I
Dream of Jinn
By Elayna
Notes and other
information at the bottom of the page
He had to get away, escape from
everything in his life, and watch the roads go by, the houses and fields merge
from one to the other and back again until he reached a place he could stop and
not think.
The highway crossed a river and he
swung the car onto a frontage road, driving until he found a safe place to
park, leaving the car behind to scramble down to the bank. The river wasn't particularly large but it was
beautiful, the ripples on its surface indicating a strong current beneath,
mature trees and green growth surrounding it.
Taking off his shoes and socks, he
wiggled his toes in the water, wondering why he wasn't happy. He had no reason to feel so restless and
unsettled on a Friday night, no justification to be dissatisfied with a full,
productive week as the public relations director for a successful aerospace
firm. He had a great job, a job that
used all his communication and technical skills, a job where he was an
acknowledged master of translating geekspeak into simple laymen's language, the
consummate go-between for two different worlds.
But no matter how good it was, he lived daily with the knowledge that it
wasn't his dream job.
His dream had been to be an
astronaut, to be one of the precious chosen few who could soar into space and
look down on Earth, but he'd failed in that dream. With so few opportunities available, there
were people like him, who were competitive, and then there were the others, who
were Competitive in big glowing capital letters.
So not the childhood dream but still a damn good job that challenged his analytical mind, a reasonable boss who respected his work, friendly fellow geeks as co-workers, not too much nonsensical bureaucracy, or at least, none he couldn't work around with a little finesse. His personal life was good: healthy parents enjoying their retirement, an older sister who'd popped out an adorable niece and nephew for the family to spoil, a house in an excellent neighborhood, an environmentally responsible car for his commute and his beloved beater truck for weekends, really great friends… Everything he'd wanted.
He sighed and wiggled his toes
some more, the muddy silt oozing between his toes, water drops flicking at his
trousers. How could he have everything
and still feel so…wrong?
A bit of debris drifted out of the
current, coming to rest softly against his toes. Despite the dirt encrusting it, he could see
patches of a deep red material. Curious,
he squatted down to swish the object in the water, washing off the outer layer
of grime.
He whistled in surprise as he held
it up. The object was a bottle, about
six inches tall, seemingly fashioned of an intense red stone with carved
markings on it. It felt warm, even
though it had come from the cold river.
He rubbed on the markings, chipping the dirt out with his fingernails
trying to decipher the pattern, and then stumbled back, his butt hitting the
muddy ground. The lid popped off with
the loud explosion of a badly opened champagne cork and steam began wisping
out.
The wisp became a waterfall, the
steam pouring out of the bottle and flowing down to the ground, growing into a
dense pillar of gray particles that packed themselves closer and closer
together, finally coalescing into the figure of a man.
A very unusual man, towering over
Ben's 5'10" height, with broad shoulders and slim hips. His long hair was brown and gray, a portion
pulled into a ponytail on top of his head, the rest falling to his
shoulders. He was dressed like a refugee
from an Arabian nights party, with a gauzy black vest open to reveal his
muscled chest, and black harem pants clinging low to his hips, low enough to
reveal that his belly button was an innie.
The vest and pants were accented with gold coins that matched the gold
necklace around his neck, and the gold hoop earring in his right ear. The rings on his fingers were also gold but
studded with different colored stones, while the rings on his toes were plain
gold, etched with intricate designs.
"I am the genie of the
bottle, and I am yours to command, Master," the figure announced in a
baritone voice with an accent like smooth velvet stroking over Ben's skin, and
bowed, bending so low that the ponytail flipped toward Ben.
"Excuse me? You're what?"
The figure straightened and
repeated, "I am the genie of the bottle, and I am yours to command,"
before giving the same deep bow, his head hanging almost to his knees.
Ben laughed, amused and knowing
instantly that he was the victim of an elaborate practical joke. He put his hand out, surprised when it
connected with the figure's very solid head.
Well, not Dexter and his new holographic experiments then.
The hair under his hand was
unexpectedly soft and silky, and he pulled the ponytail through his hand before
letting it fall. "Very cute and
very well done. You've got me baffled. Who put you up to it? Joe? Nick?"
"Put me up to it?" The
genie straightened to look at him with a perplexed expression on his handsome
face, a face made even more distinguished by the slightly crooked nose, the one
element that added reality to perfection. "Magic is magic. I have been bound to the bottle since my
creation, countless years ago."
"Yes, of course. I'm not famous, so this can't be
'Punk'd.' Some new version of 'Candid
Camera'?"
"I do not understand these
words, Master, punked or camera. They
did not exist when I was created, and I have not learned them since."
Ben grinned. The genie was doing a great job. His words were subservient, but there was a
touch of crankiness behind them, as if the genie disliked being ignorant.
"Of course not. No cameras countless years ago. So now you're mine to command? My three wishes for fame, fortune, and
glory?"
"If those are the terms you
desire, then yes. I am yours to command
until your troubles are solved, Master."
Whoever arranged this prank had
done amazing work making the genie appear from the bottle, a technological trick
that pointed to a work buddy, but the genie's attire screamed of one of his gay
friends at the club, probably Adrian.
Maybe they'd gotten together, one to handle execution, the other design? But why, and why here? His friends weren't normally practical
jokers. Were reality shows getting this
extreme?
"My troubles?" Ben stepped close to the genie, this
incredibly attractive man with the virtually see-through costume and settled
his hands on his hips, feeling silky fabric and even silkier skin under his
fingers. "I know one trouble you
can help me solve," he said suggestively, rising up on his toes to take
the man's mouth in a lingering kiss, figuring such boldness would end the
masquerade and make the perpetrator reveal himself. No one who knew Ben would expect him to
accost a stranger.
The genie was awkwardly, almost
shyly returning his kiss, and Ben didn't care about why or how, only that his
lips were exploring a mouth that tasted of exotic spices and his arms were full
of big, warm male. Undoubtedly, the
"genie" was a hired performer, and he was doing a bang-up job. Ben lost track that this kiss was to end the
charade, thrilled to experience more of the sweet, spicy flavor of his mouth. He stroked his hands around the genie's waist
and up his spine, the skimpy vest no deterrent to his explorations. He was going to be so embarrassed if this
kiss got loaded to YouTube, but this man was irresistible.
For someone who pretended not to
know how to kiss, the genie learned fast, his tongue and mouth so enticing that
Ben finally broke the seal of their lips, to try to gain some control, wiggling
his toes into the muddy earth to ground himself. He collected air back in his lungs, breathing
harshly while he rubbed his cheek on the genie's smooth cheeks, the contrast
between the skin and the roughness of the genie's beard framing his chin
sending an erotic tingle through Ben's already sensitized body. "So … do I get a private performance? Does this come off?" he asked, toying
with the low waistband, wondering how far this "genie" would allow
the activity to go, before someone leaped out with a camera and they all had a
good laugh.
"If you desire," the
genie responded, "though I have never helped anyone like that before. Are you sure this would ease your
troubles?"
It would definitely help the
erection straining against the fly of his pants. And so what if it was unwise? He'd been cautious and studious all his life,
attributes that had only left him trailing behind when bolder people took bigger
risks and advanced. "Positive. Absolutely positive. But let's go to my place, okay? It's a little muddy here." He kept his eyes on the genie, playing with
the joke, trying not to search for the hidden crew.
"As you wish."
Then Ben felt the genie dissolve
in his arms, his body turning to steam.
Not just watched it this time, but felt it in his arms, and how the hell
could that be done? The steam floated
gently, then faster and faster, pouring back into the bottle where Ben had
dropped it on the ground. The red top
sprang out of the mud and sealed the bottle shut with an explosive noise to
equal its opening.
And for the first time, Ben
wondered if this was more than an elaborate practical joke.
~~~~~~~~~
Ben set the glass bottle on the
coffee table, then checked his place, running his fingers over surfaces,
lifting objects, searching for hidden equipment. He was as unsuccessful in his home as he had
been by the river, and the craving to determine the truth was increasing
exponentially with every second. If he
was being filmed, the cameras were really well hidden or long-range, he
thought, drawing all the blinds.
He perched on the edge of the
couch, and Gus leaped into his lap.
Stroking the gray tabby, he said, “Abracadabra!”
Nothing happened.
“Open Sesame!”
Still nothing.
“Shazam! I have the power! Speak friend and enter!”
Nothing happened except Gus
butting his head harder into Ben’s hand, demanding more serious stroking, which
Ben gave absentmindedly. The beautiful
bottle remained obdurately a beautiful bottle, blood red with a wide, curved
lower half narrowing into a thin top half.
He looked around the room, saying, “Cute joke, Adrian. How did you do it?”
