Authors: Andrew Klavan
Rick flashed away, the Boars and Harpies and Cobras coming after him, the King of the Dead shaking the stony platform so hard, it nearly knocked Rick over. For the next several minutes, there was nothing in Rick's mind but the swing of his sword and the flash of his movements. Only when all the smaller creatures were dead and he confronted the King face-to-face again could he begin to try to think this through.
The wall of cloud was at his back, and the King of the Dead stood before him.
You must learn what Kurodar does not know
, Baba Yaga had told him.
You must face the horror he cannot face.
This placeâthis MindWar Realmâwas so full of horror, Rick hardly knew where to begin. But while he had been fighting, it seemed, his mind had been working on the problem unconsciously. And now, as the King of the
Dead ground its teeth and roared more fire and spread its wings ready to fly at him again, images and ideas flashed through Rick's brain faster than he could understand them.
The Realm was made from Kurodar's imagination. He created most of it purposefully. But here in the Golden City, some things seemed to have come to life spontaneously whether Kurodar wanted them to or not.
Even I'm his creature, poor soul that I am
, Baba Yaga had said.
But he can't touch me. He can't make me leave, much as he may want to.
So some parts of Kurodar's imagination were beyond his own control. He had made this great beast, the King of the Dead, on purpose . . .
In the image of his father!
The thought came into Rick's mind suddenly and he knew it was true. He remembered that vision Baba Yaga had given him. All the dead of the Soviet Union, the murdered dissenters who did not want the fake paradise that was being forced upon them.
They all thought they'd escape me! But they all fell into my prison eventually and into my hands.
That was the King of the Dead speaking, but he was speaking in the voice of Kurodar's brutal father, the agent of the KGB. A man who had murdered so many. A man so hated by the people that when the Soviet Union fell, a mob had beaten him to death, right in front of his son . . .
In the same flash in which he remembered this, Rick remembered his own anger against his father when he
thought his dad had betrayed his family, before he understood that his father had made, instead, the impossible choice of sacrifice, the impossible sacrifice of love.
But what if that had not been his dad? What if his dad had been a monster like this? What if his dad had had no God to teach him that sacrificial love but had known only the god of his own power? How hard it would have been then for Rick to find his trust again. . . . to rebuild his lost boy-faith into the faith of a man. His dad's love . . . his mom's love. . . Raider's love . . . Molly's . . . It had all been God's love and had brought God's love to himâthat was the love that now surrounded him like Mariel's armor and made him strong.
But what if there had been no love? What if he had been Kurodar?
The King of the Dead roared and the Realm's black sky was lit by fire. It spread its demon wings and whiplashed its octopus arms. It lashed its snake tail and pounded its dragon feet. And it charged at Rick where Rick stood pinned against the wall of cloud.
. . . the horror he can't face . . .
“He was glad!” Rick shouted. “He was glad when they killed you! You filled his heart with hate and he hated you and he was glad!”
It was so strange. The words came out of him and they were only words, but he felt them fly from him like bullets. Because they were true. That was the horror Kurodar couldn't face. He had turned his father into an evil god to
keep from facing his hatred for him, to keep himself from knowing what he truly felt when he saw his father die.
Kurodar was glad. Kurodar had been taught nothing but humiliation and beating and hatred and he was full of hatred himself, and so he was glad when his father was mobbed and humiliated and beaten to death.
“He was glad when you died!” Rick shouted.
The King of the Dead stopped his charge midway. The great monster stood in the center of the rock arena and swayed on his feet and reeled in confusion.
Rick seized the moment and launched himself at the thing. He swung Mariel's sword, and again the blade bit into the monster's scales and the creature bled green goo.
This time, Rick was ready for the King's counterattack. He ducked the sweeping tentacle and pulled the blade free and spun away.
But if he thought the battle was over, if he thought mere words would bring the giant down, he was wrong. As quickly as before, the King of the Dead healed. As quickly as before, he turned. He roared and there was fire, just as before. Nothing had changed.
Or wait . . .
Rick stood now with the interface behind him and the King of the Dead between him and the wall of fog. The monster was facing him, just as huge and powerful as before. But something was different.
The wall. The fog. It was coming undone.
The towering storm-tossed wall of fog was unfolding
from its heights and rolling down and growing smaller and thinning to mere mist as it fell. Something in Rick's words had broken through the miasma and begun to clear it away.
Rick did not have time to wonder what this could mean, or how it might help him, because the King of the Dead had spread its wings and tentacles again, and the smaller monsters were already crawling out of its belly ready to attack.
