Goddess for Hire

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Goddess for Hire Page 10

by Sonia Singh


  The two dancers were watching me suspiciously.

  “We need to stop the show!” I ran back to the curtain and peered out. How was I going to warn everyone without causing a panic?

  One of the dancers grabbed my arm. “Who sent you? Which troupe?”

  “What?” She may as well have been speaking HuTu for all I understood. I pulled away and stepped back from the curtain. “Listen, we need to get everyone out. There’s a—”

  Her foot shot out faster than you could say “impending explosion” and connected with my abdomen. I fell back, still managing to hold on to my sword.

  Taking up a graceful stance, the two dancers faced me and waited.

  Dancers.

  Hence the incredible leg muscles.

  With considerably less grace, I stood and decided not to waste time with the Goddess Gaze. It hadn’t worked on gun-wielding Gwennie, and I highly doubted it would work on them.

  Don’t ask me why.

  Maybe I’d skip Metaphysics for Dummies and go straight to Metaphysics for Morons.

  Anyway, I didn’t want to risk another Kathak kick to my solar plexus.

  Time to use my outside voice, as well as my sword.

  Grasping the ruby handle, I swung in a warning arc. “Don’t mess with me, girls, you won’t like the results.”

  “Our troupe has waited years for an American tour,” one of the Shh Sisters said. “We won’t let you spoil it.”

  I stared at them in shock. “There’s a gas leak, you dumb shits!”

  “Big deal.” She sniffed. “Half the concert halls in India have gas leaks.”

  Okay, enough time wasted. I lunged. Both dancers kicked out together. I stepped aside, protecting my stomach, but it was my right hand they were after. Together their feet came in contact, forcing my hand back, nearly causing me to brain myself with my own weapon. I let go, and the sword went skidding across the floor.

  Nice.

  So an hour of swordplay on the beach and I wasn’t Olympic fencing material. Surprise, surprise.

  Weaponless, I contemplated my options.

  I’d have to rely on my wits.

  I was seriously screwed.

  The gopis came at me with another flurry of kicks, which I managed to avoid by running backward like a total dork until I had my back to the wall.

  What I needed was pizzazz.

  Pure shock and awe.

  I centered myself, connected with the warmth, and visualized a familiar fierce wind.

  It began with a tickle on the back of my neck.

  The breath of a baby breeze.

  And then came the roar of its full-grown mother.

  Tempest-force gales had chairs, props, and bottles of water flying. The two dancers watched wide-eyed and struggled to gain hold of something. Too late. They fell and were blown onto the stage.

  That took care of them.

  Feet spread for support; I threw out my arms. “Stop!”

  The wind continued to blow.

  “Stop! I command—” I lost my balance, fell, and was blown out with the others.

  The wind died down and disappeared.

  Really nice.

  All the dancers were staring at me. The audience was silent.

  A voice erupted from the darkness. “Maya! What Are You Doing?”

  Mom.

  And she was speaking in capital letters.

  In the front row a little boy began to cry.

  What chain of events, starting from my birth, had led me to be in this position? Facedown on the stage in front of a bewildered audience.

  Especially when everyone knew I hated Kathak.

  Though now—

  I hated destiny more.

  Chapter 31

  THE LAST CAR had finally left.

  My announcement of needing to clear the auditorium because of a gas leak had not been met with panic. Instead, people had shuffled out, grumbling, and demanding their money back. I made a quick call from the lobby phone, since cell phones were traceable, and the appearance of the police, firefighters, and SouthCal Gas Corp. had audience members moving a tad faster.

  I didn’t wait around after the police arrived. Grabbing my sword, I hightailed it to a secluded vantage point, where I’d wait until the leak had been fixed and everyone safely removed from the premises.

  My cell phone rang as flocks of people spilled out into the parking lot.

  “How did you know about the gas leak?” my mom demanded.

  “I have a sensitive nose.”

  “Since when? You can’t tell the difference between curry powder and talcum powder.”

  I turned my phone off after that.