But Gus’s purrs were the only
response. He picked up the bottle,
cupping it in one hand, noting again its warmth, tracing the patterns carved in
the stone with the fingers on the other hand.
They resembled Arabic writing, mysterious with elegant slashes and curls,
but he could find nothing that might be an electronic trigger. He flinched as the top exploded from the
bottle, smoke pouring out again. Gus
meowed indignantly and leaped off his lap in a huff as the genie formed, appearing
as incredibly handsome and magnificent in Ben's living room as he had on the
river bank.
“I am yours to command,” he said,
bowing low.
“Erm…have a seat.”
The genie sat on the carpet with
his legs crossed in front of him, hands resting on his bent knees.
Ben pushed the coffee table aside,
and sank to the floor in front of the couch, eying the black and gold figure,
copying his pose. "So… you're a
genie?”
"I am the genie of the
bottle. I was created many years ago by
a great wizard.”
Could this possibly be true? It seemed ludicrous, but the way the genie
had first formed into a solid body, then dissolved back into the bottle, was
beyond what any of his friends could achieve, and the joke was going on way too
long to be a reality show. "What is
your name?"
"I am the genie. I have never needed a name."
“And you exist to help people?
Give them three wishes, granting their fondest desires?”
“I exist to help those in trouble,
to help those in need fix the problems in their lives. And then I return to the bottle until I am
found by the next person who needs me.”
“Excuse me? Are you saying you
only help pathetic individuals?”
“A person with troubles is not
pathetic, merely troubled. It is the
task that the wizard gave me, to assist such people. My bottle floats through this world, finding
them.”
“I don’t have a troubled life!”
Ben heard his voice rise, resenting being labeled.
Apparently undeterred by Ben's
protestations, the genie asked with sympathy, "How are you troubled? In your life's work? Your wives?
Your wealth?"
"I am not
troubled!" He denied what he had
been thinking earlier, what had driven him to stare at the river. He was accustomed to taking care of people,
to having them lean on him, a loyal friend and loved brother and son. He'd always been a responsible person with a
neatly organized life. Not someone who
needed a total stranger to fix him.
“Then you would not have found
me.”
The genie’s confidence infuriated
Ben. Who was this stranger, to walk into
his world and announce he was troubled?
Why wasn't he here to grant him fame and fortune, like any normal genie
out of a standard tale ought to provide?
But no, this genie gazed down his large crooked nose and wanted to fix
Ben's problems. "I love my
job. And my family. And I make a very good living."
"Then it is…" the
genie's eyes paused on Ben's crotch…"A problem in your erotic life? Is that why you kissed me?"
“Oh, get back in the bottle,” Ben
said crossly, standing up. Just because
his relationships never tended to last long only meant he had high standards,
not that he had a problem in his 'erotic life.'
He was tired of dealing with this insanity.
“No, Master.”
“No?”
“No, Master. I am not ready to return to the bottle.” The genie was completely calm, and absolutely
stubborn.
“You said you would obey me!”
“I will obey you, Master. When you give the right command.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the morning, Ben decided the
entire experience had been a mad albeit very realistic dream. He skritched Gus under the chin and yawned,
reluctant to get out of bed. Gus purred
and licked at his fingers, agreeing that sleeping in was a wise decision. The silent evening of eating his TV dinner,
reading his email and watching the "Best of Both Worlds" from his
Star Trek DVD collection had surely happened without the presence of a very
large genie padding around his house, examining his possessions and asking
questions that Ben stubbornly ignored or answered briefly.
Couldn’t have happened. Didn’t happen. Genies didn’t exist except in Disney films
and fantasy novels, and while the genie was as majestic as Gandalf, he was
nowhere near as funny as Robin Williams.
Ben made himself believe as he pushed Gus off his chest, got out of bed,
and used the toilet. But reality – or
extremely solid fantasy – intruded when he entered the kitchen and bumped into
the very large genie, wearing pink and cooking breakfast.
“Argh! Don’t give me a heart
attack!”
“Good morning, Master,” the genie
answered cheerfully, apparently not at all disturbed by a startled Ben in only
his briefs. "I'm making
breakfast. How do you like your
eggs?"
"What are you
wearing?" His attire was similarly
styled to yesterday's – a skimpy vest that revealed much of his firm chest and
abdomen, with harem pants that hung low on his hips, billowing around his legs
before being gathered to end just above his ankles – but the colors were
decidedly bright pink with touches of vibrant red. It was the classic "I Dream of
Jeannie" outfit, only Barbara Eden never displayed a belly button as cute
as his.
"Is this not the proper
attire for a genie in this time and place?
I saw it on the box with moving pictures and hoped you would find it
reassuring."
"A male Barbara Eden in drag
in my kitchen isn't reassuring," Ben snapped. "Change back."
"Then black and gold are your
favorite colors?"
"No, blue and silver
are. But not pink."
"Blue and silver it is then,
Master." The genie crossed his arms
in front of his chest and jerked his head back and forth briskly one time,
clearly having watched too many reruns.
The pink blossomed into sapphire blue and the red accents shimmered into
silver. The jewelry stayed shiny gold,
and the genie was as stunning in this outfit as he'd appeared in the
others. If only finding a genie wasn't
such a supremely bizarre and unbelievable fantasy, Ben could be extremely happy
to have someone like him sharing his house, even if temporarily.
"Much better," he
admitted grudgingly.
"Thank you. Your eggs?"
"Oh - scrambled is
fine."
"Is that your favorite
way?"
"My favorite way is Eggs
Benedict, but scrambled is fine. It's
easiest."
"Eggs Benedict it is."
The genie turned back to the stove, a bowl with Hollandaise sauce appearing in
his hands.
"Hey, that's not one of my
wishes, is it?" he yelped.
"Because I did not wish for Eggs Benedict to solve all my
troubles."
"No, Master. I can use any of my minor powers as I wish
while waiting for you to reveal your troubles and fondest wishes."
Great. Back to being a pathetic individual
then. At least one who would be served a
great breakfast. Ben yawned as he made
coffee, his taste buds watering at the thought of the creamy rich sauce. He might as well enjoy this madness.
~~~~~~~~~~
Not sure what to do with the
genie, Ben decided to take him on his usual Saturday morning errands. He drove slowly through his neighborhood,
glancing at the yard sales until a wooden bureau caught his eye. The genie did not follow directions to stay
in the car, but stepped out and followed him.
Even though the genie desired to be helpful, subservience wasn't strong
in his nature. At least he'd willingly
bobbed his head and transformed his clothes into ones similar to Ben's, gray
shorts and a blue polo shirt.
The genie was not impressed with
the quality of goods displayed on the lawn.
And said so, several times, commenting on scuff marks and worn areas and
why anyone had selected such unpleasing patterns in such unattractive colors. Ben finally dragged him to one side, under
the shade of a large oak tree.
"You've supposedly spent eternity helping people with problems. Can't you be a little gracious about used
items?" he hissed.
"You deserve better,
Master. You deserve the finest wonders
of the land. Anything you wish to ask
for. Not another person's
leavings."
The compliment caught Ben
off-guard and the titters from a teenage girl who'd heard the genie's title for
Ben flustered him. He shot a glare at
her, which only earned him an eye roll.
"We can discuss good environmental practices later. For now, if you can't say something nice,
don't say anything at all. Can you obey
that command?"
"Yes Master."
The teenage girl tittered again,
and Ben really wished he'd waited to have this conversation in the car, but he
hadn't predicted the genie's refusal to mute his glorious accented voice.
"Stay here," he ordered,
before engaging the homeowner, bargaining for a reduced price on the
dresser. The wood was solid under the
nicks. Some refinishing and a little
TLC, and it would make an excellent dresser for his nephew's bedroom, and a
good match for the bed frame that Ben had refinished for him last year.
The genie was at his side after he
paid for it, helping to lift it into the back of his pick-up truck. After they got into the cab, the genie asked,
"Can you explain good environmental practices now?"
"Our society discards a lot
of valuable items, both people and things, but the resources of this world are
limited. Garage sales help items get
reused instead of being dumped in a landfill.
The wood in that dresser is excellent.
It was made when furniture was built to last. It can look like new and be useful for years.
"Besides," he added,
"my sister and her husband don't have a lot of money. They get embarrassed when I try to help
them. This way I can do something useful
for them but they won't feel as obliged."
"It satisfies you to do this
work?"
"Very much."
"Then this part of your life
is good."
"All my life is good."
"It cannot be, or I would not
be here."
Ben gritted his teeth, focusing on
his driving and the other cars on the road.
He snapped the radio on, but flicked it back off as soon as he heard
Christina Aguilera lamenting about a genie in a bottle. What drove him so insane when the genie told
him his life was troubled? He knew it
was. Wasn't it the lack of *something*
that had sent him to the river?
