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One Wish Away: Djinn Empire Complete Series

Page 53

by Ingrid Seymour


  No one came.

  Akeelah laughed. “All the members of security have been . . . reassigned. But they will be here shortly. You will be thrilled to see them, I’m sure.”

  The man looked around at his band members, unsure of what to do. He gave a hesitant step forward. Akeelah tilted her head to one side as if asking “and what do you intend to do?” He stopped, face twisted in a cowardly expression.

  She turned to the crowd and spoke without preamble.

  “The world begins anew today.” She had no microphone, but her voice rang loud and clear throughout, and every one of the 50,000 spectators heard her as if she stood next to them. Many cheered, thinking it was all part of the show, but it was a half-hearted demonstration compared to the hysterics they had displayed just moments ago. Most stood mute, not quite understanding the prickling feeling in their gut, the one that told them to run.

  “Today, humans will begin to understand their place, and it all starts right here with an extremely necessary culling.”

  Culling? Culling? Culling?

  The word ran from mouth to mouth, both as a bewildered question from those who didn’t know its meaning, and an incredulous one from those who understood it all too well.

  “Humans have become a plague upon the Earth,” she continued, explaining herself with a tired, matter-of-fact tone, like a teacher going over an old lesson. “For the sake of human rights, your species—undeserving as it is—has run amok, reproducing like cockroaches, but contributing far less. And in fact, destroying many of the wonders this physical world has to offer, destroying The Creator’s masterpiece.

  “You have abused the gifts denied to my kind.”

  Her kind? Her kind? What kind?

  “You have spewed your progeny without restraint and continue to seek greater longevity, in spite of the starving masses all around the world. You have filled the planet with your monstrous creations and have called it progress.”

  “Yeah! Damn right!” someone screamed in the crowd.

  A deep hush fell over those around him.

  Akeelah stalked along the stage, her legs lithe like a predator’s.

  “So I have resolved that it is your turn to be hunted, to be cut down, to be brought to the brink of extinction. It is time you taste the bitterness of your own poison. All while I get my wish.” She pursed her lips, innocently, making it clear it was her wish that really mattered, not all the other things she had just said.

  Her body gave a violent jerk, then. The crowd gasped as she fell to her hands and knees. She shook her head violently. The tress of her white hair came undone, spilling around her face. The hair took a life of its own, each strand a writhing snake that slithered along her back, arms and legs and slowly became fur, completely covering her black skin. Her hands morphed into two massive paws, tipped with blood-red claws. A long tail sprang from her back-end. Her face molded into a wild feline visage.

  She roared, a deafening, hungry growl that turned the stands into spilling ant nests. Delighted, she gave another roar, a command to her half-djinn subjects to spring into action. They had been waiting patiently as she gave her speech, but now, they also morphed, taking the shape of white tigers.

  Fangs bared, they launched for the stampeding crowd, snatching them, mauling them, stealing their lives. The stands were painted red, and soon flowed like rivers of death and gore.

  Security helped too, making sure no one was left alive. The once-guards had no other choice after Akeelah’s bastard djinn used their magic to give them large fangs, claws and a killing hunger.

  Hiding from this new spectacle, the band huddled together behind the drum set, praying the tigers sated themselves on screaming fans and left them alone. Akeelah ignored their cowardice. Their time would come. Instead, she paced to and fro on the stage, her emerald tiger eyes on the carnage below.

  Her muscles yearned to pounce. Her mouth watered. But she tried to be content with the fact that this was her doing. She had made these half-djinn after Gallardo gave himself to her. She had dreamed it all. Her army was small. Thirty subjects, all capable of killing humans, most terribly unwilling, but hopelessly bound to her will. Later, she might need more of them but, for now, they were more than enough. Very little was needed to cause terror, and there was no doubt . . .

  Terror had been born tonight.

  It breathed and writhed like a demon summoned from the pits of hell. She heard it in the raw screams, the pathetic pleas, the wet sound of tearing flesh.

  It was glorious.

