Authors: Tom Holt
Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
He laughed. âYou know perfectly well I did,' he replied. âYou were there, remember? And so was Melissa. She was sitting on it.'
âAh,' I said. âThanks.'
I turned to walk away, but the Fuller elf wasn't done with me yet. âWell,' he said, âhow do you like it here?'
Tact; always tact. âIt's just fine,' I said. âVery nice architecture. Good sky.'
The Fuller elf nodded. âIt'll take you a while to get settled in,' he said. âHardly surprising,' he added. âIt must be pretty disconcerting, coming home for the first time.'
I didn't reply to that, and he let me alone and turned to the Melissa female. âWelcome back,' he said gravely. âYou were gone a long time.'
She nodded. âToo long. But I'm back now. All that stuff is just â memories.'
Funny way she said the last word, though one more piece of weirdness was like a very brief shower of rain in mid-Atlantic as far as I was concerned. âPrecisely,' he said. âSo, what're we going to do aboutâ?'
About
him
, he meant â referring to me. I swung round â I hate it when people talk about me behind my back to my face, if you see what I mean - and said, âCan I make a suggestion?'
âOf course,' said the Fuller elf.
âFire away,' the Melissa female confirmed.
When it actually came to it, I couldn't think of a better way of putting it than, âTake me to your leader.' So that was what I said. I didn't add on the bit about coming in peace, because that would have been just plain silly.
âAh,' Melissa said, âthat could be awkward. We don't have one.'
I shrugged. âAll right,' I said. âThen take me to your national assembly, parliament, congress, board of directors, general purposes committees or Christmas thrift club. Please?' I put in, because it always helps to be polite.
âHaven't got any of those,' the Fuller elf said. âThat's not how we do things here, I'm afraid. Will we do instead?'
I sighed. âI don't know,' I admitted. âIt's hard figuring out who's the best person to ask when you don't really know what the question is.'
âTell us what you think the question is,' the Fuller elf suggested, âand maybe we can help you.'
âAll right,' I said. âWho am I?'
The two pointy-eared ones looked at each other. âGood question,' the Fuller elf said. He was starting to get on my nerves.
Melissa took a deep breath. âHere goes,' she said. âIn your world, that's easy. You're Michael.'
âThank you,' I replied. âHow about here? Since everything and everyone in my world seems to have a counterpart here, I suppose I must have one too. Yes?'
âNo.'
Yeah, right. Just when you think there's a tiny thread of spider's web connecting the monolithic blocks of weirdness. âThere isn't,' I repeated. âOh.'
âThat's the whole point,' Melissa said, with a slight catch in her voice. âThat's why it's all so difficult, in your case. You see, you're Michael here too. You're the only person in the whole worldâ'
âBoth whole worlds,' the Fuller elf interrupted, presumably under the impression that he was helping.
ââ Both whole worlds, thank you, who's the same on both sides.' Melissa bit her lip; not something you see every day, your actual perplexed lip-biting, but she did it exceptionally well. âIt's what makes you unique.'
Me. Unique. Probably just as well, of course. âReally,' I said, and if I sounded just a tad sceptical, can you really blame me?
âYes,' Melissa said. âWhich is absolutely wonderful, of course, because it meant you were able to save me. Nobody else in the world could've done that, and I'm really, really grateful. But it doesâ'
âComplicate things rather,' put in the Fuller elf. âIn fact, we aren't quite sure what to do.'
I sniffed. Well, if they could all do melodramatic gestures, so could I. âTell you what,' I said. âYou could appoint a leader and ask him.'
Yeah, well. It was supposed to be bitingly sarcastic, but I guess I wasn't exactly at the peak of my form.
Melissa took a step forward, then stopped. She looked extremely uncomfortable, and my diagnosis was either an intolerable moral dilemma or itchy underwear. âIt's because of what you are,' she said. âWho you are. I think it's about time I told you.'
The Fuller elf gave her an are-you-sure-that's-wise look. I decided I didn't like him one bit. She replied with a little dip of the head. It made her hair sway in a quite enchanting fashion, but I really wasn't in the mood.
