10
The two propane torches on either side of him
were lit and roaring blue flame straight up. Kusum made a final
adjustment on the air draw to each one—he wanted to keep them noisy
but didn’t want them to blow themselves out. When he was satisfied
with the flames, he unclasped his necklace and laid it on the
propane tank at the rear of the square platform. He had changed
from his everyday clothes into his blood-red ceremonial dhoti,
arranging the one-piece sarong-like garment in the traditional
Maharatta style with the left end hooked
beneath his leg and the bulk gathered at his right hip, leaving his
legs bare. He picked up his coiled bullwhip, then stabbed the DOWN
button with his middle finger.
The lift—an open elevator platform floored
with wooden planks—lurched, then started a slow descent along the
aft corner of the starboard wall of the main hold. It was dark
below. Not completely dark, for he kept the emergency lights on at
all times, but these were so scattered and of such low wattage that
the illumination they provided was nominal at best.
When the lift reached the halfway point,
there came a shuffling sound from below as rakoshi moved from
directly beneath him, wary of the descending platform and the fire
it carried. As he neared the floor of the hold and the light from
the torches spread among its occupants, tiny spots of brightness
began to pick up and return the glare—a few at first, then more and
more until more than a hundred yellow eyes gleamed from the
darkness.
A murmur rose among the rakoshi to become a
whispery chant, low, throaty, guttural, one of the few words they
could speak:
“Kaka-jiiiiii!
Kaka-jiiiiii!”
Kusum loosed the coils of his whip and
cracked it. The sound echoed like a gunshot through the hold. The
chant stopped abruptly. They now knew he was angry; they would
remain silent. As the platform and its roaring flames drew nearer
the floor, they backed farther away. In all of heaven and earth,
fire was all they feared—fire and their Kaka-ji.
He stopped the lift three or four feet above
the floor, giving himself a raised platform from which to address
the rakoshi assembled in a rough semicircle just beyond the reach
of the torchlight. They were barely visible except for an
occasional highlight off a smooth scalp or a hulking shoulder. And
the eyes. All the eyes were focused on Kusum.
He began speaking to them in the Bengali
dialect, knowing they could understand little of what he was
saying, but confident they would eventually get his meaning.
Although he was not directly angry with them, he filled his voice
with anger, for that was an integral part of what was to follow. He
did not understand what had gone wrong tonight, and knew from the
confusion he had sensed in the Mother upon her return that she did
not understand either. Something had caused her to lose the Scent.
Something extraordinary. She was a skilled hunter and he could be
sure that whatever had happened had been beyond her control. That
did not matter, however. A certain form must be followed. It was
tradition.
He told the rakoshi that there would be no
ceremony tonight, no sharing of flesh, because those who had been
entrusted to bring the sacrifice had failed. Instead of the
ceremony, there would be punishment.
He turned and lowered the propane feed to the
torches, constricting the semicircular pool of illumination,
bringing the darkness—and the rakoshi—closer.
Then he called to the Mother. She knew what
to do.
There came a scuffling and scraping from the
darkness before him as the Mother brought forward the youngling
that had accompanied her tonight. It came sullenly, unwillingly,
but it came. For it knew it must. It was tradition.
Kusum reached back and further lowered the
propane. The young rakoshi were especially afraid of fire and it
would be foolish to panic this one. Discipline was imperative. If
he lost his control over them, even for an instant, they might turn
on him and tear him to pieces. There must be no instance of
disobedience—such an act must ever remain unthinkable. But in order
to bend them to his will, he must not push them too hard against
their instincts.
He could barely see the creature as it
slouched forward in a posture of humble submission. Kusum gestured
with the whip and the Mother turned the youngling around, facing
its back to him. He raised the whip and lashed it forward—one
—two—three times and more, putting his body into it so that each
stroke ended with the meaty slap of braided rawhide on cold, cobalt
flesh.
He knew the young rakosh felt no pain from
the lash, but that was of little consequence. His purpose was not
to inflict pain but to assert his position of dominance. The
lashing was a symbolic act, just as a rakosh’s submission to the
lash was a reaffirmation of its loyalty and subservience to the
will of Kusum, the Kaka-ji. The lash formed
a bond between them. Both drew strength from it. With each stroke
Kusum felt the power of Kali swell within him. He could almost
imagine himself possessing two arms again.
After ten strokes, he stopped. The rakosh
looked around, saw that he was finished, then slunk back into the
group. Only the Mother remained. Kusum cracked the whip in the air.
Yes, it seemed to say. You, too.
The Mother came forward, gave him a long
look, then turned and presented her back to him. The eyes of the
younger rakoshi grew brighter as they became agitated, shuffling
their feet and clicking their talons together.
Kusum hesitated. The rakoshi were devoted to
the Mother. They spent day after day in her presence. She guided
them, gave order to their lives. They would die for her. Striking
her was a perilous proposition. But a hierarchy had been
established and it must be preserved. As the rakoshi were devoted
to the Mother, so was the Mother devoted to Kusum. And to reaffirm
the hierarchy, she must submit to the lash. For she was his
lieutenant among the younglings and ultimately responsible for any
failure to carry through the wishes of the Kaka-ji.
Yet despite her devotion, despite the
knowledge that she would gladly die for him, despite the
unspeakable bond that linked them—he had started the nest with her,
nursing her, raising her from a mewing hatchling—Kusum was wary of
the Mother. She was, after all, a rakosh—violence incarnate.
Disciplining her was like juggling vials of high explosive. One
lapse of concentration, one careless move…
Summoning his courage, Kusum let the whip
fly, snapping its tip once against the floor far from where the
Mother waited, and then he raised the whip no more. The hold had
gone utterly still with the first stroke. All remained silent. The
Mother continued to wait, and when no blow came, she turned toward
the lift. Kusum had the bullwhip coiled by then, a difficult trick
for a one-armed man, but he had long ago determined that there was
a way to do almost anything with one hand. He held it out beside
him, then dropped it onto the floor of the lift.
The Mother looked at him with shining eyes,
her slit pupils dilating in worship. She had received no lashing, a
public proclamation of the Kaka-ji’s
respect and regard for her. Kusum knew this was a proud moment for
her, one that would elevate her even higher in the eyes of her
young. He had planned it this way.
He hit the UP switch and turned the torches
to maximum as he rose. He was satisfied. Once more he had affirmed
his position as absolute master of the nest. The Mother was more
firmly in his grasp than ever before. And as he controlled her, so
he controlled her young.
The field of brightly glowing eyes watched
him from below, never leaving him until he reached the top of the
hold. The instant they were blocked from view, Kusum reached for
the necklace and clasped it around his throat.