Rick braced himself for the onslaught, his sword in his two hands. And as he did, the wall of cloud unraveled completely and dissolved to drifting tendrils of white smoke and was gone. The air was clear.
It was like a dam bursting. The moment the cloud wall fell, a powerful rush of silver water and blue light came pouring into the dark that surrounded the arena. The next moment, even before the fresh spate of Boars and Harpies and Cobras could launch at him over the rocky surface, Mariel and Favian were there. Mariel rose up out of the silver flow that rushed into the rocks, and Favian burst like an angel from the powerful blue beam that pierced the darkness.
The water spirit was on the King of the Dead's left and the blue sprite was to the right of him. The King of the Dead turned one way and the other in surprise and rage.
The army of Boars and Harpies and Cobras rushed and flew and slithered over the arena toward Rickâbut even as they charged, Mariel threw out both her arms at
once and unleashed a powerful flood of shining mercurial water. It washed over the entire stampeding army and in the next second they were carried away. They were gone.
The King of the Dead let out one last shrieking cry and spread its wings and rose up off the platform into the air.
But now Favian threw out his hands and blue light shot from his palms to form a barrier. The King flew at it, struck it, and, giant though he was, fell back. The arena shook as the monster dropped down onto it. And now Mariel turned her power on him, and surrounded him with silver water, hemming him into the small circle at its center.
“The interface, Rick!” she cried out.
And at the sound of that almost musical voice, Rick roused himself from his startled shock. He saw Mariel's substance circling the beast. He saw Favian's light barring its way.
He turned around. There, framed against the backdrop of starry emptiness, Kurodar's twisted, pain-racked face hovered above him.
The thing was too big and insubstantial to attack with his sword alone. But now he remembered: that final power, the last upgrade, the blast he had unleashed in the church against the swarming armies of the dead . . .
He summoned the energy for that blast. He felt the charge mount within him, magnified somehow by Mariel's armor. Soon he was full of the seething strength of his faith and spirit.
And in a single blinding explosion of light and power, he released it in a great flash at the interface . . .
“There they are!” shouted Chuck.
The Traveler and Professor Jameson and Miss Ferris looked at the screen to see the white figure that was Rick Dial become visible again. The blue figure of Favian was there, too, and the silver figure of Mariel.
Professor Jameson turned to look at where Molly lay on the cot, her hands folded on her chest, her eyes gazing emptily up at the ceiling.
“She's broken through,” he murmured.
“And look!” said Miss Ferris.
They all turned to her and then followed her gaze and they all saw the big screen with the Battle Station on it, the sky weapon that Kurodar had seized.
“The energy bar. It's not filling anymore,” Miss Ferris said.
“They've done it,” the Traveler murmured. He glanced at Professor Jameson, nodded toward Molly. “Take her off the box. She's done enough. Bring her back.”
Professor Jameson nodded once and hurried to his daughter. Gently, he lifted the band off her forehead and unplugged it from the black box.
Molly went on staring another second. Then blinked once. Then looked at him. Then smiled radiantly.
The Traveler turned calmly back to his computer to finish programming the portal.
In the moments before Kurodar died, he didn't feel surprised. It was really as if he'd always known who he was, what he was, and what he was trying to hide from himself. It was as if when Rick shouted out the truth inside his mind, he merely nodded and surrendered, all the will to power going out of him, because he knew all the power in the world wouldn't save him from the awful fate of being himself.
Strapped to his chair and wired to his machine, the electricity that backed up into him when the interface was destroyed was really no more painful than the hatred that had seethed inside him all along, as if his veins were filled with acid or boiling water.
The native workers who had tended and fed him out of fear this whole long time ran for their lives screaming as the machinery that generated the Realm began to rock and smoke in the moments before it exploded.
But Kurodar didn't move. He couldn't, attached to the mechanism as he was, part of the mechanism as he was. He just sat there and waited for the final blast.
And in the end, he died weeping.
After he struck the deathblow, Rick watched the face of Kurodar come raining down out of the black sky in points of twinkling light. It was almost beautiful, though he knew it heralded destruction. He turned around and his eyes locked with the eyes of the King of the Dead. For another moment, the great beast struggled and writhed, trapped within Mariel's silver circle of water and barred by Favian's rays of blue light. For another moment, its eyes, the eyes of Kurodar in the face of his father, burned with hatred and with rage.
But the next moment, Rick saw the fire of that hatred go out, and he knew that Kurodar was finished.
The King of the Dead threw back its human head and roared in agony. Its dragon body twisted and its demon wings crumbled to red ash. It shuddered once and then its whole body erupted into flame. Rick could see the smaller monstersâthe Boars and Harpies and Cobrasâburning to ashes inside it.