~~~~
The day was about to go from
bizarre to worse, Ben could tell as he drove back to his condo and saw Sean
sitting on the lawn. Sean never dropped
in for a casual visit. He wanted
something – or more likely, wanted him to do something. Ben waved at him, acknowledging his presence,
as he parked the truck in his driveway.
"You know this man,
Master?"
"He’s a co-worker. And a friend.
Please, no 'masters' while he’s around."
"As you command,
Master."
"As I request." Sean was waiting by his door at he opened it,
looking as if was ready to pour his heart out, or perhaps emote bad pretentious
poetry. His long black hair was unrestrained, seemingly hanging loose, but with
enough gel to ensure a swath dangled over one eye, and he wore skintight black
jeans and a black mesh t-shirt, an outfit that looked stylish but ridiculous,
given the warm temperature. It was
really becoming one of those days.
"Hi, Sean."
"Ben, thank God you're
here. Who's your hot friend?" Sean seemed torn between distress over
whatever brought him to Ben's place and lust for the genie. Keen observation of other men was one of
Sean's strong skills, even if he was incredibly erratic about relationships,
falling in and out of entanglements faster than the beat of a dance song.
"Oh – this is the gen –
Gene. He's a friend."
"Gene Jeannie? Where have you been hiding him?" Sean practically prowled over to the genie,
offering his hand with more panache than a southern belle. "I'm Sean."
The genie seemed bemused by Sean's
hand, taking it gingerly, and Ben wondered how many people who found the bottle
ever bothered associating with the genie.
Did they demand their three wishes and toss the bottle back in the
river? Give me a fortune, kthxbi?
"I am – Gene."
"So how long are you in
town? Ben didn't tell me he was having
company this week."
Sean's flirting bothered Ben for
reasons he didn't understand. Sean
flirted with everyone, even women. It
was simply a part of his nature. And
Gene – the genie – was a countless-years-old wizardly creation destined to move
along soon, as soon as Ben convinced him he wasn't needed. "Gene, can you give me a hand? Sean, did you need something?"
Gene helped Ben lift the dresser
and carry it into the garage. Sean
followed behind them, talking nervously, explaining one of those long
complicated stories that were always difficult to follow, full of too many
unclear pronoun references and overly dramatic people who needed a severe
reality check. People like Sean.
"Hold it – you want me to
pretend to be your boyfriend?"
"Isn't that what I just
said?" Sean sighed with exasperation.
"Just for tonight. At the
club."
"So the hot guy – "
"The hotter guy," the
genie corrected, bringing in the rest of the groceries.
"Thank you! At least someone listens." Sean draped one arm over the genie's
shoulder, leaning on him. Like Ben, Sean
was several inches shorter than the genie, which made it look like they were
cuddling.
"Fine, so the hotter guy will
think you're not a pathetic loser?"
Perhaps Sean was the one who should have found the bottle. Maybe its GPS needed an upgrade.
Sean brushed his long black hair
out of his eyes for the umpteenth time.
"Not a pathetic loser! I
didn't say he thought I was a pathetic loser.
I don't look like a pathetic loser, do I?" he appealed to the
genie.
"You look like a most
attractive young man," the genie answered.
"But I do not understand. If
you desire this person, why do you not have a family member or emissary
approach him with a proposal? Someone to
speak to your good qualities and the worthiness of your character."
"Wow." Sean blinked. "I
didn't know your friend was a comedian."
"Because it would be too
rational to just talk to the fellow," Ben noted, putting groceries away in
the refrigerator, thinking that while the genie's approach sounded
old-fashioned, honest communication wasn't a bad idea.
"I tried talking to him, did
you not hear that part?"
"I got a little lost in which
he was which," Ben answered honestly.
"Look, you don't need to
understand. Just be there and dance with
me. Wear something hot. Look possessive. You can do that, can't you?"
"I have company," Ben
said happily. Perhaps having a genie
around wasn't such a bad thing. He fixed
breakfast, he helped with the shopping, he provided useful excuses to avoid
getting drafted in his friend's dramas.
"He can come too. Do you like dancing? I bet you look marvelous on the dance floor,
even if you just stand there and look hunky and sway."
The genie looked momentarily taken
aback at the suggestion. "I was not
created to dance."
Sean bumped his hip against the
genie's. "Not all of us were born
to dance, darling, but I bet you can learn.
And try not to talk about retro nonsense like emissaries."
"An emissary would present
your best qualities without having to resort to deception."
Sean mugged a face at Ben, like
'why is this hot guy so weird?'
"It's not deception. It's
just a little spice to make sure he'll get interested." Focusing on Ben, he badgered again, "You
will come, won't you?"
"I'll try. It depends on how the day goes." Ben kicked himself even as he made the
semi-promise. Sean had been trying to
drag him into trouble or embarrassing situations for years. Why couldn't he say no? Because Sean was his friend and he hated to
let a friend down. Loyalty could be such
an inconvenient virtue.
"I'm counting on you. You're my wingman. Be there." Giving him and the genie kisses on both
cheeks – longer ones for the genie, Ben noted with irritation – Sean bounced
out of the house. Great. Wake up with a magical genie in the house and
watch the day get better and better.
~~~~
"Do you wish food,
Master?"
Ben lifted his arm off his eyes
and stretched his body, getting comfortable on the couch. "I thought you were here to fix my
troubles, not be my own personal chef."
"You will not let me fix your troubles, Master."
"One of them walked out of
the door and you could very easily have helped me out of participating in
tonight's fiasco," Ben noted pointedly.
"Instead of weirding him out by talking about retro-ideas like
matchmakers."
"An emissary is very
different than a matchmaker, Master. Are
they not used at all? They seem much
simpler than these coy masquerades."
"Sean doesn't like
simple. He's not that kind of
person."
"But you are,
Master."
The genie might not understand
modern society, but he was observant about Ben.
It was an interesting thought – did the genie always do what people
asked, or did he observe and wait for the 'right command,' as he had
suggested? Had the wizard gifted him
with empathy? "Yes," he
sighed. "I'll call him later and
get out of it. I guess I'm a bit of a
pathetic loser," he admitted with reluctance. "I always try to help people, even when
I think they're making bad decisions."
"If this is that distressing
for you, I will correct my error immediately." The genie crossed his arms
and started to bob his head, but Ben swung to a sitting position, yelling,
"Wait!"
The genie paused mid-head
bob. "Master?"
"What are you going to
do?"
"I will go to your friend and
say that we will not dance tonight."
"And how will you get
there?"
"I will go as genies
do."
"And that is?"
The genie finished his bob, and
vanished. "As genies do."
Ben whirled his head to see the
genie on the other side of the room.
"Okay – no. You can't go
popping in and out of thin air."
"Then may I take the
vehicle? I can drive."
Ben had a sudden vision of
'Starman,' and Jeff Bridges' calm, "Green means go. Red means stop. Yellow means speed up." Or however that line of dialogue was phrased. "Please – don't worry about it. I can call later or something. Or we can go.
It's okay."
"I am here to solve your
troubles, Master. Not to see them
continued."
"Really, please. Sean's always like that. He can be a great guy. He's just luckier in lust than love. This isn't worth using a wish, because you
can't fix that trouble unless you change his personality. You can't, can you? Change a man's personality?"
"I can change how people feel
by making them more aware of other people or their own emotions. Open their eyes, I believe it is said. It is how I make people fall in love, when
that wish is requested. But I cannot
change their entire personality."
"Well, that's the only
effective long-term solution for Sean, and then he wouldn't be Sean any
more."
"May I ask you a question,
Master?"
"Yes, of course."
"You and Sean discussed this
club and dancing with other men. Will no
women be there?"
Could a genie be homophobic? "No, Sean and I are both
homosexuals. We're attracted to other
men, not women, and we go to clubs where other men with similar tastes gather together."
The genie seemed to ponder Ben's
explanation. "Then you do not wish
for a wife and family?"
"I wish for a partner, a male
partner to share my life. I do not want
a woman. As for kids – these days it is
possible for two men to adopt or hire a woman to have a baby for them. I'd like it if something like that
happens. But I won't be devastated if it
doesn't. It's a difficult thing to
organize. But what about when you were
created? Did men never love other
men?"
"Yes, Master, men did love
other men. The wizard included this in
my understanding. But it was first and
foremost important that a man married and had children to carry on his name and
take care of him in his old age. The
love of other men was for distraction only."
"I like my time
better."
"It is a most different
time. Perhaps I am here to make this
happen for you. A man to love and
children to raise."
Could that be why the genie found
him? Is that what would fulfill
him? "It would be a little
difficult to explain a ready-made family, brought into life in an
instant."
