9
The dark bow of the freighter loomed over
Jack, engulfing him in its shadow as he stood on the dock. The sun
was sinking over New Jersey, but there was still plenty of light.
Traffic rushed by above and behind him. He was oblivious to
everything but the ship before him and the clatter of his heart
against his ribs.
He had to go in. There was no way around it.
For an instant, he actually considered calling the police, but
rejected the idea immediately. As Kolabati had said, Kusum was
legally untouchable. And even if Jack managed to convince the
police that such things as rakoshi existed, all they were likely to
do was get themselves killed and loose the rakoshi upon the city.
Probably get Kolabati killed, too.
No, the police didn’t belong here, for
practical reasons and for reasons of principle: This was his
problem and he would solve it by himself. Repairman Jack always
worked alone.
He had put Gia and Vicky out of harm’s way.
Now he had to find Kolabati and see her to safety before he made a
final move against her brother.
As he followed the wharf around to the
starboard side of the ship, he pulled on a pair of heavy work
gloves he had bought on his way over from Fifth Avenue. There were
also three brand new Cricket butane lighters—three for $1.47 at the
department store—scattered through his pockets. He didn’t know what
good they would do, but Kolabati had been emphatic about fire and
iron being the only weapons against rakoshi. If he needed fire, at
least he would have a little of it available.
There was too much light to climb up the same
rope he had last time—it was in plain view of the traffic on the
West Side Highway. He would have to enter by way of a stern line
this time. He looked longingly at the raised gangplank. If he had
had the time he could have stopped at his apartment and picked up
the variable frequency beeper he used for getting into garages with
remote control door openers. He was sure the gangplank operated on
a similar principle.
He found a heavy stern line and tested its
tautness. He saw the name across the stern but couldn’t read the
lettering. The setting sun was warm against his skin. Everything
seemed so normal and mundane out here. But in that ship…
He stilled the dread within and forced
himself up the rope monkey-style as he had last night. As he pulled
himself over the gunwale and onto the deck at the rear of the
superstructure, he realized that the darkness of last night had
hidden a multitude of sins. The boat was filthy. Rust grew where
paint had thinned or peeled away; everything was either nicked or
dented or both. And overlaying all was a thick coat of grease,
grime, soot, and salt.
The rakoshi are below, Jack told himself as
he entered the superstructure and began his search of the cabins.
They’re sealed in the cargo areas. I won’t run into one up here. I
won’t.
He kept repeating it over and over, like a
litany. It allowed him to concentrate on his search instead of
constantly looking over his shoulder.
He started at the bridge and worked his way
downward. He found no sign of Kolabati in any of the officers’
cabins. He was going through the crew’s quarters on the main deck
level when he heard a sound. He stopped. A voice—a woman’s
voice—calling a name from somewhere inside the wall. Hope began to
grow in him as he followed that wall around to the main deck where
he found a padlocked iron door.
The voice was coming from behind the door.
Jack allowed himself a self-congratulatory grin. The voice was
Kolabati’s. He had found her.
He examined the door. The shackle of a
laminated steel padlock had been passed through the swivel eye of a
heavy slotted hasp welded firmly to the steel of the door. Simple
but very effective.
Jack dug out his pick kit and went to work on
the lock.