What Do You Say to a Naked Elf?
Page 1
PROOF
“Nice ears, Spock. Buy them at a convention?” At Charlie’s look of puzzlement, Jane waved away the comment. “Never mind. Obviously, they don’t have television on Lowth. I’ll tell you about it sometime over a cappuccino. That explains the elf half of being a Whelphite. I suppose you have proof of the fairy half?”
He frowned. “You won’t take my word for it?”
“The word of a drug-addicted white slaver who thinks he’s an elf? Riiight.” Jane snapped her fingers, feeling a twinge in her shoulder at the movement. “Cough it up, Keebler.”
And that was when the clothes came off. . . .
What
Do You
Say to
a Naked
Elf?
CHERYL STERLING
LOVE SPELL NEW YORK CITY
To FNMS-the CommaKazi, POV Police, PETA, and all others. Without you, this would be a lesser work sitting comfortably in a drawer somewhere.
To Mom. She didn’t live to see it in print, but she profoundly affected these words.
And finally, to the real Tivat. His sacrifice under my wheels started this adventure. R. I. P., bunny.
What
Do You
Say to
a Naked
Elf?
Chapter One
Kabloom! The right front tire blew. The car’s headlights illuminated the rabbit sitting in the middle of the lane. Barreling up the highway entrance ramp, Jane Drysdale didn’t have time to react.
“Oh, damn,” she swore. The animal disappeared between the front tires and the vehicle swung to the right. She heard a sickening thunk, thunk and tightened her grip on the steering wheel to wrest back control, but it was too late. Careening down the embankment, still going sixty miles per hour, she watched in horror as she headed for a stand of trees.
Jane stomped on the brakes. The car fishtailed, straightened and, for a few brief seconds, paralleled the road before a line of trees, smaller than the first, rose up before her. She jerked the steering wheel left and ground her foot into the brakes again.
The vehicle veered up the embankment, shuddered and died. Momentum threw Jane forward. The airbag exploded in her face.
Her last conscious thought was the memory of the rabbit shimmering into a more humanlike shape, then reforming just before it slid under her wheels.
An insistent pounding pulled her from the darkness. At first she thought it came from her right temple, where most of the pain in her head centered. It continued, and Jane recognized the sound of someone rapping on glass. With a groan, she twisted and peered out from one eye.
Less than a foot away, a man stared at her, mouthing words she couldn’t understand and beating on the car window. He looked deranged. Automatically she reached to touch the buttons to lock the door and windows, only to remember she’d traded in her beloved Mercury the month before. This older Neon, with smaller payments, didn’t have the luxury of power options.
Jane’s left arm wasn’t working too well, so she reached across with her right to lock the door. She noted that the button, inexplicably, was in the down position. Had Detroit changed how things worked? Still disoriented, she pulled up on the tab.
A moment later, the door jerked open from the outside. The man groped her middle with rough hands and fumbled to unsnap her seat belt. The catch gave, and he wrenched her free.
“Hey!” she yelled, not only from the harsh treatment but also a new set of aches that made themselves known.
“There is a fire!” an accented male voice said in her ear.
Jane twisted in her rescuer’s hold. From the corner of her eye she saw a flicker of orange. She gasped and struggled against his grip.
“Let me go!” she shouted. She made her body go limp. Dead weight isn’t easy to carry off to murder and rape.
Her rescuer released her, and Jane staggered to her feet. The scene before her was nightmarish.
She must have swerved the car too sharply: She’d plowed straight into the embankment, crumpling the car’s front end. The hood had popped open, and under its steel canopy a fire the size of her microwave blazed.
Jane swore. This will be nice explaining to the insurance company—oh my God, the toys! At the thought of her merchandise, packed in Rubbermaid containers in her backseat and trunk, Jane lurched forward. She had a lot of money tied up in inventory, and it would definitely be impossible to explain to State Farm.
“Get back!” the man shouted. “Stay away!”