  From here on out, all it had to do was grow and spread, and like a proud mother, she would make sure to nurse it, to send it on its way to roam and be free.

  With a mere thought, she wished the domed stadium ceiling to disappear. Terror was better served with an audience, and she would procure one. She used her magic to project the scene onto the thick blanket of clouds that covered the sky. The gruesome sounds of the carnage accompanied the images, spreading over a mile radius. It reached all the New Orleans residents who were close enough to The Superdome. In shock, they heard and watched a show worse than any ever presented at the Roman coliseum. Though, in this instance, the gladiators didn’t stand a chance.

  The wild beasts had every advantage.

  Claws ripped clothes and muscle alike. Gaping jaws silenced screaming throats. Those who didn’t succumb to the beautiful animals trampled their neighbors in a useless effort to escape the madness. No one was allowed to escape. The gates were magically shut. Running and hiding were useless against Akeelah’s magic.

  The river of blood grew thicker. People slipped, struggled to get back on their feet, then gave up and curled up in the fetal position, wailing.

  Traffic around the stadium came to a halt. Drivers and passengers exited their vehicles and raised their eyes to the sky. More came out of the adjacent buildings and stood in the middle of the street, mouths agape, hairs standing on end. Those closer to the stadium heard the actual cries of the victims and knew in their guts the images were real, not some publicity stunt to advertise the next violent Hollywood blockbuster.

  Soon, all evidence that the tigers had once been white was gone. Their open mouths dripped with blood, as did their fur. Silence fell over the stadium, a shroud heavy with spent youth and severed life.

  Akeelah closed her eyes and reveled in the lack of sound and the metallic scent wafting through the air. After a moment, she spoke again, an eerie female voice slipping over a rough feline tongue.

  “Bear witness. Spread the word,” she said to those who had witnessed the massacre on the innocuous clouds.

  Like a master magician, she performed her next trick. Her paws, tail and fur slowly disappeared. Her body stretched upward and morphed again, leaving behind the same ebony giant that had set things in motion. Her voice rang over the city. Her image shone on the clouds and people saw, witnessed, through their eyes and their phones.

  It wouldn’t take long for the word to spread.

  “Today, a new rule commences. Behold this is the age of the Djinn Empire.”

  2

  Marielle

  One week was an eternity without magic.

  We had learned this fact while traveling from Dubai to New Orleans by regular means alone.

  Ironically enough, one week was also plenty of time for the world to lose its shape and become a warped, twisted place filled with walking nightmares.

  I looked over my shoulder, away from the closed door in front of me. A chill trickled down my spine, and it had nothing to do with the dreary February weather. I couldn’t shake the feeling that someone was watching me. Everywhere I went, there it was, like an irritating hangnail. This time, at least, I knew the sensation wasn’t unfounded. Abby was sitting in the parked car, keeping an eye on me and the dark apartment building, ready to blow the horn and alert me if anything suspicious happened.

  After a deep breath, I faced the door again and gently knocked. I waited, heart lodged in my throat, for someone to let me in. No light
came through the heavily curtained windows, but that didn’t mean no one was home. Not these days.

  There was a small rustle behind the closed door. Lifting my chin—something that didn’t come easy after a week of pressing it close to my chest—I looked straight into the peephole below the zero of the apartment number: 202.

  “It’s me . . . Marielle,” I whispered.

  A thick silence hung in the air for a long moment. The door didn’t open. I frowned, wondering if I’d imagined the rustling sound. Or maybe . . .

  I snatched the ball cap off my head, realizing they probably couldn’t see my face. Dark hair spilled over my shoulders.

  Please, be here.

  There was a click. The door sprang open. An arm reached out and yanked me in. I staggered into the apartment as the door slammed behind me, leaving me in complete darkness. My heart throbbed in my hands. Instinctively, I crouched, ready for a fight.

  A familiar voice spoke from the pitch black, “Señorita Mariella!” A pair of arms wrapped tightly around me, and the sweet scent of lavender filled my nostrils.

  “Anita!” I exclaimed, reciprocating the embrace.

