faerie rift chronicles 01 - faerie rift (41 page)

“What do you plan on doing next?” his aunt asked him.

Lilly could see the concern in her face.

“I have to go back there tomorrow,” he told her.

“Go back? After what happened today?”

“I need to see the next elemental grandmaster. The one who is the grandmaster of the air elementals.”

“But why?” his aunt cried out. “Isn’t having the ability of one enough. Your Uncle Rich is an air worker and he’s never felt the need to try and obtain grandmaster status.”

“I know, but I have to do this. I need all four of the elemental master abilities.”

“All four?” his uncle said. “Why?”

“Because I will need them in order to obtain the fifth elemental mastership. And I want that because I learned today what I always suspected; my parents are being held captive inside that place. It’s up to me to get them out. I can only do that if I have all of the elemental powers… including the fifth one.”

“I don’t think I’ve heard of someone working the fifth element in hundreds of years,” his uncle said. “It’s the most dangerous one there is. Can’t you find another way to get them out?”

“No, the builders are in the middle of the mall in that clock tower. I think they’ve imprisoned my parents in there. They kidnapped them in hopes it would stop me from acquiring all the elemental powers. Well, they’ve given me a reason to obtain them all.”

His aunt and uncle were quiet. They realized Dion had determined his path and there was nothing they could do to prevent it.

“One more thing,” Dion said to them.

“What?” his uncle asked.

“I need to borrow the gas can. Lilly is going to run me back to the van with it after we stop at the gas station before it closes. The thieves who tried to steal my tire also drained my gas before they left. I didn’t learn about it until we tried to start the van.”

His uncle smiled.

“Well, that went pretty well,” Lilly told Dion as she drove him back to the mall. They’d managed to find one gas station still open in time to fill up the gas can. “But really, I don’t see why you bother with a van.”

“Why?” he asked her as they pulled up to a red light.

“Anyone who can summon the power of the earth should be able to travel anywhere he wants and do what he wants. I can’t imagine what you’ll be able to do when you get those other abilities.”

“Just you wait and see,” he told her. Then Dion leaned over the seat, kissed Lilly on the lips, and held it.

The light turned green, but the car didn’t move until another car pulled up behind them and honked them forward.

It wasn’t long before they reached their destination. Lilly got out of her car and helped Dion pour the gas in the van, then returned the can to the trunk of her car.

“It’s late,” Dion told her as he wrapped his arms around her. “You need to go home.”

“What time should I be here tomorrow?” Lilly asked.

“Let’s get here nice and early at nine in the morning.”

They kissed one final time.

Soon, each was on their way home, with plans in the making for the next Elemental Grandmaster.

Manipulator Of Elements – Air

Chapter 1

“Jupiter Hitch?” Lilly asked Dion. “His name is Jupiter Hitch?”

“That’s what I’m told,” Dion said as they pulled up in front of the mall in his van. The tank was now full after he’d gone out the previous evening with his uncle and filled it.

His aunt and uncle were still opposed to Dion’s return to the mall. After learning about his experience the previous day with the ghouls, the security officer who wasn’t human, and the revelation that his parents were imprisoned inside the mall, they pleaded with Dion to stay put. If it were that dangerous, why would he return alone?

But as Dion made clear, there was no other person who could free them. The mall builders created the shopping center over the abyss and it was obvious that they feared his abilities. The only way to keep Dion at bay was to hold his parents captive. Or so they thought. Instead, it had the opposite effect. He was more determined now than ever to free them.

The mall rose from the field as if it was constructed as a fortress on a plain to guard the approach to a city. Although the lands around it were flat, it was also possible to imagine the interstate next to it a great river. The cars racing down it resembled fish in the river.

It was early, but the sun was already in the sky, drying the morning dew without leaving too much of an imprint in the soil. If you were still enough, it was possible to see the rabbits in the grass, munching on whatever they could find. Not too far away, from where the mall was built was a quiet stream, which wound its way to the Miami River in silence. It would appear from concrete pipes and vanish into them over and over again. The hand of humanity made itself known felt by the sounds of concrete trucks bouncing to the latest subdivision under construction.

