All Sonic the Hedgehog characters and
situations are (c) the Sega Corporation, DiC
Productions, and
Archie Comics. Based heavily off of situations written for DiC by
Ben
Hurst in the episode "The Void", and by Len Janson
in the episode "Sonic Boom", so
some familiarity with
those episodes will help the reader. Questions and comments are
more
than welcome, so send them to
Rated PG for language and a short scene with very graphic violence.
Foreknowledge
A Sonic the Hedgehog story by Tristan Palmgren
--
Chapter 1: To Love and Lose
--
Timeline: From the King's perspective, two years have passed since
his banishment into
the Void.
--
The scratching of a pen's tip, scribbling facts and figures on a
thick piece of worn
parchment, was the only noise in that echoed
off the distant walls and numerous crystalline
stalactites of the
castle's throne room.
King Maximillion Acorn, heir to the Mobotropolis Royal Crown and
exile, stifled
the noise of even his own breathing. He had long
ago learned that he preferred the Void's
silence to sound. Sound
was a distraction, dragging him out of his work and back
into
reality. Any time he so much as looked upon his surroundings,
all he could think of was
that he wanted to shed them like a
reptile would a crinkled and dirty skin, and be cleansed
of it
forever. The crystal rocks poking haphazardly from the floors and
walls, the angles
of the skewed yet surreally familiar doors and
hallways, all would remind him of what a
disgusting mockery this
castle was.
Silence let him submerge into the task; submergence let him forget.
His work gradually consumed the parchment's available space. With
mild
annoyance, he flipped the sheet over and began working in a
clean space. He rarely set
the pen down, or even took it away from
the sheet, but when he did, his eyes always
drifted over to a
sketch drawn in the margins of the page. It was rough, and
not
professionally detailed, but the basic shape alone was
discernible. It was a large circle,
inset with other smaller
circles: the portal to the Void. A single word was scrawled next
to
it, deeply enough to leave a dimpling on the thick parchment. It read
"Escape".
The scraping sound of an old, wooden door opening shattered the
silence. King
Acorn took his eyes away from his work, peering
upwards.
"How goes our work today, my aged apprentice?" a rasping
voice inquired.
Footsteps echoed across the cavernous throne room
as the figure drew closer to the
workbench.
King Acorn grimaced. Over the past two years, he had come to hate
that voice
with a bitter intensity that he had only felt for one
other person in his life. He reluctantly
set the pen down on the
parchment, positioned so that it carefully hid the sketch of
the
Void, and turned his chair to face the newcomer.
"Not very well, I'm afraid," the King replied, looking
his 'master' straight in the
eye. "As seems usual with a case
like this. I'm still afraid that there really is no way out
of the
Void, beyond being dragged out from the outside."
"I expected as much from you," Ixis Naugus replied
icily. He stepped closer,
laying his hand down on the King's
workbench. His hand idly flicked the pen aside, and
regarded the
drawing with a raised eyebrow.
Max Acorn held his breath, feeling like a child for fearing Naugus so.
Thankfully, Naugus only viewed it with an air of chilly
disinterest. "Becoming an
artist in our old age, Max?"
"It seems the only way to pass time while trapped here,
master," Max reluctantly
responded, secretly thinking to
himself that Naugus was in no position to make jabs at his
age.
"No matter. I've come here because I wanted to show you
something," Naugus
said, stepping over to one of the false
throne room's blank walls. "Come," he beckoned.
Max stood up, following a few steps behind the bearded wizard. His
boots
clacked across the stone floorings louder than Naugus's
footsteps.
"You resent being taken away from your work," Naugus
said matter-of-factly, as if
he could read the King's mind. "But
I've made some discoveries you'll be interested in.
With the
surveillance device we built."
Max nodded quietly. He and Naugus had built the machine over a
month ago; the
work that went into its construction was the only
thing the King had to be proud of for the
past two years. It
allowed a person trained in its use to view events in the real world
as
they were happening, by opening a microscopically small fissure
in the air, an invisibly
small portal that would lead to the Void.
Although nothing from inside the Void could
escape, light and
sound heading inward could be captured. The micro-fissure was
capable
of being opened anywhere in the world, from Robotnik's
most secure laboratories to the
ocean floor. It was the ultimate
scrying device, but Naugus had forbidden him to use it.
"How well do you remember your daughter, Sire?"
Max stopped dead in his tracks, unsure of what to do. Showing any
signs of
weakness would usually only invite more of the sorcerer's
abuse; right now, though, he
felt nothing but weak.
Memories flashed before him, images as vivid as if they were
happening right now.
He remembered the first time he had ever seen
her as an infant, fur still damp, coiled up in
her new mother's
arms. He saw the smile that had lit up her face when he dropped her
off
at Rosie's, the morning before the coup. It had been the last
time he had seen her. He
could never forget that smile.
"That well, eh?" Naugus chuckled. "Do you wish to
see what has become of her
in your absence?"
The King felt his lips move almost automatically, answering before
he had a chance
to even think. "More than anything in the
world."
Naugus raised a flattened palm the air. Max stepped backward
involuntarily,
cursing his servile fright. He had thought for a
moment that Naugus was going to strike
him, but the palm remained
steady.
I was never like this before, the King thought sourly, I had
willpower. I
was a leader, not a servant.
A heavy, bass thud reverberated throughout the throne room. Max
fought back
his instinct to flinch. When he glanced back at
Naugus, he saw that the floor in front of
the empty wall had shot
upwards, crumbling the rock around it. A large, flat video
monitor
almost half the size of the throne room had risen from the ground.
Naugus
lowered his hand, nodding in satisfaction.
That was the trouble with interacting with Naugus. The old wizard
didn't look
like much of a foe. His long, bleached white beard and
the horn growing out of the middle
of his forehead only lent him
the ludicrous appearance of an insane beggar. Yet, a single
motion
in his fingertips could split the earth and change the world...
The monitor crackled to life, spitting out static and then the
haunting howl of the
Void. Somewhere in the real world, Max knew,
a micro-fissure was opening. The image
cleared up slowly, wavering
for several moments before finally becoming steady. Colors
gradually
resolved themselves from the gloom, but there still wasn't much to
see.
This wasn't from any fault of the camera itself, but instead just
from the general
lack of light from the real world. The
micro-fissure had opened indoors, in a corridor
glowing only with
the dim red color of low-power light bulbs.
"Where is this?"
Naugus's face twisted into a sneer. "This is your glorious
capital city. It's been...
redecorated by that low life, War
Minister Julian."
More memories flooded back to the King, none of them pleasant.
Years-old anger
stirred within him -- Julian was the only person
that he hated more than Naugus.
He heard footsteps slap down against the metal floors. Echoes made
it difficult to
say exactly how many people were making the noise.
Within seconds, three figures ran
into view from below the
micro-fissure, and stopped below one of the muted red bulbs.
Soft
light played across their features.
Two of them he didn't recognize, but his jaw dropped when he saw
the third. It
was his daughter, Sally Acorn, but she had changed
in a way that Max had never
expected. She had grown.
The face on the monitor was definitely the sleek, regal face of
the Acorn heir, but
over a decade of growth had worked their way
into her features. She was taller, much
taller, and possessed the
budding body of a young adult female. The King pegged her age
at
around sixteen or seventeen years of age.
The biggest change, though, was the eyes. Not a spark of innocence
was left.
"That's im-impossible!" Max stuttered, feeling
his heart sinking. I've lost eleven
years out of my daughter's
life. "I've only been trapped in the Void for two years!
She
was five when I left!" My daughter's grown eleven years without
her father.
Eleven years.
"She couldn't have grown that much in only two years. There
hasn't been enough
time!"
Naugus threw him a disgusted glance. "Time? Have you
forgotten where you are,
lackey? Time is something that happens to
other people."
The King snapped his muzzle shut, and watched.
--
"'Twan? C'mon, Sal, the hedgehog can do this by himself."
"No, Sonic, there are too many guards!" the Princess protested.
"And you think that, of all people, Antoine can help me?"
"Zat is zee plan, you fuel!"
The heavily accented fox planted his hands on his hips, staring
crossly at the
hedgehog, trying to look as menacing as possible.
He didn't pull it off. The blue-quilled
hedgehog's eyes rolled
upwards, and he shook his head.
King Acorn narrowed his eyes, examining the fox. He was dressed in
the garb of
the Royal Guard: his daughter's bodyguard, perhaps?
The guard thrust an angry thumb at
his chest. The metal buttons on
his uniform's shoulder glinted in the poor light. "I'll have
you
knowing zat I am being much too very brave an' strong for zose
miserable SWATbots."
The hedgehog, Sonic, cast a wry glance at Sally. "Is he full of himself, or what?"
"His ego's smaller than yours," Sally snapped back. She
took a deep breath, and
shook her head. "Sonic, now is not
the time to change the plan! We agreed on this last
night: you and
Antoine distract the armory's guards, while I sneak in and plant
the
explosives. If you had problems with it, you should've brought
it up then!"
Sonic merely shrugged. "I just know that 'Twan's gonna mess
it up, just like he
always does."
"Use your head! There are too many SWATbots for you to take on alone."
"Talk about your oxymorons. There's never too many. Later!"
The hedgehog's legs whirled around in a circle, revving up like a
motor. His
sneakers appeared to not so much as speed up as opposed
to blur. A high-pitched
whine that the King had only heard once
before screamed through the air.
Sally grabbed the hedgehog by the shoulder before he could take
off, a resigned
expression on her face. "Just... be careful,
okay?"
"As always, Sal."
She leaned forward, planted a quick peck on his cheek, and let go.
The hedgehog
took off.
--
Max turned to Ixis Naugus. "What's become of my daughter's
life? That one was
Sir Charles's nephew, I know. But what of the
other? And what were they doing?"
"Questions, questions," Naugus sighed. "You should
recognize the other. He's
the son of one of your former advisors."
Naugus didn't need to finish, as long-forgotten memories filled in
the pieces of the
puzzle. "General Francois D'Coolette,"
the King said. He hadn't thought of the stern old
man in quite
some time; now his son was apparently an important fixture in the
Princess's
life. So much could happen in a decade.
"I've only been watching them for a few days, so I'm not
entirely sure," Naugus
confessed, "But they seem to be
part of a roguish band of Freedom Fighters out to destroy
dear old
Julian. Your daughter is their leader, apparently."
King Acorn's gaze fell back to the monitor, and to his daughter.
Although much
time had passed, she was still only a child in her
mid-teens. Leading a group of Freedom
Fighters?
Max remembered himself at that age – the responsibility of
being heir to the throne
weighed heavily upon him. He'd had to
feel and act old even as a teenager. The same
thing must be
happening to Sally, only her dire situation must be magnifying
the
phenomenon a hundredfold.
Naugus continued speaking, occasionally gesturing at the screen.
"Right now,
they're trying to bomb one of Julian's armories.
The hedgehog will try and distract the
metal men standing guard
outside, while the Princess and her bodyguard are supposed
sneak
in and plant several explosives." A smile twitched at the
corners of the wizard's
lips. "Unfortunately, that won't
happen."
"You've seen this before, then?" the King asked. "You know what will happen?"
"Oh, yes." The smile grew wider. "That's why I
wanted to show it to you." He
snapped his fingers, and the
camera view changed.
Max suddenly had a very sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach.
He turned back
towards the monitor.
--
The corridor had apparently widened out into a larger, box-like
room. A set of
double-doors consumed most of one of the walls. Two
of the city's robotic police force,
Julian had called them
SWATbots, the King recalled, stood motionlessly on both sides of
the
doors. Red light glistened off their helmet's amber visors.
There was a flash of blue, and suddenly the hedgehog was standing
between them.
A chuckle echoed through the room, and then he was
gone again. A trail of dust marked
his passage through one of the
side corridors.
The two guards didn't hesitate to give chase. In unison, they both
raised their
arms, leveling them at the retreating hedgehog.
Bursts of crackling blue energy erupted
from their wrists,
slamming into the walls nearby the Freedom Fighter. Metal split
and
crumbled, shooting sparks in every cardinal direction.
The King winced. The city's police force hadn't been equipped with
laser cannons
anywhere near as powerful as what he had just seen.
Julian must have retrofitted the
Peacebots with them after the
exile into the Void.
"Priority One Hedgehog – Freeze!"
Sonic dashed around a corner, and out of the guards' line of fire.
One of the
robots continued to pursue him. The other stopped dead
in its tracks.
Max heard Naugus's chuckle. "The Freedom Fighters hadn't
planned for this
scenario."
The SWATbot reached down to its left wrist, expertly punching a
number of
buttons in rapid succession. It held the wrist to its
face. Judging by the layout of the
buttons and the appearance of a
small, meshed speaker, the King guessed that it was a
communication
device of some sort.
"Alert, Warehouse 6-G," the SWATbot ordered. "Flank
the building. Seal off all
entrance and exit points."
The SWATbot turned on its heel, and marched back over to the armory door.
"What's happening, Naugus?" the King asked.
"Julian apparently got tired of the Freedom Fighters
outwitting legion after legion
of SWATbots," Naugus's voice
dropped to a hiss at the mention of Julian. "So he
upgraded
their AI programs to more effectively deal with diversionary tactics.
It... catches
your daughter by surprise, I'm afraid."
As if to prove Naugus's point, two pairs of footsteps began
echoing down the
corridor drew the remaining guard's attention.
The camera angle rotated slightly, just in
time for the King to
see his daughter and the uniformed fox run around the corner.
They
skidded to a halt almost immediately.
"Soneec did not distract zee guards! Zat stupeed hedgehog! He
failed!" Antoine
groaned under his breath.
The SWATbot began to raise its laser-augmented wrist. It wasn't
even going to
give them a warning.
"Antoine, duck!"
The Freedom Fighters tried to jump back behind the corner. Antoine
wasn't fast
enough. The SWATbot's wrist glowed, and spat laser at
the fox's chest. Even the King,
from his distant vantage point,
could tell that there wasn't enough time to dodge. The fox
hastily
cast up his right arm to deflect the blast.
Throwing up his arm at the last minute saved Antoine's life, but
the damage to the
fox's body was severe. The laser burned through
his arm's fur and flesh, searing and
melting both, before finally
being absorbed by his forearm's bone. His uniform's sleeve
burst
into flames.
Antoine screamed with a pain he had never known before.
Sally grabbed Antoine by the neck, and dragged him back around the
corner. Her
shocked eyes quickly surveyed the wound, and, in a
single motion, ripped the sleeve of his
uniform off his shoulder,
and flung the still-burning fabric onto the floor.
Smoke licked upwards from inside the wound. The laser's energy had
not only
charred and cauterized the flesh, but the bone as well.