  Someone struck a match. A small light burst into existence and illuminated Javier’s trustworthy face.

  “Jesus, Maria y José. You’re safe, Señorita.” He looked as glad to see me as I felt to see them. “Where have you been? Your papá was worried sick.”

  “Where is he, Javier? Where is my dad?” Leaving no time for pleasantries, I jumped right into my foremost concern.

  Under the soft, orange glow of the candlelight, dark half-moons underlined Javier’s eyes. He already looked tired and worried, but at my question, his features grew gloomier still. Anita took a step closer to her husband, face twisted in concern.

  “Mr. Robert go looking for you, Señorita?” Javier said. “He says he will try to ask in your school, that maybe your friends know where to find you. That was a day before The Superdome Massacre.” That’s what the newspapers had dubbed it—when there were still newspapers to care and report what happened around the world.

  I cursed under my breath—just what I’d been afraid of.

  “But he . . .” Javier paused and measured his words, “he do not come back. And then . . .” he trailed off and shrugged hopelessly.

  And then the world went to hell, I thought bitterly.

  I took a few steps backward, collapsed on the sofa and ran my fingers through my hair.

  What now? What now?

  If only it hadn’t taken us this long to get back from Dubai. We’d barely made it to Copenhagen when all hell broke loose. From there, finding a way to New Orleans had become a feat of determination and intense bribery.

  It took several days before we were able to charter a private jet to fly us to the US. The pilot asked for an exorbitant amount of money and refused to go anywhere further than New York City—no way in hell he would land anywhere near Louisiana. Hell had started there, after all.

  Once in New York, we procured a car, a large Hummer, and drove south like demons, straight to Jardin Noir where I hoped to find Dad. But he hadn’t been there.

  That’s when we decided to separate; Faris to go to his Garden District house to look for Dad, and Maven to look for his mother and twin brother. The plan was to meet back at Live Oak Plantation, which would be far safer than the city. The old plantation house had been in the middle of being remodeled and lacked the most basic comforts, but that was the least of our concerns.

  Abby and I kept the Hummer, and the guys took my Prelude and Grandpa’s old beat-up truck which had been parked at the nursery and, miraculously, still worked. It had been hard to separate as soon as we got to New Orleans, but it would have taken too long to go together to four different places.

  Besides, it was clear Faris didn’t want any of us anywhere near the Garden District. Akeelah knew his place, and that made it the most dangerous spot we had to visit.

  Driving through the city had been an eerie and demoralizing affair. New Orleans was in shambles, the streets strewn with chaos: shattered windows, burnt cars, broken barricades, all the evidence of Akeelah’s destruction.

  Abby and I had exchanged charged glances as we drove to her parents’ house. But we didn’t say anything. There were no words. We got there with the plan to convince Abby’s folks to come with us to Live Oak, but to our surprise, they turned down our invitation, too scared to step out of their house. We begged them, but there was no changing their mind. Abby stormed out of the house yelling that she hoped they all got what was coming to them.

  After that we’d come here, my hopes of finding Dad with Javier’s family riding very high.

  A burning sensation rose behind in my chest. I took a deep breath, tried to fight the surging nausea.

  Where are you, Dad? Where are you?

  I prayed Faris had found him in his Garden District house. Though I wasn’t very hopeful—not when Faris had called Dad at the nursery and warned him not to go back there.

  A dark figure entered the living room from the side. I jumped to my feet, hackles standing on end. But it was only Benito, Javier and Anita’s fourteen-year-old son, who Faris had rescued from Mexico when the boy got involved with gangs last year. He came to stand next to his mother, rubbing sleep from his eyes. Anita draped an arm around Benito’s slight frame and kissed him on top of the head. She cooed something in Spanish that I couldn’t decipher.

  Fighting the paralyzing fear of losing Dad, my only living relative, I stood to my full height and squared my shoulders. I had to keep moving, had to act. Constant motion was the only reason I was still functioning. It was what kept me going, holding gruesome thoughts and fear at bay.

