by Gabi Moore
“It has crossed my mind once or twice.”
“Keep this in mind,” Jones told him. “The bad guys shoot back and they have better guns. But to return to what you asked, yes it would normally be a case for the FBI. As I said, they are looking into it at the top level, but sometimes they tap people like me where a local eye is needed. I had some people I know in Washington who needed a favor or two call me. We had a long talk and they told me the mall was attracting all kinds of attention because they suspected he was using it to get rid of money he’s not supposed to have. Happens all the time. You would be surprised how many dud records and lousy movies are the result of people dropping cash because they don’t want their accountant to ask questions.”
All three were silent at the table for a good minute. Each of them had more to tell, but were afraid of revealing too much information before they got what they wanted.
Dion couldn’t tell Detective Jones about the travels outside the time circles to Ancient Egypt and he suspected Jones knew a lot more about his uncle’s activities than he wanted to say. The only person who had little in the way of knowledge to contribute was Lilly. She had seen too much to just get up and walk away.
“So what do you want from me?” Dion asked him. “I barely know my uncle and we’ve only spoken one time.” Dion neglected to mention the one time was a few hours ago.
“Let me know if you find out anything that I can use,” Jones said. “I’ll watch out for you. I know you are still trying to find your parents and I might be able to find out some information you can’t. As I said, I know people in Washington. Kidnapping is a federal crime and it falls under the FBI’s jurisdiction, so they will have an open file on it. I’ll see what I can find out if you see what you can find out.”
“I’ll do what I can,” he told Jones. “You do the same.”
“Deal.” Jones turned to Lilly. “No need to tell your parents I said hello again. They’ll wonder why you’ve ran into me two days in a row down at the mall.”
He got up and walked away.
They saw him leave through the nearest exit doors.
“Does he change anything?” Lilly asked.
“Not in the least bit. All it means is that there is one more person to keep in mind. I don’t know if he’ll be of any use to me at all. Your detective friend doesn’t seem to realize my parents are imprisoned here.” Dion starred at the table in thought for a few seconds. “We need to go fetch Emily and Sean. They should be waking up soon.”
It was a short walk to the furniture store and the manager was on duty. As Dion and Lilly walked into the store, he signaled to them and they followed him to the back room. The store didn’t have very many patrons in that day and they passed into the section marked “Employees Only” without much notice.
“Been sleeping sound all day,” the manager told them while he opened the door. “I’ve checked in on them from time to time and they’re fine.”
Both were still asleep when they looked in. The manager didn’t turn on the light to the second back room where the display waterbed was kept. Emily was curled up to Sean and sleeping in peace. Sean had his arm around her and was in the land of Hypnos too.
“Both of you need to wake,” Dion said to them as he stood by Sean. “Time to go home.”
Sean opened his eyes a bit at a time and looked up. He seemed oblivious to where he was and rose up with a backstretch. Emily did the same and turned to look at Sean with confusion. She kicked her feet over the side of the bed, put her shoes on and checked to make sure her clothes were still in place.
“What am I doing here?” both of them said at the same time.
“Do you recall anything that had to do with the cheerleaders?” Dion asked them.
“The last thing I remember was facing down with them in the mall,” Sean told him. “I thought they had some nerve to try and corner us out there.”
“What about you?” Dion said to Emily who appeared to be a little bit groggy.
“It’s the last thing I remember too. We were standing there and they appeared, acting like they owned the place. What happened?”
“Elemental power,” he said. “They had a lot of it and tried to use what they had to get to me through both of you. Don’t worry, I’ve been granted mastery over the air element, so they will be of no further trouble.”
Dion turned again to Sean. “We need to talk later.”
Sean nodded in return.
“I hate to kick you out,” said the manager, “but I do need this room for customers. I’ve had to tell several people today where’re fixing a leak to get them to come back.”
“We’ll be out of here soon enough,” Dion said.
They walked Sean and Emily out into the parking lot with care. At one point Dion thought, he might have to hold onto Sean, as he still seemed to be in a daze. Emily was fully awake by now and kept her eyes ahead as if she tried to remember something. It was better she didn’t.
Once outside the mall and onto the walkway, which snaked down the parking lot, Dion sat everyone down and rested. The outside temperature had dropped, which worried him a bit as this was never a good sign in the spring. Dion looked up in the sky to see if there were any traces of the air elemental sylphs the miniature helicopter scared from the mall, but he couldn’t see them.
“When did you cut a deal with the elemental?” Dion demanded to know from Sean. “And don’t lie to me; I know she promised you a lot if you stole the map from me.”
Sean looked to the ground. Lilly thought he was about to cry.
Sean wanted to, but not in front of Emily. He’s laid there awake with her curled up to him waiting for them to return in the back room of the furniture company. If only he could repeat that hour over and over for the rest of his life, he’d know true peace. When he woke up he had a brief memory of what happened and how the cheerleader elemental had used him to get the map. He knew retribution was on the way, but he could deal with anything if Emily loved him. Although she was asleep, he didn’t care. Maybe someday she’d realize what he’d done and how it was all for her.
