Authors: Tom Holt
Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
But in the end, even the round-up somehow got done, and we reached the extremely unnerving point where there was nothing else to do except set the plan in motion. There was an enormous weight of reluctance hanging over us at that moment, like the heaviest, sulkiest pre-thunderstorm weather you've ever had to live through. I could see why. Up till then, we all had something to look forward to, something to believe in â even for terminally miserable elves, that's a wonderful thing. But if we did the plan and it all went horrendously wrong, we'd have nothing at all. It didn't help that all our meagre, fanatically hoarded savings of hope were sitting there in the pot, and all we had in our hand was a pair of threes. The fact that anything higher than that and we'd most certainly lose was no consolation at all.
Sweetie-Pie looked at the loudspeaker grill, then at me. âRight, then,' he said.
âRight,' I replied. Neither of us moved.
âYou're all set,' he said.
âRight.'
About five seconds of dead silence. âYou can start any time,' he pointed out.
âOK,' I said.
Another four seconds. âLike, now, for instance.'
âNow?'
âYes.'
âRight.'
He didn't frown; in fact, his face was as blank as a hard drive after the latest Windows upgrade has just done its worst. âYou don't want to do this, do you?' he said.
âNot really.'
âCan't say I blame you,' said Sweetie-Pie. âIt's a bloody terrible idea.'
âYes,' I said.
âWell, then.'
âQuite. Oh well,' I said, âhere goes nothing.' And I pressed the button.
âNot that one, you clown,' said Sweetie-Pie. âThat's the one for setting the month on the digital clock.'
âOh, right, sorry. This one?'
âThat one.'
âAh, fine, I see. All right, then,
here
goes nothing. Does it?' I checked. He nodded.
I pressed the button. For maybe a second and a half, nothing happened, and I was just starting to hope that perhaps we'd got it all wrong and the phone link wouldn't work for me and we'd have to call the whole thing off and go back to making shoes (which really wasn't as bad as all that, in fact it could be quite satisfying and fulfilling at times, there's a sort of pure Platonic beauty in a precisely folded piece of tissue paper) when the speaker crackled violently, and a voice I quite definitely recognised growled, âYes?'
Hearing him again â it went beyond a nasty turn and a quick flash of instinctive panic. I'd got used to those, over the years, they were almost reassuringly familiar and friendly (you know how it is when something, a sound or a smell, reminds you quite unexpectedly of something from your childhood). This time, though, there was something new, a quite different and altogether less pleasant isotope of fear â the kind that tells you you're going to die, very soon, very painfully, and there's nothing at all you can do about it. Acquaintances have told me that shopkeepers get the same sort of feeling when the excise men show up for a surprise VAT audit, but I wouldn't know about that.
âHello,' I said.
Silence. A very long moment of dead silence. You know, I should have realised before then (what with elves' weird fast-forwarding ability and so forth) just how elastic and negotiable time can be. I may have lost fifteen years flitting back and forth across the line, but I reckon I caught up with them in full during that second and a half.
âWho is this?'
âMe,' I replied.
âOh.' Very neutral tone of voice: no expression, no feeling. âThought I recognised you. What the fuck are you doing using the phone system?'
I took a deep breath. âThere isn't anyone else,' I replied. âLook, you've got to come quick, before it's too late.'
Another pause. By my calculations, I was at least sixty-three years old by the time it was over. âWhat are you drivelling on about now?'
âYou've got to come here now and stop them,' I said, âbefore they're all killed.'
âWhat is all this?' asked Daddy George. (And I thought,
Shit, he knows I'm up to something. I never could fool him, he knows me too well.
And then I remembered, that's why me, because he knows me too well.)
âListen,' I said, âplease. There's no more time, they're all going to die unless youâ' And then I hit the kill button.
I stood there for quite some time, my finger still down hard on the button, as if I was trying to smother it to death, or at least keep it from getting out of its socket and biting me. Or maybe I was afraid that if I let go, Daddy George himself would push his way up out of the control panel, squeezing his head through the button socket. Crazy.
âYou think he bought it?' Sweetie-Pie whispered.
I shook my head. âNo idea,' I said. âBut he's coming.'
âYou're sure about that?'
I nodded. âAbsolutely positive,' I said. âTrust me. I know him too well.'
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
W
aiting for him to arrive â
It was the strangest feeling. Partly â partly, it was just like when you were a kid and your best friend was supposed to be coming to tea; and you'd sit by the window looking out for the car, and when it didn't arrive and didn't arrive you'd open the front door a crack and peep out through that. (How that was meant to make the car get there quicker I never quite figured out.) Partly it was hoping and praying that I'd been right and Daddy George had suspected something and wasn't going to come after all (but that didn't work, because if he thought I was up to something, he'd get here even quicker), and partly it was a dull, bleating voice in the back of my head repeating,
Seemed like a good idea at the time, seemed like a good idea
â
At least there was plenty to do to keep myself occupied; there were stray elves to chivvy into hiding, wiring relays to triple-check, unforeseen contingencies to plan for, lots of redundant and meaningless stuff that had to be done anyway; and all the time I was thinking,
Me and him, face to face, and whoever loses will be proved to have been wrong
. I guess that was the very worst part about it all; not the fear of death or pain, certainly not an abstract fear of losing (I've always been a very good loser, probably because I've had so much practice), but the very specific and unbearable fear of losing to
him
, because that would mean that in some vague but incredibly important sense, he'd be vindicated and I'd know for sure, in that last despairing moment, that he'd been right about me being worthless and no good all along, just as I'd always suspectedâ
If the bad guy wins, he isn't the bad guy any more, because everybody knows the good guy always wins. It's like the old gag about how in every election the government always gets elected. Victory is clarity, it defines everything.
Him and me
, I told myself.
We know each other too well.
