by P. W. Child
Chantal was so terribly cold, her skin burnt like frostbite under her thick layers of clothing. She tapped her boots on the carpet to increase the flow to her feet, but they remained frigid and pained inside her shoes.
A deep breath later, she made her decision. Chantal rose from the chair and took a poker from the fireplace. The wind grew louder, the only serenade to the lonely crackle of the impotent fire, but Chantal kept her senses alert as she stepped into the corridor to find the source of the creaking. Under the disappointed leer of her husband’s deceased ancestors depicted on the paintings hung along the walls, she vowed to redeem what she still could of this ill-begotten idea.
Poker in hand, she descended the stairs for the first time since she’d waved goodbye to Henri. Chantal’s mouth was bone dry, leaving her tongue feeling thick and out of place and her throat coarse like sandpaper. As she looked up at the lurching paintings of Henri’s female family, Chantal could not help but feel a sting of guilt at the sight of the sublime diamond necklaces adorning their necks. She dropped her gaze rather than endure their stuck-up expressions damning her.
As Chantal progressed through the house she switched on every single light; she wanted to make sure there was no place to hide for anyone who was not welcome. Before her, the northern flight of stairs stretched down to the ground floor where the creaking sound had come from. Her fingers ached in agony as she grasped the poker tightly.
When Chantal reached the bottom landing, she turned to make the long journey across the marble floor to flick the lobby switch, but her heart stopped at what the half-darkness presented. She sobbed quietly at the fearsome vision before her. Near the switch on the far sidewall, the creaking was explained harshly. Suspended by a rope from the ceiling beam, a woman’s body was rocking from side to side in the breeze of the open window.
Chantal’s knees buckled and she had to hold back a primal scream that begged to be born. It was Brigitte, her housekeeper. The tall, thin, thirty-nine-year-old blond was blue in the face, a hideous and ghastly warped version of her once pretty guise. Her shoes had fallen to the floor, no more than a meter from the tips of her feet. The atmosphere down in the lobby felt like the Arctic to Chantal, almost unbearable, and she could not tarry long before she feared she would lose the use of her legs. Her muscles burned and stiffened from the cold and she felt the sinew taut inside her flesh.
I have to get upstairs! she shouted in her mind. I have to get to the fireplace or I’m going to freeze to death. I’ll just lock myself in and call the police. With all her strength she waddled up the steps, taking them one by one, while Brigitte’s staring dead eyes followed her from her the periphery. Don’t look at her, Chantal! Don’t look at her.
In the distance she could see the cozy, warm drawing room, something that had now become pivotal to her survival. If she could just make it to the fireplace, she only needed to guard one room, instead of trying to search the vast hazardous maze of her huge house. Once she was locked into the drawing room, Chantal calculated, she could summon the authorities and try to pretend she didn’t know about the loss of the diamonds until her husband found out. For now, she had to deal with the loss of her beloved housekeeper and the killer that might still be inside the house. She had to stay alive first and be chastised for bad decisions later. The awful strain on the rope sounded like a recurring breath as she passed along the banister. It made her sick while her teeth jittered from the cold.
A horrible moan ensued from Louise’s little office, one of the spare rooms on the first story. From under the door, a freezing gust of air flowed forth and crept over Chantal’s boots to stalk up her legs. No, don’t open the door, her reasoning urged. You know what is happening. We don’t have time to discover evidence of what you already know, Chantal. Come now. You know. We can feel it. Like a terrible nightmare with feet, you know what is waiting. Just get to the fire.
Subduing the urge to open Louise’s door, Chantal let go of the handle and turned to leave whatever was moaning inside to itself. “Thank God all the lights are on,” she muttered through her clenched jaw, hugging herself as she walked to the welcoming door that led through to the wonderful orange glow of the fire.
Chantal’s eyes widened as she looked ahead. At first, she was not sure if she really saw the door move, but as she approached the room, she noticed that it was visibly closing slowly. Trying to hasten, she held the poker at the ready for whomever was pushing it shut, but she had to get in.
What if there are more than one killer in the house? What if the one in the drawing room is distracting you from the one in Louise’s room? she thought as she strained to see any shadow or figure that could help her discern the nature of the incident. Not a great time to bring that up, her other inner voice remarked.
