Read The War for the Waking World Online
Authors: Wayne Thomas Batson
“Okey-dokey.”
Moments later, after walking through a warren of passages, stairs, and semihidden doors, Archer led Amy into a huge courtyard, at the center of which stood the massive square bulwark they had seen from outside.
The courtyard surrounded the immense building, which Archer assumed, contained the original Scoville Manorâpets and Doc Scoville included. There were odd sounds coming from the structure's left side. Archer and Amy ran to investigate, and when they turned the corner, they arrived just in time to hear Rigby say, “Okay, squirt, now it's your turn!”
Archer and Amy skidded to a halt and could do nothing for several minutes but stare. Completely decked out in maestro garb fit for symphony conductors, Rigby and Kaylie stood on a raised circular platform. Kaylie had stepped upon a footstool before a narrow lectern. She cleared her throat and tapped a slim, white baton on the edge of the lectern. She waved her baton hand, and the music began. Archer didn't know where the music was coming from, but it sounded like an orchestra the size of a football field.
With each beat of Kaylie's hand, something new appeared in the courtyard. The first to materialize was hundreds of giant Patches doll soldiers, followed by camouflaged commandos, too many ninjas to count . . . and, suddenly, there were three frog soldiers wielding light sabers, a marshmallow warrior, andâfinallyâa dozen or more gleaming silver knights riding the ultra-fluffy, giant Siberian huskies.
The music rose in pitch. Rigby helped Kaylie down from the step stool, and then took his place at the lectern. He gently placed his top hat upside down on the lectern, lifted his baton, and gave a sudden sweeping gesture with both hands. A battalion of electric guitars instantly joined the symphony, not out of place, but rather in perfect melody and rhythm. Rigby certainly seemed to enjoy it. He began to move his head back and forth to the music, gently at first, but then with a powerful movement matching the beat.
“Is . . . is Rigby headbanging?” Archer asked.
Amy said, “Yep.”
Rigby wasn't just getting into the music; he too was creating, albeit his creations were a little less
adorable
. In front of the ninjas and commandos, a team of warriors appeared. They wore spiked black armor with red visors on their helms, and they rode furry spider steeds as big as tanks. The arachnid creatures turned in unison, crouched low, and raised their bulbous abdomens in a threatening posture.
Archer and Amy gasped. There were eerie, glowing patterns in the short hair of the spiders' abdomens, ghostly, clownish faces. These things, Archer thought, would give the Nightmare Hounds a run for their money.
But Rigby wasn't finished creating. Beyond the spiky black knights and the ghoulish, clownish spider tanks, there appeared a phalanx of twelve-foot, flaming ogres. The music thrummed, a symphonic rock concerto, rising now to its climactic finale. Rigby thrust both hands forward. In front of the flaming ogres, appearing in ranks of twelve, came the Redcaps: sturdy, old, goblin men with red eyes, large crooked teeth, and talons for hands. Each creature held a long, gnarled-wood staff and, of course, wore a red cap.
Every single warrior or creature stomped its foot. The music came to an abrupt end. Rigby and Kaylie stepped to the edge of the platform . . . and took a bow.
Not knowing what else to do, Archer and Amy began to clap.
“Archer!” Kaylie squealed. She leaped down from the platform and sped across the courtyard to her brother and hugged him. “You're back! Yay! How's Dad and Buster andâhi, Amy!”
“Hiya, Kaylie!” Amy said. “That was quite a showsy, whoa-sy, concert thingy you two put on. Yep.”
“Dad, Buster, and Amy's mom are safe,” Archer said, “still inside the vault I built. They're still in the trance . . . or the Veil or whatever, but at least they're safe.”
Rigby joined them. “Well, 'ello, Amy, you're out of the Veil too, eh? Keaton wake you up?”
“Nope, nope, nopity nope,” she replied. Then she pointed at Rigby's face. “You have a funny nose.”