Antoine's eyes and mouth were clenched tightly shut. He held a
trembling left
hand over the wound, trying to contain some of the
smoke as if it were blood. His jaw
wavered.
"Oh, no," was about all Sally could manage. Empathy
stronger than anything the
King had ever felt surged in her eyes.
"P-Princess," Antoine stuttered, jaw still trembling
treacherously. "I cannot move
my hand, Princess."
The fox's right hand hung limp. There had obviously been some
damage to his
nervous system.
"I don't know if-" Sally was interrupted. The SWATbot's
metal boots were
echoing up the corridor, getting closer. It was
running towards them. Without thinking,
she grabbed Antoine's good
arm and began running. The fox was able to keep pace, but
just
barely. "Come on!"
--
"Naugus," the King started, and then thought better of
it. "Master, I implore you.
Tell me what happens to my
daughter!"
"See for yourself." The wizard's bony fingers snapped,
and the camera view
changed once more.
--
It was another dimly lit amber red corridor, nearly identical to
the others that the
King had seen, except that this one was
somewhat lengthier. Both ends of the corridor
stretched far off
into the distance. There were no doors or markings anywhere,
only
uniform gunmetal gray walls. The complex the Freedom Fighters
had infiltrated was
obviously very large; that gave Max a modicum
of hope. It would be easy for them to
stay hidden in such a vast,
empty facility.
Sally and the wounded fox were running down its length, hardly
stopping for
breath. The fox was still nursing his wounded arm,
although thankfully no more smoke
was emerging from the wound.
Occasionally, he would drip of small blotch of blood red
on the
ground beneath him, but the laser's searing heat had cauterized most
of the gash,
sealing the arteries. Whimpers recurrently issued
from his throat.
Sally glanced behind her. "I think we lost it." But they didn't stop running.
The high-pitched whine the King had come to recognize as the
hedgehog's
speeding legs grew louder, and a streak of dust rounded
the corner up ahead. It slowed as
it approached Sally, and the
burred streak of blue became recognizable as Sonic.
"Yo, Sal, did you-" the hedgehog cut himself off when he
saw Antoine. "What the
hell? What happened?"
The fox only whimpered, jaw trembling. He cupped his good hand
protectively
over the injury.
"There was a guard still at the door," Sally said hastily. "He shot Antoine."
"Still there? But I thought I had both of them running after
me!" Sonic scratched
his head, his eyes wide open in alarm.
"Doesn't matter now," Sally said. "We need to get
him back to Knothole. Maybe
Booksh-"
"Priority One Hedgehog," a security bot's voice rumbled
from the end of the
corridor. The three Freedom Fighters spun
instantly around, facing it's raised forearm.
The laser-augmented
wrist glowed menacingly in the poor light.
"It's a trap!" Sally's whisper got caught in her throat.
Sonic raised his clenched fists. "It's okay, I'll get us out of this-"
The SWATbot spoke once more, interrupting the hedgehog. King Acorn
felt a
shiver ripple down his spine. His jaw ached from being
clenched shut for so long. "New
orders – shoot to
kill."
Without further warning, a laser bolt screamed down the hallway
and slamming
into Antoine's throat. The fox flew backwards,
smashing bodily against the far wall. A
spray of blood glimmered
against the ceiling, in stark contrast to the cold gray metal.
He
slumped to the floor, and didn't move again.
The hedgehog gasped, and tried to rev up his legs and escape.
Sally only had time
to whisper something unintelligible before the
SWATbot fired again.
One shot caught the hedgehog's leg. He fell to his knees, too
shocked from pain
to try and move. The next laser hit him squarely
in the center of the chest, throwing his
body backwards to finally
fall, belly up, on the floor. The laser had instantly burned
through
the outer layer of flesh and had smashed through his ribcage with
sheer, brute
force. His internal organs had been instantly cooked
by the scorching heat.
Sally involuntarily stepped backwards, hands almost covering her
wide-open
mouth. She looked like she was screaming, but could
force no sound to emerge from her
lips.
"No," the King cried. A tear rolled down his cheek. "Naugus, make it stop!"
"That is beyond my power, Max," Naugus cackled, almost
gleefully. He was
enjoying this. "We cannot escape the Void.
This is all happening in the real world."
Sally couldn't take her eyes of the corpse of the hedgehog. Her
breathing came
out suddenly, in slow, muffled gasps. She looked as
if she were too afraid to say anything,
as if taking any action
whatsoever would prove that this was reality, and not simply
the
terrifying escape of nightmare.
She tore her gaze away from the gruesome remains of her only love,
and towards
the robot still standing at the end of the hallway.
Its wrist glowed with unspent laser
energy.
"Priority One Target eliminated. Priority Two: Princess
Acorn. Surrender or
die."
Sally stood shock still in the corridor. Everything was horribly quiet.
"Surrender or die," the SWATbot repeated.
A whisper, too soft to be heard by the SWATbot, escaped Sally's
throat. "Kill
me."
The King had been biting his lip, and only noticed it now when
blood started
trickling into his mouth. He couldn't even feel the
pain from the cut.
"This is your last warning."
Sally's fist curled up into a ball. She tried to speak again, but
her voice choked up.
The SWATbot didn't acknowledge it. Instead,
its wrist began to glow brighter as it once
more prepared to
discharge a laser burst.
A gloved metal hand swept down from around the corner and knocked
the
SWATbot's arm to the side. The laser beam exploded harmlessly
against a wall. The
Princess didn't even flinch.
"No, no," a deep voice chuckled ominously, "we
can't let her get off that easy, can
we?"
The King's face twisted into a snarl. "Julian."
The SWATbot obediently lowered its arm as Ivo Robotnik stepped
into the light.
More robotic guards had appeared behind him, as
well as a shorter, frailer human with a
ridiculously bird-like
nose. Robotnik's red eyes gleamed with a red light all their own
as
they surveyed the carnage.
"The hedgehog is dead... it just makes me feel warm, and
alive, for the first time in
years. I feel... hungry for more.
Wouldn't you agree, Snively?"
"Yes, sir," the bird-nosed human said, mouth curled in
disgust as he looked at the
remains of the Freedom Fighters.
"Dig up and clean out some of the old stoves from King
Acorn's royal kitchen.
And have the SWATbots take the hedgehog's
remains there."
"But that's just-"
"This is one meal that I'm really going to enjoy."
Resignation overtook revulsion on the smaller human's face. "Yes, sir."
Robotnik's forefinger and thumb squeezed a lump of flab on his
arm. "Oh, pinch
me, I must be dreaming. Sally Acorn is also
in my grasp." A wide grin split his face.
"Tell me,
Princess, how does it feel?"
Sally's expression went blank. Without another word, she simply
turned around
and began running towards the opposite end of the
corridor.
Robotnik sighed, and took a step to the side to give the SWATbots
a clearer view.
"You," he jabbed his thumb towards the
nearest guard, "shoot her in the leg."
Sally didn't cry out, didn't even utter a single whisper, as the
laser beam cut her
down. She stumbled to the floor, incapacitated,
with blood oozing from a new wound in
her calf.
"Retooling the SWATbot AI was a marvelous idea, Snively.
Simply ingenious."
"Oh… thank you, sir."
Julian's boots echoed down the corridor as he moved towards
Sally's fallen form.
"One more order, Snively."
"Go ahead, sir."
"Warm up the roboticizer."
--
The video screen flickered in response to Naugus's command, and
the scene
changed. Some time had passed, but the King couldn't
tell how much. Sally imprisoned
in a clear glass tube in the
center of a large, cavernous room, leaning against the wall
for
support. From the camera's angle, Max could just barely see
the charred and singed fur
around the wound in her leg.
"Well, Princess, you and I both knew that it would only be a
matter of time,"
Julian grinned. "After all, you and
your friends have taken so many risks in your attacks
on my city.
It was only a matter of time before the dice rolled my way, for
once." The
obese man tweaked his flaring orange mustache. "A
shame you and your friends are
finished thanks to that rather
stupid coincidence. I would have preferred it if your demise
was
more dramatic."
The frail human looked down, occasionally tapping a few buttons on
a computer
console. "Therite field at maximum. Ready to
roboticize."
Sally's hands pounded against her glass cage. The tube muted out
all sound, but
her eyes were wide open in the universal human
expression of fear.
"Activate."
Electric blue flashes of lightning arced down from the ceiling of
the glass tube,
tearing across the Princess's body. Her toes
seemed to... mesh together, and reform into
one solid block of
metal. The effect swept up her legs, changing warm fur and flesh
into
cooling gray steel. Her wound disappeared under a sheath of
metal.
The King rushed forward, pounding his fists against the titanic
video monitor. He
heard someone shout, and recognized his own
voice. What hurt the most was the fact that
there was nothing he
could do. Not even his helpless cries of protest would carry
over
into the other world.
Julian's grin grew wider. "Goodbye, Princess. It's been fun."
Sally's fists clenched, fingers fusing into one solid chunk of
metal. Her arms
straightened as the bone itself was chemically
twisted into a solid metal rod. Her
midsection was flattened, the
electricity burned up to her shoulders. A blood-curdling
scream
managed to break free of the otherwise soundproofed roboticizer.
Sally's face
actually bent, changed its shape. Her blue eyes
clenched shut.
When they opened again, they were a solid mechanical red.
King Acorn sunk to his knees, mouth agape.
"100 percent roboticization factor, sir," Snively
reported, fingers playing across
the computer console. The glass
door popped open, and the robot emerged from the tube.
Robotnik walked over to it, rapping the robot's head gently. It
didn't react.
"You can still hear me, can't you, Princess?
Your mind is still trapped in there.
Helpless. But capable of
seeing, and hearing, and feeling. I can only imagine how
torturous
that must be. Oh, this is too good... Worker bot, your first duty is
to go to the
castle kitchen and to assist in preparing the feast."
"Yes," Sally droned.
"Afterwards... hmmm... we'll put you on sewer patrol. How does that sound?"
"Orders acknowledged."
"Make sure that you enjoy yourself, Princess. Remember, I like my meat rare."
Naugus's bony fingers snapped. The video screen blurred, and
finally faded into
nothingness.
--
For a moment, there was no sound in the false castle's throne
room. Then a
hissing noise, like two weathered bricks scraping
against one another, became audible, and
began to grow louder.
It was Naugus, laughing.
"That was too much," Naugus rasped, still chuckling, "I
enjoyed that, and I'm
enjoying your reaction even more. I've seen
that scene before, but this time had to be the
most fun."
"That... that wasn't real. It couldn't be."
"I'm afraid it was real. And it took place eleven years, four
months, and thirteen
days after you were exiled from your
kingdom."
King Acorn held a hand out to the blank screen, brushing his
fingers across it.
"Sally... nothing deserves to die like
that."
"But she didn't die," Naugus corrected. "Julian
transmuted her flesh to metal."
"Worse than death,"
the King mumbled. His vision blurred as his eyes teared over
again.
"Please, Naugus, there must be something we can do to stop
that!"
"It's already happened, Max. It's history." Naugus
grating laugh echoed across
the throne room again. He held up his
palm, and the blank video monitor fell back into the
floor. The
King watched it recede into the rock. "And besides, I don't wish
to save those
rodents."
"You said it yourself, Naug-" Max stopped himself.
"Master. We're in the Void.
Time is something that happens to
other people. There must be something we can do to
stop this!
There has to be!"
Naugus's tone darkened. "You little fool. You think I showed
you that out of any
sort of pity?"
"Then why-"
"I showed it to you to have a little fun. You're becoming
surprisingly
insubordinate of late, Max. You seem to think that
there's something waiting for you out
there, in the real world, if
only you can escape."
King Acorn felt himself tremble involuntarily. An emotion,
something that the
King had never experienced before, began to
well up within him, and drown out even his
sorrow. Whatever this
new emotion was, it was primal.
"I wanted to demonstrate to you how completely and utterly
inept your futile
dreams are. There is nothing out there waiting
for you, Max. Even your daughter lies
among the dead. There is no
reason left to be alive, other than to be MY servant. Is that
clear?"
A rage the like of which the King had never felt before took over.
There would be
time for mourning later. Now it was the time for
anger. His fists clenched. "You... you
showed me my
daughter's death... just to torment me?"
"Your life from before the Void is over, Max. I want you to
recognize that only
servitude, to me, sustains your existence
now."
Naugus's eyes burned.
"Do you understand me? There is nothing left for you to live
for out there.
Nothing but me."
"NEVER!" His shout pierced the air, shocking even
himself. Naugus took an
instinctive step backwards; Max's trained
eye recognized it as a show of weakness. The
King rushed towards
Ixis Naugus, fists balled up as weapons.
He didn't make more than two steps.
The sorcerer leveled his index finger at the King like it was a
weapon. Green fire
spewed from the rock itself, singing Max's fur
and knocking him off his feet into a jarring
impact with the
floor. The blow knocked the wind out of him, and for a moment
he
wasn't able to focus his eyes.
"Never attack a wizard. I thought that you'd learned that the
first day you came
here."
The world came sharply into focus suddenly. Naugus was standing
over the
King's prone body. With a snap of the sorcerer's fingers,
invisible hands grabbed Max by
the shoulders of his military
uniform and lifted him high off the ground.
"Pray you never make a mistake like that again, Max."
Naugus snarled. "Have
you learned the lesson I wanted you to,
hm? Tell me, what is your reason for living now?"
The King struggled against the unseen arms suspending him in the
air, but was
allowed no quarter. "To see my daughter again,"
he choked.
Searing, terrifying acute pain shot through his body for the
longest time. Even
though it couldn't have been more than three
minutes, it felt like an hour.
"Wrong answer. Why do you live?" Naugus asked again, calmly.
"Sally," the King gasped.
The pain lasted longer this time. When it was over, the King's
breath came out in
long, drawn-out weeps.
"Why do you live?"
Nothing mattered now except the pain. The King felt something in
his soul snap.
There was no choice but to submit. "To serve
you, Master Naugus," he sobbed.
"Very good. Is there anything left out there, in the real world, waiting for you?"
"No, master!"
"Do you wish to escape to see your daughter, Princess Sally Acorn?"
The King's head hung, and he paused for several breaths. "No, Naugus."
Max felt the arms release him, and he fell quite some distance to
the floor. He
almost didn't feel the impact. The pain had numbed
him to almost all sensation but itself.
"Remember it always. I was hoping this lesson wouldn't need
to be as... messy.
You disappoint me."
Without another word, Naugus left the throne room. The King waited
until he
was sure that Naugus was gone, and then sunk to the
ground. He didn't even feel himself
sobbing, or notice the tears
beading together on the floor.