“You’ve got everything, Dion,” he snapped. “Both of these girls are crazy about you. Half of the girls in the school swoon when you walk by. I can’t even have one girlfriend. Do you know how many of them I’ve asked to the prom? Three, and I’m not going to ask another one. So, yes, I was pulled out by the hot cheerleader. I’m sorry that I don’t have your good looks and ability to work miracles, but it seemed the only way I’d ever have a girl show interest in me.”
Dion looked at him and tried his best not to feel pity. He’d just confessed to betrayal and for the most idiotic of reasons. Gifted? This ability was a gift? It was a gift to lose your parents and have to rescue them? He was talented because the very things he could do would have him branded a witch in the Middle Ages? All the poor fool had to do was learn how to dress right and be personable and he could live a normal life. Okay, his family might be a mess, but he wasn’t the only one out there with issues. Dion wanted to give him a lecture, but he just couldn’t bring himself to do it.
“I’ll let it go this time,” he told Sean. “No human alive can stand up to the combined power of twelve elementals of their class. We need to talk some more later.”
Dion turned to Emily. “And you can stop using Sean to do your dirty work! He nearly died to impress you. I’m sorry your home life isn’t the best, but you won’t solve it by playing boys against each other.”
“How dare you talk to me like that?” Emily roared back at him. “I’ve been snatched twice by these creatures just from hanging around with you. I’m still terrified what might come next. Just get me out of this place because I never….”
Her speech was cut short by the sound of a freight train. Except it wasn’t a freight train, it was a tornado.
The large funnel had materialized in the vacant field next to the mall. Sean turned around to see it began to move in the direction of the mall. Of course, the temperature drop and the c
loudy skies. The humidity. It was the very air sylphs banished by the toy helicopter. They were back now and headed to the mall with vengeance in mind. They were too dull to realize the mall was far more powerful than anything they could create. At most, the tornado would damage part of the mall, which his uncle could have fixed in a few weeks. But the people who stood in horror in the parking lot could be injured or killed.
Dion left his friends who were still in awe of the funnel and walked to the middle of the lot directly in its path.
The tornado began to leave the field and ripped through the grass and dirt as it came. The field was mostly dirt as it was stripped the previous year for the construction on the mall. A few trees still on the ground were tossed in the air and landed behind it in the barren grass.
Dion glared at the sylphs who were dancing in the middle of it and projected his will into the funnel. They stopped spinning around when they felt his presence and turned to face him. The funnel was slower now and not in motion. The sylphs were watching him and realized they were in front of someone who knew who they were. A command was issued to them from Dion and the tornado evaporated. The last Dion saw of the sylphs were vapor trails as the retreated to the upper atmosphere as fast as they could go.
The funnel was gone. Clouds rolled back in the sky and the sun began to shine through. The mall patrons in the lot, and inside, pressed to the windows, looked relived at the disappearance of the tornado. For years, people would claim a twister had come close to the mall, but vanished at the last minute. No one had a camera with them to take a picture and it soon became a legend told across the town.
Dion walked back to his friends. “We need to leave,” he said and walked towards the car. “We have things to do.”
Manipulator Of Elements - Water
Chapter 1
At eight in the morning, the day Dion appeared to seek the power of the third element, Officer Karanzen had an unexpected visitor in his office. He’d arrived at seven to check the roster from the night before. He prepared for a visit from Matt, the mall’s representative who dropped by on a regular basis to see if there were any security issues they needed to know about. He expected the little toadie to arrive again unannounced today because that punk Dion had managed to get into the mall and obtain what he needed the day before.
The mall owners had played a new game yesterday and told him to stay out of the way. They wanted to handle the local kid who caused them so much grief. He really didn’t care who gave them a hard time, it was all part of the job. Karanzen understood who the kid was and why he needed to be kept at bay, but the mall didn’t make his job easy. Instead of banning Dion from the mall, they wanted him to be allowed to stroll in with his friends and try to reach whatever place he needed to find. Both times, he wasn’t informed from where the kid had to be stopped until it was too late. They didn’t’ want Dion anywhere near the store managers who had the special powers he needed. They seemed to be threatened by this Dion character and Karanzen couldn’t understand why.
If the mall was sitting over the abyss, why didn’t they unleash one of the fiends which lurked inside it against Dion and his friends? There were all kinds of primordial beasts down there that would have him for breakfast if they were allowed to leave. If the mall owners were supposed to stand guard over the Gates of Hell, why couldn’t they let one of these monstrosities out every now and then? There were ways to keep them under control. Even Karanzen knew how to manage his true form until needed. It shouldn’t be much of an issue for the mall owners.
Karanzen had his uniform on and sat behind his desk, the plans of the mall spread out in front of him. If that kid made it back in here today, it left two sections he would try to reach. He betted on the Blue Sector, as he liked to call the part of the mall in front of him. He didn’t know exactly whom Dion needed to reach, but he was almost certain who it might be based on the kid’s activities the last time. Over the years, he’d developed a feel for these things...
“Come on in,” he yelled at the door upon hearing the knock. It had to be one of his guys, who else would be here this early in the morning? Bert for sure; he didn’t have any interests outside his job. He was always the first to clock in when he pulled the morning shift.
