Forbidden (The Djinn Wars Book 6)

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Forbidden (The Djinn Wars Book 6) Page 2

by Christine Pope


  After a second or two of struggle, he did let her go. She rolled over onto her hands and knees, not caring about the rough asphalt under her palms. Coughed and coughed, and spat foul-tasting mucus from her mouth. At last she sat up, chest still heaving, and saw that the stranger had clambered to his feet and stood a few paces away, hand shielding his eyes from the sun as he looked around.

  Jillian thought she should get up as well, although she didn’t know if her shaky knees would support her yet. A quick glance told her that she definitely wasn’t in Los Alamos — the air was warmer here, the hillsides dotted with the occasional juniper or piñon pine rather than the ponderosa forests that surrounded the mountain town. What buildings she could see looked shabby and rundown, not new and clean and neat the way so much of Los Alamos was. Anyway, if they’d ended up in Los Alamos, the djinn stranger with her would have shown signs of being affected by the djinn-repelling devices placed strategically around the town, and yet he stood there strong and straight, if unsmiling.

  A shudder went through her as she sent a quick, sidelong glance in his direction. He hadn’t made a move toward her once they’d landed here, and that was something. On the other hand, she didn’t quite know what he intended to do. She’d never been around a djinn before. But if he was one of the evil djinn who’d made it their goal to eradicate humankind from the face of the planet, surely he would have killed her as soon as they were away from…wherever that awful place had been.

  Not wanting to dwell on that prospect, Jillian made herself look around again. Something about her surroundings seemed halfway familiar, as though she must have come here sometime in the past. With an effort, she pushed herself to her feet, swallowing more of the warm, clean air as she did so. The familiar scent of damp earth came to her nose, telling her that it must have rained here fairly recently. Not that surprising, since it was August, and New Mexico was in the depths of monsoon season.

  If they’d actually ended up in New Mexico, of course.

  When she turned to look up the street, she saw a building painted turquoise blue, and a line of shops next to it, and she nodded to herself. Of course. She should have recognized the place right away. A glance over her shoulder, and she saw the stranger staring at her, those formidable brows of his pulled together.

  “Where have you brought me?” he demanded, hands planted on his hips. He did not look happy with her at all.

  Too bad she was too weak to run….

  Chapter Two

  Aldair had not known what to think when the strange woman appeared in front of him. He had spent what felt like an eternity in the outer circles, the place where he had been banished after his ignominious defeat at the hands of his hated half-brother Jasreel. But he knew at once from the way the woman gasped and choked on the poisonous air that she must be human. A djinn could live here, if uncomfortably. A human, on the other hand, would die within the minute.

  His quick actions had saved her, but he had not done so for any altruistic reasons. No, he had guessed that if she had the means to come here to the otherworld, then she could also get herself away — which meant she could take him with her. He would be free.

  Despite this primary motivation, he could not help but notice that this human woman, whoever she was, seemed as if she would be quite lovely when she wasn’t wracked with coughs. Her lips had been lush when he placed his mouth on hers to give her his breath. And the eyes that had stared up at him in gratitude were a dark, smoky gray, quite arresting.

  Even so, he would not allow himself to be distracted by her. The important thing was to get away from the otherworld, and she was his only means of doing so. And though at first she had seemed reluctant, or frightened, at the end she did what she must to activate the device and bring them here.

  Wherever that was.

  Before his exile, and long before the djinn had exterminated most of mankind, Aldair had traveled the world and seen many of its sights for himself. But he could not remember ever being in a place such as this. No grand city of concrete and stone and steel here, nor a wild forest or a lush grassland. They had landed on a narrow road in a valley of some sorts, with the sort of scrubby vegetation he knew grew in the southwestern part of the land that had once been the United States. The buildings he could see appeared quite ramshackle and old, the kind of wooden structures that had to have been built decades earlier, perhaps as much as a century before.

  He turned toward the woman, who by that point had gotten shakily to her feet. Even in the plain clothing favored by human females in this place and time, she was enticing enough, with her slim waist and the curves of her breasts, accented by the tight-fitting, sleeveless top she wore.

  But he would have to focus on those curves later. For now, he needed to know where they were.

  “Where have you brought me?” he demanded. “What is this place?”

  For a few seconds, she didn’t reply, but kept staring down the street, which, unlike the roads in Taos, had not been cleared of abandoned vehicles. A person could walk around them, but a car could never negotiate the choked pavement. Not that he needed to worry about such concerns; air elementals such as he had their own means of getting around.

  “I think we’re in Madrid,” she said at last.

  She pronounced the word strangely, with the accent on the first syllable and a flat “A” sound. Aldair felt his nostrils flare in derision. “Foolish woman,” he said, “I have been to Madrid. It looks nothing like this.”

  At this remark, she turned back toward him, a half-smile playing on her lips. “Not Madrid, Spain,” she replied, pronouncing it correctly this time. “Madrid, New Mexico. It used to be a mining town. Now it’s a little artist colony, tourist destination.” Her smile faded abruptly as she added, “Or at least it used to be…before.”

  He cared little for that. The Heat had done its work, and he had no energy to waste on the billions the disease had taken with it. “Where in New Mexico?” he asked sharply.