--
Max Acorn wasn't sure how long he had lain there; it was as if no
time at all had
passed, and yet the world itself had leapt a
century into the future. In the Void, he knew,
this was half-true.
That thought clung to the King's mind as he dragged himself across
the false
throne room, and to his old workbench. He landed in the
chair heavily, and with a single
heave, threw the book of worn
parchment aside. It landed with a clatter somewhere
outside the
field of his vision.
"You old fool," Max muttered under his breath. He wasn't
sure whom he was
talking about: himself, or Naugus.
Naugus certainly wasn't the most astute judge of human nature. It
was clear that
he had been angling to coerce Max into more work.
Now, the last thing on his mind was
doing anything that that...
creature demanded.
But Naugus was right. There was nothing left to live for, now. He
had barely
managed to sustain his existence on hope for two years.
The hope that someday he would
break free of the Void and be
reunited with his family, and reclaim the kingdom and the
life
that were stolen from him. Whenever hope had failed he would bury
himself in his
scientific studies, and numb the pain that way.
Now he couldn't bring himself to either hope or work.
He reflected on Sally's last few moments as an organic being,
standing shaken and
traumatized over the bodies of the other
Freedom Fighters. He had only come to know
the others in their
last few moments of life, but from what he had seen, the King knew
that
they most have been very important to his daughter,
especially the hedgehog. Was what
he was feeling right now the
very thing that had flashed through his daughter's mind
standing
in the corridor?
With them gone, did she too feel nothing left to live for?
In his mind's eye, the King saw himself standing in the very same
corridor,
kneeling over his daughter's slain body. A SWATbot stood
leveling its laser-augmented
wrist at his forehead.
Nothing and nobody left to live for.
Max's whisper echoed his daughter's last words. "Kill me."
Footsteps once more echoed across the rocky floor of the false throne room.
These weren't the heavy sounds of Naugus's strong, imperious
strides, but a pair of feet
that moved with practiced stealth.
This was the third occupant of the Void, a person that
Naugus had
yet to discover. He was well hidden.
The King ignored the irritating grating of wood against stone as
he turned his chair
around. "Ari. Did you-"
The ram stopped in the middle of the room, as if afraid to
approach any further.
"No, I didn't know that would happen. I
left that world before then. But... I did know
your daughter as
she appeared on that screen. As a Freedom Fighter, and not a child."
"You knew that a decade of my daughter's life had gone by?
Then why didn't you
tell me?"
"Would you have accepted it if I had?"
Max held a hand to his eye, pretending to rub it clear but
discreetly wiping away
the formation of a tear. He shook his head.
"No, no, I suppose I wouldn't have. To
think that you have
known my daughter, as an adult, even though you only arrived
here
three months ago? To me, it's only been two years since
Mobotropolis fell. And for
you..."
"...over a decade."
"I would been almost insensate, unable to concentrate on anything else."
Ari stepped forward again. Ever since he had been thrown into the
Void, he had
remained here, in this room or a hidden bunker
nearby, to stay hidden from Naugus. Both
of them knew that if the
sorcerer ever found Ari, he would either be killed or converted
into
one of Naugus's servants, like the King.
It had scarcely been a year since Naugus had begun to trust his
servant enough to
teach him some minor magical tricks, for use in
his studies. Although the king's budding
talents were still small,
they had proven to be useful. Soon after Ari arrived, Max erected
a
magical ward around the throne room that would be able to fool
Naugus's bizarre
sensing power. The sorcerer would never be able
to sense Ari's presence. Unfortunately,
the limited range of the
ward kept him chained to this single room.
"Exactly. I didn't tell you because you never would've been
able to concentrate
on what Naugus tells you to do. He would've
killed you."
The King sighed, looking down at the floor. "I see. Now that
I... that I know, is
there anything you can tell me about my
daughter? I just want to know... what I missed."
"She saved my life once," Ari said, "just after we
first met. She risked her own to
do it, too, even though I was the
one who sold out her friends to Robotnik."
The King glanced
over at the wall where the video screen had been.
Ari continued. "Seeing her roboticization, on Naugus's
monitor, was as much a
shock to me as it was to you. Nothing
deserves an existence like that. Not even
Robotnik. But at least I
feel better knowing that, while she was out there and alive, she
did
good. She helped a lot of people, many more than just me. She leaves
a fine legacy
behind, your Highness."
"I won't be able to see any of it. I can't be there for her.
And she still ends up
suffering a fate even worse than death."
"We're in the Void, sire. We can't change any of that. But we
can do one thing.
Sally deserves a better memorial than either
Naugus or Robotnik have given her."
The King looked up,
meeting Ari's eyes.
"She's a completely different person than the one I left
behind in Mobotropolis,"
Max said. "I can't give her
that. I don't even know my own daughter anymore."
Determination
sparkled in his eyes. "That's another thing we can change,
though."
He stood up, marching in a straight line towards the throne room's
large doorway.
His cloak swept through the air behind him.
Ari watched him leave. "Where are you going?"
"I'm going to use the surveillance device that blasted wizard
keeps locked up.
Look in on my daughter's life before her
roboticization."
The ram frowned. "Naugus has forbidden you to use it, though.
He'll be... upset
if he finds you there."
"Who the hell cares?" The King slammed the door behind him as he left.
Chapter 2: Unattainable Memories
--
It seemed that the King had scarely moved more than twenty paces
past the
doorway when he was already upon his destination. In the
Void, distance, like time, was
something that could easily be
magically negated. He made short work of the lock barring
his
entry, and stepped inside.
Naugus's workshop was empty.
Max was in a large, cavernous room that was at least twice the
size of his own
imperious throne room. Most of the space was
simply empty, though, with nothing but
craggy gray rock walls for
decoration. Occasionally, though, a table filled with
various
artifacts dotted the floor's expanse, and there were
bookshelves scattered across the walls
at seemingly random
intervals. Each shelve was nearly full, and the books contained
there
were not placed in the neatly arranged order of someone who
possessed the tomes just for
show, in the sloppy, half-exposed
manner of someone who was too busy using those
books to make them
look tidy.
A tunnel snaked away from the workshop on the opposite end of the
chamber,
leading into a solid rock wall. It was from there that
Naugus would usually open the
Void's portal during his
experiments.
Most of the tables and twisted bits of machinery were clustered
near the doorway
that Max had entered through. He deftly weaved
between them, moving towards a larger,
more complex structure.
The scrying device that he and Naugus had invented looked
deceptively simple. It
was a single blank video monitor suspended
above a bench, with a large chair perched
nearby. The King sat
down, feeling uncomfortably small in a chair sized for Naugus's
much
larger form.
There were no buttons, levers, or switches. Naugus distrusted
technology and
electronics, and believed that anything that they
could accomplish could be done better
with magic. The surveillance
device's only interface was the user's mind. Thankfully,
having
acquired a modest amount of Naugus's own magic skills, Max could use
it.
He drummed his fingers on the desk for a moment, staring at the
inky black of the
empty monitor. A sigh escaped his lips.
Time really was no constraint in the Void. A micro-fissure could
be opened
anywhere, and at any time.
Show me my daughter's life.
--
3224. The outskirts of Mobotropolis.
"Where are we going, Rosie?" A walrus tugged at the
nanny's bright red dress.
Several pairs of small feet, mostly
barefoot, were running as fast as they could manage
down the dimly
lit red passageway. Except for the nanny, they were all children,
none of
them any older than six years. Most of their eyes were
wide with fear; it was clear that
none of them could really
comprehend what was happening to their city. Three of them
the
King recognized immediately. The blue-quilled hedgehog was there. One
of them
also had the light brown fur and long, pointed noise of
the french-accented fox that the
King had seen die in the
corridors of the warehouse.
Sally Acorn was also there, running alongside the hedgehog. Of all
the children,
hers was the only face that wasn't twisted in some
form of helpless distress. She was
silent, her mouth pursed into a
tight, thin line. There wasn't any detectable fear in her
eyes,
only a slight twinge of sorrow and regret overshadowed by simple
determination to
get where she was going.
"To somewhere safe, Rotor," Rosie answered between
pauses for breath. It was
clear that they had been running for
some time. The King smiled when he saw the old
nanny, one of the
few genuinely pleasant people he had met during his tenure on
the
throne. The Void had never given him a chance to remember her.
"When can we go back home?" another child, a long-eared
female rabbit, solicited
anxiously.
"Soon, I hope." Rosie said, still reassuring despite all
that had happened. "I'm
sure the Royal Army will be able to
sort this mess in no time."
"Is what happened to Uncle Chuck happening to everyone in the
city?" the
hedgehog asked tearfully, voice pleading for the
right response.
Rosie didn't answer.
At last, the group of children reached the end of the corridor.
Rosie's palm hit a
button concealed from the King's limited camera
view. A door hissed open, and bright
natural sunlight flooded into
the corridor. Almost as one, the children all raised their
hands
to block out the light as their eyes adjusted to it. Not allowing for
any time to rest
or pause, Rosie quickly herded them all out into
the door. The King willed the camera
view to change.
They were standing outside in the forest, on a hill overlooking
the suburbs of the
great city. Mobotropolis's towering spires were
just visible in the distance. Some of the
children paused as they
gazed towards the skyscrapers, their breath catching in
their
throats. Rosie kept trying to move them onwards, fighting
against stubborn legs that
didn't want to move.
"Please, move quickly, children," she implored, giving
them gentle shoves in the
right direction, "we're going to a
retreat out in the Great Forest. We'll all be safe out
there; it's
one of Sally's father's hidden hideaways. He and Sir Char-"
Rosie's eye caught
the distant city, and the shock stopped her in
her tracks. "Oh no!"
A vast, dark cloud of boiling smog loomed over the city, as still
and silent as a
child's nightmare. Vast tendrils of smoke coiled
upwards from the massive fires that raged
throughout the
cityscape, curling upwards and joining the ash and debris that would
soon
grow large enough to blot out the sun. From this distance,
both the bright blazes and
smoke appeared motionless.
Many of the city's pristine white-tinted structures had been
painted over by the
smog and ash into a cruel, metallic gray.
Other buildings had changed in the most horrible
ways, either
collapsed in on themselves, or bent into new shapes by a technology
that
Rosie couldn't begin to imagine. She couldn't even make out
the silhouette of the King's
pyramidal place: usually, its size
made it the first building visible when approaching the
city. Now
it was simply... gone.
The group was silent for a long moment. After glancing once at the
city, Sally's
gaze fell slowly to the ground in front of her. The
corners of her mouth curled
downwards, her eyes gleamed with loss.
"Rosie," the rabbit asked, voice trembling, "the
Royal Army isn't gonna be able to
fix this. Is it?"
"I-I..." For a moment, Rosie didn't know how to even
begin answering. "We'll
find out. Come on, children! We have
to get to Knothole!"
Her voice spurred them all into action. Sally was the last to
start moving, but
when she ran, she ran with a vigor and resolve
that not even Rosie could match.
Later in the afternoon, the group progressed further and further
into the wilds of
the Great Forest, following ancient animal
tracks and unused trails. Time had worn down
most of the day's
earlier panic. The children now followed Rosie at a leisurely pace
as
they moved through the trees. Sally still hadn't spoken a word
since leaving the city
behind.
Mobotropolis was no longer visible past the horizon, even when
trees didn't block
it, but the ominous cloud of smoke and ash
continued to grow in the sky.
"Sally?" Rosie asked cautiously. "Are you all
right? You've been awfully quiet so
far."
Sally looked up at Rosie, and nodded. "I just miss my dad."
--
3228. The Great Forest.
"I... I just found him there, Sal. Alone. I couldn't just leave him."
"I know, I know, but..." Sally trailed off, moving her
gaze from the hedgehog to
the small cub. He couldn't have been
more than a toddler. He was standing, watching
them from the other
side of the clearing. She lowered her voice so that the cub
couldn't
hear her, feeling guilty for do so all the while. "It
could be a trap, Sonic. We know that
Robotnik's still on the
lookout for survivors of the coup."
The nine-year-old hedgehog scratched his head. "A trap? This
little guy? C'mon,
get serious, Sal."
"I am serious. If his village was destroyed, then how did he
survive? Did he ever
tell you?"
"Well, no..."
"Robotnik could've planted a tracking device on him, hoping
that someone
charitable enough would take him back to their
village. Then he'd just have another
target."
"Yeah, that does sound like something Robuttnik would do,"
the hedgehog
relented. "But it still seems far-fetched."
"Well, where did you find him?"
"He was out in the open, wandering around the rubble of the
village. I heard him
crying."
Sally frowned. "If he was out in the open during the attack,
do you think that
there's any way the SWATbots could've missed
him?"
"No way! They would've spotted the little guy, all right."
Sonic glanced back
over at the cub. "But here's how I see it,
Sal. We have two choices: we either take our
chances and bring him
back to Knothole, or we leave just leave him out here." His
eyes
glistened. "Sal, if we just leave him out here, you know
he'll die. He's too young to
survive on his own."
Sally's face sagged, and there was a long silence. The cub watched
them
curiously.
"We're too young to be making these kinds of decisions, Sonic," she said softly.
"Robuttnik forces everyone to grow up fast." The
hedgehog's fists clenched and
unclenched.
"But with options like those, what choice do we really have?"
Sally asked, and
sighed. "We just have to hope for the best.
I'll walk with the cub back to Knothole.
You'd better go on ahead,
tell Rosie what you found."
"You got it." With that, the hedgehog was gone. A trail
of dust marked his
passage southward.
"Whoa!" the cub exclaimed, watching him go, clearly
impressed by the speed. He
ran over to Sally's side of the
clearing to see the hedgehog receding into the distance.
Sally studied the fox cub carefully. Two bright orange tails
peeked out from
behind his back. For the past four years of her
life, she had been isolated from everybody
but the people who had
found their way to Knothole. She had never had to deal with
children
younger than herself, and for a moment, wasn't sure what to do.
"Are you ready to go, honey?" she asked cautiously.
Honey? she thought to
herself, mildly disgusted. Not even Rosie is
that corny anymore.
"Go? Where are we going?"
"To a place called Knothole village. It's safe there."
The fox cub looked angry for a moment. "That's what they said
about home.
They said that it was safe there, but they lied."
"I'm sure they didn't lie," Sally said, reflexively.
The cub looked up at her. "Then why did the robots come and
turn everybody to
metal?" He looked like he was about to
burst into tears. Sally found herself resting a
comforting hand on
the cub's shoulder, although she was sure that she never told her
hand
to do that in the first place. She honestly didn't have an
answer for the cub.
"Do you, um, do you have a name?"
