Louisa grinned. “Sure!”
Herman shifted uncomfortably in front of Sam’s lens. He was a reserved man who did not enjoy cameras, but deep inside him there was a tiny inkling that his voice would be immortalized, and that sat well with him. On his head, he wore a cowboy hat much like Sully’s. Unlike Sully, though, Herman was of slight build. From under his hat his wild frizzy hair made him look like a 1960s rock star, whereas Sully’s robust build and grey braid gave him the appearance of a Cherokee chief from a modern Hollywood film.
“The so-called Lost City is a legend that came from when my grandparents came to New Zealand from Samoa in the late 1800’s. People who hear this legend think it is something from Jungle Book or something, with treasures of gold and silver…” Sully explained, while his friend smiled coyly as he enjoyed the misinformation they were debunking.
“But it is not like that,” Herman added. “It is not about the gold that lies under these mountains. The settlers thought what they always do.” He made a shrill voice to impersonate those he was referring to. “Oh, there is gold to be plundered. Let’s ignore all warnings and rape all the sacred ground to make ourselves rich. Well, at Nekenhalle they got their comeuppance, not once, not twice, but continuously.”
“The Lost City is said to be the home of the Cosmic Snake, you know, the one that will destroy the earth at the end of days. There are many such beliefs in different cultures, of course, but the markers tell us that it is here at Nekenhalle,” Sully explained. “Why do you think the place is called Nekenhalle?”
“I was actually still going to ask about that,” Sam acknowledged. “The etymology is a bit unclear.”
“When Germany occupied Western Samoa in the 1800’s, some Samoa-born Germans came to New Zealand during the migration,” Sully elucidated. “Nekenhalle belonged to one of those families, a Prussian family called Wilhelm, my grandma told me. The Wilhelm’s were the first men to disappear looking for gold under those hills, mate.”
“My turn,” the more jovial Herman told his friend. “They named the farm Nekenhalle, because ‘neke’ is Maori for ‘snake’.”
“Hall of Snakes,” Nina announced. “That’s what the name means.”
“Christ,” Eddie Olden grunted. “How did our colleagues here not know this, Louisa?”
She shrugged, “Maybe they knew, Ed. Maybe this is New Zealand’s best kept secret. It would make sense, you know, to protect the place from a gold rush?”
“Good point!” Nina gasped. “Like guardians, guardians of the Lost City.”
“Fuck me,” Sam muttered in awe. Sally looked terrified, even upset. She collected some glasses and went for the kitchen, while her husband stared into space. “It makes perfect sense. Keep the secret of snakes, and make it look like mining accidents when someone goes snooping,” Sam said, putting it all together.
The two elders looked satisfied with his presumption.
“And that is what is poisoning the livestock,” Louisa concluded, looking at Eddie with horror in her eyes. “We have to get a specimen, Eddie.”
“God no!” Cecil cried in protest.
“Crikey, Lou, if you are serious, you are certifiable. For Christ’s sake, don’t expect me to accompany you!” he shrieked in revolt. “In fact, I will be happy to consider this case closed and keep this little secret myself! There is no goddamn way I am going to go up there and harvest another bloody predator to infest Australia with, love! And if you have any regard for the indigenous wildlife back home you will know better than to take one of those demons back!”
“That is the right word, mate,” Herman told Eddie. “See, these things aren’t normal serpents. That bloke over there said they were Anacondas, but tell me, Dr. Veterinarian,” he beseeched, addressing Cecil, “how many venomous Anacondas do you know of?”
Cecil gulped. It was a horrifying notion. “None. They are essentially boa constrictors.”
“Not these, mate,” Herman said, looking amused. Purdue watched Herman intently, sharpening his pale blue eyes on the native elder from his chair at the end of the table. From behind his hand he spoke, leaning to his right in a relaxed posture. “You almost sound like you admire these creatures.”
The old Maori pinned Purdue with his glare and replied, “Tell me you do not find some admiration in terrible gods, my friend. There is something about the cruel and powerful beasts of this earth that reminds us of our insignificance and I think we need that kind of humility thrust on us every now and then, don’t you?”
Purdue nodded. “There is much weight in that attitude, my good man. Much.”
“Good to see a man not blinded by money,” Eddie remarked. His statement amazed Purdue and his friends. It was an unexpected affirmation coming from someone who vilified the billionaire for so long, but it was welcome. Eddie lifted his glass to Purdue, who returned the gesture, and the two former rivals exchanged smiles.
“This bit of exposition was very helpful, gentlemen,” Sam said, “but I’ll have you know, by tomorrow I hope you both have a good laugh at our gullibility and admit that you played a joke on us.”
“I agree, Sam,” Nina sighed, finishing her beer, “because if this shit is real, I did not bring enough underwear or alcohol to deal with it.”
“I hate to break it to you, love,” Sully told Nina, “but you are about to be sorely disappointed.”
“What kind of weapons will we need for the search tomorrow?” Eddie asked the elders. They looked at one another, seeming quite worried themselves. Herman tilted his head and shrugged, “Wish I knew, mate, wish I knew. We have never seen these things ourselves. We just heard all the stories from our dads and mums, grandparents, and so on.”
“But from what Dr. Harding said he found in the animals,” Sully joined in, “these things are real. Poison and crushed bones, as well as moving rapidly through the grass…”
“And the house!” Herman reminded him. “The cops said they chased assailants they could not see, that moved too fast, right?”
“Right!” Sully nodded.
“I’d say the young Mr. Harding over there is due a year’s beers, mate,” Eddie smiled at Gary.
“Can’t say this is a bet I am glad to have won,” the young man admitted. “I was hoping that what I saw was just two blokes moving fast. Knowing that they could have been something we have never had to worry about just gives me the creeps, honestly. Now I am sure my father’s is dead. I heard him scream. Now I know why. My dad was terrified of snakes, even the small, harmless ones.”
“That’s true. We could not even watch snake movies with him when we were ankle-biters,” Cecil agreed with his brother. His smile of reminiscence waned when another thought came up. He looked at Gary. “You said they screamed, these things?”
“Well, sort of. They shrieked, screeched like those spiders in the horror films, you know,” he told Cecil.
“Christ,” Nina said. “I wonder, since we are on the understanding that they are already hybrids, if they could be more of just a mix of two serpent species. After all, what they supposedly are already, could very well be just part of the mix.” She looked at Herman and Sully. “Gentlemen, do you have any idea where they come from? Have they always been here, just subterranean?” She quickly cast a look to Sam and Purdue. “Or were they brought here from somewhere else, perhaps?”
Herman cleared his throat, puffing on his pipe in between sentences. “All we know is what we heard, according to very old legends. But, you know, legends are usually exaggerations of the truth. They could have come here with settlers, tourists, who knows.”