"But not impossible. I could fulfill this wish."
Did he want a family? Something inside Ben recoiled at the idea of
living with genie-made people, like living with dolls without souls. "I'll think about it," he promised,
which seemed to make the genie happy as he smiled, his eyes a stunning
blue. "So… lunch?"
"Yes, Master. I will make you a dish you will find very
pleasing."
Ben hadn't meant that as an order,
but considering the excellence of breakfast, decided to let it stand. He watched the genie pad back into the
kitchen, realizing how much he'd accepted this crazy situation. He had a genie living in his home. A genie who wanted him to be happy, in any
fashion he could make possible. Ben had
wanted to be an astronaut and failed, but somehow he'd become Captain Tony
Nelson.
What were the limits of a genie's
powers? How different could he make
things? And why had Ben been so stupidly
offended at the genie's assertion that he was troubled that he hadn't asked
this question? Moral indignation was
stupid when it led to ignorance. Ben
went into the kitchen, watching as the genie mixed ingredients, did a few head
bobs, floated a few pots and utensils in the air, and in minutes, a plate of
food landed on the table.
"Do you need to eat? Do you want to eat with me?" He should have asked at breakfast.
"I can eat, but it is not
necessary that I do so."
"I'd like you to. Please."
The genie nodded, and another
plate of food landed on the table.
Ben tentatively took a few bites
of honeyed chicken, wild rice, and vegetables cooked with interesting
spices. "This is superb."
"Thank you, Master."
"So I should have asked
earlier. What can you do for me? To grant my wishes?"
"I can do anything within my
powers to help your troubles."
There was that lack of precise
communication again. What was within his
powers? "And you do actually
help? It's not a monkey's paw thing?" He didn't believe the genie would be
deliberately harmful, but if he was going to start taking this seriously, he
should confirm the genie was sincere.
"A monkey's paw thing? I am not familiar with this term."
"There's a famous short story
where people are granted three wishes by getting a magical monkey's paw, but the
wishes backfire in disastrous ways. For
example, they ask for money, so their son is killed and they receive his
insurance money.
"Or there's an episode of
'The X-Files' where Mulder – that's the lead character – asks for peace on
Earth, so the genie makes everyone disappear.
Without people, there's peace."
The genie's thin lips were tight
with displeasure. "These are not
the work of genies. Or perhaps genies
created by bad wizards. I will do you no
harm."
"Can you turn back
time?"
"Of course, Master. Do you wish to redo a moment in your
life?"
Did he? Everything would change. "Possibly," he answered slowly,
trying to decide on the best moment to make sure his dreams came true. "Would I remember that my life had
restarted?" After all, he'd need
that knowledge to do better the second time around.
"If you wish,
Master."
If he went back to high school,
did it better… or maybe college? Did he
want to go back to a time before Ipods and wireless laptops? Should he go back even further? Sometimes it seemed like 13 had been the
deciding age, but he couldn't imagine repeating the horror that had been junior
high school. He didn't want to revisit
being mocked for his lack of height and acne, or go through the stress of
accepting his homosexuality. "Or
can you change things now, put me in the profession I want to be in?"
"Of course, Master. Where do you wish to be?" The genie already had his arms crossed, which
Ben was sure he hadn't been doing before watching 'I Dream of Jeannie'
reruns. He'd have to keep him away from
the box with moving pictures for the rest of his stay.
"Would I be trained? Would I know what to do?" It would be senseless to become an astronaut
and crash the space shuttle out of ignorance.
"Of course, Master. You would not be happy otherwise."
"That's just…"
overwhelming. The ultimate do-over or
do-differently. To have everything
change, to be in a different place with new skills and knowledge. Even better than winning the lottery, which
was only money. How many people had been
granted this opportunity? "How many
people have you helped?"
The genie shrugged with
indifference. "Hundreds,
perhaps. I have not kept track. Sometimes I am found quickly. Other times I float in my bottle for many
years."
"Do you ever go back? Find out if the people you helped remained
happy?"
"I cannot. I am tied to whoever owns the bottle. But they have received their greatest wishes,
why should they not be happy?"
So the genie did give people
whatever they asked for? That answered
whether he was empathic. He'd been being
difficult when he talked about the 'right command.' How odd that a being so old didn't realize
many people don't really know what they want.
Sean knew he wanted that guy tonight, but he'd want some other guy
tomorrow. Most people assumed money
would fix their every problem, but Ben had read about too many bankrupt lottery
winners to believe that fallacy. The
doorbell rang and he glanced out the window, seeing his sister's station wagon
parked in front, his sister, niece and nephew standing on the porch. "It's my sister and her kids. No masters, okay? No genie powers in front of her. You're a friend from work, that's
all."
"Yes, Master."
"No masters," Ben hissed
as the doorbell rang again. Opening the
door, he smiled, his expression faltering as he saw her unhappy face. "Beth?"
"Ben." She burst into tears and launched into his
arms.
Aaron tugged on Ben's shorts. "Mommy's unhappy," he confided. Deirdre tucked her thumb in her mouth and
sucked loudly.
"Yes, I can see. Come on, come inside." He maneuvered his still crying sister and her
two small children into the house. At
least he didn't have to worry she'd ask awkward questions about the genie.
~~~
"So… what's up?" Ben
asked softly, his gaze on the kids, being entertained by the genie in the
backyard, fortunately with simple tricks that could be interpreted as
sleight-of-hand. And perhaps were – Ben couldn't
tell. Maybe the genie had non-magical
tricks to go with his fantastic powers.
Beth leaned forward in her chair,
petting Gus. "Hi, Asparagus. Sweet kitty."
"He's not named after a T.S.
Eliot poem," Ben protested, as he always did. "He's named after Gus Grissom."
"He looks more like a theater
cat than an astronaut, don't you kitty?" she crooned, and Gus, that
traitor, purred loudly, arching his back into her hand.
"Sis," Ben said with
exaggerated patience, and Beth sighed at him, but stopped petting the cat,
instead twisting her hands in her lap.
"Craig's cheating on
me!"
"Really?" Ben asked
doubtfully, shifting in the patio chair, looking at his sister. She seemed weary, her skin washed out from
lack of sleep, her golden hair tied back too severely. Her eyes were the same color as his, that
weird gray-green-blue that was so hard to describe, but they lacked their
normal sparkle.
"Yes, really! Do you think I'd make this up?"
Gus's ears twitched, as if he
didn't like the shrillness of her voice, and he sauntered away.
"No, of course not," Ben
replied automatically. "But perhaps
you misinterpreted something?"
"He's getting calls from a
strange woman on his cell and he goes into the other room to talk to
her."
"Perhaps it's someone from
work?"
"And then he's evasive about
it!"
"Perhaps he thinks it would
be boring for you."
"He always used to share with
me." Beth looked on the verge of
tears again, so Ben squeezed her hand reassuringly, which seemed to calm
her. "He came home one night,
smelling of perfume. He said one of the
women at work hugged him because a project had gone successfully."
A scent seemed flimsy evidence,
but Ben was sure Beth wouldn't appreciate him saying so. Though they'd had their share of squabbles
growing up, they'd always been close, and Ben knew Beth hated to be
doubted. Her surprising streak of
insecurity always made her snappish whenever he questioned her too strongly.
Deirdre gave a particularly loud
giggle, catching their attention. She
clapped her hands at the genie, laughing more, as he brushed a red rose against
her nose and cheeks. The genie was
wearing short sleeves, Ben thought with alarm.
Pulling quarters from behind ears was one thing, but Beth was likely to
wonder where he was hiding flowers.
"God, he's hot," Beth
said enviously.
Or maybe not. Her attention seemed to be focused in other
directions.
"You said you work with
him?"
Why did both Sean and Beth have to
admire the genie's looks? And why did
Ben have such a temptation to order them to stop looking? Their admiration hardly impacted Ben's
wishes. He'd been the one to find the
bottle. "Yes. Not very closely. He's new.
I haven't known him long."
He couldn't risk pretending they knew each other well in case someone
asked the genie questions that he couldn't answer. And now he needed to keep Beth away from
Sean, since he'd given a different explanation for the genie's presence.
How had Tony Nelson survived all
those years?
"He's older than your normal dates."
"He's not a date. He's just a friend."
"If I didn't have Craig, I'd
be tempted." Beth's lips
trembled. "That's if I still have
Craig and he doesn't leave me for that other woman."
"Of course you still have
Craig," Ben responded, trying to sound soothing. "I'm sure this is all a
misunderstanding."
Beth smiled, though Ben could see
she was making an effort for him.
"You always say the most reassuring things, even when you know
they're all lies. Even though I'm the big
sister."
