15
Kusum stood in the engine room at the stern
of his ship, every cell in his body vibrating in time to the diesel
monstrosities on either side of him. The drone, the roar, the
clatter of twin engines capable of generating a total of nearly
3,000 b.h.p. at peak battered his eardrums. A man could die
screaming down here in the bowels of the ship and no one on the
deck directly above would hear him; with the engines running, he
wouldn’t even hear himself.
Bowels of the ship…
how apt. Pipes like masses of intestines coursed through the air,
along the walls, under the catwalks, vertically, horizontally,
diagonally.
The engines were warm. Time to get the
crew.
The dozen or so rakoshi he had been training
to run the ship had been doing well, but he wanted to keep them
sharp. He wanted to be able to take his ship to sea on short
notice. Hopefully that necessity would not arise, but the events of
the past few days had made him wary of taking anything for granted.
Tonight had only compounded his unease.
His mood was grim as he left the engine room.
Again the Mother and her youngling had returned empty-handed. That
meant only one thing. Jack had tried the elixir again and Kolabati
had been there to protect him… with her body.
The thought filled Kusum with despair.
Kolabati was destroying herself. She had spent too much time among
westerners. She had already absorbed too many of their habits of
dress. What other foul habits had she picked up? He had to find a
way to save her from herself.
But not tonight. He had his own personal
concerns: His evening prayers had been said; he had made his
thrice-daily offering of water and sesame… He would make an
offering more to the Goddess’s taste tomorrow night. Now he was
ready for work. There would be no punishment for the rakoshi
tonight, only work.
Kusum picked up his whip from where he had
left it on the deck and rapped the handle on the hatch that led to
the main hold. The Mother and the younglings that made up the crew
would be waiting on the other side. The sound of the engines was
their signal to be ready. He released the rakoshi. As the dark,
rangy forms swarmed up the steps to the deck, he re-locked the
hatch and headed for the wheelhouse.
Kusum stood before his controls. The
green-on-black CRTs with their flickering graphs and read-outs
would have been more at home on a lunar lander than on this old
rustbucket. But they were familiar to Kusum by now. During his stay
in London he had had most of the ship’s functions computerized,
including navigation and steering. Once on the open sea, he could
set a destination, phase in the computer, and tend to other
business. The computer would choose the best course along the
standard shipping lanes and leave him sixty miles off the coast of
his target destination, disturbing him during the course of the
voyage only if other vessels came within a designated
proximity.
And it all worked. In its test run across the
Atlantic—with a full human crew as back-up and the rakoshi towed
behind in a barge—there had not been a single hitch.
But the system was useful only on the open
sea. No computer was going to get him out of New York Harbor. It
could help, but Kusum would have to do most of the work—without the
aid of a tug or a pilot. Which was illegal, of course, but he could
not risk allowing anyone, even a harbor pilot, aboard his ship. He
was sure if he timed his departure carefully he could reach
international waters before anyone could stop him. But should the
Harbor Patrol or the Coast Guard pull alongside and try to board,
Kusum would have his own boarding party ready.
The drills were important to him; they gave
him peace of mind. Should something go awry, should his freighter’s
living cargo somehow be discovered, he needed to know he could
leave on short notice. And so he ran the rakoshi through their
paces regularly, lest they forget.
The river was dark and still, the wharf
deserted. Kusum checked his instruments. All was ready for
tonight’s drill. A single blink of the running lights and the
rakoshi leaped into action, loosening and untying the mooring ropes
and cables. They were agile and tireless. They could leap to the
wharf from the gunwales, cast off the ropes from the pilings, and
then climb up those same ropes back to the ship. If one happened to
fall in, it was of little consequence. They were quite at home in
the water. After all, they had swum behind the ship after their
barge had been cut loose off Staten Island and had climbed aboard
after it had docked and been cleared by customs.
Within minutes, the Mother scrambled to the
center of the forward hatch cover. This was the signal that all
ropes were clear. Kusum threw the engines into reverse. The twin
screws below began to pull the prow away from the pier. The
computer aided Kusum in making tiny corrections for tidal drift,
but most of the burden of the task was directly on his shoulders.
With a larger freighter, such a maneuver would have been
impossible. But with this particular vessel, equipped as it was and
with Kusum at the wheel, it could be done. It had taken Kusum many
tries over the months, many crunches against the wharf and one or
two nerve-shattering moments when he thought he had lost all
control over the vessel, before he had become competent. Now it was
routine.
The ship backed toward New Jersey until it
was clear of the wharf. Leaving the starboard engine in reverse,
Kusum threw the port engine into neutral, and then into forward.
The ship began to turn south. Kusum had searched long and hard to
find this ship—few freighters this size had twin screws. But his
patience had paid off. He now had a ship that could turn three
hundred and sixty degrees within its own length.
When the prow had swung ninety degrees and
was pointing toward the Battery, Kusum idled the engines. Had it
been time to leave, he would have thrown both into forward and
headed for the Narrows and the Atlantic Ocean beyond. If only he
could! If only his duty here were done! Reluctantly, he put the
starboard into forward and the port into reverse. The nose swung
back toward the dock. Then it was alternating forward and reverse
for both until the ship eased back into its slip. Two blinks of the
running lights and the rakoshi were leaping to the pier and
securing the ship in place.
Kusum allowed himself a smile of
satisfaction. Yes, they were ready. It wouldn’t be long before they
left this obscene land forever. Kusum would see to it that the
rakoshi did not return empty-handed tomorrow night.