The Secret Of Ka Part 13

You’re reading novel The Secret Of Ka Part 13 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!

Keep my mouth shut; don't draw its attention. Let Amesh ge t his hand, and then hopefully the djinn would return to its bottl e and leave us alone .

A voice spoke . T he words did not emanate from the direction of the invisible ma.s.s alone . T hey came out of the walls . T hey were inside my head, too, an echo of a sound so old i t could have existed before the earth. Words both soft and oppressive, definitely sly . I t was clever; its life had been long . I t would be difficult to fool .

"What is your name?" it asked .

Amesh opened his mouth to speak . I abandoned my vow o f silence .

"N o!" I shouted. "Demand to know its name."



Amesh tried to look at me, but the thing had hi m hypnotized .

"Why?" he mumbled .

"Your name will give it power over you . T ell it to revea l its name."

Amesh swallowed, struggling. "Who are you?" he asked . N ow I felt the djinn stare at me . I t did not want to giv e out its name. Plus, it was angry that I had helped Amesh . I sensed it saw me as an enemy .

Yet a part of me felt that was not necessarily bad . T h e djinn were not there to make friends . T hey were forces of nature . T hey possessed power, and apparently they craved power .

Amesh could use it as an ally to get what he wanted. But the n he had to break the bond . I felt as if the carpet were still talking to me, telling m e these truths. But I wondered if it was not something else . M ayb e just talking to the carpet had awakened my intuition .

"Don't just ask. Order Order it to reveal its name," I told Amesh . it to reveal its name," I told Amesh .

He coughed weakly. "tell me your name," he muttered .

His voice lacked authority; another mistake, I knew . T h e djinn's gaze swung between us. Amesh had set it free. However- a nd it was like I could read a piece of its mind!-there was thi s other one who kept giving Amesh advice . I sensed its doubt . I t wanted to know my name! e ven more than Amesh's . I t wanted his name so it coul d get mine . I t was fortunate I was in the temple to guide Amesh .

At the same time, it was a pity I had not had a chance to lear n more from the carpet before I had to face a djinn . I was not sur e why it was interested in me .

"B e forceful," I urged Amesh .

"i demand that you tell me your name!" he said, finall y showing some strength . T he attention of the djinn swung bac k to Amesh .

"Darbar Aloya ta," it replied . "N ow your name."

Amesh went to reply .

"I gnore it," I said . "M ake your demand. "

"S hould I ask for my wish now?" Amesh asked me .

"First invoke its name . T hen make your wish an order."

Amesh nodded at my instruction, which had just poppe d into my head. Frankly, I felt as if my mind was not my own . I felt like the carpet was still trying to warn me about the djinn, w hile the djinn was still checking me out .

As Amesh focused on the djinn, he flashed a c.o.c.ky grin . T hat worried me. c.o.c.kiness and mastery were not identical . I n fact, they were usually opposites .

"Darbar Aloya ta," Amesh said firmly . "I demand yo u grant me great riches of jewels. A trea sure chest full of them. "

" Huh?" I gasped. He was asking for money when he shoul d have been asking for a new hand! money could always be earned; o nly magic could fix his handicap .

A red mist formed at Amesh's feet. A wind blew, takin g the mist and twisting it into a spiral that spun before him, giving off bright sparks, changing into a pillar of fire . I heard a loud popping sound, and a gold chest appeared at Amesh's feet . T he jewels inside it sparkled with exotic beauty . T he pilla r vanished .

I knew I had to get over my shock and watch closely wha t Amesh did next . T he entire night had led to this moment .

He had made his wish . I t was not the one I had hoped for bu t it was done . N ow he had to return the djinn to its cage an d walk away .

But Amesh had fallen to his knees. He was running hi s fingers through the jewels, lifting them to his lips, kissing them, s pilling them over the floor. His eyes were drunk with joy, th e smile on his mouth so wide I thought it might split. He looke d so happy-i scolded myself for being judgmental. His wish ha d not been my choice but it had been . . . H is .

All along I had been wrong. He wanted wealth more tha n anything . N ow it was his; now he could buy his Papi and mir a whatever they desired. From what I could see, the gems th e djinn had given him were priceless . I suspected the richest me n in the middle east would sign over their fortunes to possess them .

Possess . T he word haunted me for some reason .

"Do you see what I have! sa-" he shouted .

"Don't say my name!" I interrupted . "N ot in front o f the djinn!"

But the djinn had heard . I heard it whispering to itself .

Sa . . . Sa . . . Sa . . .

