Authors: Tom Holt
Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
âNow how far is it?' the elf demanded.
âNearly there. Really nearly there,' said Daddy George, in one of the most accurate and truthful statements of his life. âIn fact, if it wasn't so dark you could practically see it from here.'
The elf sniffed suspiciously. âYou'd better be right,' he said. âBecause if I find out you've been playing games with meâ'
One of the features of this particular house that had most impressed Carol's dad when he was considering buying it was the security system. Infra-red beams latticed the perimeter; once triggered they switched on more floodlights than Wembley Stadium and set off a devastating array of bullhorns, sirens and other musical instruments. To an elf, accustomed to the Arcadian calm of pastoral, unmechanised Elfland, the effect was extremely offputting. He dropped to his knees, hands clamped firmly over his pointy ears, while with his third hand he tried to find whatever it was you turned, pulled, pushed or pressed to turn the damn' things off.
Daddy George, by contrast â well, he wasn't in his element exactly, but he'd been a distinctly third-rate burglar long enough to be able to cope with a suddenly triggered burglar alarm and a few bright lights. As soon as the elf relaxed his invisible grip, he was off like the electric hare at a greyhound track, heading straight for the house. In consequence he had his back to the elf at the crucial moment, when the elf contrived to wrap all ten of his highly conductive fingers around the main live cable.
This was a slice of luck as far as Daddy George was concerned, since looking directly at a flash like that could easily have left his retina as crisp and charred as a transport café fried egg. Having guessed what'd happened, he slowed down, grinning hugely, and gradually turned round.
âFuck'
, said a small voice from somewhere under the mushrooming pall of smoke that hovered a few feet above the ground.
âAre you all right?' Daddy George called out.
âDo I sound like I'm all bloody right?'
the voice whimpered.
âWhat the hell was all that about, anyway?'
âWhere are you?' Daddy George asked. âI can't see you.'
âDown here.'
It took him about thirty seconds to figure out where the little squeaky voice was coming from. âYou've shrunk,' he observed.
âYou don't say. Dammit, I think you may be right. Of course I've bloody well shrunk, you stupid tallâ'
The elf got no further. Daddy George had picked him up between forefinger and thumb, and was shaking him. He was being quite gentle, at least by his standards, but the elf didn't like it at all.
âWell, well,' Daddy George said. âNow this changes things rather, don't you think? A little jolt of electricity, and suddenly you're not nearly as big and mean and nasty. Doesn't look like your super-special magic powers are working too well, either.' He flipped the elf over into the palm of his hand and was about to close his fingers and squeeze very had when someone shone a powerful torch in his eyes and recommended that he keep absolutely still.
As far as Daddy George was concerned, it was love at third sight. First sight was mostly just blinking, thanks to the powerful torch I just told you about; second sight didn't get any further than the two large, malevolent-looking bull terriers straining at the leash gripped in the speaker's left hand. Third sight, however, got past the light and the dogs to the extremely beautiful, if unsympathetic, girl who'd just spoken to him, and apparently it liked what it saw.
The logical explanation is that the mutual attraction between Carol and the elf somehow adapted itself to the transdimensional shift, with the elf's human-side counterpart taking his place. My personal theory is that the vast majority of drive-by shootings by the kids with the wings and the arrows are unaimed area fire, and it's anybody's guess where the shots are going to land. I'm not sure that either hypothesis fits all the facts of the case; regardless of that it was undeniable that no more than two minutes after first setting eyes on each other, Carol and Daddy George were deeply and inextricably in love, a state of affairs, no pun intended, that carried on more or less unchanged throughout the sixteen years that followed, right up to the point where I'd waved them goodbye in the station car park on my way back to school for the new term. Nor did I have any reason to believe, as I reviewed the downloaded memories in my mind, that anything had happened to change it since.
âAll right,' I said. âNow I remember. So â what happened to the elf?'