“Uh-oh,” Kaylie said. “Amy got happified, didn't she?”
Archer nodded. “She's getting better, but not quite out of it yet.”
“So did you wake her up for a reason, Keaton?” Rigby asked.
“I didn't wake her at all,” Archer replied. “She figured out the Veil on her own, but I'll let her explain it to you later. For now, let's just say we can count on her as one of our team. She's got a pretty strong will. She even flies.”
Rigby's eyebrows went up. “Really?” he said, as if his thoughts were far away. “That's astounding.”
Amy blushed
and shrugged.
“Where'd you get the idea for the spider tanks?” Archer asked. “Those things are ultra-creepy.”
“I dunno,” Rigby said, shrugging. “I read it in a fantasy book, I think.”
“They'd be kind of cute,” Amy said, “if it weren't for the haunted clown faces on their abdomens and all those glassy black eyes. Not so cute at all. Nopity nope.”
“Wait,” Kaylie said. She whirled once and flung her baton hand forward. “They are a little too creepy, but this might help.”
A peculiar clicking noise filled the room, and in a heartbeat all the spiders wore dark sunglasses.
“Better?” Kaylie asked.
“Much better,” Amy said. “Yep.”
Rigby frowned. “Oh, 'ey that's not fair.” But he laughed it off.
They all were startled when a very loud voice came over a loudspeaker high above. “Attention!” Doc Scoville announced. “Report at once to the Ready Room. I think I've solved the Rift problem.”
Doc Scoville had three of the huge monitors dedicated to his Rift research. The group crowded around them in the Ready Room, barely containing their excitement. Doc Scoville did not disappoint as he showed the animation of the pre-Rift, post-Rift electromagnetic field shifts. “This fluctuation,” he explained, “is what we saw the other day. It's our hope, really. Heh-heh. Long as it's still moving, we can push it back to its original state.”
“How?” Archer asked.
Doc Scoville said, “I'll let Kaylie explain this part.”
“I didn't work it all out,” Kaylie said. “We still need sources and locations.”
“Not anymore,” Doc Scoville said. “I've solved that problem.”
Kaylie clapped and said, “Okay, so the magnetic fields are kind of swinging back and forth. What we need to do is catch one of those waves as it's swinging back, hit it with enough of our own, and use its forward momentum to knock it all the way back to its original position. But this isn't guesswork; it's absolutely precise. If our magnetic field is off by one tesla or any of our locations are wrong by a single degree of latitude or longitude, we'll be all messed up.”
“What'll happen?” Amy asked.
“Well,” Doc Scoville said, “if we aren't pretty close to perfect, the Riftâthe Harlequin Veil, Kara, and all her plansânone of it's gonna matter anymore, 'cause we're gonna fry the world in EM waves.”
D
REAMTREADER
C
REED
, C
ONCEPTUS
16
C
ongratulations, Dreamtreader. To ascend to this level, you must have a very powerful will indeed. As such, you must challenge yourself with new abilities. Perhaps, the most helpful of all advanced Dreamtreader skills is that of portalling.
In the Dream, distance is not measured distinctly as it is in the Waking World. All is related to time. For example, it may take you one hour of your time to reach the Markets of Kurdan from the mountains. And, as you know, an hour is no small thing. It is precious, not to be squandered.
Thus the portal.
A portal condenses time. Just as Dreamtreaders use ethereal silk to repair breaches in the Dream fabric, so may you also summon that fabric from afar. In effect, the Dreamtreader opens the fabric in one place, steps through, and exits the fabric in another place. It will save you time and, perhaps, much more.
But beware! As with all advanced Dreamtreading skills, portalling will tax your mental will fiercely. Use it sparingly and only at great need.
“F
RY THE WORLD
? ” A
RCHER MUTTERED MOROSELY
. “T
HAT
'
S
not a good thing.”
Rigby said, “You've got it figured out, though, Uncle?”