Amesh made a dismissive gesture. "Don't worry, I'm the on e who freed it from the bottle . I t owes me. You can't hear everything it's telling me. You can't see it, can you? it says you can't."

"no, I can't see it. But I can hear it, and I know it's tellin g you what you want to hear. For one thing, it doesn't owe yo u anything . I t already granted you a wish . R emember the laws I told you about . I f you make another wish, you will owe it."

Amesh plucked a large ruby from his chest and stared at i t hungrily .

He giggled. "What are you talking about? I'm its master . T hat's why it told me its name . I t's under my control. You saw h ow it obeyed me." I took a step toward him. Yet I was afraid to step betwee n him and the djinn . I suspected the creature would not allow that .

"Please," I said. "You promised me you'd make just on e wish. We have to put the djinn back in its bottle. We have to ge t out of here. "

" Why?" he asked, the silly grin still on his face. He was no t hearing every thing I said . T he djinn had its own dialogue goin g on inside my friend . I t did not want me messing with its plans . N o doubt its plan was old, tried and true, for whoever opene d its bottle . I t probably kept giving the person whatever the y wanted, as long as he or she kept making wishes . . . I worried Amesh would make a second wish . I was terrified he would make a third .

"A mesh, we're in danger!" I pleaded .

He laughed and stood, shoving a few prized gems in hi s pocket. He held out a huge pearl to me, which was encircle d w ith a diamond-studded gold band . I t was a pendant-the pear l dangled from the end of a gold chain. Amesh came near .

"T his one's for you . T ake it . I t's my gift to you."

He was close enough to slap . I felt I had to knock som e sense into him . M ental telepathy, the ability to dominate a person's will-these were not powers I had expected the djinn t o have . I realized I had been a fool to go along with Amesh, t o help him get even a single wish. Because all of it had just opene d a door-the djinn's front door . I pushed his hand away. unfortunately, he dropped th e pretty pearl, and it bounced over the floor. He took a step back, s tunned that I would reject him so blatantly. Yet I wanted t o shock him back to his senses .

"Keep your stupid jewel," I said .

His grin was gone, but something else had also vanished . T here was a flatness in his gaze I couldn't quite understand . I t was as if his inner light had been extinguished .

"What's wrong with my jewels?" he asked . "N ot goo d enough for the Proud Princess?" I tried to grab hold of him, to get him to focus on me .

"T hey belong to you, not me," I said in a clear voice .

"T hey're what you wished for . T hat's fine; you're rich now. Let' s leave this place with your riches . I t's time to go." I paused .

"Order the djinn back in its bottle."

He blinked at my last remark . I knew why . M y words wer e n ot jibing with the words he was hearing inside, words he believed were his own thoughts, but I could pick up enough o f them to know they were coming from the djinn. Amesh believe d he was in control, when he was really the puppet .

Make another wish. Another wish. Don't stop . M ake another wish . . . I could hear the djinn talking to him!

How quickly it was taking control!

Amesh staggered back as if drunk and pointed an unstead y finger at me .

"You don't want my jewels because you think I'm a freak. "

"T hat's not true . I think you're a great guy," I said .

"right!" he shouted. "A great guy who has only one hand!

A guy who can hardly dress himself in the morning! Yeah, yo u admire me, all right. "

"I t's true. What happened to your hand doesn't matter. Yo u are who you are." I lowered my voice, desperate to reach him . "I never told you this before but it looks like a war wound to me . I t makes you look kind of s.e.xy."

He blinked again, this time with interest . "R eally?" I nodded vigorously . "I almost told you that when we met."

But I had gone too far. Doubt crossed his face as his internal war intensified. Again, I heard what the djinn said insid e his head .

Hand. Wish for hand back. Hand will impress pretty girl .

Amesh shook his head and took another step back .

"I 'll always be ugly in your eyes," he said sadly .

I opened my arms wide . I reached for him, to hug him . I opened my heart . I did every thing I could to pull him back fro m the abyss he was racing toward .

"Don't be silly. You're the cutest guy I've ever met. "

" Sara . . . "

"I have a crush on you, Amesh," I said .

He heard me; I know he did. Because for an instant h e smiled, and it was real . I sensed he was on the verge of sharin g his feelings for me . S ure, it was a strange moment to share intimacies, but I didn't care . I just needed him to be safe . T hen I heard the djinn speak loudly in his mind. Wit h power . T he power we'd just given it when we'd both accidentall y given it our first names .

Amesh. Wish for hand back. Amesh. Get hand back for Sara .

Amesh turned away from me then and was lost .

"Darbar Aloya ta," I heard, as he began to make his second wish .

Chapter Nine.

