There was a third piece: a chair.
“Sit,” her father said. “Go on. And before you try any of your tricks, just remember: your mother is back at home, fast asleep. Defenseless. Do you understand me?”
Candy nodded.
“Say it.”
“I understand,” she said quietly as she sat in the chair.
“Sir, may I step outside and take a breath of air?” one of the men said, as Elliot and Thompson each uncoiled lengths of the needle tubing. “I’ve always been a little squeamish around medical things.”
“No, Futterman,” Bill Quackenbush snapped. The nervous man, who Candy only now recognized as the manager of the supermarket on Riley Street, reluctantly obeyed the preacher’s instructions. Bill grabbed him by the arm, and pulled him closer. “You will stay right there—”
“Must I? I think—”
“I don’t care what you think. I’m the minister of this church and if you want to stay in the Lord’s good graces then you’d better do as I damn well say!”
Meekly, Futterman remained where he’d been told to stand. All the color had drained from his face, leaving him pasty white. Candy felt sorry for him. He looked so afraid. He seemed to feel her watching him, because his eyes flicked in her direction. Candy desperately wanted to give him some hope. She wanted to throw a thought into his head to say: It’s going to be all right. The preacher’s just a bully who found some magic hats. He hasn’t got any real power.
Candy’s concern for him distracted her from her own problems, until at a little nod from her father, Elliot and Thompson, working with well-rehearsed synchronicity, went down on their haunches to either side of the half-melted television with the white bugs in it, and unraveled from either side of it long black and yellow cables. They had at the end of them small discs with lids that the two men cautiously unscrewed.
“Now we just have to get this thing going,” Bill said.
He reached behind Candy and flipped one switch, which started a deep, regretful moan in the machine. Thompson and Elliot knew their cues. They each opened one of Candy’s hands without any need of force, and placed the discs on the palms of either hand.
“The Silter nests are in place, sir. We’re ready.”
Bill flipped two more switches, and Candy felt a creeping sickness climb through her body. The Silter nests broke through the flesh of her translucent palms and began to send fine tentacles up into her hands. She instantly started to feel the hunger of the voracious things called Silters. At once she felt weaker, as though her very life force was draining from her.
“Dad, please . . .” Candy muttered in her sleep.
“Did you hear that?” Malingo said. “She’s talking to her father?”
“Lordy Lou,” said John Moot. “That man’s psychotic.”
“She knows how to deal with him,” said John Fillet.
“Does that sound like somebody who’s dealing with things?” John Serpent said.
“She sounds as if she’s dying,” Geneva said.
“She’s just dreaming,” Mischief said.
“Look at the poor girl,” John Serpent replied. “They’re tormenting her. We have to do something!”
“I think he’s right, for once,” Tom said. “She’s obviously in pain.”
The expression on Candy’s face was becoming more and more agitated. Malingo glanced up at the faces of the John Brothers, Tom and Geneva, all looking down at Candy with echoes of her pained expression on their faces.
“You have to wake her,” Geneva said.
“But what’ll happen if we do? She’s never been like this,” Malingo said.
“Oh, Lordy . . .” she murmured. “Now you’ve got me doubting my own instincts.”
“What do you think, Malingo?” Tom said.
“I think . . .” he said softly. Then, drawing a deeper breath, “. . . I think we have no choice but to trust that she knows what she’s doing.”
“Doesn’t look that way,” John Serpent said.
“She’ll be okay,” Malingo said. “I believe in her.”
Chapter 31
The Flock
EXACTLY WHEN DID I get to be so appetizing? Candy asked herself. She seemed to be on a lot of menus lately. The first clue, now that she thought about it, was the attack of the Zetheks, who would definitely have bitten a sizeable chunk out of her if she’d not kept out of his way. Then, of course, Boa, who’d been determined to get a new body out of Candy’s energies. And now, the unlikeliest thief of all: her own father.
The machine, she could see from the corner of her eye, was devouring her visions. No, not visions—visions were simply sights, passively admired—no, it was experiences she was having leeched from her: glorious experiences.
All her beautiful experiences, and the memories of these experiences, were being stolen, drained into large phials that sat in the center of the machine. And it wasn’t just one life the device was sucking out of her, it was all the lives that she’d seen or felt in the Abarat. Her ever-inquisitive soul had touched them all in its way, made them her spiritual kin. They had stayed with her long after their physical forms had gone from sight: the dream-bedecked occupants of Marapozsa Street, Jimothi leading an army of tarrie-cats in battle against the bone beasts on Ninnyhammer, the Sea-Skippers on the tide of the Izabella. She’d confronted Zetheks, the Beasts of Efreet, not to mention Carrion and his grandmother.
Some of the memories had been nightmarish visions but she had kept hold of them in her mind for a reason. They were hers, for better or worse, and she wanted them all back. Experiencing them, in all their strangeness, she had come to better understand herself. If her father took them from her, then the Candy she had become—the true Candy—would also disappear.
“ . . . not . . . going . . . to happen,” she said.
“Reverend?”
“What is it, Norma?” he said as he studied the readouts from the Thieving Machine.
“The girl said something, Bill.”
“You are to call me Reverend, do you understand, Norma? And I heard her. I just didn’t care.”
“I think you should.”
“I told you, I couldn’t care—wait. Wait! These readings aren’t right!” He looked up at Candy. Her body pulsed with light as the Silters flailed about riotously in her etheric body. “Stop! You can’t do this!”
“You’d . . . be . . . surprised . . .
“. . . what I can do.”
“Look! She looks better. I think whatever was happening to her before . . . she has it under control,” Malingo said.
“You’re supposed to die now,” her father said. “Stop fighting it!”
“My memories of the Abarat don’t belong to you!”
“She’s getting agitated again,” Geneva said. “Look how wildly her eyes are moving behind her lids. She’s watching something.”
“Yes,” Malingo said. He watched the motion of her eyes closely. “It looks like she’s looking down.”
“At her hands, maybe?” Betty said.
Candy, asleep on the boat, continued to clutch at nothing. The sinews in her fingers taut like harp strings.
“Lordy Lou, what is that monster doing to her?” Tom said.
“I was born with a piece of Abarat inside me,” Candy shouted. “I was meant to be in the Abarat.”
“Well, you can take comfort in this: soon you won’t even remember the word.”
“I’ll remember it forever,” she said defiantly. “Abarat. Abarat. You’ll never take it from me! Abarat. Abarat. Abar—”
Her recitation of the three syllables was interrupted by a yell from the other end of the church.
“Dad! I’m bored! Nothing’s happening outside,” Ricky said as he entered the church and walked down the center aisle toward the altar.
“Ricky, I told you to stay outside. Get the hell out! Why have I been cursed with idiotic children?”
Ricky stopped short at his father’s insult. His eyes welled with tears.
“Dad?”
“I said get out of here, boy! This isn’t for your eyes.”
It was then that Ricky saw Candy, strapped to the machine, the slimy Silters creeping up her arms and into her chest, draining her of life and essence.