Chantal’s face was ice cold, her lips colorless, and her body trembling terribly when she reached the door. But it slammed shut just as she tried the handle, throwing her backwards from the force. The floor was like an ice rink and she scuttled to get to her feet again, weeping in defeat with the horrid sounds of moaning emanating from Louise’s door. Filled with horror, Chantal tried to thrust open the drawing room door, but she was too weak from the cold.
She fell to the floor, peeking under the door even just to see the firelight. Even that would comfort her somewhat to imagine the heat, but the thick carpet impaired her sight. Again, she tried to get up, but she was so cold that she just curled up in the corner next to the closed door.
Go to one of the other rooms and get blankets, you idiot, she thought. Go on, light another fire, Chantal. The villa has fourteen fireplaces and you are willing to perish because of one? Shuddering, she wanted to smile at the relief of a solution. Madame Chantal struggled to her feet to get to the nearest guest bedroom with a hearth. Only four doors down and a few steps up.
Passing the laborious groans behind the second door was taxing on her psyche and nerves, but the lady of the house knew that she would die of hypothermia if she did not make it to the fourth room. It had a drawer with matches and lighters galore, and the grid on the cheek of the hearth had enough butane to blow up. Her cell phone was in the drawing room and her computers were all in different rooms on the ground floor - the place she dreaded to go, the place where the window was open and her dead housekeeper was keeping time like the mantle clock.
“Please, please, let there be logs in the room,” she shivered, rubbing her arms and pulling the point of her shawl over her face to try and catch some of her warm breath in it. With the poker firmly clutched under her arm, she found the room open. Chantal’s panic jumped between the murderer and the cold and she constantly wondered which would kill her quicker. With tremendous ardor, she tried to stack the logs in the fireplace of the guestroom while the haunting moans from the other room grew weaker.
Her hands fumbled to take hold of the wood, but she could hardly use her fingers anymore. Something about her condition was strange, she thought. The fact that her home was properly heated and she could not see the vapor of her breath directly negated her assumption that the weather was unusually cold for this time of year in Nice.
“All this,” she seethed at her misdirected intentions as she struggled to light the gas under the logs, “just to keep warm when it is not even cold! What is going on? I am freezing to death from the inside out!”
The fire took with a bellow and the ignition of the butane gas instantly colored the pale interior of the room. “Ah! Beautiful!” she exclaimed. She dropped the poker so that she could warm her palms in the furious hearth that came alive with crackling tongues and sparks that would fade a mere pulse into their existence. She watched them fly and disappear as she stuck her hands into the fireplace. Something rustled behind her and Chantal swung around to look into the face of Abdul Raya’s emaciated face and black sunken eyes.
“Mr. Raya!” she uttered involuntarily. “You took my diamonds!”
“I did, Madam,” he said calmly. “But for what it is worth, I will not tell your husband wh
at you did behind his back.”
“You son of a bitch!” She slurred her anger, but her body refused her the agility to lunge.
“Rather stay close to the fire, Madam. To live we need heat. But diamonds cannot keep you breathing,” he imparted his wisdom.
“Do you realize what I can do to you? I know very efficient people and I have the money to hire the best hunters if you do not give me back my diamonds!”
“Spare your threats, Madame Chantal,” he warned cordially. “We both know why you would need an alchemist to perform some magical transmutation on your last precious stones. You need the money. Tsk tsk,” he lectured. “You scandalous rich, only seeing wealth when you are blind to beauty and purpose. You do not deserve what you have, so I have taken the liberty of relieving you of this awful burden.”
“How d-dare you?” she scowled, her contorted face hardly losing its blue tint in the light of the roaring flames.
“I dare. You nobles sit on all the earth’s most wonderful gifts and claim them as your own. You cannot buy the power of the gods, only the corrupt souls of men and women. This you have proven. These fallen stars do not belong to you. They belong to us all, to the magicians and craftsmen who wield them to create and beautify and make strong that which is weak,” he spoke passionately.
“You? A magician?” she laughed emptily. “You are a geological artist. There is no such thing as magic, you fool!”