Ben bit his lip because she was
right. He was diplomatic, even though
sometimes he had to blur the truth.
Perhaps he should share the secret of the genie with her, to distract her. Maybe she would have some interesting
perspective on his dilemma. But… if he
went back to redo, or switched his life now, would his changed life impact his
sister's? Not that they'd been joined at
the hip growing up, but would holidays, family vacations, the hours she'd spent
teaching him to drive be affected? How much
would everything change? His life hadn't
been lived in isolation. Would she still
have met Craig, married, had those kids?
Great. Sure, sis. You still have Craig. Unless I rewrite our family history. Then who knows? Maybe you'll end up a nun. That would really help her turmoil.
He had to talk more with the genie
before he made any decision.
The children ran back to the
patio, followed by the genie, saving him from responding. Deirdre leaned against her mother's leg. "Mommy, I'm hungry." Aaron clutched her other leg. "I'm hungry too, Mommy."
"I will feed them, if this is
allowed."
"Um, sure." Damn.
It seemed wisest to keep the genie away from his sister, but casual work
friends simply didn't offer to make lunch for other people's kids in modern
America.
"Good." The genie shepherded the kids into the
kitchen.
"He is so not just a
friend," his sister hissed.
"Friends don't make themselves at home to feed your niece and
nephew."
"He's not my boyfriend! It's just – complicated, okay?"
"Fine. I want to watch this." She went back into the house, Ben reluctantly
following. At least their conversation
stalled as they sat at the table, watching the genie make peanut butter and
jelly sandwiches, and slice apples for the kids. Not standard slices of course, but charming
curlicues that delighted them. Aaron and
Deirdre were outgoing and seemed comfortable with the genie, and Beth
frequently glanced his way as the genie demonstrated his excellent hosting
skills.
The kids finally took their food
and settled at the coffee table in the living room, with the Cartoon Network to
occupy them and Gus purring between them.
As Beth fussed over making sure the kids had everything they needed, Ben
felt grateful for the reprieve of his sister's knowing looks. Then the genie got them glasses of iced tea –
minty iced tea, which had not been in Ben's refrigerator until the genie
reached in for it – and sat at the kitchen table with them, asking sympathetically,
"Why are you troubled?"
Beth poured out her fears again,
and the genie nodded, listening raptly and intently. She finished finally with a rushed,
"Ben's humoring me. He thinks I'm
letting my imagination run wild."
"Beth, I'm not – "
"Yes, you are," she
insisted. "He's always been good to
listen, but he gets that look, like he's evaluating and deciding what's truth
and what's not. You should have been a
judge," she added, directly to Ben.
"I do not think you are
imagining a possibility that does not exist," the genie inserted,
"but I do not understand the difficulty."
"You what?" Beth
squeaked, and even with his knowledge that the genie had significantly
different cultural mores, Ben felt his jaw drop.
"He is a man. It is not unusual for a man to have a wife
and mistresses. It is regrettable that
he is not honest with you, and leaves you to wonder. He should tell you the truth."
"Ben?" Beth asked calmly.
"Is your friend insane?"
"You are his wife, and the
mother of his legitimate children. These
protect your position, and are the important considerations." The genie nodded sagely, as if his words
should reassure her.
"My husband can't cheat on
me!"
The genie frowned. "I do not understand why you say he
cannot cheat on you, if indeed you believe he is. Clearly he can."
Great, what a time for the genie
to display a love of logic. Beth had
never shared his interest in sci-fi, and was not likely to appreciate the genie
channeling Spock.
Indeed, she didn't. Beth rose, grabbing her purse off the
floor. "I cannot believe you would
condone infidelity," she said icily, and Ben could see he didn't have to
worry about her finding the genie attractive any more.
"Sis, he just comes from a
different culture," Ben tried to soothe her.
"Yes, that's strikingly
obvious. We're going home
now."
"Beth, don't – " He
grabbed her by the arm, and pulled her out of the kitchen, into the hallway,
facing her and holding her with a loose grip.
"Please don't go away angry."
"I can't accept his cheating
on me. Or your friend thinking that's
fine and dandy."
"You don't know that he
is. Don't assume the worst. Please just talk to him. The kids can stay here, if you want some time
together."
She shook her head and leaned
forward, letting Ben hug her tight. Her
body relaxed, the anger dissipating as she accepted Ben's comfort. "He's working today anyway. We'll go home and let you spend time with
your – friend. I'll talk to Craig
tonight, after they've gone to bed."
"If you're sure."
"Yes." She smiled, though it looked forced. "He's quite interesting, your
friend."
"You don't know the half of
it," Ben muttered, which made her laugh.
"I expect stories."
"Deal," he agreed, even
as he wondered if the choices he made would impact his ability to be honest
with her.
She gathered up the kids, who
insisted on hugging him and the genie before they could be ushered out the
door. When they'd left, Ben laughed
hollowly, banging his head on the door.
"I did not mean to cause
distress to your sister," the genie offered, hovering in the hallway.
"That was really normal when
you were created? Mistresses?"
"Yes, of course. Is it not now?"
"We're more into monogamy
these days. Or at least, we do a good
pretense."
"I will remember
that."
Ben wandered into the living room,
sprawling on the couch again. "Who
knows, you might have helped Sean and Beth.
This could be a three-fer."
The genie sank gracefully to the
floor, his legs falling naturally into sitting cross-legged. "Why do you say this? I wish to help. It is my purpose. But they did not seem pleased with
me."
"We all get a little – "
Ben brought his hands in front of his face, sliding them back and forth as if
outlining a tunnel, "narrowly focused.
You're very – you – and present a rather unique perspective. It can be good for people to have some
different input."
"I hope so."
Either that or he'd hear about his
wacky co-worker/friend for weeks, but if he was an astronaut, he'd deal. Maybe he should have taken the genie
seriously last night, and made his choices without any introspection. Which reminded him, he'd meant to ask more
about the impact of his wishes on others' lives. Instead, he asked, "Have you ever been
in love?"
"I was brought from the kiln,
enchanted with all the knowledge I would need to fulfill my purpose, and put in
my bottle. I have been wandering ever
since."
"Do you ever wish to
love?"
The phone rang. Ben swore at the interruption, but habit made
him answer. "Hello?"
"Ben – oh thank god you're
home."
"Mom?"
His mother sounded incredibly
distraught. "Ben, it's your
father. He's had a heart attack. He was clutching his chest and he couldn't breathe
and I called 911. The ambulance is on
its way."
"I'm coming right
over."
"No, just meet us at the
hospital. We'll be gone before you can
get here. I need to call your sister –
"
"I'll take care of it."
"Good." His mom's voice was still shaky, but she
seemed calmer.
"There's been bad news,"
he said starkly to the genie.
"Dad's had a heart attack.
The ambulance is coming to pick him up.
I need to call my sister and go to Emergency." He was dialing even as he spoke, reaching his
sister on her cell phone. "Are you
still driving?"
"What?"
"Look, pull over somewhere
and stop."
"Ben, what is wrong with
you?"
"Pull over somewhere and
stop."
"I'm in the grocery store,
Ben. What's going on?"
"Dad may have had a heart
attack. He and Mom are going to
Emergency."
"Oh god, oh god," his
sister cried, and in the background he could his niece starting to cry in
response to her emotion.
"Calm down," he said
sharply. "You need to stay calm and
meet us at Emergency."
"Okay, yes," she
answered, her voice steadier.
"We'll meet you there."
They hung up, and Ben glanced at
the genie, wondering what he would think of modern medicine. Something unexpected, undoubtedly. "Let's go." If ever there was a good time for a miraculous
wish, this could be it.
~~~
Ben arrived at the hospital before
Beth and her kids, and since they only allowed one family member to enter the
emergency area, he left the genie with strict instructions to stay in the
waiting room and tell his sister where he'd gone. He found his parents in one of the small
treatment rooms, his dad wearing a hospital gown with a needle for an IV
inserted in the back of his hand, his mother sitting on the visitor chair. His dad looked gray and his mom on the verge
of breaking into tears, but both of them were holding it together, waiting for
the test results. There was barely space
to maneuver in the room, so after a brief conversation, Ben returned to the
waiting room, to find Beth, the genie, and the kids sitting on the
uncomfortable plastic chairs.
"Ben." They hugged each other. "How is he?"
"They're waiting for test
results. You should go back and let them
know you're here. Room 15."
Beth told the kids to be good and
hurried off. "Uncle Ben, what's a
heart attack?" Aaron asked.
"Is grandpa going to be
okay?" Deirdre seconded.
Ben knelt by the children,
squeezing their shoulders. They'd both
needed to visit Emergency before, Aaron a couple of times, Deirdre only once,
for fevers and bad scrapes and broken bones.
