"Whose sorcerers tools do you use, Michael?"
He finished the circle before he answered; one thing at a time with Michael Manstein. "I order them from Bakhtiar's," he said at last. "They've always given me good results."
Back before the Industrial Revolution, a wizard had to be his own smith, his own woodworker, his own tanner. If he didn't make his instruments himself - sometimes right down to refining the ore from which a metal would be drawn - they wouldn't be property attuned to him and would give weak results or none at all.
Modem technology has changed aH that Correct application of the law of contagion allows thaumaturgical tools to keep the mystic links to their original manufacturer even when someone else uses them, while the law of similarity permits their attunement to any wizard because of his likeness to the mage who made them. Some firms take one approach, some the other, some seek to combine the two.
Michael asked, "Why do you want to know that?"
"Because I thought you used Bakhtiar's tools," I answered,
"and because Bakhtiar's may be somehow connected to the jar of potion I just gave you. What I know is that Bakhtiar's dumps at Devonshire, and there may be an involvement between the Devonshire dump case and this stuff. Its a circumstantial link if its there at all, but I figured you ought to know about it"
"You're right Thank you," Manstein said. "I have a spare set my father brought with him when he came here from Alemania after tile First Sorcerous War. I'U use that to make sure there's no conflict ofsorcerous interest"
"Makes sense," I said. "And Michael-"
"Yes?"
"Be careful ofwhats in that jar. I have the bad feeling it's really vicious."
Tin always careful," Manstein said.
The phone yelled at me. I felt like yelling right back. I'd spend most of Ae morning trying to put together a panel to investigate the thecological status of the Chumash Indian Powers, and I wasn't having much luck. Half the people I'd talked to seemed convinced in advance that the Powers were extinct and good riddance to them. If you listened to the other half, you'd move eight million people out of the Barony of Angels so the Powers could have free rein as they did in the days when the Chumash lived here.
"David Fisher, Environmental Perfection Agency."
It wasn't any of the thecologists, for which I thanked God. It was Michael Manstein. He said, could you come down to the laboratory, please? I'd like to discuss the specimen you brought me for analysis."
"Okay, if you want me to." As soon as I'd heard his voice, I'd picked up a leadstick and a pad of foolscap. "But can't you just tell me what's in it over the phone?"
"I'd really rather not," he said. Judging somebody's tone on the phone is always risky, and Michael wouldn't be anything but mild and serious even if Ae world started coming to an end around him. But I didn't dunk he sounded cheerful.
Some new safety symbols were up around the lab, but I didn't pay them any particular attention. Like any wizard worth his lab robe, Manstein was always fiddling with his protective setup. Technology changes all the time; if you don't keep up, it's your soul you're risking. Michael Manstein wasn't a man to take risks he could avoid.
"What do you have for me?" I asked as I came through the door. He'd arranged more amulets inside the lab, too; a lot of them featured the feadiered serpent. I made the connection. 'Is it as bad as that?"
He stared at me. His eyes had a slighdy unfocused look I'd never seen in them before, as if he'd gone fishing for minnows and hooked the Midgard Serpent. On his lab table stood the ex-tartar-sauce jar I'd given him. Around it was scribed a sevenfold circle. Let me put it like dris: they only protect the intercontinental megasalamander launch sites with eight. It wasn't "as bad as that," it was worse.
He said, "David, I have been a practicing thaumaturge for twenty-seven years now." Utterly characteristic of him to be exact; had it been me, I'd've said somedring like going on thirty. He went on, "In that entire period, I do not believe I have ever seen an abomination oftilis magnitude."
"Enough to cause apsychia in a fetus?" I asked.
"I'm surprised it didn't desoul the mother," he answered.
From anyone else, that would have been exaggeration for conversational effect. Michael doesn't talk that way He handed me a sheet of parchment. "Here are the preliminary results of the analysis." • My eyes swept down the list. For a few seconds, they didn't believe what they were seeing, just as at first you refuse to draw meaning from pictures of camp survivors - and camp victims - of the Second Sorcerous War. Some horrors are too big to take in all at once.
I went back for a second look. The words, curse them, did not change. I made my mouth utter them: "Human blood, Michael? Flayed human skin? Are you sure your techniques distinguish between the substitute and the real thing?
Maybe it was a substitute made through contagion rather than similarity?" That would be bad enough, but - I was grasping at straws and I knew it.
But Manstein shook his head. "Probability zero, I'm afraid. I hoped the same thing, but I didn't just use sorcerous tests: I also employed mechanical forensic analysis. There can be no doubt of the actual human component of this elixir."
I gulped. What he'd just told me meant that Lupe Cordero, a very nice girl, was also an unwitting cannibal. I wondered how anybody was supposed to break that to her.
Poor kid - all she'd wanted to do was keep her breakfast down. As if she didn't have troubles enough.
I looked at the diaumaturgical column on the parchment.
Most of it was innocuous, even beneficiaclass="underline" Manstein had found invocations of the Virgin, the Son (I remembered the name of Lupe's son), several saints from Aztecia, a couple of minor demons related (his neatly printed note said) to childbirth. But there in the middle of them, standing out like a dragon in a fairy ring: "Huitzilopochdi," I said.
"Yes." Michael's understated agreement held a world of meaning.
Why, I wondered, couldn't the Aztedan war god have been teetering on the edge of extinction? No one, not even the sort of people who march to save Medvamps, would have shed a tear to see him leave the Other Side for wherever gods go when they the. His influence on This Side has always been baleful, his power fueled by hearts ripped from human victims.
What maniac, I wondered, had imagined he should be summoned to strengdien a potion that exalted life, not gore?
But I knew the answer to that: Cuauhtemoc Hemandez. I must have said the name out loud, for one of Michael Manstein's butter-colored eyebrows rose an eighth of an inch or so. "The wrandero who made this stuff," I explained.
"Ah," Michael said. The eyebrow went down.
"Have you called the constabulary about this yet?" I asked.
"No; I thought it appropriate that you be the first to know."
"Thanks." I added, "Thanks twice, in fact I don't think I'll eat any lunch today, so my waistline thanks you, too."
"Heh, heh," he said, just like that I'm afraid he reaHy is as straitiaced as that makes him sound.
"We're going to be involved in nailing this cwandero along with the constables," I said. "I don't remember the last time anything so nasty got loose in the environment, and God only knows how many jars are still sitting on shelves in the nostrums cabinet or next to the sink. If we're real lucky, Hemandez will have kept records on the women he's sold it to so he can try and poison them again with something else.
Odds are, though, we'll have to spread the word through the dailies and the churches."
"Hemandez may not even be totally responsible," Manstein said.
"How's that?" I asked indignantly.
The tests I performed seem to me to indicate that the mfld beneficial influences in the potion were overiain on top of the already present summoning of Huitzilopochtii," he answered. The cwandero may not have been aware that the latter was present."