Ally & The Djinn Chapter 1: Seismic Shift

 Hi there, lovely readers,

Thank you so much for visiting my blogsite, and I'm genuinely grateful for every click that brings you here.

I realize that when I posted the prologue I said, come back next week for Chapter 1, and it's now weeks later and I haven't posted the chapter. My apologies. While I live with a certain amount of organized chaos, occasionally (I may be glossing over reality with that word) it's more chaos than organization. But my good news is that I have been busy and my latest WIP, a science-fiction is set a couple of millennia later in the same universe as the Saoirse Saga, is now with my wonderful editor, Lois Dacus. So, without delay, here, as promised, if a bit belatedly, is Chapter 1 of Ally & The Djinn.



ALLY & THE DJINN: 

CHAPTER 1: SEISMIC SHIFT 

Allie waited on the sidewalk, clenching her fists, her fingers—nails bitten down to the quick—pressing into her palm. Chris was late. As usual. Allie cursed him under her breath. The sudden scraping sensation under her skin, the painful crawling down her spine, the squeezing sensation in her lungs—all were a red alert. The urge to scream pushed up from her belly, through her chest, and swelled in her throat. She swallowed half a dozen times, pushing everything down and silencing the assault. No way was she going to have a meltdown in the middle of Main Street, despite her entire body crawling with ants, each possessing razor-sharp, red-hot pincers that tore at her flesh.

Where the fuck had her dealer gotten to? He’d insisted on ten o’clock. She turned and peered into the coffee shop behind her at the clock on the wall. Ten past, and no sign of him. The blazing sunlight gave her a massive headache, even after borrowing Jenny’s black sunglasses. Sorry, Jen. My eyes are way more bloodshot than yours. She tossed the mental apology in her friend’s direction. Jenny had recognized her in the street one evening and taken pity on her, and she’d experienced Jenny’s sudden bursts of temper more than once. The idea that she might throw Allie out was unwelcome because she preferred not to think about the crack house she had lived in previously. Yet In any event, she would be back at the apartment before Jenny got home from work, as long as Chris appeared soon. If he didn’t, she would be well and truly screwed, and annoying Jenny would be the least of her worries.

A frisson of electricity shot through her. Her hair stood on end. She shivered as goose bumps ran up and down her arms, as if an alien presence had passed by too close. Her mother’s witchy genes rarely manifested, yet when they did, she knew to pay attention. Granny’s hunches and sightings were more serious, and she’d spent her final days in a nuthouse. Right now, something freakish had ratcheted up her heightened state of hypervigilance to new levels of of suspicion.

She straightened up, aware of the soothing sensation of the morning sun warming her face and body. Hell’s bells, she was hungry. Hell’s bells and a bunch of parsley! Hell’s bells? Where had that come from, let alone the parsley? She’d never said that phrase in her life. Some kind of change had taken place; she could feel it down to her joints, as Granny liked to say. How had it happened, and why, and what did it mean? As a white fog clouded her mind, she focused on her scuffed sneakers, the stains on her torn jeans, and caught a whiff of herself. Man, she stank. There was another smell, too, that she couldn’t quite place.

 

 

Son of a starving djinn, Quareem thought, the aroma evoking memories. Marketplaces, conversations of many kinds, some more pleasant than others, people telling stories, jokes. A quick flash surfaced: sipping strong brown liquid from a small, delicately painted china cup as he sat on a balcony overlooking a city of pale domed buildings glinting in the sun as slender golden-skinned beauties served fragrant sesame seed cakes and refreshments. He had been there with someone. Who? A woman? The slice of memory faded, while the scent tickling the nose of his current host remained tantalizingly real. Yes, he remembered. The substance emitting that enticing, irresistible fragrance was coffee.

 

 

Another wave of… sparkly lightness with a flash of dazzle… passed through her. As she stared at the busy pedestrians, the traffic noises reduced to a buzzing in her ears, she wondered where the odor drifting up her nostrils and into her olfactory centers came from, because it was driving her crazy. She turned and, with no conscious volition, strode toward the door and entered the shop. As she approached the counter, the server looked up, eyes widening as he registered her grimy gray T-shirt, the sweat staining her armpits, and the auburn dreadlocks gathered in a loose bun on the top of her head. He spoke to a point over her shoulder. “What can I get for you today?”

His disdain made her want to smack his smug face, but then she wouldn’t get what she wanted. She smothered her irritation. “A venti Blonde, black. Extra shot.”

The man’s eyebrows rose a fraction. “For here or to go?”

“For here, and two of those.” Allie pointed at a tray of golden, curved pastries.

“Plus two chocolate croissants. That will be eight thirty.”

Allie dug in her jeans pocket and fished out a hundred-dollar bill. What the hell? Where…? She blanked. Nothing was important except sipping that heavenly beverage.

He took the cash, handing her change over. “Name?”

What was this? The inquisition? “Alicia.” This was weird. Nobody had ever called her Alicia except her mother, and she only used her eldest daughter’s full name in a particular tone to express her displeasure.

“Wait at the end of the bar.” The barista signaled his dismissal by turning to the next customer.