It had been nerve-wracking and frightening every time. Kids were so vulnerable. But none of the adults had been hurt or
gotten sick during their young lives.
"Grandpa is going to be just fine.
He wasn't feeling well, but the doctor is looking after him. I bet it turns out to be nothing at all. Now I need to talk to Gene, okay? You guys watch television for a few minutes,
okay?"
They nodded solemnly, and Ben drew
the genie to one side, where the others in the waiting room couldn't overhear
them. "He looks like hell. Can you fix him? Heal my father?"
"If that is your wish,
yes."
"Yes, it is my wish that you
heal my father. Only don't make it so
miraculous that it gets reported to the press.
Just – heal his heart. You can
make it look like bad gas or something, right?"
The genie crossed his arms,
lowered and raised his head slowly.
"Your father will recover.
His heart is strong again and will last many more years."
Ben leaned into the genie, hugging
him fiercely in relief. "Thank
you. Thank you."
The genie's arms circled him
loosely. "It is your due. You have the bottle."
Hearing the acknowledgment that
the genie helped only because required, not out of affection or friendship,
gave Ben a weirdly distasteful feeling, but he gave the genie another firm
squeeze. "Thank you."
~~~
Even knowing that his father would
be fine, Ben couldn't blithely waltz out, so they settled in to wait. The kids rapidly grew bored with the tabloid
show on the television, so the genie encouraged them to sit on the floor by
him, and began telling them a story about a powerful wizard who created a
magical genie to help people. Ben
listened as intently as the kids, though less obviously. Craig's arrival distracted the kids from the
story, and they ran to him excitedly, hugging him close. Squeezing them back, he looked over their
heads at Ben. "I got Beth's
message. How is your dad?"
"We think he's going to be
okay," Ben replied. He'd always
liked Craig, even if Beth's hooking up with him had been a little
surprising. She'd always been immensely
popular and pretty, while Craig was part of the geek squad, average in
appearance, with hazel eyes and brown hair.
He'd matured since becoming a father and looked better, filling out a
little so that he was no longer thin enough for a breeze to blow over, and he'd
ditched the thick eyeglasses for contacts.
"You are the husband of
Beth?" the genie asked.
"Yeah," Craig answered,
frowning a bit at the formality, and Ben gave a quick, "This is my friend,
Gene. He was visiting from out of
town," he added, wanting to smack his forehead immediately after the words
came out of his mouth. In his haste to
explain why a stranger would hang around Emergency, he'd forgotten that Beth
thought Gene was a co-worker.
No wonder Tony Nelson always
looked so harried. He'd have to say that
the genie was a co-worker from one of their satellite offices, if his sister
followed up on what he told Craig.
"We should talk," the
genie said firmly. Even in his casual
gray shorts and blue polo shirt, the genie's height and distinguished looks
made him command attention, and Craig automatically instructed the kids to go
watch television.
"I don't think – " Ben
started to say, but Craig and the genie were already pulling to one side.
"Why do you leave your wife
in doubt of your affections? Do you not
understand her importance as the mother of your children?"
Craig stared. "Who are you and what are you talking
about?"
"Gene, Beth didn't give us
permission to talk to Craig. That
conversation was in confidence," Ben hissed.
"What conversation? I want to know what's happening. What's my wife been saying?"
"I must help where I can, Mas
– Ben," the genie announced firmly, and wasn't this a great time for him
to decide his arena of authority extended beyond the owner of the bottle? "Your wife is most distressed. She is convinced that you are associating
with another woman."
"That I'm associating with
another woman?" Craig repeated blankly.
"She thinks you're cheating
on her." Now that the subject had
been brought up, it wasn't going to be easy to stuff it back into the bottle,
so to speak, so might as well discuss it and get it done. "You've been talking to some woman on
your cell phone and you come home smelling like perfume."
"She does not
understand," the genie inserted earnestly, "that men have needs and
that it is your prerogative to have a mistress.
You should tell her the truth of your affairs, and make sure she
understands her importance as the mother of your children."
Craig stared at them, flummoxed,
which wasn't really an attitude Ben could fault. The pair of them probably sounded
insane. "I'm not – she's just a –
it's not my prerogative to have a mistress!"
Ben frowned. "What do you mean, she's just a? Just a what?
Is there a woman?"
"There's a woman at
work. She's just a friend. She's been having a hard time, that's
all. I wouldn't cheat on Beth," he
insisted, glaring at the genie. "I
love my wife."
"Oh don't tell me you've
bought that," Ben hissed because how could Craig be that stupid? "Some woman is coming to you for
comfort? Did she ask you not to tell your
wife?"
"She didn't want Beth to
misunderstand."
"That is one of the oldest
lines in the history of relationships.
Broken relationships," he added pointedly. Oh, good god, Beth had been right and Craig
really was that stupid. Though from the
flush on Craig's cheeks, he'd known that not telling Beth about 'comforting'
the woman had been questionable, even if he was trying to pretend that
everything was above board. Ben should
have trusted Beth's instincts.
"There's nothing going
on!"
"Craig!" Beth was almost bouncing as she came through
the big double doors that led to Emergency and threw herself into her husband's
arms. The kids came running, hugging
their parents. Smiling, Beth looked at
Ben. "They think maybe Mom and Dad
overreacted, that it was just a bad gas attack." She hugged her kids, reassuring them,
"Grandpa's going to be fine."
Ben curled his fingers around the
genie's hand, giving him a grateful look.
The genie's face was serene as he returned Ben's look with a small
smile. Robin Williams' genie would have
been flourishing 'Applaud' in big neon letters over his head, but Ben decided
he preferred his genie.
"Mom said you should come
back and see them again, Ben. She said
Dad's looking a lot better than when you were back there."
Ben was nervous about leaving all
of them, but Beth was leaning against Craig, still smiling happily, and the
expression on Craig's face – well, Ben guessed he'd had a good reality
check. Hopefully the two of them would
have an honest discussion tonight. The
genie was already coaxing the children to sit down again for more of the story,
so Ben headed back, wanting to see the genie's miracle confirmed by his own
eyes.
The Saturday afternoon deluge had
started, the treatment rooms filled and ill people on stretchers beginning to
line the hallway. Children, middle-aged
people, senior citizens, some stoic, some obviously in pain, all waiting for
their turn. Had he been thoughtless to
ask for only his father to be healed?
Had he wasted a wish that could have been used more globally?
His father was sitting up on the
bed, healthy and energetic, appearing better than when they'd returned from
their last vacation. "Lots of
nonsense and bother," he proclaimed.
His mother's lips were thin. "It didn't seem like a lot of bother
when you couldn't breathe."
"It's good to be
careful," Ben said, belatedly realizing the problem with not revealing the
genie's intervention. His father always
hated to admit ill health, so now would pass it off as his mother overreacting,
an unfortunate consequence. With the
genie around, nothing worked out quite as he'd expected.
~~~
Even with the miraculous cure,
leaving emergency took several hours, as the doctor insisted on running a
number of tests before releasing his dad.
Unsurprisingly, Ben felt exhausted as they left the hospital, giving
hugs to his family, and then hopping into the car with the genie. "Thank you," he said gratefully.
"It is my duty, Master."
Ben started the car. "Could I have asked for more? To have you heal everyone in
emergency?"
"No, Master. I can only help you with your
troubles."
That was reassuring but also
generated a certain amount of guilt. The
genie's wishes were for him, his family and friends. Even if he'd thought of the others in
Emergency that day – and he hadn't, he had to admit to himself – he couldn't
have helped them. What made him
special? Why was his father the one to
be saved? "Do you ever wish it
wasn't? Ever feel…burdened by all that
you have to do? Or by what you
can't?"
"No, Master. The wizard created me to serve one purpose,
and that is what I do. It is what is
meant to be."
"I'm starving," Ben said
as the genie's answer nagged at him.
"I'm going to stop at Mama's.
I could use some fettuccine."
"Yes, Master."
Risking quick peeks at the genie's
profile, Ben could see nothing but serenity.
His expression was calm, face relaxed, long hair perfectly combed,
nothing to indicate he'd been dragged around a stranger's life all day and
performed a miracle. "There's
nothing you ever want for yourself?
There is, isn't there?" Ben
asked triumphantly, because he'd caught the genie's start of surprise, the
subtle twitch of one corner of his mouth, at the question.
"It doesn't matter,
Master. I have my duty."
"It matters to me. Please, tell me the truth."
"Most people are not like
you. They learn of their gift and
quickly decide and I am back in my bottle to wait. I wonder…" the genie glanced at his
hands, as if embarrassed… "what it would be like, to be human, to spend
more time with people, to have a family, to hug a friend, to hold a lover. You are very lucky, Master," the genie
added swiftly, his eyes dark blue with conviction. "Of all the people I have helped, I
understand the least why you found my bottle."