The cub sniffled for a moment before answering. "Yeah. My
parents call me
'Miles', but I hate that name. Everyone else calls
me 'Tails'."
"That sounds like a fun name," Sally said hopefully. "How old are you?"
The fox was still downcast, but he seemed to cheer up a little
when Sally asked
this. "Three-and-a-half," he recited.
An idea struck Sally. "Tails, do you enjoy… stories?"
He nodded slowly, warily.
Sally leaned down to the cub's height, pointing over his shoulder.
His eyes
followed to the point where her finger was tracing.
"Well, just over that hill right there, is
the village where
me and my friends live. There are a couple old storybooks sitting in
my
hut. I could read some of them to you... if you'd like."
The fox cub looked up at her, smiling warmly. It was the first
time that she'd ever
seen him happy.
--
3233. Knothole Village.
A quiet breeze picked up fragments of dust and dirt, kicking them
gently along in
its relentless quest eastward. Tree branches
rustled, mimicking the sounds of sandy ocean
surf. Small piles of
stone were scattered about in the clearing. For a moment, Max
thought
that he'd accidentally opened the camera micro-fissure in the wrong
place and
time, for there was no other movement.
Then he spotted it. A small bundle of brown fur huddled underneath
one of the
numerous trees, the fur color camouflaging nicely
against the tree bark. Sally was sitting
on the ground, hugging
her knees, staring at one of the larger piles of stone.
Her
expression was unreadable.
A distant stream trailed off into the forest, its passage leaving
a clear line of sight
through the otherwise impenetrable wall of
foliage. The King could make out far-away
thatched-roof huts down
close to the water's edge. Voices, muted by distance, carried
across
the forest: children, some Sally's age, some younger, playing.
Sally paid them no attention, only staring at the stone.
The King peered at one of them, squinting to try and make out the
writing etched
into some of the stones' surfaces. On one, carved
into the flat side of a rock, he saw the
name "Julayla".
Julayla? The King recognized the name instantly. She had been
Sally's teacher
and mentor in Mobotropolis.
It suddenly dawned on him that Sally was in a cemetery.
He peered at the stone that had so absorbed his daughter's
attention. It read: "To
the Memory of Alicia and Maximillian
Acorn."
Still Sally didn't move.
--
3235. Robotropolis, Ivo Robotnik's castle.
"I hate decisions like this..."
Sally peered through the airshaft's grate, down at the distant
floor of the room
outside. The now-familiar echo of SWATbot boots
rang from somewhere far below, out
of sight. Other than the slight
glow of flickering computer monitors, the room was
motionless and
empty.
The room suddenly snapped into place in the King's mind. This had
been his own
throne room once, his real throne room, in
Mobotropolis. But it had changed in the most
horrible, unnatural
fashion; it was as if somebody had ripped out the pristine marble
walls
and replaced them with solid metal.
Gradually, Max became away of a curious, high-toned chiming in the
background,
like a parlor arcade game.
A dark shape stirred behind Sally, and a scaly tail was briefly
visible in the sparse
light cast from below the vent. "What
are we gonna do?"
Sally shook her head. "I don't know, Dulcy. What can we do?"
"Well, I can-"
A sonorous laugh resonated throughout the room below, interrupting
the dragon.
The pinging noise had stopped momentarily. The King
scowled when he recognized
Julian's voice. "One small step
for the rodent, one very large stick for me!" The
pinging
noise resumed.
The dragon's eyes blazed in the darkness for a moment, and when
she spoke again
she was quieter. "I can drop down, take 'em
by surprise, and put the freeze on those
two." She paused for
an adolescent giggle. "Literally."
"It's too risky. What if one of the guards manages to shoot
you before you can do
anything?"
"Well... I dunno. But what else can we do?"
"We can get out of here, and save ourselves," Sally hissed.
"But what about-"
Sally cut the dragon off before she could continue. "He's the
one who sold us out.
He's the one who trapped Sonic and just gave
him to Robotnik. Do you really think that
he's worth our own
lives?"
The two Freedom Fighters were silent for a moment. Julian spoke to
someone
again, still out of the King's field of view.
"I admire your spirit, rodent, but this game's far from
over." A roaring sound
momentarily drowned out the unceasing
jingling.
"What's he doing to Sonic?" Sally asked anxiously, a
bitter twinge of helplessness
locked in her tone.
The frail human, Julian's lackey, appeared in the corner of the
room. He stepped
over to the array of computer consoles. "Sir!
Our guest has arrived!"
Julian stepped into view, ridiculous cape sweeping through the air
behind him. A
smile was almost cracking his face in two, and it
was growing deeper by the second. He
heaved his colossal form into
a pale green chair. "Invite him in, then, Snively."
The dragon looked at the Princess. "Uh-oh. It's decision
time, Sally. What are
we gonna do?"
"It isn't worth our risking ourselves," Sally repeated
to herself, like a mantra.
"He's the one who sold us out. We
don't owe him anything, least of all this. We're not
going to lose
our lives over him."
Snively frowned at the monitors. "It, uh, appears that he's
showing himself in,
sir."
The doors at the end of the hallway threw themselves open, and
like a force of
nature, a ram stormed into Robotnik's throne room.
SWATbots immediately came to
attention, laser-augmented wrists at
the ready. The King's eyes widened.
It was Ari!
The ram's voice was angry enough to act as a weapon of its own.
"All right,
Robotnik! I delivered Sonic. Now release my
Freedom Fighters!"
"Of course, dear boy, I always keep my promises. Snively,
bring in Ari's...
friends."
Doors at the far end of the room hissed open, and a troupe of
metal-skinned
roboticized Mobians marched through. They all
stopped as one, and the sound of their
steel heels clacking
against the floor filled the room. "What is this? Robotnik! We
had a
deal!"
"Deals only exist to be broken, dear boy."
"Sally!" Dulcy whispered urgently. "What are we gonna do?"
"Freedom Fighters don't risk their lives to save traitors,"
Sally said. A resigned
sigh escaped her lips. "But..."
"But what?"
"I-I remember something from my childhood. An old phrase that
my father taught
me. A life is a life is a life. And right now,
there's a life we can save. That's all that
matters. Get ready to
break him out, Dulcy."
--
King Max Acorn slumped down in the chair, watching the scene
unfold on the
monitor before him. The corner of his lip trembled
momentarily. When he had first turned
on the monitor he had
expected, like a child, that gaining a better understanding of
what
had become of Sally in the years in his absence would make
mourning her death easier.
He wanted to switch off the monitor and kill his memories, but
could bring himself
to do neither.
Naugus's words came back to him, suddenly and without cause: "Time
is
something that happens to other people."
So much had changed, in so little time.
It was so helplessly infuriating, being able to see it all happen
but unable to change
anything. The Void existed outside time and
would let him watch his daughter's life and
death occur over and
over again, but that was the extent of its powers.
Perhaps one day, when he and Naugus had finally figured out a way
to escape the
confines of the prison dimension, he could open a
portal to a date just before Sally's death
and change history
himself.
Max shook his head. He couldn't live with himself if he just gave
up, waiting for a
day that might never come. It was already
maddening knowing what had happened, but it
would be worse being
forced to live with himself afterwards, knowing that he had
just
given up. Whenever his daughter was concerned, there was no
more foul word than
'surrender'.
"No," the King said to himself, feeling the muscles in
his fist tighten. "There must
be something that can be done."
The fist trembled, overcome by powerless rage.
"Something."
On the monitor that was his only connection to the outside world,
the King
watched his daughter march unknowingly into the future,
and to the bleak aspect of being
just another mindless servant.
From the time that the camera was currently watching, it
would
only be another eight months of Sally's time before her
roboticization.
The figure on the video monitor seemed so tauntingly real. Max
held out his hand,
reaching towards the video monitor, hoping
against hope that his hand would pass through
the screen and be
able to touch his daughter. His fingers met the cold, smooth surface
of
the monitor instead.
"I can't just sit back and watch!" he cried.
As he spoke, Naugus's words came to the forefront of his mind
again, and Max
didn't know why: "Time is something that
happens to other people."
The only thing that the King could do from the Void was open the
micro-fissure
portals that acted as the scrying device's camera.
Open the portal...
The King's eyes widened as a sudden, terrible thought struck him.
He couldn't do
that to Sally, not even to save her life. Could he?
He could open the portal micro-fissures... which meant that he
could open a larger
portal as well. If it worked, he could save
her life, even though he would remain trapped
in the confines of
the prison dimension.
But the cost would be horrific.
--
3235, two months before Sally's roboticization. Knothole Village.
The sun had disappeared below the horizon hours ago, reducing the
forest's
illumination to the ethereal white glow of the stars and
crescent moon. Treetops stretched
out into the distance until they
became indistinct, colorless shadows. Sally Acorn sat
underneath
one of the tree trunks, staring up at the listless nighttime sky.
Knothole village was almost invisible in the darkness; most of the
thatched-roof
buildings were dark and languid, save for the golden
glow of a few working lightbulbs in
the sleeping town. Their light
seeped out of windows and cracks in doorways, spilling
across the
ground in an odd assortment of shapes and sizes. The gentle splashing
noise of
Rotor's waterwheel was the only noise in the village, but
even it too seemed lethargic.
Sally was the only thing that dared move in the stillness. Her
face was screwed up
in concentration, still staring at the sky.
Her fingers strummed against the tree trunk
absentmindedly.
"Stars swirled around the blank canvas of the murky sky,
dancers frozen in the
eternal pirouette of a playwright's static
template," she said, never moving her eyes from
the scene
above her. She frowned to herself, and shook her head. "Nah..."
"Eternal piro-what-now?"
Sally flinched, and glanced back at the darkness behind the tree
trunk. The
hedgehog's outline was silhouetted against the shine of
Knothole's few lightbulbs. He
stepped forward, eyes quizzically
looking at her.
"Pirouette," she said, smiling slyly. "You know. A spin, or a turn. A dance."
"Uh-huh," Sonic said doubtfully, glancing up at the
stars and then back down at
Sally. "It's getting late. Is the
sleep deprivation starting to get to you, Sal?"
"I feel fine," Sally insisted, patting the ground to the
left of her. Sonic obediently
took a seat.
"Then why are talking to yourself?" the hedgehog asked,
eyebrow raised.
"Especially goobledy-gook like that?"
"It's just a little exercise I like to try occasionally,"
she said. "Just come out here,
late at night, stare at the
stars, and think of different ways to describe them."
An
embarrassed grin snuck involuntarily across her face. "The
one you heard wasn't very
good."
"Are you practicing to be a writer, or something?" Sonic
nodded in the direction
of Robotropolis. "I hate to break it
to you, Sal, but with Robuttnik in control of the
planet you're
not going to have much of an audience."
"No, no, I'm not – it's just something I enjoy doing. For myself."
"Uh-huh," he said again, even more skeptically then before.
She shrugged, still smiling, stroking her chin. "Though I'd
never thought about
that before. If we do take back the planet,
someone's got to write the memoirs of the
war. Why, it could top
the best seller lists for years to come..."
"Don't get too far ahead of yourself, Sal." Sonic stared
up at the sky that had held
her so transfixed. He sighed. "So
what else have you got besides the one I heard?"
"How about these," Sally said, surprising herself with
an unexpected reluctance to
share the prose she had composed in
private. " 'A crescent moon lay poised as a thief's
cloaked
stiletto, ready to split the air and impale the landscape at a
provocation that never
arrives.' 'Tousled treetops fluttered in
the bleak midnight breeze, a barmy painter's
dilapidated brush
streaking across the sky in a futile quest to produce art."
"They all made about as much sense as the first one," Sonic admitted.
"I don't know why I enjoy doing this, I just do." Sally
glanced at him. "You
should really try it sometime."
"What? Me? Get serious."
"Go on, try it. You'll like it."
The hedgehog sighed in resignation, giving up. He stared at the
dark, somber sky
for a moment, eyes focusing on the sliver of a
moon. "All right, I think I've got one. It's
good, too."
She leaned towards him, attentive. "I'm waiting."
Sonic held his hands up to the air, gesturing towards the lunar
crescent. "Here
goes: 'The moon hung in the sky like a big
ball of rock.' "
Sally stared at him, blank-faced.
"You like it, don't you?" the hedgehog grinned.
"Sonic, that wasn't even – you're not supposed to describe it that way."
"What?" Sonic threw her a look of genuine confusion.
"But that's exactly what it
is!"
"The point of this exercise is to create," Sally said, exasperated. "Invent."
"Uh-huh." The skepticism had returned. "So you're
saying that Rotor would be
really good at this, right?"
Sally theatrically buried her face in her hands. "Never
mind." She looked up, and
sighed. "You just need some
practice at this. That's all."
"I don't know if I want the practice," Sonic said bitterly.
She gave him a playful punch in the arm. "C'mon, it is
getting late. We'd better
head back to the village, and get some
sleep before we faint."
"Hear, hear," Sonic agreed, getting up and graciously
extending an arm to help
Sally to her feet.
"But we're coming back out here tomorrow night," Sally
insisted. "And you're
working on some more prose."
"Oh, no, Sal. Have some mercy."
"You're coming. That's an ord-"
A thunderclap of light and sound burst through the village,
tearing through forest
and wooden structures like a supernova.
Instinctively, Sally reached out to grab Sonic's
hand. She felt a
force, like a shockwave of compressed air slam against her lithe
form.
For a moment, there was nothing underneath her feet. Then
the ground came up to meet
her.
It was over in an instant.
When Sally looked up, she found herself on a patch of dirt more
than five meters
away from where she and Sonic had been standing.
The hedgehog himself was just
getting to his feet, having been
tossed in the opposite direction.
"...the hell was that?" he was saying, voice barely
audible over the ringing in
Sally's ears. She glanced in the
direction of Knothole village, fearing only the worst.
To her
relief, the town was still standing. Only a few wooden beams had
been
knocked over in the split second maelstrom. A storage shed
had collapsed, but that was
the extent of the damage. Whatever it
was had severed Rotor's power cables or damaged
the waterwheel;
the light bulbs that had been left on had been extinguished. Some of
the
town's inhabitants had emerged from darkened huts, looking
around in panic and
confusion.
A strong wind began to pick up, and an eldritch violet light shone
from behind
Sally. She quickly turned around to stare at the
source, expecting to see an armada of
Robotnik's ground troops
poised and ready to invade Knothole. Her eyes widened when
she saw
the glowing purple and yellow portal that had formed just beyond the
tree trunk.
"Oh, no!" she turned to Sonic, eyes wide.
"That's the Void!"
The wind immediately amplified in strength to a gale-force gust,
knocking Sally's
feet out from under her once more. The strength
of the squall was amazing. Sally's hands
clawed at the ground,
vainly trying to grab a handful of grass.