Dion parked the van close to the entrance of the second part of the mall, the part that corresponded to the element of air. Now that the powers of the earth elementals were bestowed on him, he needed to obtain the other three. Only when he had all of them could he hope to master the fifth element, which ruled in the center of the mall. He had no hope of freeing his parents until he had the power of it under control. As Dion was once told, no element worker had mastered this fifth element in hundreds of years; his difficulty could not be understated.

Dion stepped out of the van and leaned back on the metal of its side. He looked at the mall and closed his eyes. It was there, the power of the element of air in the section he faced. He could feel it in the sky and around the entrance. He could see the small air gusts and wind elementals frisk around the mall and make patterns over the ground. They didn’t have much form, but these did not concern him. They were useful if you need to summon up a breeze for a kite or to push a sailboat, but not for much more. The stronger ones where higher up in the atmosphere. They were not easy to manipulate. Work with them the wrong way and you could get a lightning bolt sent down on top of your car. One had to be very careful with the elementals of the upper atmosphere.

“Do you feel anything?” Lilly said as she noticed Dion’s expression. He seemed quiet and relaxed.

“Just the sylphs who are already outside.”

“What?” Dion’s terminology drove her a little mad sometimes. This was only the second day she was with him, but the adventures they’d experienced together the day before were enough for two lifetimes.

“Sylphs,” he told her. “Air elementals. Some people call them fairies. But they’re a lot different from what you’ll find in literature. No, they don’t go around with sugarplums and they don’t have wings. They don’t have much material form at all. I see them a lot around fast air currents and in air ducts. It’s how I did the falling card trick with the police detective. I found one and cut a deal with it to knock over some stacked cards in return for allowing it to leave the building. They’re pretty easy to please. At least the smaller ones which are close to the earth. I don’t know a lot about the ones who live in thunderclouds, but they seem to be quite dangerous.

There’ll be more elementals inside and I have no idea what form they will take. The ghouls can’t bother us again as I have dominion over them. I can use them if I need to, but I don’t want to get dependent on them, it won’t look good to the other Elemental Grandmasters.”

“Do these new elementals inside the mall have any special forms? Or do they all float around the skylight?”

“We’ll know them when we run into them There is no way the mall builders will allow me to run around inside without some kind of opposition. We didn’t realize the cleaners where ghouls until we got close to them. I suspect it will be the same way with any other kind of elemental we run into today.”

Dion wore the same jeans jacket he had on the previous day. It matched the flared pants he wore too. Although he didn’t have any kind of logo on the back of his jacket, no one would’ve mistaken him for a mechanic or someone who worked with machine tools. Dion was refined, but not as obnoxious as the officers’ kids from the local air base. They let everyone know that their families shopped at the commissary and had access to all kinds of things civilians didn’t. Lately, a completely new class had moved into town: the university brat. With the rise of the state colleges built around the Midwest, academics from the coasts were flocking to the hinterland in search of work in their fields.

“So, what do you know about this Jupiter Hitch?” Lilly asked.

“According to Ms. West, he’s the Grandmaster of the Air Element. He’s the one I’ll need to meet if I’m to be granted all the powers which come with the second element.”

Athena West was a pharmacist who ran the Alchemist Shop inside the mall. She was also the Grandmaster of the Earth Element. It was she who’d given Dion his power over the earth elementals the day before. The entire day was spent in an attempt to reach her. The builders of the mall were intent to keep Dion away from her store. The ghouls, who were employed as cleaners, did everything possible to block him from reaching his destination. They’d even kidnapped their friend Emily and taken her away. It took an underground trip to the subbasement where the ghouls lived to free Emily. Lilly doubted her friend would ever come anywhere near the mall again.

