Chapter 50
Out of the Deep
“MR. PIXLER! MR. PIXLER!”
Voorzangler knocked on the door of Rojo Pixler’s suite of rooms cautiously at first, then with his fist rather than his knuckles.
“Please, Mr. Pixler. This is an emergency!”
From within, Voorzangler heard what sounded like the motion of something heavy moving over the polished marble floor. Finally, emerging from this strange sound came the voice of Voorzangler’s beloved genius, the creator of the original Commexo Kid, Rojo Pixler.
“I am well aware of the situation out on the streets, Voorzangler. I have legions of Kid Kops out there, doing their courageous best. But somehow I think a more primal touch is required—”
“There’s a huge vessel—it’s a mile long, I swear—”
“The Stormwalker? Yes. I can see it on the screens in here.”
“It’s Mater Motley, Mr. Pixler. She is calling herself the Empress of All the Islands.”
Voorzangler heard the sound of live reports from the streets of Commexo City, which the great architect was presumably viewing. Pixler had built the city from the wealth the Commexo Kid had brought it. It was the work of a true visionary to have made a city of everlasting light at an Hour where the darkness was very deep. The city stood at Three in the Morning. But nobody who lived in its bright streets feared the night. Until now.
“You don’t care that this woman has a vessel capable of destroying the city—”
“She wouldn’t.”
“She’s perfectly capable of killing everything you—”
“And the Kid.”
“Yes.”
“Don’t forget the Kid.”
“But before the Kid was you, Mr. Pixler. You are the creator.”
“Am I . . . ?”
“Yes . . .” Voorzangler said, his voice a little less certain now, “. . . of course you are. Without you . . . There’s nothing.”
“The Kid?”
“Sir. You came before the Kid. The father must come before the son.”
“Yes . . .”
“So the city, sir.”
“Yes, the city . . .” He seemed to remember the words he’d once believed above all things.
“Commexo City belongs to the Spirit of the Kid and always will.”
“Good,” Voorzangler said, relieved that the genius he worked for had not lost his grip on the order of things. “So what do we do about the . . . Stormwalker, sir? It hangs above us with all its firepower directed at the city. You don’t want any harm to the Spirit of the Kid, surely.”
“Absolutely not. This city must stand as a testament to the dreams of the Commexo Kid.”
“Good, Mr. Pixler. So . . . What should I do?”
“What would you advise?”
“Me?”
“Yes, Doctor. What would you advise for the health of the Kid’s city?”
“I don’t think we have any choice, sir. We are either destroyed or we surrender.”
“Do you think if I were to surrender to this Empress person she might come for me here?”
“I’m sorry, sir. What are you saying?”
“I’m saying that if she wants total supremacy, then it would be quite a coup for her, would it not? My priceless body in return for the safety of the city.”
“Is that what you want to offer her, sir?”
“I accept,” Mater Motley said.
“Is that her?” Pixler asked, sounding quite puzzled.
“Yes, sir,” said Voorzangler. “It is.”
“How did she get onto our secure line?”
“She’s not on the line, sir. She’s here. With me.”
“What?”
“I’m sorry, sir, I had no choice.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“She forbade me, sir.”
“And like the sensible coward he is,” the Old Mother said, “he preferred to keep his one good eye rather than tell you the truth.”
“I don’t blame him,” Pixler said. “No doubt he thought his little life was all he had. So losing it meant more to him than it would have if he’d known the truth.”
“What are you babbling about, Pixler?” Mater Motley demanded.
“Once we witness the great certainties of the High Worlds and the Deep Worlds, once we know darkness absolute and breathe the truth of light, everything else—like life—seems inconsequential.”
“You make no sense.”
“Do I not? Well, the fault is surely mine, lady. I’m afraid I’m sick. Some strange contagion I picked up on my descent into the waters of the Izabella.”
“You’re not going to frighten me off with stories of deep-water plagues, Pixler. I fear nothing and no one.”
“Oh, Empress, that’s extraordinary! To have no fear. I want to look in your eyes and see that for myself. Voorzangler?”