Sonic barely managed to outpace the wind, revving up his legs and
running as fast
as possible away from the portal. His outstretched
hand reached towards Sally. She tried
to grab it, but she couldn't
fight the wind long enough to take her grip off of the clump
of
grass.
She felt her fingers falter - this was it, she knew - and suddenly
there was nothing
there for her palm to clasp around. There wasn't
any earth underneath her.
"Sally!" the hedgehog screamed. His voice was further and further away.
The world vanished around her in a burst of purple and yellow.
Chapter 3: The Meaning of Futility
--
She hardly noticed the falling. There wasn't any sensation of her
stomach
dropping away, or her inner ears screaming in protest.
Traveling down the Void's
gateway wasn't much like moving at all,
she noticed. It seemed instead that you remained
motionless,
floating in empty air, while the world itself shifted around you. The
same
forces that prevented any escape from within the prison
dimension made travel inward
absurdly easy.
Tracking your speed while inside the portal was nearly impossible.
Not only did it
not seem like she was moving at all, in the portal
but there were no landmarks or
discernible distances to measure.
Sally knew that she must have been moving quite
quickly, though,
for at the end the ride came to a very sudden stop.
Things became all too real again. Sensation returned. This time,
Sally could feel
herself falling, could sense the air whirling
past her. She couldn't see anything but a dark
gray blur.
Something struck her body hard and without warning, a surface with
the rough
grainy texture of rock. It must have been a floor, or a
wall; she couldn't tell which. She
didn't have time to move her
hands out in front of her to absorb the blow. She felt her
skull
crack against the rock, hard, and everything went black.
She didn't know how long she had remained unconscious. It must
have only been
a few seconds, because when she returned to
awareness, the disquieting howling of the
Void's portal still
permeated the air. She found herself lying on the floor of the
same
rocky quality. It was a cavern of some sort; strange machines
lay strewn about the floor
like rubble, casting even more bizarre
shadows in the Void's unearthly light.
The Void itself was contained in a tunnel that coiled away from
the main chamber
itself. The portal was growing continually more
violent. When she stared at it, the light
and sound emanating from
the vortex had become so intense, so violent, that Sally could
hardly
distinguish the two senses. It had become one horrifying intermix.
Her eyes
threatened of going blind, her ears screeched of
deafness. Quickly, she cast her gaze
away, but not before seeing a
silhouette of a man outline against the portal. His arms
were
raised as if struggling with the Void itself.
She clenched her eyes shut. A voice carried across the winds, on
the verge of
being drowned out by the violence of the portal.
"Close, damn you!" it shouted. "Close!"
The King snarled fiercely, fighting with the gateway of the Void.
Almost
undetectable against the hurricane of light, energy
streaked away from his fingertips into
the portal, which
obstinately refused to close. Naugus had never instructed him on
using
his magical talents to open the Void, but he thought he had
learned enough to attempt
opening the portal on his own. It was
clear that he hadn't. Something had gone wrong.
The portal itself
had become too unstable, out-of-control. Surely Naugus, no matter
how
far away he was, would detect this.
Lightning arced away from him, into the portal. The energy was so
powerful that
the King didn't dare look directly at the gateway
itself. The only sign that the portal's
energy was abating was
that the light created by Max's own magic was more visible
against
the vortex's intense aura.
Finally the portal shut, screeching like the laws of physics
themselves were on the
verge of snapping in half. Max lowered his
arms, heaving a sigh of relief.
Gradually, he became aware of another's presence in the lab. He
whirled around,
thinking that it was Naugus. He hadn't seen or
heard anybody enter through the doorway,
but with the sensory
overload coming from the Void's portal, it would have been
impossible
too. Instinctively, he held his arms in the air in front of him like
a shield.
Instead he saw a small mass of brown fur sprawled helplessly across the ground.
Sally groaned, and shook her head to clear it of the impact, and
the remnants of
the invasive light and sound. She only opened her
eyes when the blazing visual inferno
had died away. A bruise was
forming under the fur on her forehead; she had been moving
fast
when she hit the rock. Sally made a quick mental note to have
Bookshire check her
over for signs of a concussion back at
Knothole.
Then she remembered where she was: the Void had claimed her. There
wasn't any
way to get back to Knothole.
She rose slowly to her feet, glancing around the cavern. Without
the light from the
portal, she could see her surroundings much
more clearly. Most of the odd machines
strewn around were
clustered near what appeared to be the cavern's only doorway. None
of
them were recognizable or had any obvious purpose. On a few machines,
she was able
to recognize simple components, such as gears or
other moving parts, although as to what
purpose drove them all she
was left in the dark.
Where the Void's portal had been was now a solid rock wall. An
adult brown-
furred squirrel, in a bright blue outfit, stood
staring that it and breathing heavy. He looked
exhausted. There
was something about him that tugged at Sally's mind, but her mind
was
too frazzled by the blow to her skull to place it.
As if to emphasize the injury, she started to lose her balance.
Dizzy, she reached
out to grab and support herself on one of the
nearby apparatuses. Sally imagined her inner
ears spinning around
in endless circles.
The squirrel turned around to face her, and suddenly Sally was
able to place his
face. Her breath caught in her throat, but a
single word managed to escape.
"Daddy!"
The shock was too much. She stumbled backwards, losing her grip on
the
supporting apparatus. Her confused inner ears told her that
gravity itself was shifting.
Sally fell unceremoniously to the
ground, landing flat on her back. Air rushed out of her
lungs in a
sharp exhale.
Before he even had a chance to think, Max Acorn found himself
rushing over to
his daughter's side, cradling her in his arms.
Nothing else mattered now, not Naugus, not
the Void, not
Mobotropolis. The only thing in the world now was the fact that
his
daughter was hurt, and that he was there to help her.
Sally didn't try to fight or move away, but only gazed upward at
her father as he
brushed aside a tuft of red hair to see the
injury. The bruise didn't look too bad, but the
King was no expert
on cranial trauma. He knew, though, she had been able to pull
herself
to her feet before. That was a good sign.
"Daddy, is it really..."
"Shhhhhh, child," he hushed her. "Don't try to move. It's all right."
He felt her limbs sag with relief, as if his word alone had lifted
the tensions and
ordeals of over a decade of torment. Max
remembered the way that she had, as a child,
accepted anything he
said as nothing less than the absolute truth. He was once
again
struck by how much and how little had changed.
"It's been so long," she whispered, noticeably calmer.
"Why am I here, though?" she asked. "What happened?"
"I brought you here," the King said, still tenderly
rubbing his fingers across the
injury. He was hesitant to say what
had to be said next. "Sally, I saved your life."
Thankfully, her composure didn't disintegrate into panic. "From what?"
"Julian."
This time it did, but she didn't panic for the sake of herself.
Concern for the others
flashed in Sally's eyes. "Robotnik was
in Knothole? Then-"
"No, no," the King sighed, "that's not it at all."
He had been expecting to feel joy
upon saving his daughter's life,
even if it meant condemning her to the Void, but now he
didn't
feel any different. Even with her right here, he felt as if he were
still mourning her
death. "In two months time, you were going
to be captured in one of the city's
warehouses." He leaned
forward. "Sally, you were going to be roboticized!"
"In two months?" her gaze fell back to the wall that had
been the portal. "Then
how do... how do you know?"
"I can't really explain it, except to say that this place
exists outside of time. I
hardly understand it myself."
"Outside of time?" she asked quizzically.
"I hardly understand it myself. But I saw it, Sally. I saw it
happen." He took a
deep breath. "You must have some idea
of how difficult that was. I couldn't bear to-"
Sally's next question took the King completely by surprise. "Where's Naugus?"
His composure faltered, and he took an unintentional step
backward. Sally was
able to slowly pull herself up to at least a
sitting position. She met her father's gaze with a
hard stare,
boring into his eyes.
"How do you know about Naugus?" he asked, breathless.
She frowned in confusion. "What do you mean, how do I know
about Naugus? I,
uh, met him the last time I was here. Remember?"
"You've been inside the Void before? But that's- that's impossible."
She looked at him helplessly. "Don't you remember?"
"Remember what?" Max demanded.
"Naugus tried to trap some of my friends in here, and exploit
Sonic's speed to
escape the Void. That's when I saw you for the
first time since the coup." Max stared,
wide-eyed and numbed,
at her. She tried again desperately. "That's when you gave
me
the list of the other Freedom Fighter groups."
"I have no idea what you're talking about," Max said,
feeling more lost than he
ever had, even when he had witnessed his
daughter's death. At least then he had
understood what was
happening.
Sally bit her lip. "Exactly how... does time behave around here, again?"
"No. Oh, no. It must be something has happened in your past,
but," the King
hesitated, trying to force the words out of
his dry throat, "has yet to happen in my future.
Bean, this
is the first time I've seen you since you were five years old."
"This is too much," Sally was finally able to rise to
her feet, albeit unsteadily. Her
right hand still gripped a nearby
table for support, while her other hand hovered delicately
over
the bruise still blossoming on her forehead.
"All that matters now is that you're here. You're alive."
He reached forward to
embrace his daughter, but she shrugged him
away, questions still burning in her eyes.
"In two months, you said... what happens?"
"It'll happen during a foray into the city. Peacebots-"
the King stopped himself,
"SWATbots will ambush and capture
you. They'll kill your friends."
"Kill?" Sally gasped. "What about Sonic?"
"He... he dies," the King confessed.
Sally's shoulders sagged, and she looked sharply away. Max thought
for a
moment that she would burst out into tears. Then she
straightened, and turned back again
to face him, her expression
hidden behind a mask of resolve. "Then I have to get
back.
There's still so much to do."
"Back?" Max said, unable to contain his shock as one
surprise continually
overcame another. "But you'll die. No,
worse than that."
Sally shook her head. "Doesn't matter. If I know about it I
can stop it." Max
tried to look away from her eyes, but
couldn't bring himself to.
"What if you can't?"
"Then at least I'll be out there, fighting." The fact
that she didn't want to be
saying this, to her father of all
people, was clearly betrayed in her voice "Even another
two
months of life out there, doing what's right, helping other people,
would be better
than an eternity trapped in here." She
gestured towards the closed portal. "Out there I
can fight to
put an end to Robotnik. That's a goal that means more than just my
life, or
the lives of my friends."
The King finally to look away from his daughter, but that didn't
stop her from
talking.
"We're not talking about individuals, here, father," she
said, voice strained.
"We're talking about entire
civilizations. That's what's worth more than my life. Two
months
of fighting to save Mobotropolis is worth more to me than a lifespan
of inactivity."
"I-I can't do it, Sally," Max said. Before he had been
unable to look away from
her; now he was struck by an inability to
even glance in her direction. "It doesn't even
matter that I
don't want to. Once inside the Void, nothing can escape. You're
trapped
here with the rest of us."
"What?" Sally seemed surprised for a moment, as if this
hadn't even occurred to
her. "No, that can't be true."
"The portal," the King tossed his hand absently in the
direction of the silent tunnel,
"it does nothing but suck you
in here. You must have felt it on your way in. It's like it
has
its own field of gravity that does nothing except pull down here.
Trying to escape it
would be like trying to jump across the Great
Plains with only a single leap."
"We've escaped from the Void before," Sally said
urgently. The thought hit the
King with the same impact as a
runaway steamroller. He had spent the last two years of
his life
convincing himself that escape was impossible.
"How?"
"Sonic," the Princess said. "His speed can fight
the Void's pull long enough to
escape. He's done it before."
"That's ridiculous," Max protested.
"There's still a way that we can set this right. We have to
get Sonic in here," Sally
insisted. The King forced himself
to look at her. "Daddy... he can take both of us out of
here."
"I don't know if-"
A third voice cut Max off.
"What is this, lackey?"
Max felt his jaw tighten; he instinctively reached out to
protectively grab his
daughter's hand. Sally let out a startled
gasp, backing away from the workshop's
doorway. A moment ago, it
had been closed.
Ixis Naugus stood in the entrance, cape billowing around his stout
form. Pointed
teeth were barred behind cracked lips twisted into a
snarl.
Max Acorn felt his hopes and dreams for his daughter's safety
extinguished in the
wizard's gaze. He couldn't see Sally, but felt
the pressure of her hand squeezing his.
Naugus took a step inward, propelled by the fury burning in his eyes.
"I don't even need to ask what happened here. I suspected as
much when I felt
you open the portal. If you had any talent in the
magical arts, you might've kept this
hidden." The sorcerer's
voice dropped to a low, throaty growl. "Instead you
almost
destroyed my workshop with your clumsiness. Can't you even
control a simple portal,
lackey?"
Ever since being cast into the Void those many years ago, the
King's life had been
spiraling out of control. His daughter was
the only anchor to sanity and independence that
he'd ever found,
and right now he held on to her hand as if it were the only link he
had to
life itself. He squeezed until it hurt; he felt Sally
gripping back with equal strength.
"Please, Naugus. For the
past two years my family has been the only thing I've ever
wanted,
or even needed," he beseeched, praying that his words would not
fall on unfeeling
ears.
Naugus only shook his head in disdain. He raised his arm. "Don't
waste time
saying hello, Sire. It only makes saying goodbye that
much harder."
His fingers snapped.
The King stumbled forward momentarily, losing his balance without
knowing why.
For a moment, he was afraid that Naugus had struck
him with a magical energy bolt.
Then he felt his fingers slip
around nothingness, and the palm that had been clasped
around his
daughter's hand clench around open space.
Sally was gone.
Air rushed in to fill the empty vacuum where Sally's body had been
with a pop
that grated against Max's eardrums. He gaped at the
bare space for a long moment,
feeling his heart sink further with
each passing second.
"You killed her!" he stuttered at last.
"Nothing so barbaric," Naugus said. "I merely
erased her from time. Reached
backwards to the point where you
opened the portal and stopped it from doing so."
Max glanced quickly back at the portal's tunnel, then back at the
sorcerer. "You
mean she's back in the real world?"
"To her, this has never happened," Naugus said. A smile
temporarily brightened
his face. "She'll still die in the
warehouse, of course. I told you, lackey. There's nothing
left out
there for you."
Max felt the muscles in his arms tense. He could never truly
recall what happened
next; his memories were blurred by pain. The
nearest explanation he could think of was
that something inside
him just snapped. It was as if logic and sanity were gone,
vanished
alongside his daughter. The only thing that remained was
puerile emotion.
"You son of a bitch!" Max Acorn launched himself at
Naugus. As heir to the
royal throne of Mobotropolis, his childhood
training in combat tactics had been quite
inclusive.
