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Sam watched the old man’s annoyance take form. He slowly peeked over the frame of his glasses. “Maybe they were upset that something as pointless as the LHC got funding while they were onto something so much bigger.”

Chapter 4

Purdue’s scrutiny was interrupted by the sound of murmuring coming from the main hallway. At the bottom of the stairs, a wheelchair crossed the landing with the stern butler chasing after it with much disgruntlement.

“Madam, please allow me to help,” he insisted, but the woman in the chair would have none of it.

“Healy, I can do this. I’m not dead yet, you know!” she barked in a low, raspy voice that struck Purdue as some German actress from the heyday of cinema or some rock singer from Woodstock. Marlene Dietrich? Marianne Faithful? He smiled.

“Now get some wine as I asked you twenty bloody times already. Please,” she grunted back at the poor butler as she wheeled herself into the drawing room.

“As feisty as ever, I see,” Purdue smiled and approached her, but she waved him away cordially.

“Please, Dave, don’t touch me. The chemo fucked me up something awful the past month. I don’t even know why I bother,” she explained.

Purdue was astonished at her resilience. By what he was told by her assistant she was in the final stages of Grade IV astrocytoma and that she could barely move or speak properly. Dismissing the information as exaggeration Purdue carried on the conversation as if he did not have any knowledge of her condition.

“I understand,” he smiled. “You are a great deal more threatening than I imagined I would find you.” Purdue glanced to the snobbish butler who stood in the door like a mannequin, holding a bottle of Dom Perignon.

“Ha!” she cried in amusement. “Healy is ex-SIS, I’ll have you know, so he is not always such a gentle old pup…” she flung her head back to address the butler, “…hey, Healy?”

He merely nodded.

“Come, pour us some of that, will you?” she requested, while pulling a long slender cigarillo from her antique cigarette case. Purdue’s eyes were glued to the artifact. It was sterling silver, hand crafted and definitely second hand. A symbol the shape of a backwards ‘N’ adorned the centre with a downward line vertically through it. While she placed it on the small lamp table he read the inscription beneath.

‘Das Reich’

Lydia was skinnier than he recalled, which was to be expected of the illness, but the other properties of her behavior with remarkably peculiar. She spoke with precision in perfectly formed words, delivering cogent arguments with the butler. There was no sign, other than the visual, that she was even sick.

But how she appeared was quite another story. In typical fashion expected of the frail suffering cancer and its painful treatment, she wore a turban-like scarf around her balding head to cover the feathery remnants on her scalp. Her once ample lips were now deflated and contorted in wrinkles of agony she must have suffered thus far and her breasts had disappeared almost completely. But those huge blue eyes under the dainty brow, falling slightly back into large eyelids were still unmistakable. Purdue remembered how deeply in love he was with her before she married Professor Graham Jenner in her late twenties and left him nursing several bottles of brandy and a broken heart.

“You fancy it, don’t you?” she winked.

Embarrassed momentarily by her apparent reading of his mind, Purdue snapped out of his nostalgia, “I fancy what, dear Lydia?” His profuse blinking betrayed his discomfort at being discovered swooning over his old feelings for her. Lydia laughed heartily. With her aged, but still elegant finger she pointed to the silver cigarette holder. “You have a penchant for German war relics, do you not? I read about that somewhere. I think in a book or article by that sexy journalist, Sam Cleave.”

‘Sexy? Sam?’ Purdue shouted in his mind. ‘Hardly.’

“Oh?” he replied. “He said that, did he?”

“Did you not read his book? I know it covered mostly his memoirs about exposing Whitsun’s arms ring and the death of his fiancé and all that, but he mentioned that he was involved in the recovery of German World War II artifacts and religious relics with renowned explorer and inventor, David Purdue. Christ, Dave, the man is apparently one of your friends and you did not even bother to read his book?”

“I haven’t had time,” Purdue stuttered, aiming for the bottom of his glass. “Besides, I am not here to talk about Sam Cleave. I came to catch up with you, my dearest. Go on, tell me what you have been up to.”

“Apart from hosting a war between God and a disease? Not much, really,” she said serenely, blowing out a straight stream of smoke.

“Madam, with respect, you should not be smoking,” Healy reminded her, offering an ashtray for her to relinquish her cigarillo.

“With respect, Healy, fuck off,” she chuckled crudely, almost malicious in her way. He looked briefly toward Purdue as if to ask for his help, and retired to the lobby to collect the dying bouquet for discarding. “Dave, take the cigarette case, darling. Soon I’ll have no use for it anymore.”

“So, you are quitting smoking,” he smiled and took the item in his hand to run his fingers over the etching.

“No, I’m quitting living, you idiot,” she bristled suddenly.

Purdue looked up at her in earnest and she quickly realized what she had done. Her tone had been utterly inappropriate, she knew. Contrite, she lowered her face, “I apologize. I really am sorry, Dave. It’s just, so unfair what has happened to me. First I am left a widow and then this, you know. I am… oh Christ, I’m so sorry…”

“No need to excuse your words, Lydia,” he said, almost placing his hand on her knee before remembering the sore skin she warned about. “It is natural to be angry.”

“I am angry. I’m fucking furious, Purdue. And do you know why?” she said, abruptly lowering her voice.

“No?” he replied, truly intrigued. “Why?”

He knew Lydia Jenner all too well. She was always up to something, no matter what her situation. She was a hustler, a shaker, an inventor and genius who lived life only for one purpose — to seek. Incredulous to anything she could not substantiate with science, she always sought to discover the secrets of the universe or at least the possibilities of its arcane functions.

“Because I have stumbled upon something that works, my friend,” she rasped in something between a whisper and a vulgar cackle. “Something that they theorize, all of them, while I actually attained the practical working of it! Sounds like witchcraft, doesn’t it?” Her beauteous eyes addressed him with powerful terror, a sensation Purdue had only felt once before when he was in the presence of a Peruvian art dealer who was possessed by some sort of demon, some sort of psychological mishap that drove him mad.

“It does sound like witchcraft,” he agreed inadvertently. “But do tell me more, dearest.” Purdue did his best to hide his uncertainty by maintaining his flirtatious way she knew well from their days at Birmingham. It would keep her fooled long enough to share her madness with him, he reckoned.

She smiled satisfactorily and giggled. It was not a sweet sound at all, but rather a disturbing outlet of wisdom at a price, he thought. And it was. Lydia wanted something more than Purdue’s company.

“Do you know where I got that cigarette case you like — you covet — so much?” she whispered with a malignant tone. “I got it from SS-Sturmbannführer Helmut Kämpfe himself, reportedly killed while in the custody of the French Resistance on 10 June 1944, or something. Stole Tesla’s death ray notes from him, as well as this very cigarette case, right after I fucked his brains out.”