faerie rift chronicles 01 - faerie rift (71 page)

BOOK: faerie rift chronicles 01 - faerie rift
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Gabriel felt a familiar tingle when he walked past the bench where several young people sat. He stopped and felt something strange come over him. It was powerful, this pulse of energy. No one he’d ever met before had such a strong sense of elemental ability. He stopped walking and let it sink into him. The power originated from one of the kids on that bench. Impossible. It took years for most people to achieve a fraction of this level of background energy. It could only mean one thing: there was a natural elemental manipulator next to him and he was on his way to obtaining all the necessary powers to achieve mastery over the fifth element.

Which one could it be? He faced them and tried to decide. They were talking about something among themselves. It couldn’t be the girl it the tracksuit, she was another elemental. There it was, he could feel it. It had to be the tall boy, the one with the long jet-black hair. Gabriel looked at him again and felt the power this kid commanded. It was stronger than anything he’d ever sensed from a mortal human before. He needed to talk to him. His presence here had something to do with those nymph girl and human boy combinations he saw walking through the mall.

“Hello,” he said as he walked up to the group. “None of you know me. I’m Captain Gabriel Briah. I need to speak with the one who’s an element worker. I think that would be you, son?” He faced Dion. “Am I correct?’

Dion stared at him for a moment before he made his answer. “That’s right. I am an elemental worker and my name is Dion.” He introduced his friends and then returned to the captain. “I don’t get a sensation of an elemental worker from you, although this place makes it hard to tell much of anything. Are you with the mall?”

“No, I’m trying to find the owner of the pool store, Salacia Delphi. Is she in there?”

“I’m waiting for her to get back too. I’m told she will be here in the next hour or two. The people working there tell me she is a little abstract on her sense of time.”

“So why do you need to see her?” Dion asked the captain.

“We used to be married.” The captain let it sink into the group for a few minutes.

“So, you’re also an elemental worker?” Dion asked.

“No, I’m from Mt. Olympus.”

Dion was stunned. He’d never met an immortal before. This was the first time he even knew about one coming down to the level of humanity. But the man didn’t appear to be one of them. He looked old and beaten, not the sort of person you would expect to spend the afternoon talking with Zeus over the nature of storms and should reality be extended to the seventh dimension. He was at least sixty and sported a white beard and hair on his head to match. Dion assumed these beings were too busy at their lever to be concerned with the affairs of mortal men. He knew they did marry humans every now and then, but it was considered very rare. The captain was clothed in an old sea coat with matching black cap on his head. Hardly the person you would expect to cast lighting down from the sky. However, Dion did know that these beings liked to assume human form on occasion and visit this world.

“You don’t look like someone from Mt. Olympus,” Dion told him. “I would have expected a toga and a crown of light.”

“That is the expensive method,” the captain responded. “You watch too many Hollywood movies. If I could round up that much power on short notice, I wouldn’t need anyone to track my ex-wife. I’ve had to come here personally to find her. Do you know her?”

“No,” I’m here to get my third elemental power. My parents are imprisoned in the tower in the center of the mall. I need all four elemental powers so I can qualify for the fifth and get them out.”

“With the fifth, you couldn’t be stopped. It explains why all the elemental grandmasters are here inside the mall. Someone did everything they could to bring them here where they could be watched.”

“Do you know anything about the mall?” Dion questioned him again. It seemed this man might have some information he needed.

“Not much. I know it was built over the entrance to the abyss. I still can’t figure out why someone would do that. Best to leave these gates closed. Is there something I should know about this mall that I don’t?”

“My uncle built it. Or at least his company built it. He is the major stockholder in the company, which owns it. He’s also a fifth elemental worker, but one who learned the fifth without the other four.”

“Ah,” the captain said. “Him I’ve heard about. This would explain all the elementals I see around here. Those lovely young women walking with the guys their age, is that your doing?”

“Yes it is. Dennis here was glamoured by Appias and I thought if she likes him, the rest of her sisters should be introduced to some friends of mine. It solved a lot of problems.”