I thought I'd gone over everything, visualised each moment, each possible version of each moment, in my mind's eye before I even made the call. But apparently not. Turned out I'd forgotten to prepare myself for the biggest moment of all, the door opening.
The door opened.
The way it should be is, the older you get, the smaller they become; the big people, the giants who stomped around and scowled down at you when you were a kid. Parents, teachers, headmasters, the older boys who used to kick you around; the idea is that you grow up and they grow old, so when you meet them again ten, twenty, thirty years later, you find yourself looking
down
, looking at this funny little guy who once scared you half to death just by scowling at you, but now you could lift him up and shake him like a pillow, except you don't want to any more â all the fear and the resentment and the hate melt away, because you who were once small are now big, and he who was once big has dwindled down into a little old man. You look down and see what you once were, one of the little people.
But the door opened, and he was absolutely fucking
huge
; he'd always been this big, broad, threatening ogre, American-footballer shoulders, hairy-backed hands like frying pans, the biggest face you ever saw in your life. Sure, I'd seen him from this angle before, once, the first day, when his goons grabbed and shrunk me and he'd loomed over me and sentenced me to the shoe factory. But I'd had other things on my mind at the time and besides, I'd really only been able to see his lower slopes (and at the time I wasn't used to being this size, I still didn't believe it had happened to me and most certainly didn't believe I'd be this way for ever, that this was actually the size
I'd always been meant to be
â¦)
He walked in, quickly shut the door and locked it behind him, then pulled some kind of remote-control thing out of his inside pocket and prodded a few buttons, making some little green and red lights flash. He hadn't seen me â fair enough, I was hiding behind a chair leg, and I was only six inches tall. Same as I'd always been.
He looked round, then lowered his head and looked down.
âThere you are,' he said.
It was one of his phrases, I remembered it very well. âThere you are,' he used to say, when I'd done something bad. (I never meant to do anything bad, but a lot of what I did turned out that way, because he said it was bad and he was bigger than me, so of course he must've been right.) I used to hide, but I was very bad at it and when he found me he'd always say, âThere you are,' in that same tone of voice, that same fundamental disappointment that I was so pathetic I couldn't even hide. âThere you are,' he said again. âNow then, what's all this about?'
I took a deep breath. âIt's too late,' I said. âYou're too late. They're all dead.'
He raised an eyebrow. His eyebrows were as long as my arm. I'd have needed a crane and a winch. âJust for once,' he said, âtry not to babble. Who's dead?'
He hadn't changed a bit; apart from still being so big, I mean. I'd hoped for a few comforting signs of ageing â some wrinkles, a little sagging of the skin, a token gesture or two in the direction of mortality, just one or two grey hairs would've done â but he hadn't given me the satisfaction. âAll of them,' I said. âI tried warning them, but they wouldn't listen. They laughed at me.'
âWell, they would,' said Daddy George. âYou're very funny when you try and be serious.'
âThey'd decided to escape,' I went on. âSome of them were going to try going out onto the roof, another lot were going through the air vents, and the rest of them had decided on the drains. I told them you'd have booby-trapped all the ways out. I told them, I know how your mind works.'
He laughed. âThey should've listened to you.' He actually laughed. âYou chose a hell of a time to be right.' A long sigh. âSo,' he went on, âthey're all dead. Bugger. All of them except you. Why am I not surprised?'
I peered up at him from behind my chair-leg. He'd lost me.
âYou know what you are?' he went on. âYou're a born survivor. Pity, that, but there it is. You know, you remind me a lot of a virus; you're small and insidious, and just when it looks like you've been wiped out and I'm finally rid of you, bingo! You mutate into an even more stubborn and annoying strain, and there you bloody well are again. I hate that.'
âSorry,' I said.
He sighed; it was like a scale-model El Nino. âI don't suppose you can help it,' he said. âI mean, the worst you've ever done to me is to be alive â though it's always seemed to me that you've consistently managed to be alive
at
me, as if carrying on breathing and walking about was a gesture of insubordination, like refusing to eat your carrots. You turn up, you vanish, you turn up again â I knew you weren't dead, you know; even when you disappeared, I knew you were still hanging around somewhere, because you're the toothache in the tooth I've just had pulled. It wasn't enough that your mother and I couldn't have children of our own. Oh, no. We had to have
you
.'
âIt's not my fault,' I said.
âOf course it's not your fault, you moron,' Daddy George snapped. âLike it's not your fault you're his son, that fucking prickle-eared freak's nasty little act of preemptive revenge. It's not your fault that everybody thinks that all my work, all the absolutely amazingly brilliant discoveries I've made were all done by you, Mister Double-Nobel-Laureate. It's not your fault, as in you didn't do anything. Not a thing, not one bloody hand's turn, and yet you're part-owner of everything I've worked myself half to death to achieve, and I can't even kill you, because of not being able to look your mother in the face again if I did. I really do love her, you know, I'd never do anything to hurt her. And now they're all dead, except you. Just my absolutely bloody wonderful sodding luck.'
I came out from behind the chair-leg; not too far, in case I had to dart back under cover in a hurry. Those enormous junkyard-car-crusher feet of his could flatten me in half a second by pure and genuine accident. âThat's right,' I said, âit's not my fault and I haven't done anything. I never did anything, and you've completely screwed up my life.'
âExcuse me?' He burst out laughing, like a jolly volcano. âWhat harm have I ever done you? I brought you up as my own son, I sent you to the best school money could buy, and what did you do? You buggered off.
I
didn't send you away or sell you to a slave-trader or abandon you on a hillside for the wolves to rear - you fucked off and left us, worried your mother to death. She cried herself to sleep for the first six months, did you know that?'
I didn't; but all I thought was,
Only six months
? Besides, I never really liked her all that much, not after she let him send me away to school.