âWell,' I said.
Melissa looked at me gravely. âI think perhaps you should sit down first.'
âHow?' I objected. âThere aren't anyâ'
ââChairs,' I continued, leaning back against the extremely soft and comfortable cushions of this really neat old-fashioned armchair. We were sitting on either side of a roaring fire in a gorgeous old oak-panelled hall that was, bizzarely, also the school gym. I clearly remembered getting there. âAll right,' I conceded. âLook, would it be too much to ask for you to warn me the next time you do that? It makes my head hurt.'
âSorry,' said the Fuller elf. âMy fault, I forgot you aren't used to it.'
I shrugged. âThat's all right,' I said. âAnd now I'm sitting comfortably, can we begin?'
I could tell from the look of Melissa's face that she really didn't want to. Tough. I scowled at her, and she nodded.
âThis may come as a bit of a shock,' she said.
Didn't say anything. No point.
âThe thing is . . .' She paused, squeezing her left hand with her right â her dazzling repertoire of truly corny gestures was probably the most amazing thing I encountered in the whole of Elfland.
âYour father,' she said. âYour real fatherâ'
âYes, I know all that,' I said. âDaddy George isn't really my dad. My real father buggered off when I was just a kid. Was that what you were going to tell me?'
âYou're sort of warmish,' Melissa replied wretchedly. The Fuller elf, meanwhile, was gazing at a small grey stain in the carpet as if it was the most amazing thing he'd ever seen in his life.
Coward
, I thought. Have I mentioned that I didn't like him very much?
âSo,' she went on, âyou don't remember your real father?'
I shook my head.
âThere's a reason for that,' Melissa said. âYou see, the man you call Daddy George - well, he actually
is
your real father.'
I started to get up, but it was one of those chairs from which you have to gradually work yourself free, like a bit of shrapnel in an old war wound. âThat's not true,' I said. âMy mum told meâ'
âI'm afraid she wasn't being absolutely straight with you,' Melissa said. âDaddy George really is your father. In a sense,' she added.
âIn a sense?'
âIn a sense,' she repeated. She was so obviously upset about something that under any other circumstances I'd have felt sorry for her. âOh dear, how can I put this?
A
Daddy George is quite definitely your father. But not perhaps the one you'd be likely to think of first.'
A very nasty, creepy thought was beginning to scamper across my mind. â
A
Daddy George?' I parroted.
âThat's right. You see, there's two. Just like there's two of everybody. One in your world,' she said, the words coming out like pulled teeth, âand one in ours. And the one who actually â well, your real father . . .'
I closed my eyes. I'm not the world's most naturally intuitive person, but I didn't want to see it coming.
âYour real father,' Melissa said, âis our Daddy George. The one from our side of the line, not yours. Which makes youâ'
My hands started towards my ears, but I have pretty slow reactions. Explains why I've always been lousy at catching things, or tennis.
âWhich makes you,' Melissa said, âan elf.'
CHAPTER SEVEN
I
have this recurring nightmare. It's the one where I'm asleep and I'm dreaming that I'm a fairly average normal sort of a guy, meandering along quietly through life, nothing much happening â wake up, slice of toast and cup of coffee, then out into the world to do whatever it is I do. And just when this part of the dream is getting so normal as to be screamingly dull, I wake up and discover that I'm not a human being at all, I'm a small green bug hanging upside down off the underside of a leaf,
dreaming
I'm human.
Don't you just hate it when your dreams come true?
Well, yes. Elves aren't bugs. But it's a dream, damn it, not a simultaneous equation.
âWhat did you just say?' I asked quietly.
âYou're an elf,' Melissa repeated. To her credit, she seemed very upset about it all. âOr at least, half an elf. Your mother's a human, of course, soâ'
âHalf an elf,' I said.
âThat's right, yes,' the Fuller elf cut in. âWhich means, you see, that there can only be one of you; not a human version on the other side of the line and an elf version over here, like everyone else. Which is also why you can go across the line from there to here. Which is wonderful,' he went on, trying to sound cheerful, âbecause you were able to bring Melissa back with you. Isn't that great?'
