any human. Dion had no intention of lording it over them like some master of the temple, but the elementals had no way of understanding this. And they would try to get at the map to prevent him from moving around the mall.
Lilly desperately wanted Dion to succeed in his quest. She was drawn to his sense of power and his mysterious side. Part of her wanted to protect him. She wanted to help him get his parents back. She couldn’t imagine being on her own without hers. It was something too dreadful to even think about it. She stayed by him every chance she had.
The whole trip to Egypt had altered Emily’s way of thinking about Dion. When she first met him, months ago, Emily couldn’t see the attraction he held for Lilly. He was just another silent boy who didn’t fit in with the rest of the kids. The school was full of them and she had no use for anyone who would accept their lot in life. But now that she’d seen his abilities and how he could manipulate the elements, she wanted to find out more about him. Okay, maybe Lilly had first bids, but she hadn’t told her Dion was off limits. He didn’t seem to be in the boyfriend zone anyway. As far as she was concerned, he was fair game.
This left her with a little problem: Sean.
Sean was nice, but lately he’d taken to following her around at school. There had to be limits on what relationship she allowed him to claim. Again, Sean was nice, but she had her pick of nice guys at the school. Plus, she’d seen the end result of nice in the form of her father who was so nice to his ex-wife that he continued to send her money in hopes she would come back home. Nice didn’t cut it, as far as Emily was concerned. Control was what she needed. She needed a reasonable provider, but someone she could be seen in public with who didn’t consider her an asset. Nice was for the men who did their job and came home to the white picket fence. She wasn’t going to attend college in the fall if a white fence was all there was at the goal post. She wanted more and didn’t see how Sean was part of her overall plan. So she needed a way to push him aside with minimal interference. Sean might have some heartache, but he would get over it.
Sean located the source of the crowd’s attention without much trouble. It was the sound of clapping which attracted him in the first place. He heard them at a distance and slowly moved through the crowd to get closer to the source of their attention. Several hundred shoppers were looking at something which took place on the concourse. He wormed his way through the crowd to see what it was. All thoughts of his companions were momentarily abandoned as he went in search of a shiny object.
And then he saw them.
Cheerleaders.
Here were twelve in their uniforms at a clear spot inside the mall. Even the security guards were fascinated by what was in front. The forward row consisted entirely of middle-aged men who were reliving their youth. Most of their wives were still shopping, which left the men to roam free. Of course, they were trapped in the mall when the manifestation took place. They were mesmerized at what was before them.
Twelve cheerleaders wearing the colors of a school Sean didn’t recognize. He didn’t care because they were all stunning. The cheerleaders were of all races, but they had perfect figures. Each wore a thin short skirt of synthetic material and a top, which barely covered their slender bo
dies. Some were buxom, others slight, but whoever designed the routines knew how to work the body types into the performance.
As Sean watched transfixed, a tiny girl who looked Asian jumped on top of the pyramid formed by the others. The precision of their actions was unbelievable. No one in the crowd had ever seen such work. They were all used to the dull, halfhearted local high school shows during halftime. The best they could hope for was someone who twirled a fire baton. Even that was rare as it involved a certain amount of risk with flames. None of the local girls he saw on the cheerleading squad had one-tenth the athletic ability of these girls. Even the pompoms they shook looked to be made of gold.
Where had they come from? Sean couldn’t read the name of the school on their outfits; try as hard as he might. He noticed they were blue and white in color and the name of the school was hard to read. One finally stopped and turned her back to him, which allowed him to see the name of it. He looked at it closely and finally made it out: Aerophane High School. The name of the team they cheered for appeared to be “The Sky Spirits” and their symbol was a triangle that pointed upward with a line through it. Where had these cheerleaders come from?
“Sylphs,” a voice said next to him. “It’s one of the major air elementals. I wondered what form they would take. Mrs. Jehuti said I’d recognize them right away. Now I see what she was talking about.”
“So, what do we have to worry about this time?” Lilly said as she watched one of the cheerleaders do a complicated back flip in front of the others. “These seem harmless enough.”
“Like the ghoul cleaners were harmless?” Dion said. “Never underestimate the power of these elementals. You are not seeing their true forms, I will tell you that.”
“What do they look like in their natural state?” Sean asked, as he watched the tallest cheerleader jump up and land in a perfect pattern. “I’ll take them in this form any day of the week.”
“Gusts of wind. You wouldn’t be able to tell them apart from any cloud formation unless you knew what to look for. It’s why you see them in this version. They need some way to gain people’s trust and get inside the mall in a corporal form. And who suspects a cheerleader of doing anything bad?”
Sean expected all kinds of things from cheerleaders. None of which he ever thought would happen in this world. As far as he could tell, the girls who became professional cheerleaders only became more unapproachable as time went on. If they were stuck-up now, even the ones of such low caliber as his high school, he could only imagine the attitude they had at the professional sports level.
One of the cheerleaders accidentally let loose of a pompom and it flew across the floor. Sean saw where it went and quickly ran to grab it. The pompom landed behind the cheerleaders and no one else made an effort. For some reason, the audience was focused on the performance before them and nothing else registered. The cheerleaders continued their stunning display of gymnastic ability while the one who lost her pompom stood to one side and pouted.
Sean grabbed her pompom off the floor and held it up in the air for the lone cheerleader to see. She spotted him behind the rest of her team and swiftly bounced to Sean. She grabbed the pompom from him and plastered a kiss on his cheek.