Wh en I a woke the following morning, I ha d the sun in my eyes and a throbbing head ache. As I sat up, a bon e in my back cracked . T he morning was warm . T he air was stil l and dry, the vast basin was as silent as a tomb. For a long tim e I just sat there, staring at the pond, the temples, the oval pools, a nd our bottled water . I corrected myself: it was no longer our water; it was m m y y water . T hat jerk, Amesh, was gone; my carpet was gone; he an d his djinn had taken it and flown back to Istanbul . I was alone . water . T hat jerk, Amesh, was gone; my carpet was gone; he an d his djinn had taken it and flown back to Istanbul . I was alone .

Alone and stranded on an island swarming with invisible djin n where I might die .

I couldn't have been more furious and devastated! I wante d to kill him!

But I also couldn't help miss him . I was so worrie d about him . I let these intense and opposite emotions burn me . I ha d no choice; it was as if they had a life of their own . T o hate someone and to miss someone-all at the same time . I t was to o much for my brain to process . T he time was 10:35 a.m . I had slept seven hours .

Finally, I calmed down enough to check my supplies . T h e candy was finished . I had six protein bars left . I t was time t o ration, I decided . I 'd eat just two bars a day, max . I t was no t as if the island had demonstrated that it could support human life .

Was there any reason to explore farther? An argumen t could be made for staying where I was, conserving my strengt h and food . I f I spent my time resting, I could eat one protein ba r a day and maybe live a week. Yet it went against my nature t o just sit around and hope for the cavalry to rescue me . I f only I had the carpet . T he marble sidewalk that stretched between the temple s did not appear simply new . I t was extremely clean . I n othe r words, it looked as if someone was maintaining the site .

Amesh and I had approached the valley from the east, an d seen no one. However, north, south, west-each offered an equa l promise of running into someone . I t was sad but true-thos e w ho kept the basin tidy might be less than a mile away, but if I chose the wrong direction to hike, I could walk until I died . I slowly chewed on a protein bar, in between sips of water, w hile I contemplated my dilemma . I n the end I decided to hik e up the ridge and make a thorough scan with my binoculars before I chose a course. Who knows, I thought, I might discove r a village on the far side of the western hills. We had entere d the basin in the dark yesterday, with our eyes focused on th e pools and the temples . I t was possible I was not as alone as I feared . I t was hard to stand, harder to get my feet moving . T h e previous day had destroyed my muscles. Yet before I hiked ou t of the basin, I revisited the three temples Amesh and I had entered and made sure the rocks I had used to prop open th e doors were still in place . I ndeed, I added more rocks to eac h one . I t was always possible that I might be forced to flee to a temple for shelter-for protection not just from the elements, b ut from wild animals, or even more dangerous creatures. An d the more choices I had, the better . I ignored the cobblestone path as I exited the valley . I t wa s too rocky for my taste, too long. using my compa.s.s, I face d west and hiked straight uphill . I n my pack were my four bottle s of water . T hey were heavy but I was not worried about thei r weight . I would go through them quickly . S traight up was steep . I had to stop and rest several time s before I reached the ridge . N o "surprise town" waited for me o n t he other side of the hill. But I was careful to study the terrai n before deciding on a course. Due west did not look inviting . T here was a range of hills taller than the one I was on . I t stretched out of sight, to the north, another direction I was no t thrilled about . I ts hills looked like mountains . S outh had th e fewest obstacles, and so south it would be . M y heart was still heavy . M y emotions kept swinging- m issing Amesh, cursing Amesh. But, to be blunt, I cursed hi m far more than I missed him . I set off at a steady pace, hoping the exercise would distrac t me . T he first part of my journey took me downhill, and I wa s not walking long when I noticed a change in the terrain . M os t of it was caused by the addition of a new type of shrub that wa s dark green and had red berries on it . T he fruit was unlike anything I had seen before . I t looked like raspberries, strawberries, and blueberries al l put together . I wished I could look the fruit up in my BlackBerry, b ut it was still dead. Just my luck, I thought, the berries wer e probably poisonous .

Breakfast had been only an hour ago, and I was alread y starving . I had no choice; I had to try one. Picking out wha t looked to be a ripe specimen, I bit into it carefully . T he juice that flooded my mouth floored me . N ot onl y was it sweet, it had a taste that went straight to my brain an d rang the plea sure bell. Without thinking, I stuffed another thre e in my mouth, chewing hungrily .