  One good thing had come out of all this—well, besides all the innocent lives being saved—my abrupt appearance onstage made my previous abrupt disappearances seem positively explainable.

  As the last of the fire trucks rumbled away, I headed back to my car. I wasn’t worried about someone giving my description to the police. Black hair, brown eyes, tan skin—described about 99 percent of the audience members tonight.

  Of course if the words “Aphrodite-like” or “Salma-Hayek-esque” were thrown in—I’d be spotted at fifty yards.

  I highly doubted anyone would remember my name from my mom’s freaked outburst. If they did, I’d handle it when the time came.

  Careening out of the parking lot, I had no intention of going home. I’d keep to the plans I’d made before the concert.

  Patrolling time.

  Maya Mehra. Goddess of Destruction and Early-Warning Systems.

  Not too shabby.

  Chapter 32

  THE NEXT FEW DAYS took on a routine.

  I fought malevolence, avoided my parents, exchanged witty and insulting repartee with Tahir, avoided my parents, consumed mass quantities of Starbucks, avoided my parents, and slept.

  This was seriously taking on the drudgery of a job except for one thing.

  I wasn’t getting paid.

  Yeah, there was a lot of variety. Never knowing what form malevolence would take proved interesting. And I wasn’t confined to a generic cubicle, spending most of my time in the car driving around. And as a miraculously fast healer, I didn’t need expensive health insurance. Of course there was also the added excitement that came from being the target of a fanatic Kali-hater.

  Sniper shots as I came out of Starbucks, numerous attempts to run me over, mysterious ticking packages left on the hood of my car…I would have actually started fearing for my life if it weren’t so obvious the man who wanted me dead had trained extensively in the Inspector Clouseau School of Bumbling Assassins.

  I mean seriously, I’d heard the package ticking a mile away. And even if I hadn’t, the gigantic red bow on top was probably visible from space.

  But with all of the above taking up my time…

  I never ever got to go shopping!

  So coming downstairs late Sunday morning, I wasn’t in the most Prozac-y of moods.

  I’d spent Saturday night stopping a mugging, stopping a psychotic stalker, stopping a blind date gone bad, and stopping a drive-by shooting. I also stopped a teenager from pushing his grandmother out of the second-story window because she wouldn’t give him any more money.

  The nice old lady rewarded me with a chocolate chip cookie.

  My mood, however, took a significant swan dive from pissy to lethal, when I saw Nadia standing at the bottom of the stairs.

  “What the hell are you doing here?” I said politely.

  She smirked. “Looks like someone didn’t sleep very well. The bags under your eyes wouldn’t fit in an overhead compartment.”

  My face was as smooth and firm as a liposuctioned bottom—a cucumber face mask had seen to that. “As a matter of fact I did have trouble sleeping. What’s your excuse? You look positively haggard and fortyish.” Before she could reply I noticed the suitcases piled near the door. “What’s up with the luggage?”

  Nadia shot me a creamy smile. “Didn’t Tahir tell you? I foun
d him the most gorgeous apartment in Santa Monica. Now he won’t have to stay here.”

  “You’re a fast girl, aren’t you?” Pun intended.

  Nadia didn’t get it. “One of my closest friends is in the biz. She pushed through the paperwork. The three of us went to Sky Bar last night to celebrate.”

  It wasn’t fair! They went to Sky Bar, and the highlight of my night was dunking a cookie in a glass of milk.

  “You know that weird lightning trick you supposedly pulled the other night?” Nadia asked.

  I tossed my hair—I did that a lot. “What about it?”

  “I checked the weather report, and there were low clouds in some areas of the Southland. So it was just a coincidence.”

  “Whatever you want to believe,” I said coolly. I had better things to do than convince her I was a goddess. Well, technically, I didn’t really have anything to do, but that was beside the point. “Where’s Tahir now?”

  “The company’s set him up with a rental car. As soon as he gets back we’re off.”

