What happened here?
Something about the splotches made her skin crawl. She stepped around them carefully, not wanting to touch one, even with her shoe. Controlling her unease, she knocked on Jack's door.
The door opened immediately, startling her. Whoever was there must have been waiting for her knock. But the door had swung inward only three inches and stopped. She could see the vague shape of a head looking out at her, but the dim light from the hall was at the wrong angle to reveal the face.
"Jack?" Gia said. She was plainly frightened now. Everything was wrong here.
"He's not here," said a hoarse, cracked, whispery voice.
"Where is he?"
"I don't know. Will you look for him?"
"Yes… yes." The question was unexpected. "I need him right away."
"Find Jack! Find him and bring him back! Bring him back!"
The door slammed closed as Gia stumbled away, propelled by the sense of desperate urgency that had filled that voice.
What was happening here? Why was there some strange shadowy person in Jack's apartment instead of Jack? There was no time for mysteries—Vicky was missing and Jack could find her! Gia held on to that thought. It was all that kept her from going insane. Even so, the sense of nightmare unreality that had come over her after finding Vicky gone gripped her again. The walls wavered around her as she played along with the bad dream…
… down the stairs, through the doors, down to the street to where the Honda sits double parked, start it up, drive to where you think—hope!—Abe's shop is… tears on your face…
Oh, Vicky, how am I ever going to find you? I'll die without you!
… drive past darkened brownstones and storefronts until a dark blue panel truck pulls into the curb to the left just ahead and Jack gets out of the passenger side…
Jack!
Gia was suddenly back in the real world. She slammed on the brakes. Even as the Honda was skidding to a stalled stop, she was out of the door and running to him, crying his name.
"Jack!"
He turned and Gia saw his face go white at the sight of her. He ran forward.
"Oh, no! Where's Vicky?"
He knew! Her expression, her very presence here must have told him. Gia could hold back the fear and grief no longer. She began sobbing as she collapsed into his arms.
"She's gone!"
"God! When? How long?" She thought he was going to cry. His arms tightened around her until her ribs threatened to break.
"An hour… no more than an hour and a half."
"But how?"
"I don't know! All I found was an orange under her bed, like the one—"
"NO!" Jack's anguished shout was a physical pain in her ear, then he spun away from her, walking a step or two in one direction, then in another, his arms swinging at the air like a wind-up toy out of control. "He's got Vicky! He's got Vicky!"
"It's all my fault, Jack. If I'd stayed with her instead of watching that stupid movie, Vicky would be all right now."
Jack suddenly stopped moving. His arms lay quiet against his sides.
"No," he said in a voice that chilled her with its flat, iron tone. "You couldn't have changed the outcome. You'd only be dead." He turned to Abe. "I'll need to borrow your truck, Abe, and I'll also need an inflatable raft with oars. And the highest power field glasses you can find. Got them?"
"Right in the shop." He too was looking at Jack strangely.
"Would you put them in the back of the truck as quick as you can?"
"Sure."
Gia stared at Jack as Abe bustled away toward the front of his store. His abrupt change from near hysteria to this cold, dispassionate creature before her was almost as terrifying as Vicky's disappearance.
"What are you going to do?"
"I'm going to get her back. And then I'm going to see to it that she is never bothered again."
Gia stepped back. For as Jack spoke, he had turned toward her and looked past her, looked downtown as if seeing through all the buildings between him and whoever was in his thoughts. She let out a small cry when she saw his expression.
She was looking at murder. It was as if Death itself had taken human form. That look on Jack's face—she turned away. She couldn't bear it. More rage and fury than any man was meant to hold were concentrated in his eyes. She could almost imagine someone's heart stopping just from looking into those eyes.
Abe slammed the rear doors of his truck and handed Jack a black leather case. "Here are the binocs. The raft's loaded."
The look in Jack's eyes receded. Thank God! She never wanted to see that look again. He slung the binoculars around his neck. "You two wait here while—"
"I'm going with you!" Gia said. She wasn't staying behind while he went to find Vicky.
"And what?" Abe said. "I should stay behind while you two run off with my truck?"
Jack didn't even bother to argue. "Get in, then. But I'm driving."
And drive he did—like a madman: east to Central Park West, down to Broadway, and then along Broadway for a steeplechase ride downtown. Gia was squeezed between Jack and Abe, one hand braced against the dashboard in case they had to stop short, the other against the roof of the truck's cab to keep from bumping her head as they pitched and rolled over the hillocks and potholes in the pavement—New York City streets were no smoother than the rutted dirt roads she used to drive in Iowa.
" Where are we going? " she cried.
"To meet a ship."
"Jack, I'm so frightened. Don't play games with me. What's this have to do with Vicky?"
Jack looked at her hesitantly, then past her to Abe. "You'll both think I'm crazy. I don't need that now."
"Try me," she said. She had to know. What could be crazier than what had already happened tonight?
"All right. But just listen without interrupting me, okay?" He glanced at her and she nodded. His hesitancy was unnerving. He took a deep breath. "Here goes…"
26
Vicky is dead!
As Jack drove and told Abe and Gia his story, that inescapable fact stabbed at his mind. But he kept his eyes fixed on the road and held himself away from the agony of grief that threatened to overwhelm him at any moment.
Grief and rage. They mixed and swirled within him. He wanted to pull over to the curb and bury his face in his arms and weep like a baby. He wanted to ram his fist through the windshield again and again.
Vicky! He was never going to see her again, never do the orange mouth gag, never paint up his hand like Moony for her, never—
Stop it!
He had to stay in control, had to look strong. For Gia's sake. If anyone else had told him that Vicky was missing, he might have gone berserk. But he had remained calm for Gia. He couldn't let her guess what he knew. She wouldn't believe him anyway. Who would? He'd have to break it to her slowly… in stages… tell her about what he had seen, what he had learned in the past week.
Jack drove relentlessly through the near empty streets, slowing but never stopping for red lights. It was two a.m. on a Wednesday morning and there was still traffic about, but not enough to matter. He was headed downtown… all the way downtown.
His instincts insisted that Kusum would not leave without the Mother rakosh. He would not want to wait too far from Manhattan. To sail on, even at bottom speed, would mean outdistancing the Mother and leaving her behind. According to Kolabati, the Mother was the key to controlling the nest. So Kusum would wait. But Kusum didn't know that the Mother wasn't coming. Jack was coming instead.
He spoke as calmly as he could as he raced through Times Square, past Union Square, past City Hall, past Trinity Church, ever southward, all the while telling them about an Indian man named Kusum—the one Gia had met at the U.K. reception—whose ancestors were murdered by a Westphalen well over a century ago. This Kusum had come to New York with a ship full of seven- and eight-foot creatures called rakoshi whom he sent out to capture the last members of the Westphalen family.