Authors: Tom Holt
Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
A tricky one, in fact. I decided that the best I could do was stand by and hope she'd notice and appreciate the waves of unspoken but palpable sympathy and support I was broadcasting straight at her, like some kind of emotional Bush House. Luckily, the tear-fest only lasted about a minute.
âI'm sorry,' she said (that made twice, in one day), âit's just that I've been away for so long and there were times when I thought I was never going to get back here, and I'd be stuck there for the rest of my life, and â well, that my life was going to have a rest, instead of justâ' She paused. âNone of this is really making any sense to you, is it?'
I shrugged. âWell, no,' I replied. âBut sense isn't everything, God knows. Still, if you could see your way clear to giving me just a small explanation . . . Doesn't have to be the true one,' I added quickly, as another dangerous surge of snuffles threatened to sweep in from the northeast, âjust so long as it makes me feel better, and I can go home.'
And that, believe it or not, made her
laugh
. Bloody hell fire in a bucket; you know, on balance I think bewildering laughers are possibly an even worse menace than happy cryers. Round up the lot of 'em and nuke 'em till they glow, is my recommendation.
âYou can't go home, silly,' she said.
âCan't I?' That didn't sound good. âOh.'
âNo, of course not. You can't
go
home when you're already there, can you?'
Under any other circumstances, that would be the sort of ambient weirdness level that would prompt me to make a quick scuttle for the nearest exit. Tragically, that option wasn't really available; my leg was better, sure, but I now had more pins and needles in it than all the John Lewises in Christendom put together. That only left the back-up plan, namely staying put and trying to get some sense out of the dozy bitch. Well, I say back-up plan. It was a back-up plan the way hitting the ground after falling off the top of the Empire State building is a back-up plan for forward-thinking hang-glider pilots.
âHome,' I repeated. âThat's not here, that's in South Bucks. This is school. Home from home, maybe, butâ'
âNo, listen,' she said, and in spite of everything I had to take the time out to savour the difference. Ever so many girls have said âNo' to me since in a dazzlingly wide range of contexts, and quite a few have also said âListen'. But the way she said it was completely different. Nicer, if you get my meaning. âSorry,' she went on (third time!), âI didn't mean to interrupt. But I do think it'd be much better if I started from the beginning. What do you think?'
What did
I
think? Bloody hell. Now I knew I wasn't in Kansas any more. âI think that'd be wonderful,' I told her. âPlease, go on.'
âWell, if you're sure.'
âI'm sure. Really.'
âAll right. Here goes. This is Elfland. I'm an elf. My name is Melissa.' She paused. âHow are you doing?' she asked. âAll clear so far?'
I pursed my lips. âAlmost,' I said. âThere's just one small point, though. We were round the back of the sheds â those sheds,' I added, pointing. âI don't seem to remember going anywhere.'
Another laugh. Silvery, possibly even quicksilver. âThat's not how you get to Elfland,' she said. âIt's more a case of staying where you are and hoping you can lure Elfland into coming to you.'
Now that conjured up a sheaf of mental images that I'd probably have enjoyed flicking through if things hadn't been so fraught. Worlds that come when you call. Planet-training classes.
Here, Elfland
, I thought,
good Elfland, down, boy; leave; leave it, for crying out loud, sit . . .
âHello?' she said. âFor a moment there you were miles away.' She grinned suddenly. âNo pun intended,' she added.
âI'm here,' I replied. âAnd Elfland can't be gone to, it just sort of comes and gets you. Right so far?'
âI knew you'd get the hang of it, an intelligent person like you. The fact is, Elfland and where the humans live are really all just one place. The difference is only a matter of perception, like how things look different with and without sunglasses: same thing you're looking at, but what you see isn't quite the same. All right so far?'
Furtively I tried moving my leg, but it was still doing the ingrowing-porcupine bit. âI think so,' I replied. âYou're saying that Elfland and the, um, other place, they both occupy the same spot.'
âExactly.' Big happy beaming smile. Enough to scare a man to death, seeing so much quality ivory stacked up in one place. âLike, there's only one radio but you can get loads and loads of different channels in it.'
