All the devils ran away into the burning pitch, and got away as fast as they could with all their infernal strength, both the old ones and the young ones; and henceforth they established guards all round the burning pit and issued stern ordinances that the gates be constantly guarded, in order that the soldier and the nosebag might never draw near.
The soldier came to the Tsar, and he told him some kind of tale how he had delivered the palace from the infernal visitation.
"Thank you," the Tsar answered. "Stay here and live with me. I will treat you as if you were my brother."
So the soldier went and stayed with the Tsar, and had a sufficiency of all things, simply rolled in riches, and he thought it was time he should marry. So he married, and one year later God gave him a son. Then this boy fell into such a fearful illness—so terrible that there was nobody who could cure it—and it was beyond the skill of the physicians; there was no understanding of it. The soldier then thought of the old devil and of the undertaking he had given him, and how it had run in the undertaking: "I shall serve you eternally as a faithful servant." And he thought and said: "What is my old devil doing?"
Suddenly the same old devil appeared in front of him and asked: "What does your worship desire?"
And the soldier answered: "My little boy is very ill. Do you know how to cure him?"
So the devil fumbled in his pocket, got out a glass, poured cold water into it, and put it over the head of the sick child, and told the soldier: "Come here, look into the water." And the soldier looked at the water; and the devil asked him: "Well, what do you see?"
"I see Death standing at my son's feet."
"Well, he is standing at his feet; then he will survive. If Death stands at his head, then he cannot live another