“Aye,” she replied, taking a sip of bottled water. “Are you talking about the soda ash?”
“I am, but not just that. Natron and Trona. Carbonic acid, I see. There is also other traces of sediment I cannot seem to identify, do you?” he asked Nina.
She shook her head with a mouthful of water.
“This reminds me much of the central African lake that turns animals to stone, Nina. I am not too sure, but from what I remember, it was in Tanzania?”
Nina looked on since Purdue had already noticed the presence of calcification agents that she detected at first. “You know, I am not a geologist, but I know the basics. I agree that these men’s bodies were subjected to chemical calcification of some sorts, but they are just too lifelike or robust to have been mummified,” she presented. “But there are other particles here that I don’t know.”
“Hang on,” Purdue frowned as he inspected the chemicals more carefully. “This, I believe is limestone. And this one, oddly, is bronze.”
“You are not as uninformed as you seem to believe, Mr. Purdue,” Don smiled from the doorway. “My guys said you have the results. May I have a gander?”
Nina smiled warmly at the roughshod, but intelligent archeologist.
“You may, Dr. Graham,” Purdue said ceremoniously, gracefully stepping aside for his friend to help. “Just keep it simple. Dr. Gould and I are rooted in other sciences.”
Don gave Nina a suave wink to which she chuckled. She enjoyed his laid-back manner and his absolute disregard for seriousness or rules. That was precisely the manner of someone she had once known. Sam’s reckless abandon and his challenging methods to defy the rules was one of his best-known qualities.
For once, Donovan Graham’s face took on a serious look. He was focusing on the parts he ran his thick, calloused thumb over as he mentally scrolled down the long piece of paper. Finally, he lolled his head to the side and sighed, seeming both confounded and impressed.
“What is it?” Nina asked, almost standing on her toes to urge him.
“Fuck me!” he said quietly. “This is an ancient piece, Purdue! I mean, really old. I would easily pin these old boys in pre-Classical times, circa two, 3000 BC, give or take.”
“That is before their antique texts were even written,” Nina mentioned, to which Purdue swung to face her with an amazed stare.
“That’s right, pretty lady,” Don affirmed. “These men… Jesus, I cannot believe I am actually saying this… but these men probably lived in the eras of Greek Mythology, before the Classical Era.”
Purdue hardly ever looked flabbergasted, but this time, there was no doubt that he was stunned by the revelation. He ran his elongated fingers through his hair, wanting to smile, but trying to be professional. “What about the other piece, do you think?”
“He is broken. Let me take him,” Don teased. Nina burst out laughing.
“Oh, really?” Purdue smiled. “You would have to fight Heidmann for him.”
“Consider it won, then. He has no use for a broken statue anyway,” Don persisted playfully. “He has two more.”
“Oh!” Purdue exclaimed. “That reminds me. Nina, as soon as Dr. Graham’s people are refreshed, we need to throw the Son of Zyklon-B relic on the slab. Use the refractometer as well, I think.”
“Good idea,” Don agreed. “This piece has traces of bronze, like you said, Dave. I believe it was to maintain its form better, but it could have been added a few centuries later only.” He read some more, mentioning things he recognized. “Loam, clay….you know, based on the type of limestone and hints of marble, these blokes must have lived in Crete or the highland areas of Greece. Maybe they were brothers.”
As they ascended the stairs to where Heidmann and Costa were having a drink, Purdue and Nina kept discussing the analysis as a matter of interest. Nina was filled with wonder. “Imagine just for a second, that these bodies we are now touching possibly lived in the time of Aphrodite and Zeus…”
“Respectfully, Dr. Gould,” Costa intervened casually, “those so-called gods did not exist in the material world. They were merely the hidden qualities of human nature, I assure you.”
Nina felt insulted, having her hypothetical fantasy so unceremoniously debunked.
“And you know this because you were there, in Bumfuck, B.C.?” she snapped with her customary raised eyebrow. It was her facial expression for starting a fight. “Most gods were indeed real people, from my experience in studying ancient history and anthropology. Most of them were kings and general, immortalized by their people as gods for their heroic conquests.”
“Many of them were,” he conceded calmly. “But those you mentioned… no.”
“And what would irrefutably substantiate that argument?” she asked Costa.
“Because I am Greek and you are not my dear,” he replied casually. “I am an expert in Greek history and the pantheon thereof while you lean all the way back to last centuries German atrocities. That should be substantiation enough.”
Nina’s brow darkened as her chest heaved. Purdue knew her intimately, and this was the moment where intervention would be of utmost importance to prevent a shit storm on his expedition.
“Nina, I have something for you. Come,” he smiled, placing his arm gently around her shoulders and pulling her away. As they disappeared into the hallway leading to the kitchen, Don and Heidmann stared at the cool mannered Greek Art professor. He shrugged at them.
“I don’t know that lady very well, Zorba, but I would suggest not fucking with her,” Don remarked. “I need a Guinness.”
Heidmann shook his head as he walked past Costa. “I wish I had your courage, my friend.” Costa’s culture prevented him from completely understanding what he had done wrong. He was raised to speak his mind and do it without reservation. The pretty historian’s reaction to his uttering was in his opinion, overly sensitive. Since he was a man of propriety, he knew he would soon have to apologize for offending her, even just to keep the peace. Yet, he did not consider himself wrong in setting her straight about things he knew better about.
In the evening, the group convened to discuss the findings of Dr. Graham’s team. Nina had not forgotten Costa’s snide dismissal of her opinion. After all, it was the prerogative of women to hold a grudge in Western civilization, according to most men of the same breed. It was a sad truth, but not one that fazed Costa Megalos at all. While Don took the turn to explain the genuine antiquity of the Klónos² relic, Costa constantly looked over at Nina, not to annoy her, but to establish contact whereby he could determine how susceptible she would be to a conversation.
She, however, maintained her very own stone face, refusing to afford him a moment’s attention. James Heidmann’s face lit up when the previously discussed analysis of the Klónos² came to light. Purdue affirmed what Heidmann had always suspected — his collection contained something priceless that could fetch him not only glory but immeasurable wealth.
“So, with the Son of Zyklon-B, we found what we suspected,” Don lectured, holding the data print-out in his massive hands for reference. “The age of his composition dates to around the 1940’s, relatively juvenile compared to the other piece.”
“Pretty much everything is juvenile compared to Klónos²,” Heidmann remarked out loud, evoking a hum of amusement among the others, nodding in agreement with him.
“But the irony is that there is not a single molecule of Cyclone B on this old boy here,” Don smiled. “However, the name does imply that he was supposed to be subjected to the gas, that… maybe that he is ‘the son’ of the gas, meaning he was turned to stone after he was killed in the gas chambers. Of that, we are not sure, but Nina is going to examine whatever we find near Ostrava to determine if there was any correlation between that warehouse and the Nazi concentration camps.”