Authors: Tom Holt
Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy - Contemporary, Fiction / Humorous, Fiction / Satire
I took a step back. âI wasn't thinking about that,' I replied, and damn it, my voice was quite steady. Mister Cool, I was being, so the damp stuff trickling down the inside of my leg must've been sweat, because of the air conditioning being full of elves or something. âWhat I meant was, if you hurt me, the elves are going to tear you apart.'
He laughed. âUnlikely,' he said. âI'm not planning on crossing the line any time soon, and all the ones on this side are dead. By your own admission.'
âAh.' I smiled, or at least one side of my face twitched. Sort of smiled, anyway. âI have a confession to make. I was lying.'
He frowned. âDon't believe you,' he said.
âSuit yourself.' Now, the agreed signal was supposed to be a shrill whistle, but have you ever tried whistling when your face is paralysed by fear? Can't be done. âAll right,' I shouted â and it came out all reedy and croaky, like a chain-smoking frog. âYou can come out now.'
And they did. Loads of them, from all directions; great, big, tall, irritable-looking elves. A few of them were holding hammers and makeshift clubs, but I got the impression that by the time they got to the head of the queue, there wouldn't be enough left of Daddy George to hit.
âYou bastard,' said Daddy George, quietly and with great feeling. âYou bloody well tricked me.'
âSorry,' I said. âBut you asked for it.'
âTreacherous little snot,' he growled. âI always knew you were a sneaky, underhanded bugger, but I never thought you'd do this to me. For God's sake,' he added, with a catch in his voice I'd never heard before, âtell them to back off. Please.'
Another first.
âIt's all right,' I said, âthey won't hurt you, so long as you put that gun down and do as you're told. Oh, come on,' I added, âjust for once stop faffing around and be reasonable.'
He crouched down and laid the gun on the floor. âWait till your mother hears about this,' he said. âShe'll bloody skin you alive.'
âThat's better,' I said. âMuch more like it. Well,' I added in the general direction of the nearest elf, âif it's all the same to you, I'll wait for you outside. Don't take all day about it.'
A lot of elves took a step forward. Daddy George whirled round, to see even more of them coming up from behind. There was Spike, holding something (
Ah
, I thought,
maybe that explains how she got her nickname
), and there was Sweetie-Pie, looking distinctly unsweet. âHey,' shrieked Daddy George, âwhere the hell do you think you're going?'
âOutside,' I told him. âSqueamish,' I explained. âDon't want to spoil their big moment by fainting or throwing up.'
âBut you
promised
â'
âYou know your trouble?' I said. âYou're far too trusting.'
He was terrified. Odd how fear always makes a person look smaller. I didn't feel sorry for him, though. Probably I should've, but I didn't. I suppose he brought out the worst in me.
âStop,' he shouted. âHelp me. You can't let themâ'
âGet real,' I interrupted, rather rudely. âDo you honestly think I could stop them?'
(And I wondered, at that moment, about all the opposite numbers of all these elves, the humans they were paired with, on this side of the line. Who were they, I asked myself, and what were they like? Bloody strange thing to think of, quite suddenly at a time like that. Funny old critter, the mind.)
â
Please
.'
I stopped. âAh,' I said, âthat puts a different complexion on it. All right,' I said, in my sergeant-major voice, not nearly so thin and crackly as it had been a few minutes earlier, âthat'll do, leave him alone.'
I had no idea whether they'd listened to me or not. I suspect that if I'd been them, I'd have told myself to get profoundly lost. Luckily they were more amenable to reason than me.
âRight,' I said, âhere's what we're going to do.' I took a deep breath; because I'd only stopped them for the simple reason that, where they'd only had to put up with being kidnapped and turned into slaves, I'd grown up with the bastard as my stepfather, and seeing him ripped into mince just wouldn't have been good enough. I wanted to get
even
. So I took Daddy George's remote-control thing out of my pocket. âHere, Spike,' I said, âyou're good with technical stuff. Tell me how you work this thing.'
She looked at me, and grinned. âPleasure,' she said. âYou know what,' she added, âyou're evil.'
âI learned from the best,' I replied, and handed it over.
