30
Jack let his raft butt softly against the
hull of the ship as he ran through the various frequencies on his
beeper. Finally there came a click and a hum from above. The
gangway began to lower itself toward him. Jack maneuvered the raft
under it, and as soon as it finished its descent, reached up and
placed the crate of bombs on the bottom step. With a thin nylon
cord between his teeth, he climbed up after it, then tied the raft
to the gangway.
He stood and watched the gunwale directly
above him, his flamethrower held at ready. If Kusum had seen the
gangway go down, he’d be on his way over to investigate. But no one
appeared.
Good. So far, surprise was on his side. He
carried the crate to the top of the gangway and crouched there to
survey the deck: deserted. To his left the entire aft
superstructure was dark except for the running lights. Kusum could
be standing unseen in the shadows behind the blank windows of the
bridge at this very moment. Jack would be exposing himself to
discovery by crossing the deck, but it was a risk he had to take.
The aft compartments were the most critical areas of the ship. The
engines were there, as were the fuel tanks. He wanted to be sure
those areas were set for destruction before he moved into the more
dangerous cargo holds—where the rakoshi lived.
He hesitated. This was idiocy. This was comic
book stuff. What if the rakoshi caught him before he set the bombs?
That would let Kusum off free with his boat and his monsters. The
sane thing to do was what Gia had said back on shore: Call in the
Coast Guard. Or the Harbor Patrol.
But Jack simply could not bring himself to do
that. This was between Kusum and him. He could not allow outsiders
into the fray. It might seem like madness to everyone else, but
there was no other way for him. Gia wouldn’t understand it; neither
would Abe. He could think of only one other person who would
comprehend why it had to be this way. And that, for Jack, was the
most frightening part of this whole thing.
Only Kusum Bahkti, the man he had come to
destroy, would understand.
Now or never, he told
himself as he clipped four bombs to his belt. He stepped onto the
deck and sprinted along the starboard gunwale until he reached the
superstructure. He had been this route on his first trip aboard the
ship. He knew the way and headed directly below.
The engine room was hot and noisy, the big
twin diesels idling. Their basso hum vibrated the fillings in his
teeth. Jack set the timers on the bombs for three forty-five a.m.
—that would give him a little over an hour to do his job and get
away. He was familiar with the timers and had confidence in them,
yet as he armed each one, he found himself holding his breath and
turning his face away. A ridiculous gesture—if the bomb went off in
his hands, the heat and force of the blast would incinerate him
before he knew it—yet he continued to turn his head.
He placed the first two at the base of each
engine. Two more were attached to the fuel tanks. When those four
went, the entire stern of the freighter would be a memory. He
stopped by the hatch that had taken him into the corridor that led
to the rakoshi. That was where Vicky had died. A heaviness settled
in his chest. It was still hard to believe she was gone. He pressed
his ear against the metal and thought he heard the Kaka-ji chant. Visions of what he had seen Monday
night —those monsters holding up pieces of torn flesh—swept through
his mind, leaving barely controllable fury in their wake. It was
all he could do to restrain himself from starting up his
flamethrower and running into the hold, dowsing anything that moved
with napalm.
But no… he might not last a minute doing
that. There was no room for emotion here. He had to lock away his
feelings and be cool… cold. He had to
follow his plan. Had to do this right. Had to make sure not a
single rakosh—or its master—escaped alive.
He headed back up toward fresh air and
returned to the gangplank. Sure now that Kusum was in the main
hold, doing whatever he did with the rakoshi, Jack hefted the
somewhat lighter bomb crate onto his shoulder and made no attempt
to hide as he strode toward the bow. When he reached the hatch over
the forward hold, he lifted the entry port and peered below.
The odor rose and rammed into his nostrils,
but he controlled his gag reflex and looked below.
This hold was identical to the other in size
and design except that the elevator platform waiting a half-dozen
feet below him was in the forward rather than the aft corner. He
could hear noises like a litany drifting from the aft hold. In the
dim light he saw that the floor of this hold was littered with an
incredible amount of debris, but there were no rakoshi down there,
neither walking about nor lying on the floor.
He had the forward hold entirely to
himself.
Jack lowered himself through the opening. It
was a tight squeeze with the flamethrower on his back, and for one
awful moment he thought he was trapped in the opening, unable to
move up or down, helplessly wedged in place until Kusum found him
or the bombs went off. But he pulled free, slipped through, and
hauled his bomb crate after him.
Once again he checked the floor of the hold.
Finding no sign of rakoshi lurking about, he started the elevator
down. It was like a descent into hell. The noise from the other
hold grew steadily louder. He could sense an excitement, a hunger
in the guttural noises the rakoshi were making. Whatever ceremony
was going on must be reaching its climax. And after it was over
they’d probably start returning to this hold. Jack wanted to have
his bombs set and be on his way before then. But just in case they
came in while he was still here… he reached back and opened the
valves on his tanks. There was a brief, faint hiss as the carbon
dioxide propelled the napalm into the line, then all was silent. He
attached three bombs to his belt and waited.