Where else did he expect her to wait? Hover near the ceiling? The whimsical thought brought a smile as she pictured herself—no, it wasn’t her; it was… the memory vanished. Fuck. If withdrawal had begun, she would kill Chris and skin him alive when she got hold of him. An image of lightning zigzagging from her fingertips and Chris crumpling to the ground flashed before her, followed by a sharp stabbing pain in her head. She swayed.

“Are you okay?” the stylishly dressed businessman standing behind her asked.

None of your business. Fuck off, she thought. “I’m fine,” she muttered, saved by the barista’s shrill tenor calling out her name. Nothing worse than what she considered a waste of time and energy—a conversation with someone who had no relevance to her life, now or ever.

Half an hour, two more croissants, and another giant cup of the primo barista brew later, she sat back, amazed at the satisfaction and contentment flushing through her. The corner window seat had a view of the street and the other customers in the bar. While eating, she checked both out, eyes swiveling left, then right, finding only the usual hustle and bustle. She scowled at the leather-jacketed, bald guy standing on the sidewalk glaring at her. He seemed familiar, and when she tried to work out why, her ability to think had ceased functioning.

With his shrewd, beady eyes glued to her, the man stabbed a finger at the watch on his wrist and, with a sharp, aggressive gesture, beckoned her.

Whoever he was, he wasn’t anybody she wanted to be friends with, and if he was still there when she finished her breakfast, then she would give him an earful. Mmm…that might not be for a while, because she was thinking of having a final pastry and a last gigantic cup of that beautiful beverage. First, though, the bathroom. She stood up, refrained from giving him the finger, and instead ignored him and headed for the bathroom.

She was alone, washing her hands, squinting at herself in the mirror, thinking what a mess she was and wondering when she last had a shower, when she heard the voice.

 

 

A female. Young, yes, that could work. Not that he had a choice. A nearby Hunter meant he was safer to stay where he was until there was less risk. What’s more, he’d never resided with a female before. The Fates must have offered him this chance for a reason. Aside from the subtle promise of her magic, would she want to dominate and manipulate others to fulfill her desires as most women did? A human full of material ambition made the ideal keeper, as their greed enabled him to shape them to his will. This human appeared to have no aspirations for position or money. The only images he picked up from her befuddled mind reminded him of wealthy patrons lying on comfortable couches, smoking opium from pipes, while her disheveled clothes and erratic, scattered manner of thinking, jumping from topic to topic without a break, had more in common with those he’d seen collapsed in alleyways, their pipes glowing in the dark as they inhaled. She put on a good show. In contrast, he was not sure what he might find behind the shield she had erected between herself and the world. Fortunately, it had taken no time at all to remove her obsessive craving for crack—whatever that was—which placed her in his debt.

He would do a thorough analysis of her thoughts and memories when she slept and her barriers were down. Most important, and rare to find, she possessed an immense amount of dormant magical ability. Regrettably, she had no idea of her untapped talent, so he was unable to use it. He would teach her; she would be grateful and grant him permission to access that glorious energy to replenish his own somewhat depleted store.

More essential to his survival, though, she could mask his presence from those who hunted him. He shuddered at the memory of the Hunters’ flickering scarlet cloaks. They would shackle him more tightly if they caught him again. Better to die than return to the emptiness, the nonexistence, of a Hunter’s prison.

Right now, he had to connect and entice her into agreement, because he needed to hide. Preferably with somebody who would submissively comply with his orders. An accomplice, really. Did he even have enough power to take her over? He shook his head. How had his life and safety come to depend on a mortal woman? One who, apparently, did not appreciate a steaming bath and fragrant soap.

He fixed his attention on the present. Alternating the bitter, smooth, hot liquid he sipped along with the delicious taste of combined flour, butter and sugar sent his tongue into long forgotten drools of ecstasy. He gazed around and, while the café’s occupants wore unrecognizable and bizarre outfits, he understood the status of those imbibing alongside him.

He decided that the females dressed bizarrely in skin-tight leggings and short cropped tops and wondered, what was the point in having an imagination? Perhaps that faculty had dimmed, and men in this society needed to see every lump and bulge of flesh to arouse themselves. The men, in contrast, seemed to wear looser pants of a rough-looking material and baggier tops. How odd. The women revealed their assets while the men hid theirs. He saw no ragged clothing, or signs of dirt or obvious disease. Their auras indicated satisfaction and low levels of worry about money, love and other such mundane concerns, which he had solved for himself an eternity ago.

However, the foul pungent stink of urinals had not changed, in spite of the overlay of a chemical designed to mask the pungent aromas. He watched his host study her reflection—and judging by how her nose wrinkled—even she didn’t like the rank pong of her body. Oh, well. Here’s hoping she won’t have a heart attack and fall dead, ‘cause that would be a serious inconvenience for me. Here goes. “Greetings, fair one.”

***

Thank you for reading and I hope you are enjoying the story so far. The next chapter will be posted soon(ish). If you don't want to wait to find out what happens next, Ally & The Djinn is available for FREE from my Shopify store: teagankearyey.com and from all major retail sites such as Amazon, Kobo, B&N, etcetera.

Stay safe and well,

Warmest wishes,

Teagan. 😊

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Ally & The Djinn Chapter 1: Seismic Shift

  Hi  there, lovely readers, Thank you so much for visiting my blogsite, and I'm genuinely grateful for every click that brings you here...