In a way, Ben agreed with the
genie, but felt compelled to note, "My father almost died
today."
"Yes, but if he had, if I had
not been there… he is of a good age, much older than most people lived when I
was created. You are blessed with your
parents, with your sister and her family, with your friends. You need a lover, Master. Children.
That is what you need. This is
what I wish I could know. It is the best
of life."
Ben pulled into the lot in front
of the restaurant, and shut off the car.
He'd been so angry at the genie yesterday for telling him he needed
assistance, but this felt right, true.
Someone to love, to touch, to be with, through the good and the
bad. "I can't imagine asking you to
zap a husband into existence for me."
"But I could do this for you,
Master. And children. Do you wish one of each, like your
sister? Or only boys?"
Ben wanted to laugh and ask if he
could choose eye and hair color and personality, and if they'd come complete
with backgrounds and social security numbers, but the genie was too earnest,
eager to be finally able to help. He
couldn't diminish his excitement.
"Let me think a bit more."
"But you will let me help
you?" the genie asked eagerly. As
Sean and Beth had noted, he was a very attractive man, and even more so when
fully happy.
"Yes," Ben returned
slowly. "I believe I'm beginning to
figure out what I wish from you."
~~~
Ben took a quick shower, thinking
of what he'd planned to do, and knowing it was the right course of action. Toweling off, he dressed in light blue
flannel pajama bottoms and went searching for the genie. Seated on the living room floor, he was
wearing a genie outfit again, gauzy blue and silver decorated with shiny gold
jewelry, chin braced on his clasped hands, watching the news on Ben's wide
screen TV.
"Do you find that
interesting?"
"It is amazing, your
news. All those things happening to
other people and in other countries, reported so quickly by the
storytellers."
"I guess that hasn't been
normal most of your life."
"The wizard was very wise and
knowledgeable, but even he did not have such information."
"There are advantages and
disadvantages." Ben knelt by the
genie, stroking his nose. "Why did
the wizard make your nose crooked? Do
you know?"
"He knocked me on a table
when he put me in the kiln."
"It was a mistake?"
"He made me larger than he
intended, but then he decided my size was fine, since I would be able to change
it. When he lifted me to put me in the
kiln, he knocked me against the table.
He did not notice that my nose was slightly bent until after I had been
fired. He decided not to break me and
begin again. My appearance is not
important."
"I think it's very
important." Ben smoothed his
fingers over the genie's nose, down his cheek, through the short, wiry
beard. "Not that it is the most
important part of you. That would be
your caring, your kindness. But your
attractiveness is…well, you're very attractive." Way to be articulate, Ben.
"No one has called me
attractive before. You think of me in
ways that no one ever has."
No, not precisely, but the
admiration of Sean and Beth wasn't relevant now, only that the genie had served
so long without receiving any wishes of his own. "They don't think of you, do they? Only of what you can give to them. But I would like to give to you in
return."
"Give to me? What do you wish to give to me?"
How sweet it was, that the genie
didn't understand. Most others would
interpret their exchange as suggestive flirting, but for all he'd seen and
done, the people he'd met and the miracles he'd performed, the genie was very
innocent. "You said that you wished
to know what it is to be human, to touch a lover."
"You would…" The genie rubbed his cheek against Ben's still
outstretched hand, overwhelmed.
"I would be
honored." Ben stood fluidly, taking
the genie's hand. "Come. This is for you."
But the genie didn't rise, looking
in astonishment at Ben.
"Unless you would rather not
be with a man."
"I do not deserve to be with
you. I was not created to satisfy my own
desires."
"Do I have to ask for my
second wish?"
"No!" The genie stood
quickly, gracefully. "You should
not waste a wish on me."
"Then come with me because
you can, because you are allowed to make me happy."
"Show me, Master,
please. Show me what it means to be
human."
Tugging the genie behind him, Ben
walked into the bedroom where he'd pulled the covers down to the base of the
bed and left candles burning on the nightstand and dresser, creating a soft
glow over the room. He turned to face
the genie, admiring him in his blue and silver.
He was, to put it bluntly, a hunk of a man, and for tonight, he was
Ben's. To touch, to caress, to take, to
love… Faced with such a blessing, he barely knew where to start. Slipping his pajamas off, he tossed them
aside, letting the genie see what he would be getting, his hands still at his
sides.
"You are magnificent,
Master. Well-formed and exquisite."
It was on the tip of his tongue to
ban 'Master' from the bedroom, but Ben's cock preempted that plan. Ben's cock thought 'Master' was quite hot and
hopefully completely appropriate by the end of the evening. "You're the magnificent one," he
said, beginning to undress the genie, removing the bolero top, the tie in his
hair, the flimsy harem pants, leaving him clad only in his jewelry.
Coaxing the genie to lie on his
back on the bed, Ben proceeded to do justice to the task he'd been given, the
opportunity no one else had been wise enough to seize. He sprawled on top of the genie and taught
him the wondrous sensation of skin on skin, and how to give and accept wet
kisses, long and slow, kisses that made a man's cock stiff with yearning.
Ben circled the genie's shaft with
his hand, feeling the strength and warmth, glad that the wizard had been
consistent in his design. "You're
as magnificent here as everywhere."
The genie breathed harshly. "Master, this is – I did not know that I
could feel like this. I did not know why
the wizard even gave me that organ."
"Thank god for
accuracy," Ben answered fervently.
It would have been most distressing if he'd stripped off the genie's
clothes to find a Ken doll. He grabbed
lube from the nightstand before shimmying down the genie's long body. "I think this needs immediate
attention."
"As you wish, Master," the genie replied, dazed.
Ben wished very much indeed. Wished to tease the genie's impressive organ
with lips and tongue, wished to taste the flavor of his pre-come, wished to
listen to his sighs and jerky moans as he learned the delights of being sucked
both gently and strongly. Lubing up his
fingers, Ben introduced one patiently, then another, stretching the muscled opening
while distracting the genie with the heat of his mouth. The genie began to writhe in desperation,
caught between the ecstasy of the powerful suction on his cock and fingers
exploring his channel, pressing firmly on his prostate.
"Give it up, give it up to
me," Ben demanded, taking the genie's cock deep in his mouth, his fingers
almost brutal inside the genie. With a
cry of "Master!" torn from him like he were dying, the genie
surrendered, and Ben drank voraciously, shuddering as the genie's thighs
flailed around him.
"Master," the genie
repeated weakly as Ben scooted back up, giving him sweet kisses, immeasurably
satisfied and proud at his response.
"There's more you need to
learn," he promised and voyaged to the middle ground he'd so badly
neglected, teaching the genie of the more subtle pleasures that could be had
from his nipples being sucked, the tonguing of his belly button, heated breath
against the vulnerable skin of his neck, his elbows, the back of his
knees.
"You have not experienced
pleasure," the genie said, daring to stroke Ben's body. His big hands felt so good, large and
strong. What would it be like, if he
could coax the genie to hold him down, to pin him with his big body, to
dominate Ben?
The thought made Ben shiver. He was enjoying being the Master, to teach
and control, but turnabout would definitely be exciting.
"I would like to take
you. To put my penis into your
body. Will you allow this?"
Daringly, the genie curled his
fingers around Ben's cock. "You
would put this into me, as you put your fingers?"
"Yes."
"Then yes, Master,
please. I wish this, desperately."
The genie was still loosened but
Ben was careful to prepare him more, to add a third finger, to tuck a pillow
under his hips, to stroke his thighs soothingly as he placed them on his
shoulders. Time seemed to slow to the
extent that Ben wondered if the genie was controlling it. Never had he lasted so long, plunged
endlessly so many times, his balls slapping with each thrust. Never had he been able to watch so clearly
the panting breaths of his lover, as his eyes darkened to midnight, how his
sweat formed on his brow, strands of his brown-gray hair clinging to his
skin.
Feeling the hot splash of come
shooting on his stomach as he drowned in the ecstasy of flooding the genie,
both of them coming in an orgasm so perfect that Ben could believe the genie
had used his second wish.
Ben wasn't sure how much time had
passed, only that lying on the bed, covers thrown off their naked bodies, sweat
drying on their skin, his head resting on the genie's shoulder, was perhaps the
most exquisite and relaxing experience of his life. Everyone should be privileged to feel this
good once in his life. Except, of
course, not with his genie.
The phone rang, and Ben groaned,
checking the time on the bedroom clock.