âI see,' I lied. âAll right, so now I know about Elfland. How do I leave?'
She laughed. Double silvery with extra silver. âDo you want to?'
Hadn't thought about that. âWell,' I said, âI can't stay here, can I? Can I?'
âOf course.' She took a deep breath, as if she was trying to inhale the whole sky. âOh, it's so
wonderful
to be back, and to be
me
again . . .' She paused, as if she'd just realised she'd said something extremely tactless. âNot that there was anything wrong with â I mean, I know you were very fond of her, butâ'
âHold it,' I said. (I know, since when was I all forceful and self-confident and able to talk to girls without trying to swallow my tongue?) âWho's this âher' you're talking about?'
She looked down at the ground. And very nice ground it was too, but I don't think that was why she was looking at it. âMe,' she said.
âYou?'
She nodded. âCruella Watson.'
Do you ever get days like that, when you wake up and it seems like all the rules have subtly changed while you've been asleep, and everybody else except you knows the new version? I hate it when that happens, mostly because I can never quite get past the instinctive feeling that it's somehow my fault. I don't know what you're supposed to do about it. It'd all be so much easier if I could find the instruction booklet that should've come with me when I was born.
âPlease,' I said, âdon't take this the wrong way, but you aren't Cruella Watson. You can trust me on this one, really. For a start, you're taller and your hair's a different colour and you aren't aâ'
She smiled, and shook her head. âYou don't understand,' she said. âI'm Cruella Watson
here
.'
âAll right,' I said doubtfully. âSo, who's Cruella Watson
there
?'
âShe is, of course. Cruella Watson. And here, I'm Melissa. Don't you see?'
At least I knew the answer to that one. âNo,' I said.
She sighed. âIt's my fault,' she said. âI knew it was going to be tricky to try and explain it in words, and it's not something I'm terribly good at, so I decided I'd bring you here and hope that'd make you able to figure it out for yourself. and now I think you're even more confused than you were. Sorry.'
Four times now. Definitely not Cruella; not my Cruella, at any rate. Sure, Cru did know the word, and I'd even heard her use it a few times, but only in conjunction with phrases like
excuse for a human being
, referring to guess who.
Then, suddenly I understood. No, that's overstating the case. But suddenly I could just about imagine a potential scenario where understanding might just possibly occur. âExcuse me,' I said. âI want to think for a moment. Is that all right?'
âSure,' she said. âI'm in no hurry.'
I turned away and looked round, trying to take in what I saw. She'd been right, of course. It was the same place, only different.
Of course. It was that simple.
For example; about sixty-five yards away due east there was a tree. Now I knew that tree pretty well; nothing special, taciturn, morose, lousy conversationalist, just a tree under which I occasionally sat when I was in a miserable mood and wanted an appropriate setting. That tree was exactly where it had always been, and as far as I could tell (I don't know much about that stuff) it was the same type or variety or breed or make of tree that it's always been. But here, it was also totally different; here, it was a cheerful, optimistic, empowered tree. Its branches seemed to be pushing upwards instead of drooping under the unfair burden of gravity. Its leaves were just a little thicker and greener â it didn't give the impression of having bald patches with leaves carefully combed over them. Same tree, only different.
Okay. If it worked for trees, why not for people? Maybe this place, or this version of the same place (I steered my mind round that one before it got bogged down in it) had exactly the same people as the place I came from, but they were all different. Quantitatively similar, but qualitatively divergent. Nicer.
Much nicer.
Well, there was one way of testing this hypothesis. âExcuse me,' I said, âbut are there other people here I'm likely to know?'
She laughed. âOf course there are. Go on; name someone, and we'll go and see if we can find him.'
You know what it's like when you've got to pick a name at random; my mind went so blank you could've projected movies on it. After an embarrassing pause the only name I could think of was Neil Fuller (you remember Neil; he was the one who was looking for his German grammar, when Melissa was sitting on it), so that was who I nominated.
She thought for a moment. âAh yes,' she said. âI expect he'll be in the west cloister.'