Melissa pulled a sad face. âAs far as we can judge,' she said, âyour stepfather just shoved him away in his coat pocket, under a handkerchief and a roll of peppermints, and forgot all about him.'
I frowned. âHe just sat there in the pocket, did he? No shouting or screaming or trying to cut his way free through the lining.'
âHe never got the chance,' the Neil elf put in. âApparently he bashed his head on the peppermints and passed out. When he woke up, your stepfather'd got him securely imprisoned in a jam jar. There wasn't any risk of him suffocating because your stepfather had poked some holes in the lid with a nail to let the air in, but there was absolutely no way he could unscrew the top and get out. Luckily, your stepfather hadn't bothered to clean the jar out properly before stuffing your father in it, so he was able to stay alive by licking the last traces of the jam off the walls and floor while he was waiting for the effects of the electric shock to wear off.'
âAnd did they?' I asked. He shook his head.
âNo chance,' he told me. âNot without another electric shock. What's more, it'd have to be exactly the same, not stronger or weaker. Not enough power and nothing'd happen; too much amperage and you'd get toasted elf. At least, we think that's what'd happen. Melissa here's the only elf who's ever been zapped and managed to get back home again, so you'll understand that our data's all a pit patchy and vague.'
CHAPTER EIGHT
â
H
old on,' I said. âAre you saying there've been others? Apart from you and my real father, I mean.'
Melissa smiled very sadly indeed. âOh yes,' she said. âEver so many. As you well know,' she added. âYou've seen at least two of them for yourself, in your own back garden. And that's only the tip of the iceberg. There's hundreds of them â of
us
â trapped there, and all because of him. Which is why,' she added, turning and facing the Fuller elf with a sort of grim, determined look on her beautiful face, like a supermodel who's just quit smoking, âI've decided I'm going back.'
The Fuller elf was horrified. âYou can't,' he gasped. âYou've only just escaped, after all this time. What if he catches you?'
She shrugged. âI'll have to make sure he doesn't, that's all. I'll be careful,' she added. âAt least this time I'll know what I'm up against. But I can't just leave them there. You do see that, don't you?'
âJust a minute,' I interrupted, âI don't remember any of this. What's she talking about?'
The two elves looked at me as if I was a four-year-old four days before Christmas who'd just found out where all the presents were stashed. âWe didn't give you that memory,' Melissa said. âWe thought â well, you've got enough to come to terms with already, finding out about your mother and your stepfather, and coming here for the first time. Besides, none of this is your fault, you can't be expected to get involved.'
That sounded like an entirely reasonable argument to me. Unfortunately, the way I saw it, I was already involved up to my unpointed ears. âWon't you let me be the judge of that?' I said.
They looked at each other. âNo,' they said.
âAh.'
âReally,' Melissa went on, âyou definitely don't want to know, because it truly is veryâ' She shuddered, with such a magnificently expressive gesture that I could almost visualise an imaginary ice cube slithering down the back of her neck. âYou've got an expression on your side of the line, I remember: you don't want to go there. That puts it very well.'
I shook my head. âI didn't want to come here, either,' I told her, âbut I don't recall being given any choice in the matter. Not since I was a little kid, and I saw one of your people in the vegetable patch. Ever since then, I've been the boy who saw an elf â have you any idea what it's been like, living with something like that? Don't you dare talk to me about getting involved.'
The look of genuine pity, remorse and regret on both their faces was enough to break your heart. And as for sincerity â if only there'd been a way of extracting and bottling the sincerity of those sad expressions I'd be rich and politics would never be the same again.
âWe're sorry,' Melissa said. âTruly we are, and if there'd been any other way â or if I'd been me, instead of the rather nasty person I turned into while I was there . . .'