“Sir?”
“Will you escort the Empress into the library?”
“Of course, sir.”
“I will be with you in just a moment, Empress.”
The line was broken and went to black noise.
“He’s no longer in contact,” Voorzangler said. “He’s never done that before. He’s always been listening.”
“Apparently not today, Doctor. Or he would have realized I was here with you. So take me to him.”
“I can only go as far as the door. I’ve never entered the sanctum. It’s his private world.”
“Well, today you will accompany me, Voorzangler. I am your Empress. Serve me, and I will always be with you.”
“Then of course I must obey you.”
Voorzangler proceeded to make his way through the poorly lit rooms. The only consistent illumination was from the hooded lamps above the paintings that lined the walls.
“Pixler has very eclectic taste, Voorzangler.”
“The paintings?”
Mater Motley paused to look at one of them: a very brightly colored canvas, depicting a simple white cottage, some trees, a small shed and a single star.
“Voorzangler?”
“Yes?”
“What is this atrocity?”
“I believe it’s called The Morning of Christ’s Nativity.”
“Decadence. Look at it, showing off its colors. It sickens me.”
“I’ll have it removed.”
“No need,” Mater Motley said.
She raised her hand and the canvas was consumed by an invisible flame, the bright color blackening and blistering until every last fleck of color had been consumed, leaving the antique gilded frame to enclose a view of almost any part of Abarat at that moment.
Just a few paces farther on was another picture, its style and subject as agitated and violent as the first image had been calm and peaceful. It appeared to be a body hung on a grid of barbed wire, but the details were hard to decipher. Again the cremating hand was raised, and Voorzangler flinched. But Mater Motley simply pointed.
“Now that,” she said, “I like.” She looked at Voorzangler. “All right. I’ve had my fill of art.”
She didn’t linger in front of any other painting, but followed Voorzangler to the large room at the end of the passageway.
“You seem to have a problem with your drains, Pixler,” she said as she stepped into the room.
“And with the lights . . .” Pixler replied from somewhere in the darkness. “Everything in here has failed, I’m afraid. Your . . . your . . . forces . . . Empress . . . have . . . taken . . . their . . . toll. My perfect city is no longer perfect.”
“Forget about your city. It’s you I need to see. Are there no lights in here at all?” There was an edge in her voice, more than a touch of suspicion. “Surely the chamber has a window, Doctor? The light from the burning city would—”
“Light . . .” Pixler replied, “would not . . . show you . . . anything your eyes would want to see.”
“You would forbid me?”
“No. Of course nnnnot. How could I? You are the Empressssss.”
“Then what’s going on in here? I demand to know.”
“If that is what the Empresssss wishes . . .”
“It is.”
“Then . . . sssseeeee.”
And suddenly there was light in the chamber, though it didn’t emanate from a lamp. It was Rojo Pixler, himself, who was the source of this frigid light, though his human anatomy was merely the frail centerpiece of a living form that had taken over the entire chamber, an intricate filigree of lacy tissue that covered the walls and hung in lazy decay from the ceiling. A foul stench was in these layers of rotting tissue, which here and there clotted, forming sluggish creatures that were attached by pulsing cords of matter to the body of Pixler himself.
Mater Motley seized hold of Voorzangler, her fingers digging so deep into his body that he cried out in pain.
“A crude trap, Doctor.”
“I had no knowledge of this, Empress,” Voorzangler said.
“She . . . is no Empress,” Pixler replied, his corrupted voice thick with contempt.
He rose up now, although there was little sign that it was the work of Pixler’s limbs that allowed him to do so. It was the creature within whose body he was enmeshed that drew him into a standing position.
“I . . . ammmmm . . . a part of something greater now,” Pixler said. “And I do not . . . ffffearr your DARKNESS, witch.” The light in the lace body flickered. “I . . . have passed eons in a deeperrrr darknesssss than your gray Midnight.”
