We used the Very Long Baseline Array and the European VLBI Network to perform phase-referenced very long baseline interferometry observations of the three most powerful maser transitions associated with the high-mass star-forming region G28.87+0.07: the 22.2GHz H_2_O, 6.7GHz CH_3_OH, and 1.665GHz OH lines. We also performed Very Large Array (VLA) observations of the radio continuum emission at 1.3 and 3.6cm and Subaru observations of the continuum emission at 24.5{mu}m. Two centimeter-continuum sources are detected and one of them (named hot molecular core (HMC)) is compact and placed at the center of the observed distribution of H_2_O, CH_3_OH, and OH masers. The bipolar distribution of line-of-sight velocities and the pattern of the proper motions suggest that the water masers are driven by a (proto)stellar jet interacting with the dense circumstellar gas. The same jet could both excite the centimeter-continuum source named HMC (interpreted as free-free emission from shocked gas) and power the molecular outflow observed at larger scales--although one cannot exclude that the free-free continuum is rather originating from a hypercompact H II region. At 24.5{mu}m, we identify two objects separated along the north-south direction, whose absolute positions agree with those of the two VLA continuum sources. We establish that ~90% of the luminosity of the region (~2x10^5^L_{sun}_) is coming from the radio source HMC, which confirms the existence of an embedded massive young stellar object exciting the masers and possibly still undergoing heavy accretion from the surrounding envelope.
Cone search capability for table J/ApJ/749/47/table3 (Parameters of VLBA 22.2GHz H_2_O maser features in G28.87+0.07)