Stunned, Sean looked at her in fascination. She was a blond girl with long straight hair tied in the back to keep it in place. He had never looked into eyes so blue or deep. Sean’s heart began to beat faster and he looked to see if Emily noticed what had taken place.
Although Lilly stood next to Dion, Sean could tell Emily’s attention was focused on the tall, dark elemental worker. It suddenly hit him she had been focused on Dion all day long. Why did she even want to take him along on this adventure? Oh, yes, she had told him she needed some back up, that was right.
It was always that way, he realized. Always the “friend” to the many girls he pursued in school. Always he had to watch the girl his heart burned for run after the latest bad boy and leave him in a minute. Even at his parents’ church, it was that way. How many of the girls he knew there were paired up with some gang member or motorcycle rider? Even his mother grumbled the church girls weren’t the little angels everybody assumed. Oh, they were angels, Sean knew, just not the kind his mother would approve.
“Thank you so much for grabbing that for me!” the cheerleader said to Sean. “I’d never have found it without your help!”
“Really,” he tried to say to her, “it was nothing, I just saw it and…”
She planted another kiss on him. “My name is Randi. What’s yours?”
“Sean. I’m with….” He turned to see Emily in a conversation with Dion on the other side of the line of cheerleaders, “…no one in particular. You said your name was Randi? I don’t think I’ve ever heard of your school before.”
“It’s a private one.” She stepped closer to Sean and made sure he could feel the warmth of her face near his. Her eyes were hypnotic. “Could you be a dear and do something for me?” she asked while squeezing his hand.
“What’s that?”
“Your friend Dion has something I really want. You seem pretty cool and could help me get it.”
“I don’t know….”
“You want my phone number? Maybe we could talk about it later. You drive? I think there is something playing at the ‘Mont’ tonight.”
Randi had referenced the local drive-in movie theater, locally known as a “passion pit”.
Suddenly Sean had all kinds of second thoughts. “Okay, maybe I can help you. What is it you need?”
“That map,” she whispered in his ear, her hand on his back. “I really need to get it for someone. I’ll be real grateful if you can get it for me.”
Meanwhile, Emily, Dion and Lilly were still observing the cheerleaders’ routines. Actually, most of the lower level of the mall was enthralled by them too. Dion expected the store managers to be on their phones right now with security with complaints, but something told him this was all part of a general plan. It fit in with the mall owners and their operations. Therefore, it was time to take some precautions.
He looked over and noticed a clear gemstone in a ring Emily had on her hand. “What kind of stone is that?” he asked her as he pointed to the ring.
“Topaz. It was a gift from my grandmother a few years ago. Why do you ask?”
“Can I borrow it for a few minutes?”
What were the odds? Emily had the one gemstone, which could be used for what he had in mind. She shrugged and handed it to him. Dion pulled out a handkerchief from his pocket and wrapped the ring in it. What he needed to do could damage the ring and he didn’t need Emily mad at him.
Dion walked over to the line of cheerleaders who were still in the middle of their routine and stopped. They continued with their show, but fixed their attention on Dion. Even Randi, standing with Sean turned to look at Dion. Dion continued to stand in place.
Then he tossed the ring, still wrapped in the handkerchief, into the middle of the cheerleaders.
They halted the routine and focused on the bundle beneath them. One of the cheerleaders reached down and picked it up. The crowd continued to watch on in silence. Whatever hold they had on the crowd had yet to be broken. The cheerleader who picked up the bundle unwrapped the handkerchief from the ring and held it up.
The light from overhead flowed through the stone on the ring and reflected across the cheerleaders. Suddenly, the light increased in intensity and sparkle as the cheerleaders began to shimmer and change. While they stood in place, the girls faded from view. It took place over a minute with the cheerleaders losing their individual identity to the viewers until the space they occupied was empty.
The ring, held up by nothing, fell to the ground and plopped on the handkerchief. Dion walked over, picked the ring up and returned it to Emily.
The crowd began to thin out, unable to recall why they had stayed in the back of the mall, unable to remember what drew their attention in the first place. All they could remember was some kind of performance to
ok place there, but now it was over. Soon, everyone was back to shopping and walking through the mall. The four friends remained in place with Emily sliding the ring back on her finger.
“What just happened?” Lilly asked Dion.
“The topaz. Sylphs are attracted to the gemstone for some reason. When I dropped it in their midst they all had to look at it. However, with their concentration gone, they no longer could keep up the appearance of cheerleaders. They had to return to their normal state or risk becoming bound to the ring. I think they chose the right course.”
Sean joined them again, but said nothing about the offer Randi made to him. He still noted the way Emily paid more attention to Dion than him. The cheerleader had given him a way to even things out. Perhaps he lacked the charisma of Dion and his superpowers, but there was still one card he could play.
They were interrupted by the sound of applause. They turned around to see the lone form of Edward clapping his hands together.
“Bravo!” he cheered. “Now that you got rid of them, what is your next move?”
This time he wore a cowboy shirt and blue jeans with a western style hat. A pair of pointy boots adorned his feet and a bolo tie was around his neck. To complete the ensemble he wore a pair of sunglasses. All of his jeans and jacket were decorated with imitation rhinestones, giving him the appearance of a rodeo clown.
“No lasso?” Lilly asked the little Englishman.
“They wouldn’t let me bring one. I was refused a horse too. Imagine this, a cowboy without a horse? How dare they?”
Dion was about to tell him it seemed a good idea when Edward cut him off.
“You do realize they will be back, don’t you? Also, they will have the same form. It worked well enough, but they won’t fall for the topaz ring trick a second time. I’m letting you know this because it will happen sooner rather than later.”