That Spike â even for an elf, she was smart with electrical goods. I didn't actually see the moment when Daddy George shrank, because there was a dazzling blue flash that half-blinded me. One moment he was stood there, all six foot one of him. The nextâ
âI think you overdid it,' I said.
She shrugged. âIt's a tricky thing to calibrate,' she said. âStill,' she added, as she put the remote carefully on the ground and jumped on it, âno harm done.' I don't think I'd have liked to have been Daddy George just then. It must have been rather intimidating for him, not more than an inch and a half tall, looking up at all those gigantic elves crowding round him in a ring and staring. âNow, then,' I said, âmind your backs, coming through.' I edged my way past them into the middle of the circle, bent down, picked Daddy George up and placed him on the palm of my left hand. âGuess what's going to happen now,' I said.
He was too small for me to be able to see the expression on his face, but I could hear him quite clearly. He was calling me all kinds of uncouth names. Not sensible, for a very small person in his position. âShut up,' I advised him, âor I'll inhale you.'
âYou think you're really clever,' he yelled inaccurately. âYou think you've won, and it'll be happy endings all the way. You wait and see.'
I frowned. âNot all the way,' I replied. âThere's still flu and income tax and traffic jams and supermarket queues and stuff like that. Mostly, thoughâ'
âI told her,' he said. âYour girlfriend, that Cruella. She came looking for you, after I had you captured and brought here, she said I knew what'd happened to you and she wanted you back.'
âReally,' I said.
âYes, really. So I told her, I hadn't got you, you'd gone back over the line. Not to get away from me, I said, to get away from her; because you'd got this elf girl over there, that was why you'd gone away in the first place, and stayed so long.' He laughed: tiny little laugh, all full of unpleasantness, full of victory. âYou know what? She believed me. Hook, line and sinker. Burst into tears, stood there on the doorstep sobbing her eyes out at me. Said she never wanted to see you again, in this world or the next. I nearly did my back in not laughing. So you see,' he went on, âI really put one over on you; made sure she wasn't going to come sniffing round again, making trouble. And I know her sort, vindictive little bitch, nothing you can ever say or do'll convince her I wasn't telling the truth. You've had it as far as she's concerned. I just thought I'd tell you that, while I think of it.'
Clever man, my stepfather, but he didn't know me as well as he thought he did. He was sure I'd go mad with rage and close my hand tight, squash him to death, put him out of his misery, make myself the villain. But I knew him too well; I knew that he'd rather die than go where I was about to take him. Like I'd told Spike, I'd learned from the best when it came to inflicting pain and suffering, and at that moment I was all cruelty, all seventy-two enormous inches of me.
I glanced round at the circle of elves surrounding me and closed my eyes.
Here goes nothing,
I said to myself, and crossed the line.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
A
t first I thought, âWhere is everybody?' â and then I figured it out. The factory was miles from anywhere, and there wouldn't be any Elfland equivalents for the guys in the factory, since they were all elves already; and I didn't have a counterpart, because of who I was, so that only leftâ
Nobody. Remember. Daddy George had killed his counterpart, many years earlier. I had a feeling quite a few people in those parts wouldn't have forgotten that.
We were in a building. Well, of course we were, we were still in the factory (the Elfland equivalent of it, anyway) and when looked more closely I could see that â same floor plan, same high walls, same wide-open plan. Except that here, the factory was a cathedral.
Crazy
, I thought.
I wonder what the Elfland equivalent of Westminster Abbey looks like.
Daddy George was still in the palm of my hand; and that surprised me, because I'd expected him to have reverted to his proper size when he crossed the line, the same as Cru's elfin doppelgänger had done the first time I arrived there. Apparently not. I guessed it had something to do with Spike giving the shrinker too much welly â in any event, I wasn't unduly bothered.
I smiled; a big, warm smile that bounded out onto my face before I could stop it, like a friendly dog when you open the front door. âHere we are,' I said. âWelcome to your new home.' I held out my hand, and a tiny Daddy George peered out over my fingertips. âThis is your factory,' I told him, âexactly the same, only different. We'll come back and look at it later. But first, there's some people I want you to meet.'
