Most days, Michael Manstein's impressive integrity wouldn't have let him contemplate taking off early, let alone doing it. When he said, "Why not?" I confess I blinked. He added, "We certainly aren't accomplishing anything here at the moment with the possible exception of entertaining the security guard." Maybe he was trying to justify leaving to himself, or maybe to me. At that point I didn't need any justifying; all I wanted to do was head south.
Michael must have talked himself into it, because he started sticking tools and substances back into his little black bag. I stood there waiting, hoping he wouldn't get an attack of conscience. He didn't. As soon as he was through, we walked across the street to his carpet and headed for Westwood.
Traffic was its usual ghastly self. So many carpets on so many flyways meant there was so much lint and dander in the air that the famous Angels City sunshine turned pale and washed-out; a lot of people were rubbing their eyes as they flew. That pollution usually seems worse in St. Ferdinand's Valley than other parts of town, too; they don't get the sea breeze there to clear it out What they're going to have to do one of these days is design a flying carpet that isn't woven from wool. People have been trying to do that for years; so far, they haven't managed to come up with one the sylphs like. But if they don't succeed before too long, Angels City isn't going to be a place anybody in his right mind would want to live.
I breathed easier - literally and figuratively - when we got out of the Valley and back into Westwood. Michael pulled up beside my carpet in the parking lot. "Are you going to go back up to your office and see what awaits you?" he asked.
"Nope," I said. "What's that New Testament line? Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof? Something like that, anyhow. Tomorrow will have troubles of its own. I'm not really interested in finding out about them in advance."
"As you will," Michael said. Since it was nearer six than five, he didn't have any trouble finding a parking space - most people who work at the Confederal Building had gone home. He headed on in anyhow; now that he was here, he'd do some more work. Maybe he was feeling bad about his fall from probity.
Me, I didn't feel bad at all. Hungry, yes, but not bad. I jumped onto my carpet and headed home. I got off at Imperial instead of The Second, just in case more earth elementals with my name on them were waiting for me.
If they were, I evaded them - I got home unscathed. I stayed just long enough to use the plumbing and toss tomorrow's outfit into an overnight case. Then I was out the door, down the stairs, back on my carpet, and on my way to Judy's.
Going down St James' Freeway into Long Beach in the evening is a gamble. When it's bad, the carpets might as well be sitting on your living room floor. I could have got there at nine as easily as a little before eight But I was lucky, and so I pulled up in front of Judy's place right on time.
I used the talisman to let her building's Watcher know I belonged there, then went up the stairs two at a time to her flat. I knocked on the door. When she didn't come right away, I figured she was using the plumbing herself or something, so I let myself in.
I took one step in the front room and then stopped, staring. For a second, I thought I'd gone into the wrong flat. It took me a while to realize Judy's spare key wouldn't have let me into any place but hers.
But Judy, as befits a copy editor, is scrupulously neat. The flat had been trashed. Books were scattered all over the floor, knickknacks strewn everywhere. Some of them were broken.
Earthquake, I thought, and then, more sensibly, burglars.
I ran into the bedroom, calling Judy's name as I went.
Nobody answered. On me bed, lying exactly parallel to each other, just the way Judy would have set them there, were a green silk blouse and a pair of linen pants: the right land of outfit to wear to the opening of a nice new restaurant. The bedspread was white. I am, you will have gathered, familiar with Judy's bed and its bedclothes. The red stain next to the blouse was new. It wasn't a big stain, but seeing even a little blood is plenty to make your own blood run cold.
"Judy?" My voice came out as a frightened croak. No answer again. I hadn't really expected one.
The bathroom door was open. The air in there felt humid, as if she'd taken a shower not long before. She wasn't in there now, though, not anywhere - I yanked back the curtain to be sure.
Burglars faded from my mind. I wished the word would have stayed; stuff, after all, is only stuff. You can always get more. But an uglier, more frightening word took its place: kidnappers.
I didn't want to dunk if let alone believe it. After what had happened to me on The Second, though, what choice did I have? I ran back to the bedroom, where the phone was.
I snatched up the handset.
Nothing happened. The phone was dead. Ichor dripped from the little cages that held the ear and mouth imps. The front mesh on both cages was pushed in. Whoever had snatched Judy had taken the time to implode the phone before he left with her.
I hurried out to the walkway, went to the flat next door. I knocked, hard. "I need to use your phone to call the constabulary," I said loudly. Someone was home; St. Elmo's fire glowed through the curtains and I could hear little noises inside. But nobody came to the door.
Cursing the faintheart to a warmer climate than Angels City's, I ran downstairs and pounded on the manager's door.
He answered; opening the door was part of his job. He'd seen me going in and out often enough to recognize me. As soon as he got a good look at my face, he said, "What's the matter, son?"
I didn't take offense; that's how he talks. Besides, he's old enough to have fought in the Second Sorcerous War (and he has a bad limp, so maybe he did), so he's old enough and then some to be my father. I said, "May I use your phone, please? I think Judy's been kidnapped." As with any magic, saying the word made it real.
"Judy? Judy Ather in 272?" He gaped at me, and men at the door I'd left open, I suppose to confirm that that was the flat I was talking about He stood aside. "You'd better come in."
His flat could have been furnished from the St Ferdinand's Valley swap meet; the operative phrase was essence of bad taste. From the couch, his wife gave me a fishy stare.
That was the least of my worries. But he took me to the phone and let me use it, so his carp-eyed wife could stare all she liked.
Even through two phone imps, the Long Beach constabulary decurion sounded bored when he answered my call.
Kidnapping, though, is a word to conjure with when you're talking to constables.
"Don't go back into the flat," he told me. "Stand out in front of the building and wait for our units. It won't be long, Mr., uh. Fisher."
I stood out in front of the building. It wasn't long. Two black-and-whites pulled up, red and blue lanterns flashing.
Right behind them were a couple of plainweave carpets that carded plainclothes constables.
Everybody swept up to Judy's flat and started doing constabulary-type things: physical searches, spells, what have you. One of the plainclothesmen grunted when he saw the imploded phone. "Looks like a professional job," he said.
"We aren't likely to come up with anything much."
They hadn't bothered asking me for a statement yet. I said, "This isn't just an isolated case. I can guarantee you that."
"Oh? How?" The plainclothesman sounded-skeptical is the politest way I can put it.
As with the bored decurion at the phone desk, I had the words to rock him. I spoke them, one by one: attempted murder, Thomas Brothers fire. Central Intelligence. "You'd better get hold of Legate Shiro Kawaguchi, up in St. Ferdinand's Valley," I added. "He can fill you in on the details."