Lilly was smartly dressed that day in platform shoes which added a few inches to her height. She didn’t want the real high ones that gave her an extra six inches, as they were difficult to walk in around the mall. Her blouse showed enough shoulder, but not too much. It was hidden beneath the jacket she wore over it. No reason to go on a hunt for an element grandmaster and appear to be a slob. She doubted at college it would be easy to keep up appearances when she started in the fall.

“Where do we find this one?” she asked Dion.

“He owns a hobby shop. It’s on the first floor of the mall, so we don’t have to deal with the escalators this time. Pretty nice place from what I can remember. Miniature airplanes, model rockets and toy trains. There was a hobby shop near me when I was growing up in California. I still remember buying those tiny bottles of paint to decorate model airplanes.”

Lilly never had much interest in model airplanes or rockets when she was younger. It was just not on her radar. But if it helped Dion locate his grandmaster, she was willing to help him. By now, she trusted him and his abilities.

“You think he moved here to the mall when it opened?” she asked him. “I heard something about it at the time.”

“I talked to Uncle Rich about it last night. The mall went out of their way to get him to move inside it. They claimed the reason was because they didn’t want bad relations with the local businessmen, but I think there was much more. They especially wanted him inside the mall because he’s an elemental grandmaster. They went to a lot of trouble to get them to move inside and reorganized their shops. Ms. West’s pharmacy was somewhere down in Scipio. They did the same to all of them: made them an offer they couldn’t refuse. Now the mall builders have all the elemental grandmasters under one roof, where they can keep them all in sight.”

Jupiter Hitch was an older man who opened the hobby store after he retired as an engineer from the local air base. He’d worked as a civilian contractor for the United States Air Force after he graduated college in 1940 with a degree in engineering from a prestigious technical college. World War II kicked off almost a year later and his skills were instantly in demand. He spent the war in uniform and cashiered out to a growing aeronautical industry. In 1946, he found himself working for a reclusive millionaire turning out experimental aircraft. When his designs had a high success rate, he was promoted to the head of the department. Hitch quit when his employer refused to listen to his concerns about a high altitude aircraft they were trying to test. When an entire crew was killed in an experimental design, he quit and moved east to work for the government.

Hitch became the elemental grandmaster in the middle of the Second World War after the other elemental workers decided he possessed extraordinary abilities with the air elementals. He provided information that allowed American bombers to avoid storms on the way back from missions over Germany. No one in the American government knew where he came by his information, but it saved thousands of lives.

He used his air elemental insider information to build better planes in the years after the war. The sylphs could tell him instantly if a particular airfoil design had the ability to work. The air elementals of the higher atmosphere would let him know about conditions in their part of the clouds. In return, he let them know when any kind of testing might happen in the elementals’ part of the sky. During the nuclear tests, this information was crucial to the elementals. He was also instrumental in bring the nuclear atmospheric tests to a halt. His reasons were humanitarian, but he also understood how furious the atomic explosions made the elementals.

All the years he worked for the air base, Hitch experimented on small model aircraft. He became a legend among the tiny aircraft builders, people who flew small model planes with miniature gas engines. Due to the air base and its need for skilled technical people, there was a large local community of model aircraft and rocket enthusiasts. On any given Sunday, he was down at the city flying circles or launching another model rocket into the air. Hitch never married so he had plenty of time to devote to his hobbies.

When he retired, he opened up a hobby store, which allowed him to pursue what he really enjoyed: building the latest and best model aircraft he could find. It also allowed him a cheap way to buy parts. After he hired some people who knew about the business and sales side, it allowed him to do what he wanted all day long. The hobby store was quite profitable and allowed him to interact with other hobbyists. In time, his store, Hobby Visions, became a popular source of tools and material. Hitch would also put out a catalogue that became known all over the world.

“Good morning,” a voice said to their left and they turned to see Edward again. This time he wore a USAF uniform. The rank said “Major” on the nametag.

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