Costa stared at him as if assessing the level of inebriation Don was suffering at the moment.
“Aye, Dr. Graham, this man was involved with turning people into stone. But not just any people,” she said secretively, arresting the curiosity of the men. “The SS who were in charge of Auschwitz had received orders from as high up as Himmler himself to take corpses from the gas chambers to experiment on. Now, here is the missing piece, the thing I think we have been searching for and did not have a name for it.”
“I am holding my breath here, Nina,” Purdue pressed. Costa nodded, already knowing what she was going to reveal; having known all along.
“They used a relic discovered in Greece during the Axis Invasion or Operation Marita, aptly called the Medusa Stone,” she smiled, her dark eyes alight with exhilaration.
Purdue slammed his hands together and chuckled. He looked at the others, but found Costa indifferent and Don asleep. “Well, excuse me while I find this utterly fascinating,” he said dryly, slightly disappointed. “Costa? You have no enthusiasm for this?”
Costa’s face suddenly became animate and he answered more lively, “No, of course I am absolutely intrigued, David! It is just so…” he winced a little, “…flashy. So American, hype… I don’t know how to say. It just sounds like bullshit to me. The science you and Dr. Graham discovered in the lab — that was not some fairy tale of mythology. Medusa Stone…” he shrugged.
“That is what they call it here — verbatim!” Nina moaned, wildly lashing about the papers in her raised hand.
“I know, Nina. I know,” he snickered. “It just sounds silly to me.”
Purdue was amused by it all, especially the way that Costa could rile Nina up in the same way that Sam used to. “Alright, Dr. Gould, tell us what else is he wrote there. Give us details.”
Nina narrowed her eyes lightly at Costa, shunning his unsupportive attitude, but he sank his head in respect and gestured for her to continue. Don snored away in the background as Nina filled the others in on the rest of the information.
“Look, I take it this guy was an SS officer by the name of Franz Böhme. While we waited for Costa, I ran a check on who he was on my laptop. Sorry it took so long,” she sighed, “the internet runs on abacus binary here, it seems.”
“I know. That is why satellite is so much better… and so is home-made tech,” Purdue bragged with a smirk.
“How wonderful for you,” she cooed sarcastically, smiling. She opened the saved page on her computer and scanned through it. “Anyway, Franz was involved in the invasions of Poland in 1939. He also commanded forces invading France in 1940, right? Now, listen to this. As commanding General and Commander of Serbia, Böhme ordered the retaliatory executions of about 2,000 Jews in Topola, Serbia after 22 soldiers of the 421 Korps-Nachrichten-Abteilung were attacked.”
“What a surprise! Another bloody drunk fuckwit,” Purdue acknowledged mock-courteously.
“Trust me, David, bloodthirsty pricks with power issues are not exclusive to the Nazi party or their affiliates,” Costa said casually. Purdue agreed.
“In 1945 he was Commander-in-Chief of the 20th Mountain Army too, as well as one of the commanders of the units from the German 12th Army — the XVIII Mountain Corps during Operation Marita,” she reported. Nina looked up with one eyebrow raised. “That places Böhme in Greece during the Axis invasion and here in Eastern Europe after!”
“So he could have brought the Medusa stone to Auschwitz during his stint in Poland,” Purdue speculated.
“Just what I thought too,” Costa affirmed. “That’s background on the man you found the papers on, but what do the actual papers say, Nina?”
She replaced her laptop and took up the pages she translated again. “This is a more detailed daily account of the fucking atrocious measures these animals went to at several of the satellite camps under Auschwitz command.”
“Medical experiments?” Costa asked. “You know, I don’t have the stomach for torture. Never liked hearing what Nazi’s did to their prisoners.”
“Not just medical. Apparently the Medusa stone was to be used in conjunction with two others to attain immortality, to make the wielder impervious to destruction by giving them the properties of stone,” Nina winced. “That is a bit far-fetched, no?”
“God knows anything is possible these days with the right technology paired up with physics, Nina. You and I both know this,” Purdue reminded her. “I bet there is just some element or a set of scientific laws we have not yet discovered that may very well make such things possible.”
“I agree,” Costa nodded. “Look, I know art and mythology, but from what I know about science, I am sure on a molecular level some applications of chemistry or alchemic practices could well maybe change a human’s biological composition. Why not flesh to stone?” he shrugged.
“Precisely, Professor Megalos!” Purdue cheered. “I could not have explained it better! That is what I have always firmly believed. With the correct atmospheric conditions and equations, we can create and destroy entire worlds, had we the knowledge.”
“That is delightfully perceptive, gentlemen,” Nina said, “But let us not get ahead of ourselves before we know more.”
“You’re right, Nina,” Purdue concurred. “Go on. Where did he use the Medusa stone?”
“It says here that at first, in 1941, when he first brought it back from the mountains of Greece — he does not say which or where exactly — he was planning to give it to Field Marshal Wilhelm List as a gift. List was his superior and they took part in the campaign in Greece together,” Nina read from her notes. “But it does not say anything more about the stone’s location other than that it was used in experiments at Auschwitz.”
“It must!” Costa frowned. “Why on earth would he die like that, keeping record of what happened concerning the Medusa and not leave any tangible clues?” Costa jumped up and reached for Nina’s notes. Realizing that he may have come on a bit stronger than he should have he added, “Perhaps I can find a clue in the words that he might have hidden, as a phrase or cipher?”
Purdue thought it a good idea. “Go ahead.”
Nina reluctantly relinquished her papers, looking a bit displeased at Purdue’s permission. Costa took the pages she had written out and scanned the horrific accounts, ignoring the heinous details for any clue on the location of the stone he had to have.
The morning light was bright, even with the sun smothered by more coming rain. It was their off day, so the adverse weather did not bother them.
“Can I make you a cup of coffee, Nina? I am in dire need of more caffeine,” Purdue asked, trying to appease the unhappy historian. She just nodded in response. “Costa? Coffee?”
“Thank you, David,” Costa muttered as his serious face expressed his focus on the task at hand. He could see Nina was peeved. “I might not even find anything useful, but with my knowledge of ancient Greek art and mythology there might be something our astute historian could have missed.” Costa’s tone was polite and charming, but Nina showed no favorable reaction. Instead, she joined Purdue at the table where the kettle’s soothing sound dampened Don’s incessant snoring slightly.
“Apparently when Franz Böhme first gave List the stone in the officers’ banquet room, List was amused by the shape of the stone and used it as a monocle to look at the attractive young cook who served their lunch,” Nina recounted what she remembered from the notes, uncaring what Costa was doing. She held her mug for Purdue to fill with the boiled water. “Guess what happened.”
“He turned to stone?” Costa guessed without looking up.
“Aye,” she said evenly. Facing Purdue while he stirred her beverage, she dropped a very interesting fact on top of that. “Now guess who that young man turned out to be?”