Unfortunately, this meant that there was very little elven about his home, as durability went somewhat against the prevailing elven aesthetic of things brought briefly from the earth, and then given back. A litter of fox cubs could give things back to the earth at an extraordinary rate, generally before the owner was quite done with them. Sings resigned himself to art made by humans and occasionally dwarves. As sacrifices went, he’d made worse.
Speaking of sacrifices…
He dumped the mug in the washbasin, shoved his feet into boots, squared his shoulders, and went to see if the unicorn was still there.
FIVE
“Two weeks of boot camp, eh?” said Algol. He was digging in the pack goat’s packs until he came up with a dubious bit of steak left over from the elephant (or possibly Blockhammer). “Here, put this on your eye.”
The steak was cold, thanks to Murray. He had invented a device that kept meat cold, a small box with a fan and little metal wings. He claimed the wings dispersed heat. Most of the other goblins thought he was loony, but Algol had made an effort to understand. “Like birds!” he’d said.
Murray had stared at him, wiping sweat from under his goggles.
“Hot air rises,” Algol tried to explain, “so birds must be hot, because they fly. The wings cool them down so they can land without floating away.”
“Riiiiight,” Murray had said. “Ah…yeah. Just like that. How…novel of you to figure that out.”
Algol was proud.
Mushkin put the steak on his eye. Mishkin hovered nervously. “Will he be okay? Should he go to the medics?”
“You in a big hurry to lose the eye?” asked Algol mildly. “Keep the steak on it, you’ll be fine.” He had figured out that the best way to deal with the twins was to address them as one goblin with four arms and two heads.
“This is Buttercup.” Algol nodded to the supply goat.
“Hi, Buttercup!” the twins chorused.
Up ahead, Sergeant Nessilka cringed. Why had she let him name the goat? You shouldn’t name the goat. It was just “the goat.” If food got scarce enough, you ate the goat, and that was much harder when it had a name.
Algol was a good goblin, and a fairly reliable corporal, but he had some odd blind spots, often where animals were involved.
“Now then. Boot camp. Kill a lot of straw men?”
“Yes, Algol!”
“S’fine if we’re fighting scarecrows, I s’pose. Unfortunately, we’re fighting elves. You ever seen an elf?”
“No…”
“We heard they were eight feet tall and breathed fire from their nostrils!” said Mushkin from under his steak.
“Generally not, no.”
The average elf, the corporal explained, was a little under six feet tall, with pasty skin like a mushroom and long, pointy ears like a mule. “They’re fast, see? Not goblin fast, but quick as weasels. And they have really good weapons. Loot their weapons if you get a chance.” He patted the sword at his side. It had runes like wriggling worms all down the length, which Murray said meant “Blade that Dances in the Houses of the Moon” in Elven.
Algol called it “Bob,” after his goldfish back home.
“If you loot their packs, they’ve usually got decent vittles, too. Vegetarian, but it’s good in stew. Their armor doesn’t fit us for beans, so don’t bother.”
Mishkin and Mushkin listened with round eyes, absorbing it all.
“Now, if we get in a fight—err—”
He looked at the twins. They looked back guilelessly. Algol sighed.
“If we get in a fight, try to stay close to me.”
He wracked his brain.
“They’re all a lot taller than we are, so go for the legs. Hardly anybody has any armor on the back of their knees. We’ll try to find you a shield. Hold the shield over your head, and go for the knees.”
“Always go for the knees…”
Always go for the knees was, in fact, the family motto of Clan Uggersplut, to which Algol belonged in a roundabout fashion involving several second cousins and a yak.
Uggersplut, as it happened, was also the clan to which the most competent of the ranking generals of the goblin army also belonged.
It had been the scions of Uggersplut who carried the demands of the goblins to the humans, long ago, at the start of the war.
Goblins, much like rats, prefer to flee, but when they’re cornered…well. When the goblin scout had arrived on the shore of the western sea, the goblin tribes had turned, all together, like an enormous green rat at bay, and bared their collective teeth.
So the goblin leaders sat down, in the mountain called Goblinhome—half city, half refugee camp—and talked for three days and two nights. As the sun set on the third day, they signed the large warthog hide on which their demands were written. Then they drew straws for who would carry it to the humans.