Long-forgotten doctrines of self-defense came back to him: he held
both his
thumbs out, ready to strike into Naugus's larynx.
The wizard wasn't even moderately surprised, and shot the King's
legs out from
underneath him with a magical shove.
Max had been ready for such a strike. He rolled to absorb the
impact with the
floor, and kept his hands extended out in front of
them, switching tactics. He kept his
fingers interlocked against
each other, in a splayed pattern. That was important for what
had
to happen next. His hands began to glow with a light all their own.
In the Void, magic was even easier to create and manipulate than
in the real world.
That was what allowed amateurs like Max to even
consider casting their own spells. He
let his mind focus on his
goal, exactly as Naugus had instructed him, and let the magic
swirl
in his consciousness. That was the essential concept of magic:
focusing on your
goal.
A bolt of wild, untamed energy leapt from Max's hands and surged
towards
Naugus. It struck the wizard in the face, narrowly
glancing of the bony horn in the center
of his forehead. The
magical weapon hadn't been very strong, but Naugus
staggered
backwards in surprise. If it hadn't been for the
workshop's nearby rock wall, he would
have fallen completely off
his feet.
Truth be told, the attack stunned the King as much as it did the
old wizard. But he
was determined not to show it. "Don't try
anything, Naugus. I can defend myself. Now
bring her back!"
Naugus carefully rubbed his damaged horn. The blast had chipped
away some of
the rough, bony material. Barred teeth glinted in the
light.
"Are you sure you want to challenge me?"
"I don't want anything except my daughter."
Naugus's hand shot outwards, a bolt a livid green energy shooting
from his
fingertips. The King didn't have time to fire back. He
held his arm up to block the blow,
casting a minor defensive spell
at the same time. Max only saw the magical bullet
shooting towards
his face, and focused on the goal of protecting himself from it. A
shield
of compressed air sprung up from his arm just as the bolt
struck. The magical shield
absorbed the energy harmlessly.
Before he had come to the Void, he had imagined magic being much
more difficult
to use. But all he had done as he cast the shield
was focus on his goal of self-
preservation... and it had
appeared. Max's confidence surged upwards.
"Bring her back!"
Naugus growled, and clenched his fist as if grabbing something.
The King felt the
magic shield tremble, as if Naugus actually had
managed to grab a hold of it. Then,
with a single twist of the
wizard's wrist, the shield wrenched itself away from the King
and
vanished in midair.
Another bolt of raw magic poured from Naugus's hand, and this time
it didn't
miss. Max felt the bone in his nose crack as it bashed
him in the face. It was as if his head
was on fire; he didn't even
feel himself slam backwards into the floor.
Feebly, he held up his arm and tried one last time to cast an
offensive spell at
Naugus. Another blast of the wizard's energy
swatted it to the ground and drove iron
spikes of pain into his
chest.
"You amateurs disgust me."
Max heard footsteps somewhere nearby his fallen form. It might
have been
Naugus, but he could concentrate on nothing more than
the pain. "Another lesson, then?"
the wizard rasped
angrily. "You'll be lucky if you survive this time."
For the first several hours, there was nothing more than the pain.
No questions, no
interrogations, no commands, just pain. Only when
the King had already been thrashed to
within an inch of his life
did Naugus ask the question. The King wavered in and out
of
consciousness, barely able to hear his words.
"If you don't give me the right answer the first time, you
will have outlived your
usefulness as my servant, and I will kill
you." Warm, rancid breath spilled across Max's
ear. "Why
do you live?"
It didn't even matter to Max that he only had one chance. He
would've answered
the same in any case, and truthfully.
Maximillion Acorn had been broken.
"To serve you, Master Naugus," he sobbed.
--
Life afterwards didn't seem like living at all. The King lost
track of how much
time had passed since the incident: weeks,
definitely, maybe even months. The only thing
he knew for certain
was that each morning he had to awaken to face the knowledge that
his
daughter was dead, and that he had tried for all he was worth and
couldn't save her.
He came to crave sleep. At least then he was allowed a modicum of
peace, if not
contentment. In dreams he didn't even have to
reflect on the tragic irony that the part of
his existence he
looked most forward to was oblivion.
To consume his spare waking hours, Max concentrated solely on
learning more of
the magical arts. It disturbed him that he
couldn't say why or for what purpose. He
didn't dare to use them
to challenge Naugus. He now knew, through bitter experience,
that
he would need almost a lifetime of study and practice to even be a
remote threat to
the wizard.
After the King's last bout of 'insubordination', Naugus wasn't
going to offer to
teach the King anything more about magic. So
what new knowledge he did pick up he
had to glean from ancient
textbooks and manuals pilfered from Naugus's workshop.
Stealing
the books had been risky, but he knew that not even Naugus could keep
an eye
on him every minute of the day. So he waited until the time
was right, and quietly took
them back to his own throne room.
The arcane lore was difficult at best to understand, but what Max
garnered from
them was able to bolster his fledgling skills. There
was one symbol in particular, though,
that the King failed to
understand. It had never been present in any of Naugus's
lessons,
though perhaps that cagey sorcerer had omitted it by
design. The symbol appeared
regularly in many of the later pages
of the textbooks.
Perhaps this was something that Naugus himself had missed out on,
the King
mused. There had to be more to magic than simply
visualizing your goal and waiting
for it to happen. Some
ingredient must be missing. Mayhap this was it.
Ixis Naugus was even more icily intolerant to the King than
before. Sometimes, all
that was necessary to provoke a burst of
excruciating electrical pain was to turning his
back on the
wizard. Naugus had never done that before; his sparse 'lessons' had
always
had some kind of purpose or provocation.
It was a particularly effective treatment, however. Before, the
King had only been
afraid of Naugus. Now he was deathly terrified
of him. He couldn't help himself; it was
almost an unconscious
reaction. Whenever Naugus so much as entered the room,
memories of
the pain shuddered down his spine, and he saw himself groveling,
doing
anything, to avoid another lesson.
They certainly weren't the proudest days of his life, but he survived.
There were only a few things in the Max's life that he regretted,
and would never
forgive himself for. Allowing himself to be
blinded long enough for Julian to take over
was the gravest among
these. Not being strong enough to save his daughter's life
was
another. The most recent, though, was what he did to Ari one
night in the months since
he last saw Sally.
It had been an uncomfortably cold evening, insofar as much as the
Void could have
weather. After lengthy, tiresome weeks of
researching arcane artifacts and physics
equations to aid Naugus
in his never-ending quest to escape the Void, the King had long
since
learned to ignore such mundane distractions. Max had just ended one
such session
of study and had nothing more to look forward to then
sleep and sweet oblivion. He was
about to retire to the false
castle's sleeping quarters when Ari had arrived.
The ram had made himself scarce ever since Max's failed attempt to
bring his
daughter into the Void. This was more than fine with
Max; he knew that he was
paralyzed by psychosis and depression,
and no longer had any desire to share the company
of others. He
didn't want anybody else to see him in this state.
Yet, here the ram was, standing in front of the throne room's
doors and looking as
if he were waiting for the King to say
something. "What do you want?" Max asked,
unable to
block out the icy bitterness that laced his tone.
"To save Sally's life."
The King could only muster a weary yet sincere glare, and pushed
past him
towards his bedroom's doors. "Go away."
Ari moved in front of the King, burly form effectively blocking
Max's path. "I'm
serious, your Majesty."
"No, it won't work. It… it was wrong to even try in the first place."
Ari seemed to ignore his words, which only made him angrier. "The
armory the
Freedom Fighters tried to infiltrate. There's more then
one entrance; the warehouse is
honeycombed with vents, shafts, and
tunnels that even Robotnik doesn't know about."
"How do you know about this?" Max demanded.
"I've been sneaking into Naugus's workshop for the past
several days, and using
the scrying device when he's not around.
With an omniscient hidden camera, it's easy
enough to map out."
The King's well-worn self-preservation instinct kicked in,
immediately clearing
away the fog of fatigue. He grabbed Ari
roughly by the shoulders. "You what?" he
hissed.
Although Ari was easily King Acorn's physical superior, he was
still taken aback
by the strength in his grip, and didn't
immediately respond.
"You fool!" Max burst out. "If you leave the wards
I've erected around here,
Naugus will be able to sense you!"
He didn't hold any doubts that Naugus would kill both
Ari and
himself if he discovered that the King had kept him hidden here.
"I left here only when I knew Naugus was asleep," Ari
insisted, forcibly calm.
"Sire, we have to find a way to get
this information to Sally. If she knows about the other
entrances,
the SWATbots won't be able to ambush them-"
"No!" The King shoved Ari backwards. "Sally is
dead! If you keep doing this,
Naugus will kill us both!"
"It would be worth it if we could save Sally!" Ari shot back.
Then they came, the words that he would never be able to forgive
himself for. "If
you don't stop this now, I'll turn you over
to Master Naugus myself!"
The worst part of all of this, he would reflect later, was that
when he said those
words, he meant them.
Ari stumbled backwards, not from any physical blow, but from pure
horror. There
was a moment of long silence that was worth far more
than a thousand spoken words.
Seeing the look in the ram's eyes,
the King realized the full extent of what he just done.
But before
he could speak, Ari was gone, vanished into the shadows.
"Ari… I…"
There was no answer from the darkness. Ari was gone. No sound, no
sight of his
retreating form made itself available in the
darkness.
"I…"
The King wasn't even able to lose himself in sleep that night. Not
after what had
just transpired. So after a restless night, he
began to seriously consider Ari's words.
There was more than one
entrance to the armory. It all seemed so simple. If only Sally
and
her friends had known, they surely wouldn't have tried to sneak in
through the front
doors. They wouldn't be ambushed in the
corridors of the warehouse; it would be like the
waking nightmare
that had consumed his life for the past several months would
simply
never have happened.
At first, it was difficult to even take the idea seriously. Many
things had changed
in the past few months, but the Void itself
wasn't one of them. He was still trapped inside
it, with no way to
so much as broadcast a radio signal out. There simply wasn't any
way
he could get this information to his daughter.
And if Naugus found out about any of this, he wouldn't hesitate to execute him.
Yet, despite his fears, the King found himself stealing into
Naugus's workshop
while the wizard was away, and reactivating the
scrying device. Over the course of the
next several weeks, he used
it to scout out every last corridor and crevice in the armory
and
surrounding warehouse, carefully sketching out a rough map by hand
and bringing the
parchment back to his chambers every night. One
of the few stable, electronic computers
that existed in the Void
was kept there; he's scan the images into its hard drive, and
get
ready to copy more of the map tomorrow night.
The futility of all this was never lost on him. Nothing left the
Void. It simply
wasn't possible to get any of this data to Sally.
Yet he kept sketching maps and layouts,
plotting entrance after
entrance, the building's complex air shaft network, everything
he
found. The purposeless of his quest didn't slow or stop him; it
was the only thing he had
left to do.
So, since he wasn't able to get the map to his daughter, it only
seemed natural that
when he finished mapping out the warehouse
complex, he move on the other buildings as
well. In the unlikely
event that Sally ever found this, she could make use of that as
well.
The process was painstaking and deliberate, but within the
space of another three months,
Max was able to use both Naugus's
scrying device and his ruler's knowledge to map every
major cave
and tunnel system in Robotropolis.
In all this time, there was no sign of Ari. The ram had simply and
quietly
disappeared after his confrontation with the King. Max
could hardly blame him. Despite
the fact that Ari was no where to
be found, Max knew that he must have been hiding
somewhere near
the throne room. Naugus would have found him otherwise. It was
either
that, or… Ari had died.
Every day, as he plotted more and more of the map, the King kept a
silent lookout
for Ari, hoping for nothing more than his friend's
continued survival.
Max dreaded the day that he finally completed the map. Then there
would be
nothing left to do but to act. As his drawings of the
city became more and more detailed,
a terrible fear began to well
up in his heart.
At last the day arrived. The King had mapped out the last
building, scanned in the
last page to the computer. Tonight was
the night to act; and the King still had no idea of
how to get any
of this information to Sally. But he had to try. It was the night to
either
succeed, or die.
Knowing that death was infinitely more likely, the King composed a
farewell letter
to Ari, and left it sitting on the floor of his
throne room, asking the ram to compose the
epitaph for his
tombstone.
"Archive all scanned-in images and compress them into one
file," King Acorn
commanded, using the computer's worn-out
voice recognition circuits. "Save it to a
holographic disk."
"File name?" the computer's two small speakers grated.
The King scratched his muzzle thoughtfully. Most of the hidden
tunnels and
access points, things that would be of most use to the
Freedom Fighters, were
underground. "Sub-Ter."
If, somehow, fate decided to grace him by getting the map through
to Sally, time
would still likely be limited, so any other message
he did get through would have to be
short. He wrote one last
letter to his daughter, meant to accompany the compilation of
maps.
"Sally, there's something horrible in all our futures that
must never happen. Check
the 'Sub-Ter' file. Use it. It's
impossible to tell you anything more. I love you."
He slipped the folded-up note into the pocket of his uniform, even
though it wasn't
necessary to take it with him. He had already
committed it to memory.
Max turned to face the doors of the throne room. Beyond them, it
was only a
short stroll to Naugus's workshop.
It was time to act.
Chapter 4: Discovering Spirit
--
By Naugus's artificial clock, it was late evening, almost on the
verge of becoming
early morning again. The wizard's sleeping
cycles were anything but predictable; however,
now was usually the
safest time to assume that he was unconscious. Still, the fact that
he
didn't know Naugus's whereabouts only heightened the King's
apprehension.
An involuntary shiver rippled down his spine as he stood in the
doorway of the
empty workshop. He was truly terrified of the
consequences of Naugus catching him in
the act. Almost
instinctively, he began to back away, but stopped himself just before
he
crossed the doorway's threshold again.
He forced himself to concentrate of the comforting weight of the
holographic disk
in his uniform's chest pocket, and set to work.
Focusing on one task at a time helped to
somewhat allay his fears,
if not stifle them completely.
First of all, he had to find a point where he could easily reach
his daughter. She
would have to be tapped into to the remnants of
the old Mobotropolis computer network.
Using the scrying device,
Max began backpedal through time, searching for a point, any
point,
where he could get a message across to her. It didn't take him long
to find it.
Almost a year before her death, she and her friends
were on a foray in Robotropolis. For
a brief moment, a shining
window of opportunity, she was connected into the city's
computer
network. A message transmitted to that terminal would go directly to
her.
And then Max realized that he had reached the point beyond which he had no plan.
There was nothing he could think to do. He had done all he could.
He knew how,
when, and where to transmit the Sub-Ter file, and at
long last save his daughter's life, but
none of that changed the
damnable fact that nothing could escape the Void. The Sub-
Ter
file was as trapped in this dimension as he was.