âI'm half an elf,' I repeated. âMy mother's human, and my father's the elf version of Daddy George. Fine.
Now
can I go home, please?'
The Fuller elf squirmed a little bit in his chair. âMelissa,' he said, âmaybe we ought to have told him all about itâ'
I'm not usually very quick on the uptake, God only knows, but I noticed the tense of the verb
tell
. âHold on,' I said. â
Have
told?'
Neither of them said anything.
âI get you,' I said. âYou're too embarrassed to tell me whatever this story is that you think I ought to hear, so you're going to do your fast-forward thing, so I'll remember you telling me but you won't actually have to do it.' I shook my head. âNo dice.'
Melissa winced. âIt'd be much easier,' she said. âAnd you'd have all the facts, and I wouldn't need toâ'
âTell me the bloody story,' I growled.
(Assertive little bugger I'd become, yes? I can only assume it was because they were being so polite and nice. If they'd been all snotty and brusque at me, I'd never have dared to speak to them like that. Typical.)
Pause, while souls were searched and consciences racked. âAll right,' Melissa said sadly, âI'll tell you. It's a sad story, so you mustn'tâ'
âGet on with it already.'
âAll right.'
It all started (she said) one Christmas.
Once upon a time, there was a little girl who believed in Santa Claus. Every Christmas Eve, she'd hang up her stocking from the mantelpiece before she went to bed, hoping that Santa would come and fill it with wonderful presents. And, sure enough, when Christmas morning came roundâ
âExcuse me,' I said.
She looked up. âYes?'
âI hate to criticise,' I said, âbut could you cut the saccharin levels, please? Otherwise when you get to an important bit I might be so preoccupied with throwing up that I could miss something vital.'
She frowned. âBut that's how it happened,' she said. âReally.'
âOh, for crying outâ' I sighed. âAll right,' I said. âYou can do the fast-forward stuff.'
âThank you,' she said â and suddenly the memory was there in my mind as fast as a bullet.
What I remembered was, basically, this.
Yes, sure enough there was this little human kid, and she believed in Santa. At least, she believed in what she'd been told about Santa, which is only a very small part of the whole truth, and not by any means the useful or essential part. I guess it'd be like being a Christian if the only parts of the Bible to have survived down the ages were Noah's ark, the feeding of the five thousand and the publishers' address.
All right, here's the important stuff about Father Christmas. He's an elf, too; that is, his natural habitat is the Elfland side of the line. He's also the greatest quantum physicist the elven race has ever produced (and, as I think you may have gathered from the ease with which Melissa did my quadratic equations, elves are hot stuff at sums). One of his many discoveries, and by no means the most significant, is the secret of faster-than-light travel.
Once you've grasped that, of course, a lot of the stuff you've heard about Santa Claus and dismissed as ludicrously implausible needs to be re-evaluated. Yes, he
can
travel right across the world in the space of a single night, no trouble at all; faster than a speeding bullet, in fact, (which is another elf-story we won't go into right now), and yes, he does have time to visit all the good little boys and girls and load their hosiery with consumer goods, because of (a) the relativistic temporal distortion resulting from the faster-than-light stuff and (b) this annoying but undoubtedly useful elf trick of being able to skip the boring bits of one's life and just live through the interesting stuff. In other words, it's all true, even the sleigh and the reindeer. Furthermore, the act of breaking the light-speed barrier opens a window in the barrier dividing Elfland from the human side, just large enough for an old fat guy in an overgrown wheelbarrow to slide through.
The first year, apparently, he did it as a bet; and it went down so well with the kiddies that he thought it'd be nice to make a regular thing of it. After a few years it all started to be a bit of a bind and he wished he'd never got involved, but all the kids in the Western world had come to expect it, not to mention the toymakers and the turkey farmers, and it was too late to back out without causing a considerable amount of grief and bad feeling, which elves aren't inclined to do.