  For of course it would not do to be too close to Santa Fe, where a contingent of the One Thousand and their Chosen dwelt. Where that bastard Jasreel lived with Jessica Monroe, the woman who should have been Aldair’s own….

  “South of Santa Fe,” the woman he’d rescued said.

  “How far?”

  If she was puzzled by this line of questioning, she didn’t show it. She did give a little hack of a cough before she spoke, though. They would probably need to find water soon.

  “I’m not sure…maybe twenty, thirty miles? Sorry, I only came through here once. Jack and I were driving to Taos, and we thought it would be fun to come up the Turquoise Trail and have lunch in Madrid.”

  “Who is Jack?”

  “My husband,” she said, her expression darkening. “My dead husband, that is.”

  Aldair chose to ignore that comment. If she had survived the Heat, then of course she would also have suffered her own losses. He could do nothing about that. He had not been one of those who had concocted the disease, but he also had not much cared one way or another what happened to mankind. The only reason he had joined the ranks of the One Thousand was that his hated half-brother Jasreel had desired a woman of the Immune to be his Chosen, and Aldair had seen Jessica Monroe as a chance to get his revenge on the brother he despised. Unfortunately, none of those plans had gone the way Aldair had hoped….

  The woman coughed again, and he realized they could do little else until they found some water, and perhaps something to eat. If he had been an ordinary mortal, such a task would have been somewhat difficult, as he guessed that any food left behind here in Madrid after its inhabitants had died would be long since spoiled. Bottled water, however, should still be viable.

  He imagined holding a bottle in each hand, and in the next moment the wished-for water bottles had appeared. “It appears you need this,” he said, holding out one of the bottles to the woman.

  Her eyes widened. “What — ?”

  “It is a power of ours,” Aldair broke in. It see
med clear enough to him that she had never been around a djinn before. Not one of the Chosen, then, although she was certainly attractive enough to be one. Perhaps too old? That must be it. At any rate, he guessed she must be one of the survivors from Los Alamos. That made sense, since he could think of no other way she would have had access to one of those infernal devices. “We can summon the things we need for our sustenance. Go on, drink.”

  She hesitated for a moment, but her thirst clearly overcame her caution, for she went ahead and unscrewed the cap, and took a long drink, followed by another. “Better,” she said.

  “Good.”

  The device still lay on the ground where the woman had dropped it. Aldair went over and picked it up. A loose wire dangled from somewhere in its interior. It did not appear to be functioning at the moment, and he could not help but be glad about that.

  “I’ll take that,” the woman said.

  He shot her an amused glance. She was standing there trying to look at him quite sternly, but the effect was marred by the smudges of dirt on her cheeks and chin, the way strands of her warm, malt-brown hair had slipped loose from the clasp that held it back from her face.

  “I think not,” he returned easily. “I want to make sure it cannot send me back to the otherworld.”

  “It won’t,” she said. Her fingers tightened on the bottle of water she held. “The malfunction only occurs when the wire hits the circuit board in the wrong place. And it has to be switched on. I pushed the button to turn it off as soon as we landed here.”

  “Ah.” Well, that explained some of it. She’d had no real intention of going to the djinn plane, let alone that world’s dreaded outer circles. Only a mishap of some sort. How such a thing could have occurred, Aldair had no idea. He was not a scientist. And at the moment, he didn’t much care. The important thing was that he was free…for now, anyway. He had to pray that the elders would not be able to discover that their captive had escaped. “Even so, I will hold on to it.” He turned away from her, noted how the sun was beginning to dip behind the hills to the west. “In the meantime, I think it best that we find some shelter. How well do you know this town?”

  “I told you, I don’t.” From the set of her jaw, he could see she wasn’t particularly pleased that he had refused to surrender the device to her. “I only passed through once. We had lunch at a place called The Hollar.”

  Odd name, but he decided to leave that aside. It wasn’t important. “Did people live here, or is it only shops and restaurants?”

  “Yes, some did, I think. Not many. Probably no more than a few hundred at the most. But I remember seeing houses as we came into town. Mostly on the outskirts.”

  “Show me,” he commanded, and a flicker of irritation came and went in her storm-colored eyes. However, she didn’t protest, only pointed down the road.

  “That way, I think. But I’m not sure if I’m up to a hike right now. That crud feels like it’s still somewhere down at the bottom of my lungs.”

  It probably was. While he did not think she had suffered any lasting harm, he knew she would need some time to recover. Any real exertion would only lead to another coughing fit. What she really needed was to rest, to drink more water and have something to eat.

  Well, luckily he could prevent her from having to walk at all. Without responding, he tucked the device under his left arm, then went to her and wrapped his other arm around her waist. She let out a startled little gasp, and he said, “You had better hang on tight.”

  A frown pulled at her fine dark brows, but she did as instructed — after an obvious pause — and wrapped her arms around his waist. Then it was time to take to the air, the ground dropping away from them as he soared upward. She gasped again, followed by a cough, and her arms tightened about him, but she stayed calm and still enough as he flew over the cars choking the streets, past rows of shabby-looking shops and overgrown yards, past a large building that proclaimed itself to be The Mine Shaft. Perhaps another restaurant?

