"I want her safe."
"She is not of your flesh. She is just another member of a society that would exterminate you if it knew you existed, that rejects what you value most. And even this little one here will want you locked away once she is grown. We should not be at war, you and I. We are brothers, voluntary outcasts from the worlds in which we live. We are—"
"Cut the bullshit!" Jack said. "She's mine. I want her!"
Kusum glowered at him. "How did you escape the Mother?"
"Killed her. Matter of fact, got a couple of her teeth in my pocket. Want them?"
Kusum's face darkened. "Impossible! She—" His voice broke off as he stared at Jack. "That necklace!"
"Your sister's."
"You've killed her, then," he said in a suddenly hushed voice.
"No. She's fine."
"She would never surrender it willingly!"
"She's asleep—doesn't know that I borrowed it for a while."
Kusum barked out a laugh. "So! My whore of a sister will finally reap the rewards of her karma! And how fitting that you should be the instrument of her reckoning!"
Thinking Kusum was distracted, Jack took a step forward: The Indian immediately tightened his grip on Vicky's throat. Through the tangle of her wet stringy hair, Jack saw her eyes wince shut in pain.
"No closer!"
The rakoshi stirred and edged nearer the platform at the sound of Kusum's raised voice.
Jack stepped back. "Sooner or later you're going to lose, Kusum. Give her up now."
"Why should I lose? I have but to point out your location to the rakoshi and tell them that there stands the slayer of the Mother. The necklace would not protect you then. And though your flamethrower might kill dozens of them, in their frenzy for revenge they would tear you to pieces."
Jack pointed to the bomb slung from his belt. "But what would you do about these?"
Kusum's brow furrowed. "What are you talking about?"
"Fire bombs I've planted them all over the ship. All timed to go off at 3:45." He looked at his watch. "It's 3:00 now. Only forty-five minutes to go. How will you ever find them in time?"
"The child will die, too."
Jack saw Vicky's already terrified face blanch as she listened to them. She had to hear—no way to shield her from the truth.
"Better that way than what you've got planned for her."
Kusum shrugged. "My rakoshi and I will merely swim ashore. Perhaps the child's mother waits there. They ought to find her tasty."
Jack masked his horror at the vision of Gia facing a horde of rakoshi emerging from the bay.
"That won't save your ship. And it will leave your rakoshi without a home and out of your control."
"So," Kusum said after a pause. "A stalemate."
"Right. But if you’ll let the kid go, I'll show you where the bombs are. Then I'll take her home while you take off for India."
He didn't want to let Kusum go—he had a score to settle with the Indian—but it was a price he was willing to pay for Vicky’s life.
Kusum shook his head. "She's a Westphalen...the last surviving Westphalen...and I cannot—"
"You're wrong!" Jack cried, grasping at a thread of hope. "She's not the last. Her father is in England! He's..."
Kusum shook his head again. "I took care of him last year during my stay at the Consulate in London."
Jack saw Vicky stiffen as her eyes widened.
"My Daddy!"
"Hush, child," Kusum said in an incongruously gentle tone. "He was not worthy of a single tear." Then he raised his voice. "So it's still a stalemate, Repairman Jack. But perhaps there is a way we can settle this honorably."
"Honorably?" Jack felt his rage swell. "How much honor can I expect from a fallen..." —What was the word Kolabati had used? —"...a fallen Brachmachari?"
Kusum’s face darkened. "She told you of that? Did she also tell you who it was who seduced me into breaking my vow of chastity? Did she say who it was I bedded during those years when I polluted my karma to an almost irredeemable level? No—of course she wouldn't. It was Kolabati herself—my own sister!"
Jack was stunned. "You're lying!"
"Would that I were." He got a faraway look in his eyes. "It seemed so right at the time. After nearly a century of living, my sister seemed to be the only person on earth worth knowing...certainly the only one left with whom I had anything in common."
"You're crazier than I thought you were."
Kusum smiled sadly. "Ah! Something else my dear sister neglected to mention. She probably told you our parents were killed in 1948 in a train wreck during the chaos following the end of British colonial rule. It's a good story—we cooked it up together. But it's a lie. I was born in 1846. Yes, I said 1846. Bati was born in 1850. Our parents, whose names adorn the stern of this ship, were killed by Sir Albert Westphalen and his men when they raided the temple of Kali in the hills of northwestern Bengal in 1857. I nearly killed Westphalen then myself, but he was bigger and stronger than the puny twelve-year-old boy I was, and nearly severed my left arm from my body. Only the necklace saved me."
Jack's mouth went dry. The man spoke his madness so casually, so matter-of-factly, with the utter conviction of truth. No doubt because he believed it true.
"The necklace?" Jack said.
He had to keep him talking. Perhaps he would find an opening, a chance to get Vicky free of his grasp. But he had to keep the rakoshi in mind, too—they kept drawing closer by imperceptible degrees.
"It does more than hide one from rakoshi. It heals...and preserves. It slows aging. It does not make one invulnerable—Westphalen's men put bullets through my parents' hearts while they were wearing their necklaces and left them just as dead as they would have been without them. But the necklace I wear, the one I removed from my father's corpse after I vowed to avenge him, helped mend my wound. I lost my arm, true, but without the aid of the necklace I would have died. Look at your own wounds. You've been injured before, I am sure. Do they hurt as much as you would expect? Do they bleed as much as they should?"
Warily, Jack glanced down at his arms and legs. They were bloody and they hurt—but nowhere near as much as they should have. Then he remembered how his back and left shoulder had started feeling better soon after he’d put on the necklace. He hadn't made the connection until now.
"You now wear one of the two existing necklaces of the Keepers of the Rakoshi. While you wear it, it heals you and slows your aging to a crawl. But take it off, and all those years come tumbling back upon you."
Jack leaped upon an inconsistency. "You said 'two existing necklaces.' What about your grandmother's? The one I returned?"
Kusum laughed. "Haven't you guessed yet? There is no grandmother! That was Kolabati herself! She was the assault victim! She had been following me to learn where I went at night and—How do you Americans so eloquently put it?— 'got rolled.' That old woman you saw in the hospital was Kolabati, dying of old age without her necklace. Once I replaced it about her neck, she quickly returned to the same state of youth when the necklace was stolen from her." He laughed again. "Even as we speak, she grows older and uglier and more feeble by the minute!"
Jack's mind whirled. He tried to ignore what he’d been told. Couldn't be true. Kusum was simply trying to distract him, confuse him, and he couldn't allow that. Had to concentrate on Vicky and on getting her to safety. She was looking at him with those big blue eyes of hers, begging him to get her out of here.
"You're only wasting time, Kusum. Those bombs go off in thirty minutes."
"True," the Indian said. "And I too grow older with every minute."
Jack noticed Kusum's bare throat. He did look considerably older than Jack remembered him.
"Your necklace..."
"I take it off when I address them." He gestured to the rakoshi. "Otherwise they wouldn't be able to see their master.”
"You mean 'father,' don't you? Kolabati told me what Kaka-ji means."