9
“SAHNKchewedday!
SAHNKchewedday!”
Jack had run out of James Whale films—he had
been searching unsuccessfully for a tape of Whale’s The Old Dark House for years—so he had put on the
1939 version of The Hunchback of Notre
Dame. Charles Laughton, playing the part of the ignorant,
deformed Parisian, had just saved Maureen O’Hara and was shouting
in an upper class British accent from the walls of the church.
Ridiculous. But Jack loved the film and had watched it nearly a
hundred times. It was like an old friend, and he needed an old
friend here with him now. The apartment seemed especially empty
tonight.
So with the six-foot projection tv providing
a sort of visual musak, he sat and pondered his next move. Gia and
Vicky were all right for the time being, so he didn’t have to worry
about them. He had called the Sutton Square house as soon as he had
arrived home. It had been late and Gia had obviously been awakened
by the phone. She had grouchily told him that no word had been
received from either Grace or Nellie and assured him that everyone
was fine and had been sleeping peacefully until his call.
On that note, he had let her go back to
sleep. He wished he could do the same. But tired as he was, sleep
was impossible. Those things! He could not
drive the images out of his mind! Nor the possibility that if Kusum
learned that he had been on the ship and had seen what it held, he
might send them after him.
With that thought, he got up and went to the
old oak secretary. From behind the false panel in its lower section
he removed a Ruger Security Six .357 magnum revolver with a
four-inch barrel. He loaded it with jacketed 110-grain hollow
points, bullets that would shatter upon entry, causing incredible
internal devastation: little hole going in, huge hole coming out.
Kolabati had said the rakoshi were unstoppable except for fire.
He’d like to see anything stand up to a couple of these in the
chest. But the features that made them so lethal on impact with a
body made them relatively safe to use indoors—a miss lost all its
killing power once it hit a wall or even a window. He loaded five
chambers and left the hammer down on the empty sixth.
As an extra precaution, Jack added a
silencer—Kusum and the rakoshi were his
problem. He didn’t want to draw any of his neighbors into it if he
could avoid it. Some of them would surely be hurt or killed.
He was just settling down in front of the tv
again when there was a knock on the door. Startled and puzzled,
Jack flipped the Betamax off and padded to the door, gun in hand.
There was another knock as he reached it. He could not imagine a
rakoshi knocking, but he was very uneasy about this night
caller.
“Who is it?”
“Kusum Bahkti,” said a voice on the other
side.
Kusum! Muscles tightened across Jack’s chest.
Nellie’s killer had come calling. Holding himself in check, he
cocked the Ruger and unlocked the door. Kusum stood there alone. He
appeared perfectly relaxed and unapologetic despite the fact that
dawn was only a few hours away. Jack felt his finger tighten on the
trigger of the pistol he held behind his right leg. A bullet in
Kusum’s brain right now would solve a number of problems, but might
be difficult to explain. Jack kept his pistol hidden. Be civil!
“What can I do for you?”
“I wish to discuss the matter of my sister
with you.”