The story: Ash Mistry is back, but he's not the boy he used to be. The Kali aastra has changed him forever, turning him into a bringer of death. It happens first with the girl Ash has been crushing on since grade school; his anger and guilt send him racing back to India in search of the the stolen Koh-I-Noor diamond, and a way to bring Gemma back from the dead. But if he turns away from his friends and works with Savage, the master of the diamond, will he become just as evil?
June Cleaver's ratings: language PG; violence R; sexual content PG; nudity PG; substance abuse PG-13; magic & the occult R; GLBT content G; adult themes (going over to the Dark Side) PG-13; overall rating R.
Liz's comments: While I really liked "The Savage Fortress", the first book in the Ash Mistry series, in book 2 then author has taken a significant step over to the Dark Side (hence the move from a PG-13 rating to R.) While the first book was quite violent in its own right, Ash as a hero tended to have bad things done TO him, rather than being the doer of them. In this installment, Ash becomes more a creature of Kali, the death goddess, rather creepily sucking up the energies created by the deaths around him. In all, I was disappointed with the sequel's very dark tone and extreme violence, and will probably stop following the series (although there was an unexpected twist at the end that does leave you wondering...).
Annotation with spoilers: Ash Mistry, at home in England, hears the strange news that the Koh-I-Noor diamond, part of the Crown Jewels and secretly an aastra, has been stolen, and he suspects right away that there's some connection to the evil Lord Alexander Savage, who got away at the end of the previous book. He's been having difficulty fitting back into life in England; kids at school still treat him like the nerd he's always been, and he still can't seem to crank up the nerve to ask Gemma, his crush, for a date--and all this, along with the growing ability to sense how to kill everything around him, and to see killing as a natural way to solve many of life's vexing problems.
When he finally does crank up the nerve to ask Gemma out, he comes home to find Parvati waiting for him, with a plan for retrieving the diamond. He figures he can help her shake down a rat rakshasa a named Monty and still make it back in time to meet Gemma at the Guy Fawkes Day bonfire. While at Monty's, Savage's crew of rakshasas show up, firmly tying the jewel's theft back to him. Ash and Parvati (along with a tiger rakshasa named Khan, who's Parvati's new traveling companion) get the jewel; Ash, rushing home for his date, is frustrated that a traffic jam has slowed things to a standstill--so he gets off a block later and walks. Of course, this makes him an hour late meeting Gemma at the park where the bonfire is being lit. She is there waiting for him, although understandably a bit ticked off. Ash offers her his coat just as her former boyfriend Jack shows up and there's a bit of a scuffle. Gemma, irritated, walks off with Ash's coat...just as there' s an unearthly yowl and Ash realizes that somehow, the evil dog rakshasa Jackie has tracked him here. Worse, he realizes that Gemma is still wearing his coat.
By the time he catches up with her, it's too late. Even worse, Parvati is there, and Jackie offers to trade Gemma's life for the diamond, but Parvati refuses. She says that the thousand deaths that will result from Savage getting the stone is a bad trade off for one girl. But Ash is guilt ridden as Gemma dies in his arms, especially because the Kali presence within him grows stronger because of it. Even worse, the people at school start treating him like he's a murderer (even though the police clear him later), so when Parvati asks him to accompany her back to India, he's ready to go.
In the story, Ash is having dreams of the cruel, bloodthirsty emperor Ashoka, another person his soul has been in its past as an Eternal Warrior. He's afraid that, more and more, this is the type of person he's becoming, and the tendency is getting harder and harder to fight.
On the plane, he meets back up with John (the kid from the Lalgur who helped Ash escape from the thug Ujba in the previous book), who quits his job as a cabin boy to join Ash and Parvati on their adventure. When they get to Kolkata (aka Calcutta), Parvati leads them to an old graveyard that is her base camp, and where her followers-- a huge crowd of less than stellar rakshasas--also hang out. Through one of his dreams, Ash learns that the stolen diamond is a Brahma-aastra, a healing stone. Ash gets the idea that somehow, there should be a way to use his (or even Lord Savage's) powers and the stone to bring Gemma back from the dead, and this becomes his obsession for the rest of the book. He and the others search for Savage in the Savage corporation's various places of business, but have no success until John has the idea to look in places that would have been there when Savage first arrived in the 1850s. In the meantime, Ash is reunited briefly with Ujba, who warns him not to trust John, and who evidently was the one assigned by Rishi to complete Ash's remaining in case Rishi was ever killed. This makes sense, because Ujba is also a follower of Kali, but Ash gets only as far as drinking a Soma potion (kind of like a peyote ritual) that turns him into the complete follower of the death goddess, with augmented powers that let him do things like knock down buildings.