“Or create them. You do realize they’re all bonded now, don’t you?”

“Yes, I knew it would happen when I introduced the entire group.”

“So are you going to cut them loose when you get the full water power?”

“I don’t think so. We should be able to work something out for them. There are a number of lakes around here.”

“Not really a good idea,” the captain explained. “It never works when a mortal loves someone who isn’t. The next time I get back to Olympus, I’ll see if Zeus is in the mood to grant some mortality. He doesn’t do that very often.”

The captain thought about it some more. Another plan might be to grant the boys immortality, but that had even worse side effects. It was bad enough aging while your wife stayed young forever, worse to see everyone you know grow old and die while you remained.

“So, what is your story?” Dion asked him. “You appear to have aged. Was that the result of marriage?”

“No, it was the result of Zeus making me human. I wanted to age with my wife but I didn’t know she was resistant to it. It seems some of you elemental workers age very slowly. Not as slow as we do on Olympus, but slow enough to make a difference if you age at the normal rate of any other human. I started to notice it happen after we’d been together twenty years. After a long time, people began to ask us if she was my daughter. It became so bad I had to leave and go elsewhere. I ended up as a sailor and then the captain of my own charter boat. I’ve come back here to find out if she needs any help. Word came to me that her store in the mall was dangerously close to the abyss.”

“So what happened when you became mortal?” Lilly asked. “Did someone get your job?”

“In fact, that is exactly what happened. It was a long resignation procedure and he didn’t want me to go. But I was young and foolish. This is why your friends may eventually regret their decisions. When the time came for me to come to this world, Zeus promoted a younger immortal into my slot. He’s running that part of the operation now and I wish him luck. He found out it was a lot less glamorous than it appeared. Even the benefits aren’t that good anymore. You used to get your own island and palace to go with it. Now, you’re lucky to get a boat and a crew.

“You used to have another name?” Emily asked him.

“Poseidon,” he told them. “I used to go by Poseidon. But I had to turn my trident in when I left. I hope Hercules likes the job because he’s stuck with it until someone else is foolish enough to get it.”

“I can’t say I’ve ever been in the presence of someone who was in control of the oceans,” Dion said to the captain. “It must have been a step down to become a sailor.”

“You might think that, but I was rather sick of the job. It’s not all causing tidal waves and using your trident on arrogant whales. I had to inventory the oysters every year for Zeus. Can you imagine how much time that took? It was insane. Even with the help of the seals. No thank you, someone else can do the job. Plus I had to contend with those despicable oil freighters. You have no idea how much trouble they can be and the damage they do when they leak. I’m glad to be mortal.”

“But something had to cause you to want to be mortal,” Emily brought up. “I can’t imagine one day you suddenly decided to do it.”

“No, it was the ex-wife and only her,” he explained. “I’d tell you the entire story, but I’m sure you would find it too boring.”

“Sit down, captain,” Dion waved his hand at the bench. “We’ve nothing to do until Ms. Delphi appears. I’m sure we’re all eager to hear about it.”

“I will try not to bore you,” the captain said as she seated himself on the bench.

Chapter 10

“I was sitting on a rock,” the captain began, “watching some of the elementals sing one evening. I was in the Sargasso Sea. I like this part of the ocean because you never can tell what the tide action will bring to the center. I’ve found all kinds of things in many different broken up ships. Even found a treasure chest from lost Lemuria there one time. I have no idea how long it floated in that mess. Usually I send them to the bottom of the ocean or give the nicer sparkalies to the elementals since they like them so much.” He saw Dirce blush, which he didn’t know they could do, but he’d seldom seen them out of water.

I was in the process of looking over a boat to see if there was anything that needed my attention. Sometimes I find valuable items in them and, well, there are plenty of needy families who live by the shore and can use the help. I find a way to get the dolphins to take whatever will help to them. They usually don’t know who dropped off coins or jewels, but I liked knowing that my job allowed me to do some good.