“Try and stop me!” she called over her shoulder, stumbling and slipping across the dew-drenched grass.
His hand closed over hers on the door handle. She yanked herself free, using the momentum to elbow him in the stomach. She had the satisfaction of hearing his whumf before she pulled open the door and tugged out one of six containers. By the time she had two free, he’d recovered and pushed her aside to get the third.
“Idiot mortal,” he exclaimed under his breath.
“Mortal?” She crawled around him in the almost empty backseat. Smoke filled the interior, and she heard fire crackling. “What does that make you? Witch? Warlock?” She pulled down the split-rear back to expose the opening to the trunk. “Help me with this, will you?” Smoke billowed around them, making it difficult to see.
“Get out of here!” he ordered.
“Not until I get my stuff.” The seat down, she grabbed the closest box and shoved it in his direction. She heard it slide away, accompanied by a string of what sounded like curses in a language she didn’t recognize.
Smoke stung her eyes and burned her lungs, but it didn’t stop her from crawling into the trunk and reaching for its release handle. Pulling it with her good hand, she kicked the lid open. Fresh air hit her. Someone helped her out.
“The boxes!” she cried.
“We have them,” said a new voice, also accented.
Jane twisted around. A man regarded her, older than the first, but with the same build—slight, wiry, an inch or two taller than her five-feet-six. She swiveled her head and saw four other men, similar in appearance, all wearing woolen hats or caps, jeans and lightweight jackets. Jockeys? Chimney sweeps? Circus performers?
“Who are you people?” she asked. She searched for the first guy, the one who’d pulled her from her car.
Backlit by the fire claiming her little Neon, he stood supervising the stacking of her boxes.
“Darrin,” she cried. “Yoo-hoo, Darrin Stephens. Over here.” Technically it wasn’t accurate, Darrin being the mortal in Bewitched, but how many famous warlocks can one name? Jane couldn’t name any. She nodded a thanks to the old guy, a move that made her head ache more, and tramped to her rescuer’s side.
He caught her arm, his eyes bright with the reflection of the flames. “Get back. It will explode.”
She shook her head. “You watch too many movies. It doesn’t happen like that in real—”
A huge boom cut off her words. Her companion threw her to the ground, hurling himself on top of her. Jane cried out at the impact, her bruised body about to mutiny. They rolled several feet before coming to a stop. Shards of burning debris rained around them.
Pandemonium broke out. Shouts filled the air, again in a language she didn’t know. Metal crashed to the ground, some of it very close to Jane and her rescuer. The roar of the fire intensified.
Jane lay for several moments under the stranger, adjusting to his weight, listening to the sound of his harsh breathing in her ear. After what seemed a reasonable time for him to move, she nudged him in the ribs with a pointed finger.
“Hey, Darrin, you mind getting off me?”
He muttered something and rolled away, taking her hand and rising with her i
n one fluid movement. “Are you hurt?” he asked.
She had a slight ringing in her ears and the beginning of a headache, plus various bumps and bruises. “From the crash? Yes. From the explosion? Not too much. How about you?”
He shrugged. “Nothing.”
Jane looked around. Only the five other men seemed to have stopped at the accident scene. Of course, it was close to one o’clock in the morning. She verified the time on her Indiglo watch and realized Darrin still held her hand.
“Hey,” she cried, pulling free. “Thanks for saving my life and all that, but I’m not giving out rewards. Not the kind you’re thinking of anyway.” She changed the subject. “Did you guys call nine-one-one?”
“Nine-one-one?” he repeated.
“Yeah, like maybe a fire truck or two.” She watched in dismay as the husk of her car continued to burn. “Not that it will do me any good, but those hunky firemen like to practice. Keeps their hormones up.”
“They will be here.”
“Great.” Jane shivered, aware that the temperature had dropped since she’d left Kendra’s party. She’d made a lot of money tonight, and Darrin had helped save what she hadn’t sold. Orders, checks and cash lay tucked in one of the boxes.
“Are you cold?” he asked.