  As if waiting for his cue, Tahir came through the front door twirling a set of keys. He was wearing a soft brown V-neck sweater and tan slacks. He looked better than a hunk of Godiva chocolate.

  “So you found a place?” I said, establishing my reign as the Duchess of Obvious.

  Tahir smiled. “Thanks to Nadia.”

  I felt an Ugh in my stomach. Not the Ugh of malevolence. More like the Ugh of nausea.

  He rubbed his hands together. “Let’s be off then. I want to get settled. Starting tomorrow I’m a working man.”

  “Right.” Nadia picked up one of the suitcases and began dragging it toward the door.

  “Umm, aren’t you going to help her?” I asked him.

  “She’s doing fine.”

  “Well, I guess it’s good-bye then,” I said stiffly, and held out my hand.

  Tahir ignored it and turned to Nadia. “Let me give you some help.”

  She pushed a wisp of hair off her sweaty brow. “Thanks.”

  “When you stack the luggage, make sure the heavier suitcases remain on the bottom.”

  “Okay.” Huffing and puffing, she managed to open the door with her elbow and haul the suitcase outside.

  Tahir returned to facing me. “It never would have worked out between us, you know.”

  Where did that come from?

  “What are you talking about?”

  He continued as if he hadn’t heard me. “I need someone who is proud of her cultural heritage, someone who respects her elders, someone who would make an excellent wife and mother.”

  Before I could respond he pulled me into his arms and kissed me.

  My first thought was—How very unexpected.

  My second thought—How dare he!

  My third thought—Wait until Nadia sees this!

  Then brain activity ceased altogether.

  I became pure sensation.

  It was as if Cupid had shot an LSD-tipped arrow straight into my heart.

  The softness of Tahir’s sweater…the citrus scent of his cologne…each individual muscle in his arms flexing, as he pinned me to him…and his mouth…soft and controlling, velvety and firm.

  I was the shy virginal heroine of a romance novel who suddenly turns wanton at the touch of the hero’s mouth.

  I was totally begging to be devoured.

  Then just when I was hoping he’d use some tongue—

  His lips moved to my ear, as his hands slid to my waist and squeezed. “Someone needs to go to the gym.”

  The Duchess of Obvious had met the Duke of Mood Killers.

  I jumped back. “You asshole!”

  He grinned. “Much better than a handshake, wasn’t it? No need to thank me.”

  And he was gone.

  I stood there for a few moments.

  As much as it sickened me mentally, physically, and metaphysically—

  I was going to miss the bastard.

  I was looking through all the containers in the fridge, deciding what to warm up for lunch, when the phone rang.

  I grabbed it and continued with my food-finding mission. “Hello?”

  “Maya.” It was my mom, and she didn’t sound happy. “Has Tahir left?”

  “Yeah about twenty minutes ago.”

  “Your father and I are at Dimple’s. We need to talk.”

  I promptly lost my appetite.

  Chapter 33

  AUNT DIMPLE and Uncle Pradeep lived in Anaheim Hills.

  Once, when I was a kid, I made the mistake of referring to the area as just Anaheim in front of my aunt. A long lecture ensued on the difference between The Hills and the rest of the city.

  I couldn’t understand what the big deal was. So what if she lived in Anaheim Hills? It was still north Orange County, and everyone knew south county, where we lived, was better.

  Even though it was Sunday, it still took me thirty-five minutes to get to her house. In Southern California, social conversation revolved around—not politics and the weather—but freeway changes, driving times, and traffic patterns. Whoever had to change the most freeways in order to get to a place won.

  Homes in Anaheim Hills were mansionlike, and the neighborhoods had an attractive woodsy feel.

  But I’d never move there.

  I needed to be within walking distance of the beach.

  I drove up a long windy driveway that diverged at the top. On the right was my aunt’s house. I parked behind my mom’s silver Mercedes, then rang the doorbell.

  I knew what this was about.

  Tahir had moved out, and it didn’t take a nifty third eye to see that nothing had happened between us—our earlier lip lock notwithstanding.