That reminded me of something, but I tagged it and put it aside for later; this was no time to get sidetracked. âThat's really nice of you,' I said. âAnd you know, if I was really me â the meek, gutless, won't-stand-up-for-himself, lets-everybody-walk-all-over-him little weed I seem to remember being all my life, though how I could've been so pathetic I really can't understand â if I was still that same me, I'd tell myself that you two know best and let you get away with it. But I'm not, and I won't. You're going to tell me the rest of the story, or there's going to be big trouble.'
There was enough hopelessness in the looks they exchanged to fuel a whole fleet of Booker Prize runners-up. âWe're only thinking of what's best for you,' said the Fuller elf. âPlease don't make us do this.'
Well: I may have suddenly sprouted a tungsten carbide backbone and a will of high-carbon steel, but I could still feel compassion. âAll right,' I said, âI guess I'll just have to find it out for myself. Which I'll do,' I added, âjust as soon as you send me back where I belong.'
To judge by the way they looked at me, I might as well have been talking in Klingon. âBut that's where you are,' Melissa said. âWhere you belong. Home. Here.'
I scowled. âAbsolutely not,' I said. âThis is some crazy place, the Disneyworld that time forgot. If you think I'm staying hereâ'
âBut you've got to,' Melissa said. âYou can't leave.'
âThanks,' I replied, âand I appreciate the hospitality, but I've got an English essay to write, for one thing. So, which way's the exit?'
The Fuller elf shook his head. âNo,' he said, âI think you're missing the point, or we haven't explained properly. It's not just that we don't want you to go â though of course that's entirely true, we don't â but you
can't
. It's impossible. There's no way back across the line. I'm sorry.'
I was beginning to get seriously annoyed with both of them. Odd, in retrospect, how easily it came to me, back in my old life and my old personality, other people got annoyed with me, not the other way around. But here I was losing my temper like a seasoned professional.
âBullshit,' I said. âShe just said she's going back, so it's got to be possible. If she can go back, so can I.'
Long silence, extremely awkward and embarrassing. Eventually, the Melissa elf heaved a huge sigh.
âWe'd better tell him,' she said.
The Fuller elf frowned. âAre you sure?'
âHey!' I yelled. âWhat about asking
me
if I'm sure? Because I am. Absolutely fucking positive. So tell me.'
I don't think elves use bad language â unless they pick up the habit when they find themselves over on the human side â though they would appear to know what it signifies. They stared at me disapprovingly, as if I'd just farted in the nave of Westminster Abbey in the middle of a royal wedding. âAll right,' the Melissa elf said. âBut don't blame us if you don't like what you hear.'
âThank you,' I said.
Another pause; I think each of them was waiting for the other to go first. I guess the Melissa elf must've drawn the telepathic short straw, because she was the one who eventually broke the silence.
âBack home,' she said, âwhere you lived; that's a really nice garden, don't you think?'
I nodded. I had a feeling I knew what was coming.
âBut your stepfather,' she went on, âdoesn't do much to it himself, does he?'
I shook my head. âNor does Mum,' I said. âI've wondered about that myself.'
She nodded. âAnd your stepfather's business,' she continued, looking at a spot in the air about two feet to the left of me, âhe does quite nicely at it, doesn't he?'
âI suppose so. To be honest I never took much of an interest.' I grinned. âI didn't want to give him the satisfaction.'
âUnderstandable,' the Melissa elf acknowledged. âBut you'll agree, he must be making money at it. I mean, your standard of living's pretty high.'
âIn material terms, I suppose so, yes.'
The Melissa elf dipped her head a couple of times. âAnd that's never struck you as odd?' she asked. âAt a time when all the shoes you see in the shops are cheap imports, from China and Eastern Europe and all those other places where they can make them so cheaply because their labour costs are so much lower than in Britain, your stepfather's making a good living running a small shoe factory in the Home Counties. That's never struck you as just a little bit curious?'
Now she'd lost me. âI suppose so,' I said. âLike I said, I've never really thought about it.'
âI don't suppose you've ever visited the factory?' she said.
âNever wanted to.'
âI'm sure that's right. But did he ever offer?'