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I called the CBI. Saul Klein had gone home, but the fellow who answered the phone knew what was going on with the case. I asked him, "Can you send someone down to try to trace the call? Your Mistress Chang managed to do it earlier today."

"Well, why not?" the CBI man said after he thought it over. "Don't hurt to try." He read me back my home address to make sure he had it right, then said, "We'll have someone there in half an hour or so."

It was more like forty-five minutes, but that didn't surprise me. I drive St. James' Freeway every day; I know how things can be down there. When the rap on the door came, I opened it with my left hand. My right hand was holding the blasting rod; after what had happened to Judy, I wasn't taking any chances.

The weedy little fellow outside gave back a pace when he saw I was carrying a rod, which meant he almost went ass over teakettle down the stairs. He rallied fast, though.

"Can't say as I blame you, six," he said, and flashed a CBI sigil that said he was an intermediate thaumaturgic analyst - by which I learned the CBI has silly job tides, too - named Horace Smidley. I lowered the rod right away. He might not have looked like the light-and-magic show version of a CBI man, but he sure did look like a Horace Smidley.

I led him to the phone. He went through the same tracing ritual Celia Chang had used earlier in the day back at the office. He wasn't as smooth as she had been - he was only an intermediate thaumaturgic analyst after all - but he got the job done. The quasi-mouth that formed Ehgors seal spoke its series of digits, then fell sflent once more.

That's the same number they used when they called before," I said.

"Is it? Careless of them." Smidley made a ducking noise in the back of his throat; I got the idea that he disapproved of carelessness no matter who perpetrated it, even if it made catching the bad guys easier. He went on. "I'll take the information back with me."

"What do you think it means?" I asked. "Are they holding Judy somewhere dose to there and using that phone because it's convenient to them?"

That is most probable," he said; he and Michael Manstein would have got on well together. The other possibility is that they are deliberately transporting her a long distance to mislead us. Possible, as I say, but risky: any accident or flying violation that a constable happens to observe destroys what up to now has appeared a well-organized scheme."

Again, you could tell he liked organization, no matter who was using it or for what purpose. I worry about people like that; the Leader of Alemania had had a lot of them behind him. Horace Smidley, though, was on my side, for which I was duly grateful. I thanked him for taking the trouble to come down at night "My pleasure," he said, and then, to my mind, weakened the answer by adding, "And my duty." He headed down the stairs - intentionally this time - and then, I presume, on back to Westwood.

Me? I shut the door after him, brushed my teeth, and went to bed. I don't remember another thing until the alarm clock scared me awake the next morning.

It was going to be a hot one. I could tell as soon as I got out of bed. Even after a long night's sleep, I still felt tired, but out my bedroom window I saw that the wind stirring tile eucalyptus tree next door was some from out of the northeast what they call St. Ann's wind. That always strikes me as rude, or don't you think naming a wind after the Virgin's mother implies she talked too much?

The wind swirled hard enough to shake my carpet as I headed for the freeway. When I flew past a vacant lot, I watched the dust devils spinning tumbleweeds around and tossing them up into the sky. There are more dust devils these days than there used to be; I've always said cutting the budget for meteorological exorcists was a mistake. One day the devils will join forces and blow down a building or three, and fixing things will end up costing a lot more than we're saving now.

But what politician looks to the future? I wondered why I was bothering myself, come to that. If the Third Sorcerous War broke out, dust devils would be the least of my - and everyone else's - worries.

Michael was waiting for me in the parking lot. "Have you received any news?" he asked as I walked up to his carpet. "They made Judy call me last night," I said, nodding.

"Whoever they are, they want us to stop investigating anything that has anything to do with the Devonshire dump - or else."

Michael gave me a curious look. "Yet you are still here."

He turned on to Wilshire to get to St. James' Freeway for the trip up into the Valley.

"Yeah, I'm still here," I said. "I don't believe stopping would really make them turn Judy loose. And besides… the deeper we get into this case, the more important it looks."

God, help me, I was starting to think like Henry Legion. Saving the world, not just one person, looked bigger all the time.

We got off the Venture Freeway at Winnetka and headed north, Michael flying, me navigating. It was a mixed kind of neighborhood, first a business block, then a row of homes, then some more businesses. Once we flew past what looked half like a school, half like a farm. I glanced down at my map.

"That's the Ceres Institute of St. Ferdinand's Valley." In spite of everything, I laughed. "Angels City is an ecumenical place."

"Another artificial cult," Michael said; his business is keeping up with such things. They say the goddess really does improve agricultural productivity."

"I wonder how much maintaining her cult adds to the price of produce, though." Cost-benefit analysis again. You can't get away from it in our society: it was the same kind of thing I was doing to see whether the Chumash Powers would be worth preserving if they did still happen to exist That reminded me I'd have to call Professor Blank one of these days and see what more he'd harassed his graduate students into finding out "We should be getting dose," Michael said.

"We are," I answered, after a check of where we were.

The next major cross street is Nordhoff. You'll want to turn left there. Mason is the next fair-sized street that will cross it, about half a mile west of Wimietka."

"Very good." Michael swung into the leftmost flight lane at Winnetka and Nordhoff. We had to wait for all the southbound carpets to go past before we could turn, though.

Strange how rules of the road that were codified for horses in Europe long before anyone outside the Middle East was flying carpets still govern the way we handle traffic. Sorcery, of course, maintains anything old and curious because being old and curious makes it powerful in and of itself. I'd never thought of traffic rules falling into that category, though.

The north side of Nordhoff was a light industrial park, with one big rectangular box of a building following another.

The south side was mostly houses, though the comer with Mason boasted a liquor store, a Golden Steeples that probably did a land-office business from all the working types across the street, and also a Spells 'R' Us.

Chocolate Weasel was in the industrial park, a couple of buildings past Mason. Michael let his carpet down in an open space near the front door. As I undid my safely belt and stood up, I noticed that a lot of the carpets in the lot were old and threadbare. People didn't work here to get rich, that was obvious.

Michael picked up his little black bag. We walked over to the entrance side by side. The first thing that hit me when we went inside was the music. There were minisingers involved in the case after all - I'd have to tell Saul Klein. But they weren't playing lieder - oh my, no. The inside of Chocolate Weasel sounded like an Aztedan bar in East A.C. - or maybe like one down in Tenochtitlan - both in style of music and in volume. I must confess I winced.