by Mason Bushell
honeyed milk
It wasn’t the squirrel bounding among the branches who
had ten-month-old baby Petey gurgling from the picnic blanket. In fact, he was watching
the man in the white suit on the bench making coins vanish and reappear from
the air.
“Time to go home, Petey darling,” said his mother,
Liza, lifting him from the blanket surrounded by a carpet of daisies on the
park meadow. He smiled and took hold of a lock of her red hair. He was soon
safely buckled into his pushchair. Liza paused at the bench to put her picnic
rubbish in the bin. It was then the magician made a large silver coin appear. With
a magical flourish it left his hand, and Petey found it in his. The baby looked
to the mystical man, but he was gone before Petey’s mother even noticed he was
there. Petey put the coin in his mouth and made a funny face, it tasted awful.
Liza pushed him home blissfully unaware of what her son was holding.
Soon Petey was sat in his playpen at home. Surrounded by his array of colourful toys and the cartoons on the tv, he was a happy little fellow. Liza brought him a bottle of milk. Whilst helping him drink, she noticed the coin lodged in his romper suit.
“What’s this, hey baby?” she cooed her eyes taking
in the sight of the demon surrounded in flames upon the old talisman. Petey
just giggled and smiled. “Where did you get this?” Liza read the incantation
written around the demon. The last word left her lips with a groan at the sound
of the doorbell. She rose and left to answer it at once.
Petey clapped his hands on his legs and held his
toes with a bemused smile. He could feel the room growing warmer. He watched
his biggest teddy glowing orange. From behind it stepped a five-inch tall man
with flame-red hair. The granite-like muscular body of the Jinn was clad yellow
and red polka dot shorts, and white sunglasses.
“Yes, you summoned me.” he began in a bored voice.
“What do you - oh no. Baby.” The Jinn grew wide-eyed as baby Petey grabbed him
with a chubby hand. He began squealing with laughter as he shook the shrieking
Jinn like a rattle.
“Waaa! What do you want? Milk, a nappy change,
chocolate, teddy bears, dinosaurs, a Ferrari.” The Jinn was being shaken all
over the playpen. “Ahhh! I’ll give you anything, just put - me – daaaaa!” The
Jinn was sent free and flying through the air. He slammed into a rubber
dinosaur, bounced off a squeaking elephant and disappeared in a heap of
building blocks.
“Gaaa,” said Petey gleefully.
“No, that was not funny.” The Jinn dug himself out
of the rubble of bricks and faced the baby. “Never do that again,” he warned. Petey
had other ideas and seized him again. This time the Jinn found himself looking
into the wide-open mouth of the baby.
Petey blew a spit bubble as the Jinn grew close to
his mouth.
“No way, no sucking and drooling on my hairdo.” The
Jinn wrestled an arm free and snapped his fingers. “I am not a chew toy. Have a
pacifier.” he said as the yellow soother appeared, aimed and shot into the
baby’s mouth. A millisecond later, the Jinn would have become a living gummy
bear. Once more he found himself flying across the playpen. This time he
vanished and reappeared on one of the pens posts. A second later a scream
filled the air. Liza was back and she was terrified by what she was seeing.
“Why me? I have him throwing me around like a
ragdoll and now you screaming at me.” The Jinn slapped his forehead. “Can
everybody, please, calm down.”
“But, but, but you’re a, a.”
“Yes woman, I’m a five-inch tall man wearing stylish
shorts and sunglasses.” The Jinn gave her a disarming smile. “Now seeing as
that little monster in there can’t read yet. I’ll assume you read my coin and
summoned me.”
“I guess I did.” Liza came a little closer. Picking
up a toy drumstick she poked the little man in the chest, like he was a
diseased rat. “What are you? You won’t hurt my baby, will you?”
“Easy lady.” the Jinn swatted the stick away. “I’m real
and I’m a Jinn. You summon the big, evil, fiery one if you want your baby
fried. You summon me if you want me to do things for you.” The Jinn put his
palms together. “So, did you need something?”
“Well.” Liza took on a thoughtful gaze. “You can
change his nappy if you like.”
“Ugh, I’d rather throw a lit match in a gas tank,
than change his stinky nappies. Thank you very much.” The Jinn folded his arms.
“Next request?”
“Goo, gaa, goo,” gurgled baby Petey trying to reach
for the Jinn again.
“It’s okay, Darling. He’s not going to hurt you.”
Liza moved to comfort her son.
“Actually, he just asked for his daddy to come and
have a game with him.”
“I wish he could be here, Jinn. Daddy is always at
work from seven in the morning until nine at night.” Liza told him.
The Jinn whistled. “Wow, that’s a lot of hours.” The
Jinn snapped his fingers. In a moment a car was heard pulling up on the driveway.
Liza listened to a person get out and shut the door. Footsteps crossed the
gravel and her husband entered the house.
“Max, why are you home early?” Liza asked never
noticing that the Jinn had vanished.
“I was working with a client when I had the
strangest urge to come home. I got in the car and I realised that I really have
no time for my darling wife and my special little man.” the man took off his
suit jacket, picked up his son and pulled his wife into a family hug. “I’ve
decided to significantly reduce my hours. I can still get my work done if I
schedule properly. That way, I can also be here for the two of you more often.”
“Really? Oh, Petey, isn’t that great?” Liza beamed
and kissed Max.
“Goo, gaa goo, goo.” Petey chuckled and took his
daddy’s glasses off.
“Really. So, how was your morning?” Max took back
his glasses and gave his son one of his dinosaurs instead.
“We had fun in the park, then…” Liza paused and
looked for the Jinn. “Came home to watch Petey’s favourite TV shows. He’ll need
a nappy change soon.”
“Great well you change his —” Max froze for a second,
his eyes glazed. With a shake of his head, he smiled. “I’ll change his nappy,
then hows about we drive to the seaside for the afternoon,” he said instead.
“We’d love that.” Liza smiled.
“Okay, won’t be too long.” Max left the room with
baby Petey.
Liza looked about her with furrowed brows. “Hmm, where
was the Jinn?”
“He’s a model husband now, don’t you think?” said
the Jinn. Liza looked into the playpen to see the little man juggling building
bricks. He looked every bit the circus clown with those polka dot shorts on.
“He is, thank you so much.”
“My pleasure, from now on he will share the chores
and be with you both more. Return that love and you will be a happy family.”
The Jinn vanished and reappeared near the door. “Oh, and don’t summon me near
that baby again. I have a bloody headache from being used as rattle!” with
that, his job was done, he snapped his fingers and vanished.
See more by Mason:
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/07/the-heart-shaped-carving-in-old-oak-tree.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/08/talia-and-jinn.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/08/talia-and-jinn-2.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/09/the-jinn-and-dog.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-governor-and-jinn.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-magician-and-jinn.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/08/talia-and-jinn.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/08/talia-and-jinn-2.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/09/the-jinn-and-dog.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-governor-and-jinn.html
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-magician-and-jinn.html
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