The door opened to reveal a man with silver hair and an expensive suit. He was about his age. Karanzen was good about sizing up a suspect. But this was somebody he needed to show some respect. He shot up in his chair and offered a hand, which the man took.
“Lieutenant Karanzen,” he addressed the man. “I’m the security officer for the mall. Is there something I can help you with today?”
“Just the person I want to see. Seth Bach, I am the chief stockholder in the company which owns the mall.”
Karanzen was right again. This was not someone to be taken lightly. He’d heard the name bantered about and it was someone to which you paid attention.
“Sit down, sir,” Karanzen told him. “I suspect this has to do with the problems we’ve had with some of the local kids?”
Bach seated himself at the chair next to Karanzen’s desk. He picked up a service award from it, looked the award over and returned it to the desk.
“It concerns one kid in particular. Dion Bach.”
Karanzen’s eyes flared. “You have the same last name?’
“That’s right. It is because he’s family. Dion is my nephew. He lives here in the area with my brother, his other uncle.”
“Is there something I need to know about? I was told by Matt there was some concern from the office this kid was allowed into the mall. I told him I would need a reason before he could be banned from it. Are you here to give me that reason?”
“You have some idea why this mall was built,” Bach said. “I know because I was the one that sent Matthew out to find you while the mall was under construction. There are two more people he needs to reach. One today, one tomorrow. If he should reach both of them, we can just forget about this mall and everything else in the world. He needs two more elemental powers to obtain the fifth one. Right now, I’m the only fifth element worker in the world. Another fifth element worker would be one too many.”
“Isn’t there a way you could prevent him from reaching the mall?”
“There are many ways I can keep him out of here, none of which I want to employ while I still have family. If it ever became known I’d caused Dion grief to prevent him from reaching the mall, the rest of my family would hunt me down. I don’t have a desire to be a rabbit on the first day of hunting season, Officer Karanzen. Do I make myself clear?”
“Very clear, sir.”
“I’m glad to hear that, officer. Now excuse me, I have a meeting with some investors.”
He stood up and left the room.
***
Dion picked up Lilly early the next morning. She was waiting for him out front of her father’s house in the driveway. She jumped in, slammed the door and kissed him on the lips before she sat down in her seat. It was still not ten in the morning, but some of the neighbors were already out working on their yards.
Dion noticed an older neighbor lady glared at him when Lilly climbed into the van. She taught world literature at the high school and didn’t like him. He’d taken her class last year and found it to be weak in the selection. She lowered his grade because he had the audacity to ask her why an obscure Greek poet from the Middle Ages had more significance than Chaucer or Yukio Mishma.
“Everything alright with your parents?” Dion asked Lilly as he put the gear in drive.
“We had a long conversation,” she said. “I hadn’t thought about some things in a long time. Those cheerleader elementals brought them into my head. I’m not sure if it’s all resolved or not, but we’ll talk some more this evening.”
The previous days’ encounter with the cheerleader elementals, the physical representation of air sylphs, was intense, but not as bad as when they had to rescue Emily from the ghoul cleaners the day before. It didn’t matter now that Dion had two of hi
s four elemental powers. This would allow him to pursue the rare fifth elemental power when the time came.
He was concerned about the effects it might have on his other friends who went along on his quest. Sean seemed to be in better spirits when he dropped him off last night. Now that Sean had finally opened up to Emily, she had the option to accept what he felt for her or breaking it off. If nothing else, it would allow them the opportunity to move on in life. Officer Karanzen and his goon squad hadn’t been around that much. It could change once word was passed up to the clock tower in the center, where the offices of the mall were located, that his security guards failed a second time to prevent Dion from obtaining one of his elemental powers. And they’d learned the man who created the mall was none other than Dion’s own uncle, Seth Bach. As far as Dion knew, his parents were still imprisoned in the clock tower at the center of the mall.
“Do you want to talk about it?” Dion asked Lilly as they headed over to Emily’s house to pick up her and Sean.
Both Sean and Emily insisted on returning to the mall with him and Lilly the next day. They wanted to see the quest through to the end. Dion needed two more powers from the elemental grandmasters before he had all four abilities and the strength to tackle the fifth, which no elemental worker had done in generations. His uncle claimed to possess the power of the fifth element, but had learned it by the dreaded left hand path method. His uncle had not mastered the other elements before it.
“They finally realize I’m not six years old,” Lilly explained to Dion. “Mom told me last night the hardest thing she ever did was admit my sister was a woman and could make her own decisions. I think they want to protect me from the world, but I told them the way to do it is not by locking me away.”
Dion didn’t know how to respond. He’d always had a very open relationship with his parents and never got into trouble in school. He decided years ago it had to do with the way the different element workers were placed into the world at large. You had to be careful that no one saw you create a homunculus or light a campfire with a salamander. It tended to make a kid listen to what his parents had to tell him or her. He remembered watching a nasty water nymph elemental near a group of kids swimming in a lake. Dion was able to coax them all back onto the bank until the elemental left. He was relieved he didn’t have to tell them the reason.