Ash and John make their way to the old Raj cantonment, where Ash makes two unhappy discoveries: first, that John has betrayed him to Savage because Savage was willing to send money to John's mother every month, and second, that Savage as used his powers over the elements--in his position as a level 7 sorcerer--to animate a huge group of stone statues, which are now his soldiers. Using a bit of reverse psychology, Ash tricks Savage into not killing him, but at this point, John has told the creepy old man the location of both Parvati and the diamond. Ash is weighted down and thrown off a bridge to drown, but uses his powers to escape, nearly depleting them all. When he wakes up an entire day later, Parvati's camp has been obliterated. Strangely, he finds John there, having had no where else to go once it became clear that Savage, being done with him, was going to kill him. Ash understands John's behavior and is willing to forgive him, and together, the two of them decide to follow Savage.
The old magician has gotten on the train and headed south. Unable to find Parvati to let her know their plans, Ash leaves her a letter of apology and he and John take the next train in pursuit. Following a hunch, Ash finds the place where Savage and his minions have left the train; he and John follow their trial to the shore, where there's an ancient causeway. Ash sends John to look for Parvati--or any other kind of help he can drum up--and goes to tackle Savage on the island at the other end of the causeway.
When Ash gets to Savage's camp, he's able to sneak up on the old man and press a dagger to his throat. But Savage, talking fast, promises to use the Koh-I-Noor to help bring Gemma back to life if Ash will help him find the right spell on the Black mandala in Ravana's palace. Ash wants to believe that Gemma can be rescued from death (even though he's had a dream showing him that when Ashoka tried to resurrect brave warriors who died following him into battle, they returned as zombies) so he agrees to help Savage...for now.
Savage proves his magical chops when he is able to cause Ravana's palace, long sunken, to rise up from the ocean floor. Together, he and Ash are able to work their way through a series of magical booby traps set by Ravana's brother, the demon prince Vibheeshana, to make their way to the heart of the palace. Here, they encounter an incarnation of Vibheeshana himself, who tries to reason with Ash. It's at this moment that Parvati and Khan show up, and side with the rakshasa prince. But Ash is blinded by his desire to bring Gemma back from the dead, and it's only when he's faced by Savage's sudden but inevitable betrayal that he realizes Parvati is right. Since Savage as been able to inflict a mortal blow on Vibheeshana, Ash waits to receive the power from his death to recover enough strength to go on.
Using his powers, he tracks Savage to the palace treasury, where the man is busy absorbing the eighth level of magic from the black Mandala, but Ash interrupts the process, and the diamond, which had been cursed by Ravana's himself, cripples the magician. Finally, Ash forces Savage to transport himself, Ash, Patvati, and Khan back to the mainland just before the palace sinks back under the waves. But as they all land on the shore, winded, Savage is somehow able to crank out the magical power to teleport himself somewhere else entirely. Thus, although they have retrieved the diamond and prevented Savage from attaining the tenth level of sorcery, they're pretty much right back where they started.
Parvati stays in India with her followers--kind of a new family for her, even--and Ash goes back to England to find that things at school really haven't changed much. He does, however, visit Gemma's grave really early one morning and bury the now powerless Koh-I-Noor diamond with her.
On his way home, though, things seem weird. There's a huge billboard advertising Savage Industries; his parents have changed; it appears that his aunt and uncle are still alive, Lucky is taking riding lessons, and a young, handsome Alexander Savage has just been named Time Magazine Man of the Year. Weirdest of all, on his way to school, Ash stumbles over another version of himself, Asoka--and his worst fears are suddenly confirmed: somehow, Savage has altered the timeline leading up to this moment, and Ash Mistry, Kali-Aastra, now exists only as a temporal anomaly.
Big problem, right? Clearly, big enough to need its own book! And thus "The City of Death" ends with quite a plot twist on the very last page. Very clever, Mr. Chadda!