He walked over to the empty rock tunnel, where the Void's useless
portal could be
opened, and stood there, staring at the blank
stone. His palm slipped across the disk
concealed in his uniform's
pocket; its weight felt depressingly hollow. He didn't know
how
long he stood there, motionless. For all Max knew, it could have
already passed into
the next day's morning, or afternoon. He only
became aware of the passage of time again
when the workshop's door
squeaked open behind him. The clacking sound of heavy boots
against
the floor marked Ixis Naugus's entrance. He made no comment as to the
King's
presence in his workshop.
Max stood shock-still as the footsteps drew closer. They stopped
only two meters
away.
"Did you really think I wouldn't catch on to this?"
Naugus's raspy voice asked.
The undercurrent of his tone was thick
with seething anger.
"That was an illusion I never held."
"Then it's been outnumbered by the ones you do," Naugus
interrupted harshly.
"About a month ago, I set up a passive
surveillance system by my scrying device. You
were obviously
unaware of it." Max felt the yawning pit growing in his stomach
grow
deeper. It threatened to swallow his soul whole. "I've
been watching you come in here
ever since then, creating maps. I
know what you've been doing… I was beginning to
wonder how
long it would take before you would finally act."
The sorcerer's words jabbed into the King like a thousand needles
in his chest,
worse than any physical torture he had ever
inflicted. This game had been won by Naugus
before it even began.
Max had set out expecting failure, but even this was almost too
much
for him to handle. The only thing that allowed him to keep his
composure was a
determination to not die weeping.
"If you're going to kill me, then make it fast," Max snapped bitterly.
"I'll do no such thing," Naugus's voice quivered with
hostility. There was a pause,
as if the wizard had to stop keep
himself under control. "You… you haven't just
outlived
your usefulness as my servant. Oh, no, that would be too
simple. You've… angered
me."
Max finally turned around to face Naugus, freezing when he saw his
eyes. A
madness deep enough to be called insanity burned in those
dark pits.
"I'll make sure you take days to die," Naugus hissed.
Once again, the King saw his life spiral out of his control. The
same feeling that
shivered down his spine when Julian exiled him
to the Void struck him again. Except this
time he wasn't going to
lose control of not only his life, but his death as well. Back
before
Julian's betrayal, he had always known that he would die an
old man, happy and loved.
The perfect ending to a perfect life. He
had never imagined that reality could be so cruel.
"Then get it over with," Max spat.
Naugus's cracked and parched lips twisted upwards in a terrible smile.
The first bolt brought Max to his knees, as if some titanic force
had nearly sheared
away his ankles. Bright light flashed as
another bolt fired, and he felt the first of Naugus's
torturous
magic seep their way into his body. It felt as if the flesh had been
flayed from
his arms and his ribcage shattered into a thousand
tiny shards. He couldn't keep the
scream from escaping his throat.
"Silence! Your only purpose is to die at my feet-"
A third voice splintered the fray, stopping Naugus's words before
they left his
mouth. "No!" The magic ceased cackling
around Naugus's fingertips as he took a step
backwards in
surprise. The sorcerer's cape whirled through the air as he spun
around.
Someone else flew leapt into the air, slamming into
Naugus's stout form and tackling him
to the ground. A gasp of
shocked air was forced from the wizard's lungs when his
back
connected with the stone. Max's vision was distorted by pain;
he only saw the interloper's
two curled horns. The burly ram held
Naugus pinned to the floor.
"What is this?" Ixis screeched. Almost immediately
recovering from the surprise
attack, more magical energy began to
form around his hand, getting ready to strike back.
"You'll
all pay, I-"
"Shut up!" Ari bellowed.
An instant before a bolt of pure energy would have leapt from
Naugus's hands to
strike the newcomer, the ram's fist drew back
and smashed into the sorcerer's face.
Naugus's neck snapped
backwards; there was an audible crack as his skull nearly
shattered
open against the workshop's stone floor.
No time for pleasantries, no warm greetings. Even a strong blow
like that would
only keep Naugus disabled for a few seconds at
best. Ari waved frantically towards the
rock tunnel, where the
unopened portal could be opened. "Go, sire! Go now!"
Without thinking, Max rose to his feet, dashing over to the
tunnel. For a moment,
he was conscious only of the ground slipping
past underneath his feet. It was all too
unreal: in under five
seconds, he had been dragged to the gaping maw of utter failure
only
to be brought back again. With still no way to escape the
Void and get his message to
Sally. But now he had no choice but to
try.
He let magic flow through his bones, concentrating on nothing more
than his goal
of summoning the gateway between dimensions. In the
real world, the portal would open
a year before Sally's death,
just before she would log into Robotropolis's computer
network.
Where didn't matter so much, just so long as it was near a terminal
that could
transmit the data he needed. A second later the
portal's swirling purple and yellow
exploded into existence in
front of him, blowing wind towards him in a strong outwards
gust.
Behind him, he heard Ari's scream of pain as Naugus recovered
enough to fully
direct his powerful offensive magic at the ram.
There wasn't even any time to feel
sympathy for him. The same
thing would be in store for Max if he waited but a second
longer.
In the instant before he leapt, he was struck by a twinge of
sorrow for the
overwhelming futility of his plight.
King Maximillion Acorn hurled himself into the portal.
--
Almost immediately, the titanic energy field surging inwards
nearly shoved him
back into Naugus's workshop. It took all of his
strength to merely remain in the yawning
lip of the portal,
suspended in limbo in the disorienting no-man's land between the
Void
and reality. Just behind him, the workshop loomed
threateningly close, while ahead, the
distance between himself and
the real world seemed nearly infinite.
Light and sound flashed past him, both caught in the Void's pull
and streaming
towards the end of the portal. It seemed that the
only thing solid was his own body;
elsewhere in the portal, it was
almost as if each of his five senses had merged into a pool
of
disconcerting liquidity. Nothing was a constant except for the
distances between both
portal entrances.
Sally's last few words came back to him. "Sonic. His speed
can fight the Void's
pull long enough to escape." His mind
relaxed, concentrating on the goal of giving his
legs the same
power as the hedgehog's. If speed and speed alone could allow escape
from
the portal's inexorable pull, then perhaps the effect could
be magically recreated.
Magic flowed through him, into his legs, and they began moving
fast enough to
become a blur, gaining traction where there was no
visible ground. The workshop started
to fall into the distance
behind him. He allowed himself a brief, shining moment of hope:
he
was gaining!
Yet, as he draw further and further away from the Void's
magic-friendly
environment, the energy that powered his legs began
to dissipate. Each step became more
and more difficult, while the
exit to the real world was still frustratingly far off. Max
began
to tumble backwards, barely able to catch himself from falling back
into the
workshop.
Body and mind aching, he glanced up towards the impossibly distant
portal
opening. The real world lay just beyond there,
tantalizingly visible for the first time in
more than two years.
But it couldn't be reached. All that the King had gone through,
all
that he could hope, didn't change the horrible fact that there
was no escape from the
Void.
It was sorely tempting to just let go, fall back into Naugus's
workshop, and face
the death that was coming to him.
Max's muscles were strained with the massive effort needed to just
keep him
suspended in the portal's entrance. He was almost an old
man; they would give, soon.
There could only be one more try.
The King flexed his mental muscles, letting magic flow through him
once more,
and instead of focusing on the goal of forcing his
tired legs to move faster, he focused on
nothing more than
reaching the other side of the portal. That was his only goal.
Magic
energy cackled uselessly around him, fading away. Still no effect.
His goal, his goal. He needed to reach the other side. This was
more than just a
goal, a needless purpose. Reaching the other
side, landing in the real world, meant more
to him than anything
he'd ever done before. His daughter meant more to him than the sum
of
Mobotropolis. He couldn't just concentrate on his goal and let his
magic take him
there. It had ceased to become a goal.
It had become his life.
His…
The missing symbol clicked into place.
It had never been anything that Naugus could teach because Naugus
didn't
possess it. The symbol had represented an essential
component of magic, an ingredient
that was the strongest of
powers. It was something that was incredibly simple yet
incredibly
difficult to achieve. There was more to magic than merely visualizing
your goal
and waiting for it to happen, so much more. Such things
seemed impossibly shallow by
comparison.
Visualizing your goal was only part of the process, the very
beginning. Not even
Naugus had recognized this. To truly become
powerful, you had to almost become a part
of your goal. Merge with
it.
The missing symbol represented spirit.
Max's shout breached both sides of the portal, spilling over into
the workshop and
the real world, triumphing over even the
sensory-skewed zone that was the portal itself.
Max Acorn became a part of his goal, wanted to save his daughter's
life badly
enough to give his own. Flush with dawning triumph and
screaming a wordless cry, he
surged through the impossible
boundaries of the portal fighting as best as he was able, and
surged
out the other side, and into the real world.
--
He landed in an environment almost as cold and unforgiving as
Naugus's workshop
in the dimension he had left behind, and barely
managed to avoid cracking his head against
a stone wall. The first
thing he was cognizant of, though, was the portal and its pull.
The open purple and yellow vortex swirled nearby, sucking in air
with speeds
approaching gale-force. Dust and debris from his
dismal surroundings flew into the Void.
But the pull Max felt was
more than just wind.
It was almost a magnetism trying to draw him back inside, a pull
that was more
than even the newfound power of his magic could
fight. He got the unnerving impression
that the universe itself
had cast aside its cloak of physical laws and said to him, "You
don't
belong here." Instantly he knew that he could only
remain in the real world for no more
than a few minutes at best.
The pull would overpower him soon.
Even now, in the real world at long last, true victory was
impossible. He couldn't
remain.
This bothered him little. His only real goal lay in saving his
daughter's life, not in
escaping the Void itself, and now he had a
golden window of opportunity in which to
accomplish it. He reached
inside his pocket, making sure the holographic disk containing
the
Sub-Ter file hadn't slipped out in the maelstrom. A reassured smile
crossed his face
when he felt its presence.
Max glanced quickly about, searching for a computer terminal of
any kind. There
were none in sight. The room he had landed in
didn't seem like it would contain any,
either: it was dusty and
unused, the walls and floors made from primitive stone masonry.
Where
had he landed?
In his panic to open the portal, he had only instructed it to open
somewhere near a
functioning computer terminal, but hadn't been
any more specific with his instructions. He
prayed that wasn't an
oversight that would cost Sally her life.
There was but a single door at the far end of the small room. Max
stumbled over
to it, the portal's pull making him fight for every
step. It was locked. He furrowed his
brow, and let a bolt of
energy fly from his fingertips and blast the door open.
Outside was an empty stone corridor filled with row upon row of
countless
doorways, each identical to the last. The King finally
realized that he had landed in a
prison cell.
Memories long since abandoned ever since his exile came back to
him with a rush.
There was only one such complex this ancient, and
this dilapidated, anywhere near the
boundaries of his kingdom.
This was Ironlocke Prison, an antique structure that had
lain
abandoned for over a century. It was far removed from
Mobotropolis itself, in an
uninhabited region of the Dark Swamp.
The portal's pull had been growing stronger. He hobbled blindly
down the open
corridor, hoping with each step that it wouldn't be
his last. Max felt his cloak catch on
something and tear, but he
paid it no attention. There had to be a terminal around
here
somewhere. In the warden's office, maybe. There had to be.
The world would no longer be a place the King wanted to live in if
there wasn't.
Almost as soon as he had thought it, Max lurched
into the warden's office, and
spotted the computer. It was
archaic, like everything else in Ironlocke, but if it only had
a
connection to the old Mobotropolis computer network, it would
serve his purposes.
He switched it on.
"Access code, please," A rough, electronic voice grated through aging speakers.
He didn't have time for this. "Override by order of the Royal
Throne of
Mobotropolis." More memories surged back to him;
supposedly, each computer ever
commissioned by the royal
government would have this feature. The family credo, known
to
nobody but the royal house would override anything. Supposedly.
"Code: 'To Rule
With Honor'."
"Access approved." The computer's worn-down speakers had
an irritating reverb
effect, but at least the voice recognition
circuits were functioning.
"Connect to the Mobotropolis data network."
"Connection established."
Max resisted the urge to jump up and cheer. The Void's pull was
getting stronger,
and his time in the real world more and more
limited. Instead, he pulled the holographic
disk out of his pocket
and shoved it into the terminal.
This was it: the critical moment. Would it work or wouldn't it?
"Upload the Sub-
Ter file to the following terminal:
StealthBot Hangar 2A, Plane 5."
"Insufficient bandwidth," the terminal buzzed.
The King's jaw dropped open. "No!" he shouted. "You
have to be able to send
that file!"
The computer didn't answer.
"Why can't you upload it? Diagnose." Max was once again
cognizant of the
Void's continual pull on his body. A minute or
two remained to him, at most.
"The file is too large to maintain a stable connection rate."
"Then send the terminal a message. A simple one."
"Enter message."
The King frowned. What would get Sally's attention faster than
anything else, he
pondered. Thinking fast was critical.
"Bean."
--
"Man, what is all this stuff?"
"It's the brains of the plane," Sally replied, eagerly
looking over the Stealth Bot's
internal components. It looked
exactly as the stolen schematics said it would. Unless
Robotnik
had left any hidden traps inside the computer itself, hacking into it
would be less
than a problem.
Sonic had to peer into the interior of the plane from the open
grate below. There
wasn't room enough in the control pit for more
than a single person, and besides, it was
his job to make sure no
maintenance or security robots got too close. "And you're
gonna
do a little brain surgery, right?"
Sally's hand traced across the control panel, finding an input
jack that would fit her
hand-held computer. "More or less,"
she said, glancing down at the hedgehog. "First I
have to
break the access code, get into Robotnik's mainframe computer, and
reprogram
the launch data." Her gaze fell back to the
controls in front of her, and she unclipped
Nicole her boot,
setting her idly on the console.
"Then kaboom!" Sonic triumphantly raised his fist in
unnecessary emphasis.
"These Stealth Bots are lunchin', yes?"
"They're… lunchin', yes," Sally confirmed, nearly
stumbling over the hedgehog's
unique vocabulary. With a single
motion of her wrist, she deftly flipped Nicole's case
open, and
plugged her into the waiting console. "Nicole?"
"Ready, Sally," the computer confirmed, faithful as ever.
"Access main database."
"Password, Sally."
Such routine obstacles had been expected, and the Freedom Fighters
were more
than capable of dealing with them. "Run decoding
program for 'X'." A dormant
holographic projector hummed to
life, spewing light into the air. A three-by-three grid
appeared
in mid-air, flashing letters past too fast for the eye to read.
