31
Kusum quelled his frustration. The Ceremony
of Offering was not going well. It was taking twice as long as
usual. He needed the Mother here to lead her younglings.
Where was she?
The Westphalen child was quiet, her upper arm
trapped in the grip of his right hand, her big frightened
questioning eyes staring up at him. He could not meet the gaze of
those eyes for long—they looked to him for succor and he had
nothing to offer but death. She didn’t know what was going on
between him and the rakoshi, did not comprehend the meaning of the
ceremony in which the one about to die was offered up in the name
of Kali on behalf of the beloved Ajit and Rupobati, dead since the
last century.
Tonight was an especially important ceremony,
for it was to be the last of its kind—forever. There would be no
more Westphalens after tonight. Ajit and Rupobati would finally be
avenged.
As the ceremony finally approached its
climax, Kusum sensed a disturbance in the forward hold—the nursery,
as it were—off to his right. He was glad to see one of the female
rakoshi turn and go down the passage. He hadn’t wanted to interrupt
the nearly stagnant flow of the ceremony at this point to send one
of them to investigate.
He tightened his grip on the child’s arm as
he raised his voice for the final invocation. It was almost over…
almost over at last…
Suddenly the eyes of the rakoshi were no
longer on him. They began to hiss and roar as their attention was
drawn to his right. Kusum glanced over and watched in shock as a
screaming horde of immature rakoshi poured into the hold from the
nursery, followed by a fully grown rakosh, its body completely
aflame. It tumbled in and collapsed on the floor near the elevator
platform.
And behind it, striding down the dark passage
like the avatar of a vengeful god, came Jack.
Kusum felt his world constrict around him,
closing in on his throat, choking off his air.
Jack… here… alive!
Impossible!
That could only mean that the Mother was
dead! But how? How could a single puny human defeat the Mother? And
how had Jack found him here? What sort of a man was this?
Or was he a man at all? He was more like an
irresistible preternatural force. It was as if the gods had sent
him to test Kusum.
The child began struggling in his grasp,
screaming, “Jack! Jack!”