Doc Scoville slapped the palm of his hand to the table. “I think I do. Take a look.” He gestured to the screen and began taking the data far back before the Rift occurred. “Remember those odd bursts of EM?”
Archer nodded. “I do,” he said. “One of them popped up in Scotland, right?”
“Correct,” Doc Scoville said. “Glasgow, as a matter of fact. And here it is.”
Archer and the others watched as a small graphic explosion took place right over the UK. It was like someone had tossed a stone into a still pond, causing rings, one after the other, to surge outward.
“I went back through,” Doc Scoville explained, “and I slowed down the frequency to make it a day per second rather than a week. Turns out, there was a ton more of those little bursts. And I say âlittle' to mean they don't last long. But they aren't short of power. Heh-heh, no sir!”
“So what are they?” Rigby asked.
“Well, I pinpointed the locations, and I figured it out from there. Glasgow, Scotland . . . Nice, France . . . two separate signature bursts here in Maryland . . . and finally, Queensland, Australia. Sound familiar?”
“It's us,” Archer muttered. “It's Dreamtreaders, right? Coming in and out of the Dream?”
Doc Scoville clapped. “That's right!” he said cheerily. “Lad, you're a whole lot smarter than Rigby gives ya credit for. Heh-heh.”
Archer caught a sideways glance from Rigby but chose to ignore it.
“So we generate our own electromagnetic fields?” Kaylie asked. “I mean not like normal but great big powerful ones?”
Doc Scoville said, “That's right.”
“But you mean Lucid Walkers too,” Rigby said. “Right?”
“Not exactly,” Doc Scoville replied, absently wiping a smudge from the tabletop with his index finger. “I'm afraid Lucid Walkers like us, well, we didn't produce much more EM than the average person.”
“Oh.” Rigby sat back heavily in his chair.
“Hold on,” Archer said, “are you trying to tell me that all human beings produce some kind of EM fields?”
“It's really very simple,” Doc Scoville said. “People have electromagnetic fields. If not, we'd die. It's one of the ways our cells operate and communicate. But the thing is, Dreamtreaders like you seem to have exponentially more powerful magnetic fields. No, metal won't stick to you, but the field is very strong.”
“That's why you have such magnetic personalities,” Amy said, snickering.
“Ooh, that was bad,” Archer said, squinting. “I hope this happification wears off completely.”
“There's a problem,” Kaylie said.
Doctor Scoville sat up rigidly. “What? Where? Did I mess up my calculations?”
“Not that,” Kaylie said. “It's the theory itself, what we called the Anchor Protocol. How can we Dreamtreaders produce enough EM to move the Rift? We don't enter or exit the Dream anymore.”
Doctor Scoville's stricken expression melted away. “I thought of that already. All you have to do is make something really, really big.
The act of creation produces a ton of EM energy. Matter of fact, I was monitoring you and Rigby as you created your army. You were blasting out teslas left and right.”
Kaylie frowned. “But did we move the earth's poles at all?”
“Some,” Doc Scoville said. “Just not nearly enough at one time. We're going to need four Dreamtreaders to be the EM anchors, strategically positioned, all using their will to create something of a colossal but precise size, at precisely the same time.”
“There's a pretty big problem with that,” Archer said. “We don't have four Dreamtreaders.” He sighed. “Right now, we don't even have three . . . unless we can get Nick back.”
Doc Scoville looked gravely at all of them. “Rigby and I will step in as the third and fourth anchors.”
Rigby sat up sharply. “Us?” he blurted. “But I thought you said we were pretty much EM weaklings.”
“That was before the Rift, my boy,” Doc Scoville said. “Now, we've got enough to pull this off.” He glanced sideways, pointed to the leftmost screen, and said, “
Just
enough. See?”
Rigby looked at the rows of numbers below each of their names. He caught his breath, and his eyes widened.
“What?” Archer asked.
Rigby waved him off. “Nothing. Don't worry about it.”
Archer let it go, but he wouldn't forget it.