Anyway, I found this sail boat which was on one side. I was ready to send it to the bottom for refuse, when I saw something move inside it. I turned the boat over in the water, righted it after snapping off the mast, and found a young girl in it no older than any of you. It’s not often I find anyone alive in these boats, so I was excited.”

“Were you, like, four hundred feet high at that point?” Emily asked him. “I’m assuming you had the ability to vary your size.”

The captain smiled. “No, much smaller. Just normal human size. It takes too much energy to do the Jolly Giant number, so I would conserve my mass. Besides, I was able to do a lot at normal size. It was one of the benefits of having the position: super human strength. When you have to check on the health of a Great White Shark, it’s a good idea to have that ability.

As I was saying, it was a young woman. I was stunned by her beauty. Standard operating procedure was to place all survivors on the nearest outside the Sargasso Sea and hope for the best. But, she was a little different. I took her to the palace, which came with the job. This was before the cutbacks and downsizing sent the base of operations to a boat. I had the elementals at the island palace take care of her until she was rested.

Her name wasn’t Salacia at the time, I gave it to her. I don’t know where she came from originally, but the name was just too hard to pronounce. So I came up with the new one. Her speech patterns were unlike anything else I ever heard either, but the Olympian board of directors approved a new language acquisition plan that year and soon I could understand what she said.

Turned out she was the last survivor of a sunken city called Atlantis. I’d heard about it a few times, just never had the opportunity to run out and check on it because it was on a landmass on the lower part of the Pacific. From what I could make out the way she described it, the entire island went under the sea during a renovation of the crust. I’d tried to tell the Olympian maintenance department for years that they needed to watch out for these isolated places before they adjusted the undersea lava flow. As usual, no one ever listened to me. So we lost an entire civilization because no one checked to see if anyone was there. A disgrace, but I managed to save her.

She brightened up the palace a lot and after a while I kept finding an excuse not to spend too much time out on the sea. I tried to put in for an extension on the palace staff, but Zeus wouldn’t listen to me. He claimed the elementals did the job just fine and no reason to involve a human in the oceanic department.

So he left me with no choice: I had to become a mortal if I intended to be with her. By the time I explained what I had in mind, she was ready to become my wife anyway. But I was sick of the job and wanted to move on. You try doing the same thing for ten thousand years and see what it does to you.

Now this all was very long and involved. I had to submit paperwork to the board of directors who needed to approve me turning into a mortal. It’s always been a very controversial among the Olympians. One of the problems is that it takes a lot of time to make an immortal and they don’t like the idea of getting rid of us once we’re in a position that can be of benefit to them. I was once told that finding another position with the Olympians was almost impossible because once they had you in the slot where you were needed; they tended to keep you there. From their standpoint, it made no sense to train someone for several millennia, just to have them quit when they put them into the slot.

But I no longer cared. It was too long and I’d spent too much time doing the same job, as I said. After a while, you get sick and tired of the palace and all the elementals that wait on you. You just want to move into a different direction and find some place to retire. They don’t like to talk about retirement because there is no lifespan for us. They talk about better opportunities once the market expands, but really, there is only one Earth and our skill sets just don’t transfer well to other planets. I had a young girl I loved and she loved me so it was time to move on.

After ten years of pleading, I was able to get the paperwork approved. I took a special trip all the way back to Mt. Olympus and Zeus was waiting for me in his office. He tried to get me to change my mind, but Salacia was already waiting for me down at the bottom of the mountain where the cable car elevator begins. I took a cable car up because I felt it was time to get used to them. Couldn’t see any reason to make the air elementals fly me up to the central headquarters.

He reluctantly signed off the paperwork and I rode the cable car back down. I know he was angry after personally recommending me for the position, but I had enough. Too many long nights trying to find a place to put the manatees when their feeding grounds were interrupted. Too many years spent finding a place in Scotland for that big lake monster to hide. That one wasn’t even supposed to be under my jurisdiction, but the board decided since it was originally an ocean dweller, I had to take responsibility.

BOOK: faerie rift chronicles 01 - faerie rift
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