By Lauren Sweet
A nice, normal, boring life—that’s all Amber Polaski ever wanted. One where she’s not unchaining her flaky New Age mom from endangered trees, bailing her out of jail, or getting dragged to naked pagan rituals. But when Amber finds a sexy genie in her antique brass samovar, any hope of normal goes up in smoke.
It’s just one tiny little wish—to find her long-lost father. What could go wrong?
Plenty. Dad shows up, all right—with a computer drive full of stolen data and angry mobsters hot on his trail. Now Amber has Fugitive Dad holed up in her Manville, NJ duplex, fending off the Mafia on one side and the FBI on the other. And she has Jasper the genie lounging in her blue plush recliner, conjuring chocolate chip cookies and passing himself off as her boyfriend. While Jasper is trying to tempt Amber with more disastrous wishes—and his seriously hot thousand-year-old body—Amber and her mom are forced to fight off Mafia assassins with nothing but chutzpah and household appliances.
It’s time for Amber to call in the B-team: Iggy the homeless dwarf, Tim the ecoterrorist, and Wanda the Fairy Dogmother with her pack of Happy Puppies. Together, they need to save Dad before the Mob makes him disappear again—permanently!
*~*~*~*
Excerpt
When
Amber came to, she was lying on the couch. Not tied up, not naked, not dead.
All good signs. She opened one eye a tiny crack. The crazy genie man was
sitting in her recliner, feet up, reading the newspaper. She closed the eye.
Now what?
“I know you’re awake,” he said. The newspaper
rattled.
Amber cracked her eye open again and watched
his triceps ripple as he turned a page. Yowsah. Too bad the best-looking guy
she’d met in, well, forever, happened to be an insane home invader. At least he
hadn’t put her through the wood chipper. Yet.
“You’re faaaakinng,” the man singsonged
softly.
Okay, that was creepy. And obnoxious. Amber
rubbed the back of her neck, which was still tingling. “What was that?” she asked. “Taser? Vulcan
death grip?”
“I told you,” he said. “I have magic powers.”
Sure you do,
buddy. She started to sit up and a wave of
dizziness passed over her. She lay back down.
He lowered the newspaper and gazed at her.
“Can I get you something?” he asked politely. “A glass of water?”
“I think I need a beer,” she said.
“Are you sure that’s a good idea?”
“I don’t have anything stronger.”
He righted the recliner and went into the
kitchen. Amber sat up—carefully—and gauged the distance to the patio door.
Could she make it?
Too late. The man returned with two bottles,
already open. He handed one to her, and then sat back down in the recliner,
looking much more comfy than he had any right to. He took a swig of beer and
made a face. “You must buy the cheapest beer in the universe.”
Ungrateful
lout. “If you wanted expensive beer, you
should have broken into somebody else’s house.”
“I didn’t break in, o gracious one,” he said.
“You summoned me.”
“Stop calling me that,” she said. “And I
certainly did not ‘summon’ you.”
“Did so.”
“Didn’t.”
“Did.”
“What are you, five years old?” Amber snapped.
He grinned at her, then passed his hand over
his beer bottle. Amber heard it fizzing. The man-who-was-not-a-genie took
another sip and looked much more satisfied.
Amber frowned. “What did you do to your beer?”
“Improved it,” he said.
Amber
stalked over to him and took the bottle out of his hand. At least if she drank
his, she’d know it wasn’t drugged. She took a sip and choked, almost spraying
the crazy man with her mouthful of beer. She checked the bottle. The label was
her brand. The beer was not. It was rich, mellow, and expensive. Imported.
“Where did you get this? Not in my fridge.”
He raised an eyebrow and smirked. “Magic
powers,” he said. “Believe me now?”
“No.” She handed back her own bottle of cheap
domestic and returned to the couch.
The not-genie looked affronted. “Hey! You took
my beer.”
“It’s my
beer,” Amber informed him. “My house, my recliner, my beer.”
Heaving an exaggerated sigh, the not-genie
waved his hand over the second bottle. It fizzed. Amber got up, went over, and
tasted this one. Not the cheap beer she’d handed him.
Holy cannoli. Amber checked around the chair
and behind the end table, looking for the bottles he’d switched out. Nothing.
She tasted the beer again, and stared at him. He smirked again. “I’m an
all-powerful—”
“Genies don’t exist.”
He spread his arms wide. “And yet here I am,
in all my glory.”
“You’re not glorious. You’re delusional.” Not
entirely true. He was delusional, but
he was also fairly glorious. In a disturbingly hot,
I-could-go-postal-and-break-you-in-half-any-second kind of way.
He sighed. “It’s always so tedious getting
beyond the shrieking and disbelief,” he said. “You saw me improve your beer.
I’m real. Can we move on to the good part?”
Amber refused to give in. The world had rules,
and they didn’t include magic. “Any stage magician can do that beer trick,” she
said. “You’ll have to do better than that.”