Again, the light flickered. But it didn’t plunge the room into darkness. Instead it revealed, like a corrupted X-ray, the single vast anatomy of man and monster, exposing with appalling clarity how Pixler’s bones were interwoven with the stinking substance of his possessor. Rojo Pixler, the great architect himself, had become a piece of a piece of something that existed in all its unknowable immensity somewhere in the depths of the Sea of Izabella.
He rose up off the floor, lifted up on fans of fluttering tissue that shimmered as they worked. Rows of wet-rimmed valves twitched and spat; soft spines swelled into clusters of vicious barbs, surges of power passed through translucent ducts from one body to the next, noisily spilling Requiatic liquids onto the marble floor when they brimmed over.
“A Requiax,” Mater Motley said, her lip curling with contempt. “No wonder it stinks like a shore at high tide in here.”
“And . . . what is your stench, Hag?” the Pixler-Requiax said. By now Pixler’s body was ten feet off the ground, lit from below by the flashes of cold luminescence that spilled through the layers of tissue scattered everywhere.
“Tell your master to leash his tongue, Voorzangler, or else I will reach into that foul mouth of his and tear it out by the root.”
Voorzangler attempted to form some response to this, but she was killing him with her grip, and he was losing control of his body. His tongue could only flop about in his mouth, unable to shape a single coherent word. His whole anatomy had been drained of life force, and was now so weak that if the Empress hadn’t had her fingers buried deep in his shoulder he would have dropped to the ground and died where he fell.
But she held on to him, shaking him like a little one-eyed doll.
“Tell him, idiot!” All Voorzangler could do was shake his head in terrorized despair. “You thought to lure me into a trap, didn’t you? With this . . . fish.”
Again, Voorzangler shook his head, his control over his body seeming to become weaker with every passing moment.
“What do you want, fish?” the Old Mother said. “Are you hanging up there to terrorize me? Because you haven’t a hope of doing so! Whatever you assume you have made yourself, you are nothing, fish. Bow down! Do you hear me? Bow down before the Empress of the Abarat!”
As she spoke she let her free hand drop to her side, presenting her open palm to the floor. This simple gesture caused her to rise up into the air, dragging Dr. Voorzangler, his body now in the grip of something very close to a full seizure, with her.
Others had entered the room now, and were witnessing these grotesqueries: Voorzangler’s assistants from the Circular Room had followed him in, as had several seamstresses, but nobody made any attempt to intervene. This was a pitting of Higher Powers; everyone watching knew that. Anyone who attempted to interfere now would only earn themselves a quick death. So they all stayed close to the door in case things took a turn for the apocalyptic. And from there they bore witness.
“Bow down!” Mater Motley said again as she rose. “With your face to the ground.”
There was no response from the Pixler-Requiax, at least at first. Then, very slowly, the creature began to shake its head. The weight of the great architect’s brain distorted the soft bone as it swung back and forth, his mouth lolling open, allowing a stream of fluid that resembled molasses to pour forth. Its issue caused the stink in the chamber to become far, far worse: so vile and overpowering that three members of Voorzangler’s staff turned and fled, puking, back into the passageway.
But Mater Motley had seen and smelled far worse. She was untouched by this whole performance. She was standing on the air at the same height as the architect now and raising her hand, presenting her palm to the enemy.
“You have one last chance to bend to me. And then I will make you do so, even if I have to break every bone in you to do it. Choose, fish. Bow or be broken.”
The shaking of the head slowed, and then ceased. Pixler raised his own hand to wipe from around his mouth the last of the noisome fluid. When the thing spoke again the corruption of its speech was over. The Requiax spoke now with a clear intention to sound as though Pixler had regained control, enunciating each word with almost absurd precision.
“You would find it hard to break bones that are so soft—” the thing began. As it spoke, the thing lifted its arms above its head, seizing the wrist of his left with its right, and twisting it around as though the bones were made of rubber. “—I can let the currents carry me and never break.”
“So go back to your currents, fish.”
“I am no fish, woman,” the creature said. “I AM REQUIAX!”