Slowly, carefully, the
letters resolved themselves into a single
word. Sally bent forward to read it: the password
was "Meteor".
Without being asked to, Nicole used the password to infiltrate
Robotropolis's
computer network. As far as any monitoring programs
were concerned, they were just
another user out of thousands of
connected worker and security bots. It would only take
another few
minutes to complete their work here. Then the Stealth Bot would be
history,
and Ivo Robotnik's plans set back another day.
Someone, though, thought that a few minutes was too long to wait.
Sally's
concentration was broken by the strumming of gloved
fingers against the metal interior of
the plane.
"Sonic, do you mind?"
The hedgehog shot her his best "Who, me?" look. "Not
very well. Dogs mind,
not hedgehogs."
"Well, show a little patience," she suggested.
"Hey, hey, hey, hey," Sonic said quickly, "Patients
are for hospitals. We're in
Robo-country, and that makes me
itchy." He glanced quickly towards the hangar bay,
but before
he could launch into another tirade, something else attracted his
attention.
"Whoa!" When he looked back up at her, his
eyes were widened with alarm.
"Hurry it up, Sal!" He pointed urgently across the
hangar bay to something Sally
couldn't see. She could hear the
grinding of the security bots' treads, though. "Party-
crashers
comin'!"
Sally glanced quickly back at her computer, but was interrupted
yet again, this
time by Nicole. She was hit completely by surprise
by what happened next.
"Incoming message," Nicole reported emotionlessly. The
hologram message
disappeared, replaced by glowing red text and a
single word. A word that hadn't held any
meaning for her for
almost a decade. She blinked, eyes focused entirely on the display.
"Bean?" Sonic asked, confused.
She overcame her surprise long enough to force words from her
mouth. "Oh my
gosh. Sonic, my father called me 'Bean' when I
was little." She turned back to the
console, security bots
forgotten entirely. "Nicole, give me message origin."
Sonic bent down to peer at the hangar bay again. The bots were
getting
dangerously close. He wondered if their intrusion into
Robotropolis' computers had been
detected. "Sal, we gotta put
the pedal to the metal!"
"I have to check this out," she insisted, fusing with
the plane's controls. There had
one been a single message, and
just one word. Yet the meaning it conveyed was
unmistakable. "It
may be from my father!"
The hologram display lit up, zooming into focus a map of badlands
far beyond
Robotropolis. Nicole began charting coordinates and
listing numbers. "Message origin:
Area 12, Sector 9, Quadrant
32."
The breath caught in Sally's throat. "The Dark Swamp?"
--
"Message received."
Max didn't dare so much as exhale in relief, for fear that taking
his mind off
fighting the Void's encroaching pull for a single
moment would enable it to overtake him.
His daughter's life wasn't
out of jeopardy yet.
"Copy the Sub-Ter file to hard drive," he ordered,
urgently. When the computer
was finished, he wasted no time with
his next command. "Password lock, combination
'Bean'."
"Locked," the device confirmed.
Even though the gaping portal was several dozen meters away, it
felt as though it
were but an inch away from his forehead. The
Void wanted him back; it wouldn't allow
for any escape. Max gave
himself less than half a minute before the sheer strength of it
would
overwhelm him.
He ran through a mental checklist. Hopefully, the message had
reached Sally and
alerted her to his presence. If it hadn't there
wasn't anything he could do now. With any
luck, she would come
here and find the Sub-Ter file. Only one thing left to do.
Max's hand fumbled for the handwritten message still tucked into
the pocket of his
uniform. As soon as he removed the slip of
paper, the hurricane-force winds wrenched
out from between his
fingertips. It tumbled end over end down the corridor,
disappearing
at last into the whirling portal.
It didn't matter, the King told himself. He had memorized the letter anyway.
His grip on the real world began to slip. Even his newfound powers
could only
stay the Void's confounded power for a few more seconds
at best. He would have to
shorten the message.
"Begin recording a message for playback when the Sub-Ter file
is accessed," Max
demanded.
"Voice recognition ready. Recording."
"Bean. Check Sub-Ter file. Impossi-"
Then the Void claimed him.
--
Max tumbled helplessly down the portal, even his newfound powers
unable to slow
his descent. The universe really was against him,
again, saying that even though he had
been able to break free for
a precious moment, he still couldn't escape.
He didn't even get to see sunlight.
Max had little time for reflection or sorrows at the conclusion of
his forced flight
into the portal. The Void tossed him roughly the
ground of Naugus's workshop, moving
so fast that he almost gave
himself a concussion on the same wall that Sally's head had
struck
months ago. Almost as soon as he landed, the portal collapsed and
sealed itself
behind him.
He, Naugus, and Ari were alone.
The King rose unsteadily to his feet, eyes locking with Naugus. A
hiss of angry air
escaped his lips, traced with a subtle hint of
satisfaction. It didn't take long for Max to see
why: Ari lay
huddled at the wizard's feet, reduced to little more than a quivering
ball of
whimpering fur. Naugus took sadistic pleasure from
reducing strong, healthy individuals
into useless, sobbing lumps
of flesh.
"Do what you will, Naugus. I did it. I changed history, and
now there's nothing
you can do about it."
"Changed… what?" the sorcerer chuckled, somewhat
light-heartened by Ari's
torture. "From inside the Void?"
His lips curled upwards in amusement. "I don't doubt it
in
the least."
King Acorn didn't answer, staring resolutely at the horn on the wizard's forehead.
Without warning, Naugus's face darkened. "It's your turn,
now, Sire. It was wise
to hide this one from me, but all that
means now is that you'll die together. On your
knees, lackey."
Max remained standing.
"So then die on your feet." Naugus held out his hands,
and with a single flick of
his wrist, flung a magical bolt of pain
towards the King.
Max observed him casting it, watched the bolt fly towards him with
detachment.
He could see it all, now. Things that had been
invisible to him before he had discovered
the meaning behind the
missing symbol. Naugus's magic was almost deceptive in its
power;
in truth, it was acutely simple. Naugus only visualized his goal and
let it happen.
He didn't part any part of himself into the magic.
He lacked spirit. It was as if the
vessel firing the magic was
little more than a living corpse.
He harmlessly absorbed the offensive magic into his body, barely
working up a
mental sweat in counteracting it.
Naugus frowned, startled and more than a little unnerved that Max
hadn't doubled
over in unbearable pain. He flexed his fingertips
again, and shot another blast of magic in
the King's direction,
this one a little stronger.
Max watched, uninterested by Naugus's display of power, and calmly
shrugged off
the magic. He thought it remarkable that he had
actually been fearful of the wizard's
power before, when all he
needed to do to defend himself against it was put his spirit into
it.
Spirit was one thing Ixis could never have.
"What is this…" Naugus frowned, and prepared to
fire yet another bolt. His hands
began to glow with energy that,
if released, would instantly kill an unprotected furry.
"ENOUGH!"
Naugus staggered backwards, into the workshop's craggy rock wall,
clutching his
ears, his mouth open in a silent shout of horror.
Ari, still huddled on the floor, only
flinched. The brunt of Max's
power had been directed solely at the wizard.
"Why, Naugus, you were right. It is my turn, after all."
The King idly snapped his fingers. Exactly on cue, breath rushed
out of Naugus's
lungs as he doubled over in pain. He fell to his
knees.
"Just not in the way you were expecting."
Naugus gasped for air. The only thing that emerged from his throat
were squeaks.
His vocal cords were suddenly incapable of
functioning. For the first time since Max had
returned from the
real world, a pair of horns poked upwards from the trembling mass
that
Ari had been reduced to. He finally had gathered the strength
to look upwards.
"Ari," Max said, magic leaking out into his voice,
lending the injured ram strength.
The thought that magic could be
used for healing had never occurred to Max before,
simply because
he had never seen Naugus use his powers for anything except pain
and
punishment. "Time to get up," he prodded gently.
Slowly, shakily, Ari rose to a sitting position, and then his
feet. He hobbled over
to the King without saying a word, and
gladly accepted the supporting arm when it was
offered. Max's
magic hadn't cured him to the point where he was able to walk
steadily,
but that would come in time, as he recovered. Max had
had enough experience with
Naugus's tortures to know that he
eventually would.
Ixis Naugus cowered on the workshop's floor, moving only to paw
uselessly at his
throat. At last, a word escaped the
formerly-powerful wizard's parched and cracked lips.
"How?"
"Doesn't really seem to matter now, does it?"
Naugus nodded, doing his best to appear subdued. Max saw right
through the
deception; the wizard's mind was transparent. He could
see the plans and the seething
fury boiling within. Naugus's hand
shot up almost immediately, and shot one last bolt of
magic at
Max. It struck him dead-on in the chest, but Max never felt it. It
was simply that
easy to nullify.
Almost wearily, Max's magic slapped Naugus's hand to the ground.
Once more,
Naugus shuddered in pain as the King flexed his
offensive power.
It would be incredibly easy simply snuff out Ixis Naugus's life,
right here and now.
For every bit of injustice and torture the
King had been forced to put up with for the past
two years of his
life. If he concentrated hard enough, Max could even see
Julian
Kintobor's fat, grinning visage over Naugus's face.
But… no. He had vowed years ago, before he had even taken
the throne as the
monarch of Mobotropolis, to never submit to
petty revenge.
"I'm not quite sure what to do with you," Max confessed.
"As much as I've
grown, you're still a threat. If I don't
kill you right now, it's possible that you could learn
how to
counteract my defenses, maybe even catch me by surprise, and finish
me.
"I won't force you to promise to stay away, won't torture you
like you did me.
Because, if you still haven't figured it out,
those methods just don't work." He ignored
the slight smile
tugging at the corners of his lips. "So how about a proposal.
Simple,
straight, logical. We're both quite capable of killing one
other. I'm very sure neither one
of us wants to die. So in order
to prevent any unnecessary bloodshed… we both stay as
far
away from each other as possible. You stay near your workshop, I'll
stay near my
castle, and we won't exchange another word until we
can escape this prison."
King Acorn's form towered over the crumpled Naugus, making it very
clear what
would happen if he dissented. "Agreed?"
Naugus croaked something that Max could only assume was a
reluctant
affirmative.
"You can't imagine how difficult it is to see you lying
there, so vulnerable. You
really don't know how tempting it is to
do to you exactly what you did to me. Shoot pure
pain into your
body, wrack it with magic until you're reduced to little more than an
empty
shell." Max leaned in closer. "And that's exactly
what will happen if you try anything,
wizard. That's a promise."
A word tried to escape Naugus's mouth, but it got caught in his throat and died.
"Glad to see we can finally come to an understanding after all these years."
--
A year after King Acorn's abbreviated return to Mobius, another
one of Ivo
Robotnik's armories disappeared behind a curtain of
roaring flames. One after one,
explosive charges detonated inside
the warehouse, setting fire to stockpiles of volatile
ammunition
and weaponry, which exploded in even more grandiose fashion.
An investigation into the matter, heralded by the dictator's
nephew Snively, could
only postulate that the Freedom Fighters had
entered the facility through maintenance
tunnels, until then, Ivo
had been confident were hidden. The Freedom Fighters had a
knack
for surprising him like that. Robotnik's plans were set back yet
again as new
facilities had to be constructed, and new weaponry
manufactured, to make up for the
losses.
Such raids were almost commonplace in Robotropolis. As far as both
Snively and
the Freedom Fighters were concerned, it had been just
another routine raid.
Only three people alive knew its significance.
For Ari and King Acorn, after finally finishing the construction
of their own
scrying device, months of self-torture and regret had
come to a close. Sally was alive. It
had worked. For a brief,
shining moment they had beaten the impenetrable boundaries of
the
dimensional prison, and had done far more good than they ever thought
possible. Not
only were the lives of Sally and her friends
secured, at least temporarily, but now she
could keep fighting
against Julian, keep saving lives, and hopefully even help bring an
end
to the decade-long reign of terror.
There was still more work to be done, however. Sally's words, even
though for
she herself would never remember them, were not lost on
the King. At some point in
Max's future, Sally would return to the
Void.
That would be when, according to her, he would give her a list of
other Freedom
Fighter groups. Already, he had the list partially
assembled. With the scrying device, he
had located dedicated bands
of refugees scattered in the forests to the south and east
of
Robotropolis, as well as a pack of wolves based in the Great
Unknown. When Sally
finally arrived, he would be more than ready
to play his role.
He and Naugus had only seen each other a few times since Max's
triumphant
return from the real world, usually just in passing
through the Void's numerous rock-lined
corridors. They regarded
each other with nothing but wary glances, but Naugus didn't
seem
to be confident enough to risk attacking him again. At least, not
yet.
All in all, the past few months had granted Max the peace and
serenity he had
never been able to attain while living under
Naugus's bootheel. Yet he was never truly
content with his new
position, no matter how much better it was then before.
His daughter lived, and Naugus's cruelty had been contained. None
of this had
changed the fact that he was an exile from his own
kingdom, trapped in a tyrant's prison,
with everything he had
truly cared about in life stolen away from him.
No, true satisfaction would have to wait until Julian was dead.
--
There was no point, Ixis Naugus thought to himself, in wasting
valuable time on
piddling regrets. So long as he was still able to
continue his work and escape the Void, it
hardly mattered that his
former servant still lived. Naugus was determined to not waste
his
anger fuming over the situation, and instead learn from it.
Long before King Acorn had even landed in the Void, Naugus thought
that he had
exhausted almost every possibility of escape from the
prison. It wasn't as simple as going
backwards in time long enough
to keep the portal he was sucked into from opening. Such
an
action, if it were taken, would not only not free him, but split the
universe in two in a
classic example of temporal paradox. He had
thought himself doomed.
But then, King Acorn had done something that had simply never
occurred to him.
Used his magic to give himself speed enough to
physically fight the Void's pull. Naugus
had long ago relegated
all ideas of escape to the confines of mathematical equations
and
guesswork. Brute force had never occurred to him.
Yet even King Acorn's attempt to break free eventually failed,
because his escape
had been rooted in magic, and his magic had
been based in the Void. So speed was the
key, but it had to be
something non-magical and mundane.
The blue-quilled speedster he had seen accompanying the King's
daughter had
instantly leapt to mind. If the hedgehog could
somehow be dragged into the Void and
convinced to take him out,
then Naugus's own escape became a definite possibility.
The
hedgehog and his friends, including the wretch's daughter, Sally,
were now
displayed on the screen of Naugus's scrying device.
"Such superb speed," he mused, "and such a fine mind…"
Naugus's gnarled fingertips idly tugged on the coarse strands of his beard.
There had to be a way he could take advantage of this situation.
"Interesting…"