  Aunt Dimple opened the door and instead of her usual exuberant hug, she wore a very familiar pinched expression.

  Apparently it was contagious.

  “We’ve been expecting you,” she said.

  I stepped into the hall. The door shut behind me with a dull hollow thud.

  I wondered if I’d ever see daylight again.

  I was sitting in the middle of a cream-colored sofa.

  Across from me on an identical piece of furniture, were my mom and aunt. Between us was a glass-and-teakwood coffee table Aunt Dimple had purchased on her last trip to India. The same trip where she acquired a husband for yours truly.

  After shooting me a fatherly look of disapproval and murmuring something about potential, my dad left the room, a copy of Investor’s Business Daily tucked under his arm and a cup of tea in his hand.

  No one offered me any tea.

  I needed to think of something, anything, to distract my mom and aunt from their appointed topic. My gaze alighted on a new throw rug.

  Aunt Dimple had a passion for redecorating. The house was done up on a monthly basis. Since her children were married with homes of their own, and Uncle Pradeep was fairly easygoing unless you brought up proctology, there was no one to complain about the constant upheaval.

  Currently the decorating theme was Indian, hence the coffee table. Now that Indian culture was trendy again—even among actual Indians—consumers were rushing about in a state of monsoon madness, demanding anything and everything Indian. There was a bronze Ganesh on the mantel above the fireplace, heaps of embroidered cushions covered in mirror work, sandalwood boxes, incense holders, and carpets galore.

  With the exception of the coffee table, I was betting everything was from Pier 1 Imports.

  “Hey,” I said with forced interest, “is the throw rug new?”

  The pinched expression vanished from my aunt’s face and was instantly replaced with her familiar cherubic smile. “I just bought it yesterday. The matching pillows are still upstairs. I’ll get—” She stopped at my mom’s look.

  My cunning plan for distraction had failed.

  “Now, Maya, tell us exactly what’s going on between you and Tahir,” my mom commanded.

  I was so tempted to lie.

  In fact, it would be easy to blame it all
on Tahir. Pretend to be hurt over his indifference and all that gut-wrenching stuff. But there were two things wrong with that idea. One, it would get back to Tahir, and his gloating would transport me to the seventh realm of Hell, and two, I had to act like an adult occasionally. I would tell the truth.

  But not about the goddess thing.

  “We’re not interested in each other,” I began. What I wanted to do with his supple and taut body had no bearing on this conversation. “How could we be? You don’t bring two strangers together and expect them to like each other instantly.”

  My aunt’s face took on a baffled expression. “What strangers? Which strangers? I’ve met his parents. I’ve seen his astrological chart. You two are a perfect match!”

  “But that’s just it. How can we be a perfect match when we don’t even know each other?”

  “You didn’t take the time to know him,” my mom argued. “Leaving him alone in the restaurant. Running away from the party Gayatri gave especially for you—” A gasp from my aunt made her stop.

  Aunt Dimple’s hand was clamped to her mouth. Her eyes were filled with hurt. Slowly she lowered her hand. “I knew none of this! Maya, how could you? Do you know how hard I worked to make Tahir’s mother agree to this match? Do you know what I did? I—I lied!”

  “About what?” I asked.

  “I told her you were twenty-five.”

  “But Tahir knows how old I am. I told him.”

  Hand pressed to her forehead, Aunt Dimple fell back against the cushions. “All hope is now lost.”

  My mom ignored her sister-in-law’s theatrics. “Can you at least appreciate how worried your father and I are about you?” My dad strolled into the room, grabbed the plate of cookies, and left. “You won’t get married. You spend all your time shopping, going to the salon, and doing God knows what.”

  I opened my mouth to tell her about my new and exciting career, and stopped. Her worry would surely be exacerbated after discovering the fate of the world was in my hands. Not to mention the fact there was a fanatic out there trying on a regular basis to obliterate me.

  Besides, I didn’t need her criticizing my malevolence-fighting techniques.

 

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