“Yes, I am. Also bruised, battered, dirty, smoky and a dozen other things I’m too tired to think about.”
“Come with me. I will give you something to cover you.”
A sweater or a blanket sounded good. It was early April, and she hadn’t thought that it might be cool after the party. Jane followed him a few steps, then stopped.
“I’m not leaving my boxes. As soon as the fire trucks show up, every gawker within a five-mile radius will rouse himself from in front of his television and hop in his pickup truck. I’m surprised there isn’t anyone here yet, what with police scanners and CBs.”
“You are worried about the boxes?”
Hadn’t he heard what she said? “Yes.”
He put two fingers in his mouth and emitted a multi-toned whistle. “My companions will bring them.”
“Your companions? Er, I don’t want to sound ungrateful or anything, but where are you fellows from?”
“Sylthia.” He ducked his head and held a low branch out of her way as they continued their walk.
“Sylthia,” she repeated. “And where is that, exactly?”
“Lowth.”
“Uh-huh. Is that where you learned English? Because you really need to buy a contraction or two, Vanna.”
“My name,” he said, his voice firm, “is Charlie.”
Charlie. Uh-huh. Just her luck to draw a Charlie for a rescuer. If this were a romance novel, his name would be Chase. He’d be six inches taller, forty pounds heavier, have buns to die for and reek of testosterone. Instead, she’d wound up with a reed of a rescuer who looked as if he didn’t shave more than once a week. Without a sense of humor, too. Didn’t he own a television? Of course, not everyone watched reruns night after lonely night as she did. Nevertheless, the guy didn’t seem to have a clue.
At least he’d helped save her merchandise. Jane looked over her shoulder to check on it. The leader followed, one of the boxes in his arms. Good. She couldn’t afford to lose any of her toys. Realm of Pleasures was the latest in her long string of get-rich-quick schemes. At various times she’d moonlighted from her ho-hum secretarial job. She’d tried various products with little success. Realm seemed to be the niche she’d been seeking: selling lotions, potions, massage oils and adult playthings to bored, rich women delivered a slow but steady income.
Not that she had much use for anything that involved a partner, her love life being the way it was, but she could testify to the effectiveness of the vibrators. The Long, Tall Texan was her current favorite.
A gust of cold wind snapped Jane from her thoughts. She looked from the path they’d been following and realized they weren’t anywhere near the highway. Furthermore, they’d been walking for some time.
“Hey,” she called, stopping in her tracks. “Where are you fellows parked, anyway? Why aren’t we up by the road so we can direct the firemen?” She turned, trying to make sense of the landscape. “Where are we?” Mist swirled around them, making it impossible to see more than a few feet. It muffled any noise. She felt as if she’d stepped into a white vacuum.
Charlie stopped, a look of impatience on his face. “We are almost there.”
“How far away is it? Why are you guys out this late?”
Her rescuer touched her arm. “All will be answered.”
Something didn’t sound right about this. Jane tried to pull free from his grip, but he was stronger.
“Let go of me,” she ordered. The mist swallowed her words. Not so much as an echo came back to her. “I don’t like this. Where are your companions? Help!”
“They went ahead.” He tugged on her to follow him. “We are almost there.”
Jane resisted. She hadn’t heard anyone pass them.
“You belong to some kind of cult, don’t you? I could tell by the way you’re dressed, like that Heaven’s Gate guy. Ohmigod, you’re white slavers. You’re going to sell me into a prostitution ring.” Her heart raced faster. She raised her free hand. “Watch out. I know karate.”
“You are wrong.” Charlie looked ready to do the Vulcan neck pinch on her.
“You’re wrong. I’m not taking another step with you.”
He sighed. “As you wish.”
Before she knew what he’d done, she felt a sharp pain, like the bite of a ten-pound mosquito, on her bare arm. She looked down to see him withdraw a small syringe-like thorn from her flesh.
“Ohmigod,” she said again. “You’re into drugs, too.” Then the mist changed to black and swallowed her.