It was, of course, the cruellest punishment imaginable. Not just the being small â I hadn't even planned on that, it was just a bonus miracle given away free with the box tops of suffering. Instead, it was the torment of being for ever the exact opposite of himself, a timid, sensitive, caring, altruistic, pointy-eared freak, while a tiny part of himself would always remember (like I'd remembered) who he really was, back where he belonged. It had been far easier for me, of course, since in theory at least I belonged equally on both sides. For himâ
It would be a long walk from the factory to the nearest village of settlement, and I was on a schedule. I didn't have the time. So, rather unwillingly, I fast-forwarded through the gruelling six-hour hike, to the point where we were standing in a village square, surrounded by friendly inquisitive elves.
âHello,' I said. âthere's someone here to see you.'
(Too cruel, perhaps? Too cruel, even for him? But then I thought about the slaves in the factory and my own real father, vivisected to death just because once he'd loved my mother, and I thought, no. An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a pointy ear for a pointy ear. It was exactly right.)
I couldn't help noticing how my minuscule companion squirmed with terror as the elves came flocking round, and tried to bury himself in the gully between my middle and index fingers. Daddy George and I may not have seen eye to eye in the past â I'd have needed a stepladder, for one thing â but even I would never have said he was the timid sort. True, there's a lot to be timid about when you're knee-high to an action figurine, as I'd found out myself the hard way, but even so. Interestingâ
âOooh,' cooed an elf, extending a finger towards Daddy George's abdomen. âHe's so
cute
. Can I pick him up?'
I smiled. âOf course,' I said. âHere.' I tipped my hand over, dropping Daddy George into the elf's cupped palm. âYou do realise who you've got there, don't you?'
The elf nodded. âHe's the one who opened up the gateway,' she replied, âand lured all those poor people across the line. Oosa ickle-wickle
sweetie
, den?' she added, with apparent sincerity.
Hang on
, I thought,
this isn't right. The greatest criminal in elf history, and she's trying to tickle him under the ear?
âYou don't seem to mind,' I said.
She didn't look up. âHe's been a very naughty boy â haven't oo, vewwy bad, bad boyzlewoyzle â but that's all in the past now. And he's such a little darling, with his little feet and his dear little handsâ'
And then I realised I'd been barking up the wrong tree altogether. I'd brought him here on the assumption that when the elves got their delicate, artistic hands on him, they'd deconstruct him slowly and painfully with the help of extremely fine medical instruments. Blame it on my lack of vision, my inability to see the full canvas, the big picture. What the elf female was doing to him now was, of course, far more agonising and excruciating than anything that could be achieved with mere clumsy, inefficient steel and nitric acid. Steel could only torture his body; acid could only gnaw away at his flesh. Two or three days, a week at most, and he'd be safely dead and beyond the reach of vengeance. What the elves would do to him â sweet, sentimental, forgiving, loving, caring, nurturing creatures that they were â would strip away his self-esteem and burn out his brain, and they could keep it up for years and years and years, while he cowered and hid and cringed like the cutest-ever little puppy dog, inciting his tormentors to greater and greater excessesâ
(And inside? Just as inside every darling little bundle of fluff there's a very small sabre-toothed tiger frantically scrabbling to get out, so it would be in this case. The real Daddy George was still in there somewhere, always would be: trapped for all eternity in a frightened, helpless little body that practically yelled to all comers, âHug me! Pick me up! Stroke me! Love me!')
I felt sick. There're more ways of killing a fluffy kitten than drowning it in cream, but none of them comes anywhere close as regards sheer inhuman cruelty.
An elf was hurrying towards the group with a saucer of milk in one hand and a ball of pink wool in the other. Seeing them, I felt like some kind of monster.
Time
, I decided,
I wasn't here
. I still had a lot of work to do; there were elves trapped on the wrong side of the line to be rescued, for a start. I had no idea where Daddy George's gateway was, let alone how to defuse the booby traps so that the prisoners could use it to get home. So the only way to bring them back would be one at a time, taking them with me by way of a circle in the grass. It could take years, for all I knew â not that I had anything better to do, God knew, not after Daddy George had played his last and quite possibly nastiest trick. He'd known Cruella far too well; figured out the surest and most infallible way to make sure she'd never speak to me again. And without her â well, I might as well be back in the factory, laying sheets of tissue paper over a thousand empty shoeboxes a day.