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In fact, he’d been planning to go and check on the progress of his assailant for his own investigative purposes. “I need Sam. I need Sam to find out who this bastard is and why he wanted to poke inside my head. A case of Scotch to the man who guesses who he works for too!”

“An evil warlord from some grisly German era?” his butler asked nonchalantly as he brought in fresh towels.

“My God, Charles, do you want to give me a heart attack so early in the morning?” Purdue exclaimed.

“Apologies, sir,” the refined man replied dryly. “But it is past noon, in case you did not know.”

“What?” Purdue whimpered. “Are you serious? What time is it? I left my watch in my bedside drawer.”

“It is ten minutes past two, sir. Shall I bring you something to eat? You’ve slept through four meals. You must be famished,” the butler said with a slight lift in his solemn voice.

“Yes, thank you, Charles. But just toast. Toast with salt butter,” Purdue requested. “And some Bovril.”

“To drink or to spread on the toast, sir?”

Purdue peeked over the screen of the shower, his eyes rolling for the decision. “Um, both.” He turned to rinse his hair just as Charles was about to leave, but the butler had to halt when Purdue continued his wish list. “And a mushroom omelet with chopped peppers, please.”

The butler sighed and waited for more, but only heard Purdue burp under the clatter of the water. “Very well, sir.”

* * *

When the billionaire had finally eaten his fill under the watchful and very concerned eye of his cook and housekeeper, he climbed the stairs up to his study to catch up on the business he’d neglected while at the police station.

“Shall I get the car ready, sir?” the butler asked from the bottom landing. “Or will you not be going to Dundee anymore?”

Purdue stopped at the top of the stairs for a moment, looking down at his butler. “Actually, yes. Yes, thank you, Charles. I think I should go and visit my former therapist just to see if there is any more cheer I can provide,” Purdue said jokingly. “Did Didi bring my financial month-ends this morning?”

“She did, sir. I told her to leave them on your desk,” Charles informed him. “She asked that you sign the documents she’s marked and that, if you shan’t be back by Thursday, you leave them right where she’d left them for you.”

“Marvelous,” Purdue smiled, wringing his hands. “That’ll be all. Thanks, Charles.”

Purdue walked briskly toward the open doors of his study, eager to catch up on important payments and settlements, permits and registration applications for some new patents. He was lenient with his travels and business trips, but never with monetary matters. Purdue liked overseeing payments personally, even though he had Didi working full-time as his personal accountant. She was as meticulous as he, sometimes even strict to a point where he felt as if she employed him, but he still kept an eye on all movements of his money. Didi had left some documents open on his large rosewood desk, marking the places where his signature and initial were needed with colorful, sticky flags.

“Aw, Didi, you are too creative to be an accountant, my darling,” he commented, smirking at the colorful ensemble of markers decorating the normally boring and bland collection of typed and printed papers. One by one he perused the wording to make sure that he knew what he was signing for. On the letters and offers sent from his own office to be checked before being sent out globally, Purdue played editor. Not only was he pedantic about grammar and spelling, but it was also very important to the charismatic explorer and inventor to word his correspondence to reflect his business acumen and his personality.

“Odd…,” he muttered as his elongated fingers lifted the last envelope addressed to him.

“What is it, Mr. Purdue?” his housekeeper asked as she passed. “Everything alright?”

He looked up at her with a perplexed expression and lifted the envelope for her to see at a distance. “Look at this. Orkney Institute of Science,” he said amusedly. “It’s peculiar that I would be receiving a statement from my own clinic in Kirkwall.”

“Probably a mistake. Why would you be billed by your own company?” she scoffed with a silly smile.

The housekeeper, Lily, was relatively new in his service, yet Purdue and Lily often spoke about personal matters as if she were a part of his family. In fact, most of his staff was treated very amicably by David Purdue and he was not afraid to ask for their advice on small, apparently trivial matters. Of his other avenues of expertise, though, they were worthless as far as opinions went. Of those subjects they hardly had any comprehension, let alone valuable input.

Purdue shook his head and opened the invoice. Lily remained in the room, dusting absent-mindedly at the wooden orb-shaped bookends on Purdue’s bookshelf and waiting for the verdict. But he did not respond. Purdue was so quiet while reading the details of the bill from the clinic that Lily was beginning to worry about him. She refrained from interrupting him for her own curiosity only because of his face. Lines sank into his skin at all the wrong places, leaving Purdue with a countenance of shock and sorrow. Then she watched the concern become desperation until his face had become hard again, displaying a form of determination.

“Lily,” Purdue said suddenly, and she jumped to pretend she was busy. “Can you please pack a bag for me? Just some clothing for about…five days away will do. I would do it myself but I…,” he choked inadvertently, “…I, uh, have some things to tie up here quickly.”

“Of course, Mr. Purdue,” she replied in her best professionalism, but her voice was fraught with sympathy for whatever had just punched him. “How soon will you be leaving?”

Turning red at the lids, his moist, light blue eyes pinned her. In the short while that she’d been working for him, she had never seen Purdue lose color like this. “I will be leaving tonight still.”

“Very well, sir,” she answered and slowly exited his study, pressed to look back, but refraining. Her large breasts rocked in her jersey as she pulled a light jog on her tiptoes to make a quick break for the garden, where she was dying to share the news of the boss’s apparently bad news with her colleagues.

Inside the house, Purdue watched her from the window, but he did not care what she was relaying to the others. He did not care that they would worry and guess as to the news on the account sheet. All he cared about was doing something about the illness of Dr. Nina Gould, a carcinogenic illness turned terminal that had been kept secret from him even while he was paying for the treatment of the very disease.

The staff at his Kirkwall clinic had a third degree coming, and then he had to know everything about Nina’s condition before he even thought of contacting her. She was a feisty and independent woman even on a good day, but being contacted by the man she blamed for her malady would send her into either a quiet evacuation or a profuse hatred.

Purdue had not forgotten about his foe in the hospital at Hopkins Memorial in Dundee, but he knew Lieutenant Campbell would notify him as soon as the fake Dr. Helberg woke up. Nina was more important, and her time was running out. So Purdue elected to sort out the well-hidden diagnosis and subsequent therapy of her sickness first.

“I wish he wasn’t having so much trouble all the time,” Lily told Charles. “He’s such a nice bloke and all this bad crap is throwing out his well-being, you know?”

“The best thing is to mind our own business, Lillian,” Charles reprimanded her in his stable firmness. “I’ve been here for years and Mr. Purdue has dealt with some really hair-raising situations and come out of it with tremendous resilience. I suggest you keep to yourself and let the man assert his dominance where need be until he is his old self again.”