When the platform stopped, Jack stepped off
and looked around. The floor here was a mess. Like a garbage dump.
There would be no problem finding hiding places for the rest of his
bombs among the debris. He wanted to create enough of an inferno in
here to spread to the aft hold, trapping all the rakoshi there
between the forward and stern explosions.
He stifled a cough. The odor here was worse
than anything he had encountered before, even in the other hold. He
tried mouth-breathing but the stench lay on his tongue. What made
it so bad here? He looked down before taking his first step and saw
that the floor was cluttered with the broken remains of countless
rakoshi eggs. And among the shell fragments were bones and hair and
shreds of clothing. His foot was against what he thought was an
unhatched egg; he rolled it over with the tip of his sneaker and
found himself staring into the empty eye sockets of a human
skull.
Repulsed, he stared around him. He was not
alone here.
There were immature rakoshi of varying sizes
all about, most of them reclining on the floor, asleep. One near
him was awake and active—leisurely teething on a human rib. He
hadn’t noticed them on the way down because they were so
small.
… Kusum’s
grandchildren…
They seemed to be as unaware of him now as
their parents in the other hold had been last night.
Stepping carefully, he made his way toward
the opposite corner. There he set and armed a bomb and shoved it
beneath a pile of bones and shell fragments. Moving as swiftly and
as carefully as possible, he picked his way toward the middle of
the stern wall of the hold. He was halfway there when he heard a
squeal and felt a sudden, knifing, tearing pain in his left calf.
He spun and looked down, reflexively reaching toward the pain.
Something was biting him—it had attached itself to his leg like a
leech. He pulled at it but succeeded only in making the pain worse.
Gritting his teeth, he tore it loose amid a blaze of incredible
pain: a walnut-size piece of his leg had come away with it.
He was holding a squirming, writhing
fifteen-inch rakosh around the waist. He must have kicked it or
accidentally stepped on it as he was passing and it had lashed out
with its teeth. His pants leg was torn and soaked with blood from
where the thing had taken a bite out of him. He held it at arm’s
length while it kicked and clawed with its tiny talons, its little
yellow eyes blazing fury at him. It held a piece of bloody
flesh—Jack’s flesh—in its mouth. Before his eyes, the miniature
horror stuffed the piece of his leg down its throat, then shrieked
and snapped at his fingers.
Gagging with revulsion, he hurled the
squealing creature across the room. It landed in the debris on the
floor among the other sleeping members of its kind.
But they weren’t sleeping now. The baby
rakosh’s screeching had awakened others in the vicinity. Like a
wave spreading from a stone dropped in a still pool, the creatures
began to rustle about him, the stirrings of one disturbing those
around it, and so on.
Within minutes Jack found himself facing a
sea of immature rakoshi. They couldn’t see him, but the little
one’s alarm had alerted them to the presence of an intruder among
them… an edible intruder. The rakoshi began milling about,
searching. They moved toward where they had heard the sound—toward
Jack. There must have been a hundred of them converging in his
direction. Sooner or later they would stumble upon him. The second
bomb was in his hand. He quickly armed it and slid it across the
floor toward the wall of the hold, hoping the noise would distract
them and give him time to get the flamethrower’s discharge tube
into position.
It didn’t work. One of the smaller rakoshi
blundered against his leg and squealed its discovery before biting
into him. The rest took up the cry and surged toward him like a
foul wave. They leaped at him, their razor-sharp teeth sinking into
his thighs, his back, his flanks and arms, ripping, tearing at his
flesh. He stumbled backwards, losing his balance, and as he began
to go down beneath the furious onslaught he saw a full-grown
rakosh, probably alerted by the cries of the young, enter the hold
through the starboard passage and race toward him.
He was falling!
Once he was down on the floor he knew he’d be
ripped to pieces in seconds. Fighting panic, he twisted around and
pulled the discharge tube from under his arm. As he landed on his
knees he pointed it away from him, found the rear grip, and pulled
the trigger.
The world seemed to explode as a sheet of
yellow flame fanned out from him. He twisted left, then right,
spraying flaming napalm in a circle. Suddenly he was alone in that
circle. He released the trigger.
He had forgotten to check the nozzle
adjustment. Instead of a stream of flame, he had released a wide
spray. No matter—it had been disturbingly effective. The rakoshi
attacking him had either fled screaming or been immolated; those
out of range howled and scattered in all directions. The adult had
caught the spray over the entire front of its body. A living mass
of flame, it lunged away and fled back into the connecting passage,
the little ones running before it.
Groaning with the pain from countless
lacerations, ignoring the blood that seeped from them, Jack
struggled to his feet. He had no choice but to follow. The alarm
had been raised. Ready or not, it was time to face Kusum.