  “We have to get out of here,” I said. “You’ll be safer with us.”

  “But Señorita,” Javier protested, “is not safe. Not with what’s happenin’ out there.” He hooked a finger toward the front door, as if a wild jungle awaited on the other side, which I supposed it did. “Truth be told, you shouldn’t be rattin’ the streets.”

  I smiled sadly. “Rattin’ the streets.” Javier had probably learned that expression from Grandpa Arthur.

  “You should be indoors,” Javier continued, “With the deadbolt on.”

  “A deadbolt won’t stop them.” I hated stating the truth so plainly, hated to challenge their false sense of security. Like everyone else, they were lying to themselves in an effort to stay sane, but this wasn’t a time for half-truths.

  This was the time of reckoning.

  Javier didn’t argue. By now, everyone had seen what Akeelah and her evil creations were capable of. The Djinn had made sure of that by broadcasting every single one of her atrocities to the entire world. Now terror reigned by her side while people locked their flimsy doors and hid under thick blankets of denial.

  “You’re gonna have to trust me, Javier.” The gravity in my voice made him exchange a glance with his wife.

  “Uh . . . “ He rubbed the back of his neck and seemed to consider carefully.

  “I’ll explain everything. I promise. Now, just trust me. Pack a few things, especially any food you have, and let’s get out of New Orleans.”

  He nodded. “Okay, okay,” he said nervously. He turned to his family. “Nos vamos de aquí. Vayan a empacar.” He got them into action, ushering them to their bedrooms with instruction to pack.

  Ten minutes later, we were all piled into the Hummer where Abby had been waiting, tapping her long, black fingernails against the steering wheel. Javier and Anita did a double take at the sight of my friend, and I didn’t blame them. Abby looked nothing like the girl they’d met when she used to visit Jardin Noir. It seemed that the darker the situation grew, the more goth, rather than punk, she became. Long gone were the days when she would have chosen pink as her nail and hair color. Now, black was king, adorning her fingernails, hair, clothes, eye shadow, lipstick.

  Abby turned and faced the back seat. “Hi there,” she said, displaying a cute set of teeth, her petite
body looking like that of a five-year-old at the head of a tank. Goth didn’t suit her at all.

  Everyone greeted her meekly. From the way they looked back at their apartment, it was clear they thought that leaving was the wrong choice.

  “And who is this cute little guy?” Abby eyed Benito. He stared shyly at his hands.

  “Oh, this is my son, Benito,” Javier said proudly.

  Abby reached an arm over her seat, got a hold of Benito’s chin and squeezed until she gave the boy fish lips. “You’re so cute I could eat ya up,” Abby said as if she was talking to a toddler.

  I shook my head at her, thinking Benito wouldn’t appreciate being treated like a little boy. He was already fourteen, even if he didn’t look like it. He hadn’t hit puberty yet and still had a soft, round face. He also had a small frame that made him look no more than ten years old. If Abby had known his real age, I doubt she would have offered him the same overly friendly treatment.

  To my surprise, shy Benito grinned and shook himself like a young bird, ruffling its feathers. He didn’t speak much English yet but, clearly, he was imagining a different meaning than Abby had intended.

  “Don’t embarrass the boy,” I said, giving Abby’s arm a small tug.

  Abby let Benito go and faced the wheel. “Just being friendly.” She pouted innocently and started the engine. “Any news about your dad?”

  I shook my head, eyes trained on the glove compartment.

  “Sorry, Elle.” Abby touched my hand briefly, then pulled from the parking space.

  No one spoke as we drove out of New Orleans. We just stared out the window into the uncertain night. No one “ratted the streets” anymore. The city was dead. Deader than I had ever seen it, even during hurricane evacuations.

  In the eerie silence, traffic lights turned from green to yellow to red for no reason. I imagined I could hear them switching from one color to the next. When Abby approached a red light, she slowed down but never stopped. Instead, she cautiously checked the intersection and ran the light. She could have crossed them blindly, for all the difference it made.

 

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