Jane woke in an uncomfortable position. It took a moment for her to realize that the pressure on her stomach, the ground rushing at her and her body bouncing up and down meant that she lay across someone’s shoulders. Charlie. She thumped his back, hard.
He dropped her. She fell in an ungraceful tangle of legs and arms into a bush, which practically devoured her.
“Hey,” she yelled, trying to clamber from the foliage that was scraping her all over. “What’d you do that for?”
Charlie bent forward, his hands on his knees, wincing in pain. “Why did you hit me?”
“You?” she exclaimed. “I’m the injured party here. I banged up my car, then it caught on fire, and then I was kidnapped by white slavers with drug addictions. On top of everything else, I killed a bunny tonight.”
Charlie straightened, wincing as if he’d pulled a muscle.
“It was not a bunny.”
She extracted herself from the woman-eating plant. “I ought to know one when I see one. He was definitely a Looney-Tunes-union-card-carrying bunny. I creamed him.”
“It was not a bunny.”
“Oh, yeah? What then?”
He looked her in the eye, as serious as an executioner. “An elf.”
Jane burst out laughing. “Are you sure you didn’t shoot up after me?” she asked, trying to catch her breath. “Or maybe I’m going nuts.” She felt her forehead. No fever, but a low throb.
“You’re quite sane.”
“Then you’re the one who’s Looney Tunes. I thought you said I hit an elf.”
“You did. His name was Tivat.”
“Tivat the Elf, hmmm? What was his last name, Keebler?”
Charlie shook his head. “I’m not familiar with that name.”
“Of course not. Are you familiar with the term ‘psychiatric treatment’? Because I think you’ve missed a few sessions, buddy.”
“My name is not Buddy. It’s—”
“Charlie. I know. Mine’s Jane Drysdale. Get used to it. You’ll be seeing it on quite a few legal documents after I figure out where I am and get to the nearest lawyer.”
“I am the nearest lawyer,” he said with a slight bow. “And you are in Lowth.”
“Lo
wth? Your home planet? Go to Mapquest.com, buddy, because we’re in Walker, Michigan. That road”—she pointed in the general vicinity of the way they’d come—“is I-96. There should be a house around here I can call from and get help.”
“You have help, Jane Drysdale. Mine. I am your legal counsel.”
Maybe the air bag hadn’t inflated. Jane felt as if she’d suffered a serious head injury. “And why would I need legal counsel, Perry Mason?”
“For the murder of Tivat.” He looked at her as if she’d forgotten that two plus two equal four.
“Tivat? The elf-turned-rabbit? Okaaay. And what is that called? Elficide? Vehicular Fairyslaughter? Reckless Endangerment of a Pixie?”
“It’s called murder. I wouldn’t joke about it, Jane Drysdale. The implications are serious.”
Tenacious little fellow. “Riiight. Just call me Jane, okay? Hey, you used a contraction. What’s up with that?”
He sighed. “You’re on Lowth. The sap from the stitchtree thorn also works as a translator. We’re speaking my language.”
“Riiight. Very interesting, Charlie-defender-of-elves. Well, if you don’t mind, I think I’ll be going now. It’s been a lovely evening. Let’s try it again some time. Not.”
Disgusted and tired, Jane spun and stalked off the way they’d come. Sooner or later she’d find a house and rouse someone from their toasty bed, then she’d get home and forget this crackpot.
She took a few steps before she noticed the difference in her surroundings. For one thing, it looked a lot lighter than the middle of the night. More pre-dawnish. For another, big trees, like sequoias, surrounded her. She’d lived in Michigan all her life and never seen anything like this. Least of all in Walker, with its industrial sprawl.
“Hey,” she cried, whirling around. Charlie stood where she’d left him. “How long was I out, anyway? Did you and your buddies throw me in the back of a padded wagon and take me someplace different? Where am I?”
“You’re on Lowth,” he repeated, walking over to her. “As I said earlier. My world.”