rain.
And finally, there came a third sound. The last sound she expected to hear in this mysterious place: her mother’s voice.
“
Her voice sounded remote from Candy, dulled not by distance but by something placed between them. A wall of some kind.
And now—astonishment upon astonishment—she heard her father’s voice replying.
Like Melissa’s voice, Bill Quackenbush’s speech was muted. But again, it was a gentler, more loving version of her father Candy was now hearing.
“
“
“
This time, for some reason, her mouth obeyed her instruction, and the words came out.
She even got an answer.
“
“I don’t understand.”
“
“How do you know who I was?” Candy said. “Or who I’m going to be? Who are you, anyway?”
A third woman laughed along with the other two, and as they did so there was a gentle blossoming of light in Candy’s vicinity. By it she saw all three women. In the middle of the trio, standing a little closer to Candy than her companions, was a woman who looked to be extraordinarily old. Her face was deeply etched with lines, and her hair—which was woven into navel-length braids—was pure white. But she still carried herself with great elegance, even in her antique phase. Nor did she seem weakened by age.
There was a dark energy that flickered in the delicate veins of her face and hands.
The women who stood to the right and left of her were somewhat younger than the old lady, but there was nothing fixed about any of the trio. Their faces, despite the welcoming expressions they offered Candy, seemed to be full of subtle hints of transformation.
The youngest of the three—her black hair cropped to her skull—carried a glimpse of something feral in an otherwise benign expression, a beast that was just out of sight behind her lovely bones. The other woman, who was black, had the strangest gaze of the three. When her long hair—which was filled with hints of bright color— parted and showed Candy her eyes, they had the glory of a night sky in them.
So there they were, three protean souls: one carrying lightning, one carrying sky, one touched with wilderness.
Candy felt no fear in the presence of these three: just mystification. By now, of course, she was used to experiencing that particular feeling here in the Abarat. And she’d learned what she should do in the face of mystery. She would watch and listen. The answers to her questions would probably make themselves apparent, after a time. And if they
The women now started to identify themselves. “
“
“The Fantomaya?”
“
“So
“
“You sound very certain that I’m coming back,” Candy said.
“We are,” Diamanda said. “You will have things to do here, in the future—”
“If we are reading the future right,” said Mespa. “Sometimes it’s hard to be sure.”
Now Candy thought about it, the idea didn’t seem so very unlikely. If the Twenty-Fifth Hour had let her in once, then why not again, when she better understood who she was, and what purpose she had in this strange world?
“I want to see more of this place,” Candy said, staring into the darkness that surrounded them.
“Do you indeed?” said Mespa.
“Yes.”
The three women exchanged tentative looks, as though to say, are we ready to do this, or not?
It appeared that they were, because the air suddenly quickened with life around Candy, and in it, like tiny