"That must be Sean calling from the club." The evening would be in full swing,
multi-colored lights flashing across the room, bodies writhing and swaying to
the beat of the loud music thumping from speakers in every corner. Normally, he loved to dance, to unwind and
surrender to the sound, to feel the tension leave his body after a week of
wearing nicely pressed clothes and being civilized, but now it all seemed too
frenetic compared to the peace of being in this perfect moment.
"Do you wish to dress and
join him?"
"I don't want to even
move."
"Then let me take care of
this for you." The genie slid off
the bed, and Ben watched him pad out of the room, because naked genie was a
sight truly worth ogling. And then he recalled the genie's conversation with
Craig, and that the genie didn't always handle interpersonal relationships as
Ben would. He leaped up and ran into the
living room, but the genie was already snapping his cell phone shut.
"What did you say?" he
asked in alarm.
"I said that you were very
sorry that you could not help him tonight, but that you were engaged in the
activities that he most enjoyed, and that you were sure he
understood."
The genie had been bluntly honest
again, but at least this time no one wanted to deck him for it. "And did he?"
"He asked if he could come
over and join us, but I said he could not, that two people was quite
satisfying."
"And how did he take
that?"
"He laughed, Master, and said
that he could forgive you but you owed him one.
He did not specify one what."
Being left alone tonight was
certainly worth whatever Sean might request later. After all, even if they'd gone to the club
and helped, Sean would still have asked for more favors later.
The genie might not handle matters
quite as diplomatically as Ben would have, but he certainly handled them
well.
"Master?" Both of them were standing naked in the
living room, and the genie seemed to be taking as much opportunity to examine
Ben's naked body as Ben was looking at his.
"Would it be permissible for me to practice what you have shown
me?"
The formality lost Ben for a
moment, but he quickly made the connection, his gaze flicking from the genie's
nose to his hands to his cock, all wonderfully proportional, bless the
wizard. He licked his lips, imagining
that big sword plunging into him.
"I would be honored for you to practice your new skills on
me."
The genie smiled and walked to
him, taking his hand, and they returned to the bedroom to experience more
delights together.
~~~
Ben found the genie in the garden,
sitting cross-legged on the grass, his big hands on his knees. "I thought you might wake up beside
me. Sleeping in on a Sunday is one of
the joys of being human." Gus had
been there, curled on the pillow next to him, but the cat was a poor substitute
for the genie.
"I need to think, Master, and
I do not need sleep in the same way you do."
He sank down opposite the genie,
copying his position. The sun was still
low enough that the grass was dewy under his flannel pajamas. "I have thought of my last two
wishes."
"That is good,
Master."
"So I just let you know them,
and you do them, and then what?"
"I will go back into the
bottle, Master. Please throw it back
into the river where you found me."
"You could leave me after
what we shared last night?"
"It is my duty, Master. It is what I was made for."
"Duty can be
overrated."
"It is what I was created
for."
"I understand that. I wish I didn't. I've thought a lot about restarting my life
or changing it now, and I realize I can't.
I would have to change other people's lives for my desires, and that's
not fair to them. So I do not wish to be
an astronaut but I do wish to go to the moon.
You can do that, can't you? Zap
me up there?"
"Yes, Master. I can take you anywhere."
"Good. That'll be my wish."
"And your other wish?"
"I can't – I can't ask for my
other wish. It would be wrong of
me."
"I cannot believe that you
would ask for anything that I cannot grant," the genie said,
frowning. "You would not have found
me."
"If I could ask for what I
wanted most – I would ask that you set up an identity of a man who was born 45
years ago. I think he should be from Ireland,
so he'll need an Irish passport and an American visa for permanent
residency. And then that you make
yourself into the person. Become human
and stay with me." Ben's words were
rushed, his voice low, but he didn't let it crack.
"You want… me?"
"I was by the river because I
knew I needed something more in my life, even though I didn't want to admit
it. And then I picked up a bottle and
it's only taken me a day to accept that you were right, what I needed was
someone to be with."
"I am a genie. I do not know your life, your ways. I upset your friend and your family
yesterday."
"I wouldn't care. You are unique. I wish you could stay with me and be my
lover. But I know you can't. You have a purpose you must fulfill. I think I could hate your wizard. He has made it impossible for me to ask for
my greatest wish, and nothing else seems important if I have to lose
you." Ben bowed his head, trying to
control himself, to not rail at fate.
He'd accepted that he wasn't going to make the space program. He could learn to live with this loss, which
was a far greater one. "I will take
the moon, as I know you are most insistent that I should use my wishes."
The genie clasped Ben's arms,
tugging him around, until they were sitting, both facing the house, the genie
holding Ben in an embrace. "I will
fulfill your wish now."
"You know we can't – "
breathe, he was going to say, but then he didn't, because he was breathing and
sitting on the moon. On the moon, the
one place he'd always dreamed of being, looking up at the Earth in the
sky. "Oh my god. My god."
"It is all that you
wished?"
"Oh, yes." Ben placed his hands flat on the ground,
feeling the rocky surface. Real moon
rock, and he was touching it with his bare hands. And the Earth – the Earth was so
beautiful. He'd seen pictures, dozens of
pictures taken from space, from the moon missions, from the shuttles, but
pictures couldn't duplicate the reality of experience.
He didn't know how long they sat
there, the genie letting Ben glory in his wish, but when the genie finally
said, "Shall we return?" Ben answered, "Yes," feeling
completely at peace.
As suddenly as they'd gone to the
moon, they were sitting on the grass again, in Ben's backyard, Ben coming
rapidly down from the high of having his dearest wish granted to the ache of
knowing he had to return the genie's bottle to the river soon.
"I wish to sit here for a few
moments, if I may."
"Yes. That would be fine." Ben swallowed against the heavy lump in his
throat. "I'll be inside when you're
ready to go." He stood up, leaving
the genie's arms, and walked away from him.
In the house, he was unable to focus, finally making toast and coffee to
have something to occupy his hands, but then unable to swallow more than a bite
and a sip. He peeked out occasionally
but the genie remained sitting still.
Finally, he wandered into the living room, picking up the bottle from
the coffee table. As always, it felt
warm, alive in his hands, and then… it didn't.
Cold and empty, a glass shell.
Ben froze, until arms circled him, holding out something that looked
like a passport and a stack of paperwork.
"My genie clothes disappeared
when I transformed into a human. I'm
afraid your neighbor is most upset. She
said people do not go naked in their backyards."
Ben didn't have to ask which
neighbor, because only Mrs. Kravitz got up on her stepstool regularly to peer
over the fence and into other people's yards.
"You – what did you do?"
"I fulfilled your
wish."
"But your purpose – your
responsibility – " Ben didn't understand why he was protesting. He set the bottle on the coffee table, his
hands trembling as he took the passport, flipping it open to see a picture of the
genie inside. Gene McNamara, born 45
years ago in Ireland.
"McNamara is a Celtic name,
meaning hero of the sea. I am not a
hero, but I have come across many bodies of water to be with you. I thought it was appropriate. And your family all know me as Gene."
"You gave up all your
power? For me?" The thought of what the genie had done was
staggering.
"The wizard did not condemn
me to a life of servitude. He allowed
that I might find some new world in which to live. I only needed someone to love me so that I
might stop my travels."
Whirling in Gene's arms, Ben
wrapped his arms around him, kissing him passionately, both of them panting by
the time their lips separated.
"Poor Mrs. Kravitz. She's
probably never seen anything as perfect as you are. I guess I'll need to go buy you some clothes."
"Yes, you will need to. I can no longer make them appear. But first…" Gene dropped the papers to
the ground, scattering them, and Ben let the passport follow suit. "Let us celebrate my
humanity."
Gene scooped Ben into his arms,
causing Ben to laugh happily at his strength.
He seemed different as he took Ben into his arms, stronger, more
commanding, no longer only a servant but a man.
Ben relaxed in his arms, kissing him back, wondering how his life would
change, how Gene would adjust to being human, how his family and Sean would
react when they found out Gene had moved in permanently. Oh lord, how he would reconcile the different
stories he'd told.
And then he forgot all the
consequences and ramifications to concentrate on the here and now, the
beginning of his future with his very own genie, the man he would love
forever. Wishes do come true.
~ the end ~
Title:
I Dream of Jinn
By: Elayna
Pairing: The Genie/Ben (Qui-Gon
Jinn/Obi-Wan Kenobi)
Rating: NC-17
Archive: M&A, my site,
anyone else please ask.
Category: Romance, Alternate Reality, first-time.
Feedback: Please!
Any amount any time.
Summary: Ben pulls a bottle from the river and gets a
surprise.
Notes: My thanks and hugs to Gloriana for reading and
suggestions along the way, and to Merry Amelie for the final glossy
polish. I fuss until posting so all
mistakes are mine.
Disclaimer: The boys belong to the genius who created them, George Lucas.
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