âOh' Highly unlikely place for Neil to be, a cloister. Not unless there was something there he could steal, or he was meeting some girl. âCan we go and look?'
âSure,' she said; and as soon as she'd said it, there we were, back in the study area. Except that it was (also/instead) a definite and unmistakable cloister, with big arched unglazed windows looking out on a central courtyard and a rather attractive marble fountain.
âHey,' I objected, âhow the hell did you do that?'
She looked startled. âWhat do you mean? Oh,' she added, âyou mean how did we get here. We walked.'
I closed my eyes and tried to count to ten, but it didn't work. âNo we
didn't
,' I said. âOne moment we were out there, next moment we're here.'
She clapped her hands, as if applauding. â
Exactly
', she said. âThere were two moments, one there and one here. Plus a lot of other moments in between, during which we walked across the grass, in through the back gate, across the lobby, up a flight of stairs, across the scriptorium, past the dorter, down another flight of stairs and out under a low arch where we turned right to reach this place. But they were rather dull and boring moments and I got the impression you're in a hurry and want to get all this stuff sorted out in your mind, so I left them out.'
I gave up trying to stay cool and just stared at her. âYou left them out?'
She nodded. âThat's right. We can do that here. Time works in a rather different way.'
âDifferent.'
Another nod. âNicer.'
âAh.' this time I tried taking a deep breath; waste of time and effort. âYou mean to say that if you don't want to bother with the dull and boring bits of your life, you can just sort of fast-forward them? Like the adverts on TV?'
âPrecisely.' She sighed again. She was very good at sighing. Graceful melancholy, very tastefully done. âYou know,' she said, âwhen I was stuck in â well, in your place, I thought I was going to go mad, having to live through every second of every day. How you people can stand it, I really can't imagine. You must be so brave.'
I'll admit, I'd never thought of it in that light before. Typical: I get to be a hero and never know it. âSo,' I went on, trying to clarify, âI've just been for a two-hundredyard walk which I don't remember a thing aboutâ'
âDon't you?' She looked surprised. Her surprise wasn't quite up to her sighing, but it wasn't bad. âAre you sure about that?'
âWell, yes. No,' I corrected myself, because I'd been wrong; I
could
remember it, once I'd found the right place in my mind to look. I could see myself trotting up the stairs, down the stairs, past the wrought-iron lamp sconces set into the wallsâ
Weird. Where the hell had wrought-iron lamp sconces come from?
âYou can remember it, can't you?' she said, with a gentle smile.
âAll right,' I conceded, âyes. But it never happened. Did it?'
âOf course it did. Tell you what â after we've found your friend, we'll walk back, and he can be a witness. Will that do?'
I'd forgotten all about the quest for Neil Fuller. âFirst things first,' I said. âWhere is he? I can't seeâ'
And suddenly, there he was, complete with a full memory of having stood around for half an hour waiting for me; but I skipped over that. One thing at a time, after all.
Neil Fuller. Unmistakably Neil Fuller â only he was six foot two, with light brown hair tied up in a ponytail, wearing what looked to me like a Robin Hood outfit from a rather upmarket fancy-dress hire place and â much more bizarre â looking pleased to see me.
âThere you are,' he said. âI was beginning to wonder when you'd show up. Oh, hi there, Melissa,' he added, with a polite little wave. âGlad to see you're back with us.'
I cleared my throat nervously, as though I was about to make a speech in front of the whole school. âExcuse me,' I said, âbut are you Neil Fuller?'
His grin was so broad that I was surprised his face didn't unzip. âOf course I am,' he replied, whereupon he grabbed my hand and started shaking it enthusiastically. âMy name's Arganthonius, by the way,' he added. âWelcome to Elfland.'
Now there comes a point â and God help you if you ever reach it â when the lunatic drivel starts making sense. Well â let me qualify that a little. It's sense, Jim, but not as we know it. I looked the newcomer in his clear, bright golden eyes, smiled as pleasantly as I could, and said, âDid you manage to find the book you were looking for?'