  They would have to leave that exploration for later, though. Now they were passing the southern border of the town proper. Aldair’s eyes scanned the ground below them, looking for someplace that would serve as a proper refuge. If forced, he would go to one of those ramshackle houses, but he would far prefer something bigger and newer.

  There. A dirt road wound off the highway and up a hill, and to a respectable-enough homestead, one with a largish house, a few outbuildings, a windmill.

  “That one looks good,” the woman said. “There are solar panels on the roof. That means it might still have power.”

  Such technical issues were not of too much concern to him, for he knew he could spare enough power to maintain a home of that size. Still, if it did have solar power, that meant he would not have to use much, if any, of his own energy.

  He brought them down into the open dirt area just beyond the garage. As soon as his feet touched the ground, he set down the woman. She removed her arms from around his waist and stepped away, looking somewhat pale. Had their flight disturbed her, or was her pallor only a result of her exposure to the air of the outer circles?

  When she spoke, though, she sounded composed enough. “Well, that made it a little easier.” Her voice was still rather hoarse, though, and she lifted the bottle of water to her lips and took a long swallow. “Guess we’d better look around.”

  “I agree.”

  Aldair moved past her to the house, which was not the sort of flat-topped stucco structure he’d come to expect in this part of the world, but rather a large two-story building with a sloped metal roof and wide porches that wrapped around three of its four sides. Two chimneys poked their way up from the roof, and well-grown trees — cottonwood and oak, apple and elm — shaded most of its windows.

  He went up the porch steps, the woman a few feet behind him. The door was locked, but that mattered little to him; he touched his fingers to the knob, and at once it obediently turned.

  The air inside was stale. All the windows were shut, which he found rather surprising. The Heat had struck at the end of September, a time of year when the weather should have been mild and pleasant. One would think the inhabitants of the house would have left their windows open. But he supposed that was a good thing, for at least the interior of the home hadn’t been damaged by rain or snow pouring in.

  Everything looked clean and neat, except for a layer of dust on all the surfaces. He approved of the interior, open and somewhat spare, with pale golden wood floors and walls painted only a few shades lighter. Abstract art in large splashes of color, a handsome square hearth with a slate surround.

  The floor creaked slightly as the woman moved past him, heading deeper into the house. He followed, partly because he wanted to see the rest of the place, and partly because he wanted to see where she was going.

  Through a dining area, and then on into the kitchen, which was also more spare and modern than he would have expected, given the overall rundown nature of the town where this house was located. Hard counters of polished stone, steel appliances.

  The refrigerator hummed away, and the digital clock on the microwave showed the time as 5:48. So apparently the solar power had held on all this time.

  Then the woman paused, her hand going to her mouth as she stared down at the floor in consternation. Aldair followed her gaze and saw a small pile of fine gray dust there, obviously the remnants of one of the home’s inhabitants.

  His mouth tightened. The place had been so neat and in order that he had found himself thinking perhaps no one had been here when the Heat struck, that possibly this had been someone’s second home.

  Apparently not.

  “I can take care of that,” he said, and waved a hand. Instantly, the back door opened, and a small breeze whisked the dust outside where it could trouble them no longer.

  Except…the woman appeared very troubled indeed. Her hand shook as she pushed one of those stray strands of hair away from her face, and she’d gone even paler. “Did you really have to do t
hat?”

  “Yes,” he said evenly. “What else would you have me do? That dust has been lying in here for almost two years. At least out in the wind and the sun it can become one with the earth again.”

  Apparently she hadn’t thought of it that way. Her eyes still looked haunted, but after a moment, she gave a reluctant nod. “I suppose so.”

  Good. At least it didn’t seem as if she meant to argue with him. He moved to the refrigerator and opened it, then wrinkled his nose at the foul smell that greeted him. Yes, the power had stayed on all this time, but most refrigerated items were never meant to be kept for several years.

  A wave of the hand, and it was all gone as well, the odor along with it.

  The woman made a shocked little sound before offering him a somewhat rueful smile. “Sorry,” she said. “I’m just not used to seeing a djinn in action.”

  “You come from Los Alamos, don’t you?”

  “Yes,” she replied. “I was about to ask you how you knew that, but then, I guess it’s the only place around here with humans who aren’t Chosen, isn’t it?”

  “That I know of, yes.”

  She nodded, looking resigned. Perhaps she had hoped there would be other survivors, but Aldair certainly knew of none.

  “I am Aldair al-Ankara,” he told her. “What is your name?”

  “Jillian. Jillian Powell.”

  “Well, then, Jillian,” he said. “I suppose we should see what else there is to find here.”

  Something about his name had sounded halfway familiar, although Jillian couldn’t quite place it. Maybe she’d overheard it in a conversation once. The djinn of Santa Fe couldn’t visit Los Alamos, for obvious reasons, and although Julia Innes returned there every few months to have a convo in person with Miles and Lindsay, and sometimes Shawn Gutierrez, it wasn’t as if Jillian had ever been invited to participate in those conversations. She had a semi-useful function in the lab, but she didn’t have anything to do with actually running the town.

 

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