"stop Sara !" I said aloud . I needed to wait an hour . I f I go t sick, i'd have no one to take care of me . I washed down the berries with water before grabbing several handfuls and stuffing them in my pack . S toring them wa s probably unnecessary. As far as I could see, my path was littere d with the bushes. But I figured it was better to be safe than sorry . T he fruit gave off a delightful aroma; it seemed to give me energy . I felt stronger than when I had left the basin .

Psychologically, the discovery gave me a boost . I wasn't going to be able to live on the fruit forever, but at least now i t would take time to starve to death-if I didn't get sick. Hopefully Amesh would be back soon . . .

"I wouldn't count on it, sister," I told myself . M y late start proved a handicap . I was not far from th e basin when my watch read two o'clock-normally the hottes t part of the day . T o lighten my load, I was purposely drinkin g lots of water . T wo bottles were already gone. Yet now I worrie d that I was making a mistake. With all the hiking I had done s o far, over both days, I had not seen so much as a trickle of liqui d outside the mysterious basin . I wondered if the strange temples and pools took water fro m the rest of the island. A perfect question to ask my carpet . M y vow to wait on the berries did not last . T aking anothe r break, I ate about a pound and enjoyed every mouthful. A par t of me didn't care . I f the berries were poisonous, at least now I would die quickly .

While I was sitting and digesting my lunch, a big shee p walked over and casually licked my berry-stained hands . T h e creature showed no fear, which told me it was familiar wit h humans. Plus its wool was not that thick . I t had been sheared i n the last month . T alk about a morale boost . I felt like dancing!

"Where did you come from? Can you take me to you r master?" I asked the sheep as I petted it . T he animal stared a t me with soulful eyes and licked my face . I laughed; I took tha t as a yes. When I stood, the sheep began to walk in a southwestern direction . N aturally, I followed. u nfortunately, my companion was in no hurry to go home . I t stopped every few minutes to eat . I t liked the berries as muc h as I did, and enjoyed the leaves that surrounded the fruit as well . N ear sunset I came upon a herd of sheep . T he herd was a fair size-i counted at least fifty beasts. A dozen goats mingle d with the crowd. On the whole they were not as friendly as th e sheep, except for one . T his girl-there was no mistaking her gender-came ove r and nuzzled me. Lowering my gaze, I saw why . I ts huge teat s were swollen with milk. A pity I was a city girl-i didn't know a thing about milking animals. But the goat refused to accep t that . I t made a loud baying noise and tried to bite me .

"Hey!" I shouted, shoving it away. " I'm not dinner." t he sun went behind the hills; the light grew dim . S till, I had yet to meet any people. Luckily, the herd finally took not e o f the time. With the goats leading, it set off due west at a bris k pace . I kept to the side of the animals and tried to avoid thei r droppings . I t was dark when I finally saw three torches burning u p ahead . T hey were attached to a well, which stood between tw o buildings. Left of the well was a large wooden barn with a triangular roof . I t looked like it had been painted brown . I ts door s were wide open, and the animals jostled happily toward them . T he design of the house was different from the barn . T h e exterior was made of stone . I t was hard to be certain in the dark, b ut it seemed to weave across the side of a hill . T he hill itsel f was rocky, too. Perhaps because I was exhausted, but it was eas y to pretend that the house had grown out of the hill. While th e barn looked like a recent addition, there was an old feeling t o the house . N o one appeared to greet me . I walked toward the fron t door. Light flickered through gla.s.s . I a.s.sumed there must b e someone inside . M y heart pounded but I felt more tired tha n scared. Besides, I had no choice but to knock and wait .

A large man answered. His face made my heart skip. Hi s expression was kind, yet it had power, strength that only cam e from having lived a hard life . I saw it in his eyes; they shone a bright blue. His skin was ruddy. He had only a few wrinkles bu t his skin seemed as coa.r.s.e as the material he wore .

His clothes were from another time and place . I wanted t o c all his garment a robe, but it was probably closer to a kilt . I t reached to his knees and was beige, held up by a woolen rope .

He had an impressive belly, and a white mustache an d beard, which he kept neatly trimmed. His age was a mystery- h e was sixty, maybe older . E verything about him was oversize . I imagined I looked like a mouse to him .

He did not act surprised to see me .

"Ha talpa sang," he said in a sweet voice . I shook my head. " I'm sorry, I know only en glish. "

" engleesh? "

" en glish." I paused and pointed to myself. "American. "

"A maren." He gestured for me to enter .

The Secret Of Ka Part 13

You're reading novel The Secret Of Ka Part 13 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.


The Secret Of Ka Part 13 summary

You're reading The Secret Of Ka Part 13. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Christopher Pike already has 404 views.

It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.

LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com

RECENTLY UPDATED NOVEL