“There isn’t?” he asked with a smile as he played with the Celeste between his fingers. “Then tell me, Madam, how did I give you the illusion of suffering from hypothermia?”
Chantal was speechless, furious, and horrified. Much as she knew the odd condition was hers alone, she could not process the thought that he had given her a cold brush of his hand the last time they met. Defying natural law, she was dying of cold nonetheless. Her eyes remained frozen in horror as she watched him leave.
“Adieu, Madam Chantal. Please get warm.”
As he left under the swinging housemaid, Abdul Raya heard a blood-curdling scream from the guest room…as he expected. He tucked the diamonds into his pocket, while upstairs Madame Chantal climbed into the fireplace to find any small measure of relief to her coldness she could. With her body having been functioning at a safe 37.5° Celsius all along, she died shortly after, engulfed by fire.
7
Absent is the Traitor in the Pit of Revelation
Purdue had been feeling something he was not accustomed to knowing before – utter hatred for another individual. Although he had been slowly recovering physically and mentally from the ordeal in the small town of Fallin, Scotland, he found that the only thing marring the return of his jovial devil-may-care attitude was the fact that Joe Carter, or Joseph Karsten, was still drawing breath. It left him with an unusual bad taste in his mouth every time he discussed the upcoming tribunal with his lawyers under the supervision of Special Agent Patrick Smith.
“Just got this memo, David,” Harry Webster, Purdue’s main legal representative, announced. “Don’t know if this is good or bad news to you.”
Two of Webster’s associates and Patrick had joined Purdue and his attorney at the dining table in the high ceiling dining room of Wrichtishousis. They had been offered scones and tea, which the delegation gladly accepted before setting out for what they had hoped to be a swift and mild hearing.
“What is it?” Purdue asked, feeling his heart jump. He had never before had to fear anything. His wealth, resources and representatives could always solve any of his problems. However, in the past few months he’d learned that the only true wealth in life was freedom and he was about to lose his. A dreadful insight indeed.
Harry frowned as he checked the fine print of the e-mail received from the Secret Intelligence Service Headquarters Legal Department. “Oh, it is probably not a huge thing for us either way, but the head of MI6 will not be there. This e-mail is to notify and apologize to all parties involved for his absence, but he has had a personal emergency that he had to attend to.”
“Where?” Purdue exclaimed eagerly.
Surprising the panel with his reaction, he quickly played it down with a shrug and a smile, “Just curious why the man who ordered the siege of my estate would not bother to be there when they bury me.”
“Nobody is going to bury you, David,” Harry Webster comforted in his lawyer’s voice. “But it does not mention where, just that he had to go to his ancestral home. I suppose it must be in some corner of remote England.”
No, it must be somewhere in Germany or Switzerland or one of those cozy Nazi nests, Purdue sneered in his thoughts, wishing he could just disclose aloud what the truth of the sanctimonious leader was. He was secretly very relieved to know that he would not have to look into the repulsive mug of his enemy while being treated like a criminal in public, watching the bastard revel in his predicament.
Sam Cleave had called the night before to let Purdue know that Channel 8 and World Broadcast Today, perhaps CNN too, would be available to air whatever the investigative journalist slapped together to expose any MI6 misdeeds to the world stage and the British government. Until they had enough to implicate Karsten with, though, Sam and Purdue had to keep all knowledge secret. The problem was that Karsten knew. He knew that Purdue knew, and that posed a direct threat, something that Purdue had to anticipate. What concerned him was how Karsten would choose to do away with him, since Purdue would eternally be a loose end even if he was to be incarcerated.
“May I use my cell phone, Patrick?” he asked angelically, as if he could not make contact with Sam if he wished.
“Um, yes, certainly. But I have to know who you intend to call,” Patrick said as he opened the safe container where he kept all the items Purdue was not allowed to have access to without permission.
“Sam Cleave,” Purdue said nonchalantly, immediately getting Patrick’s approval, but getting an odd peer from Webster.
“Why?” he asked Purdue. “The hearing is in less than three hours, David. I suggest we use the time wisely.”
“That is what I am doing. Thank you for your opinion, Harry, but this very much pertains to Sam, if you do not mind,” Purdue replied in a tone that reminded Harry Webster that he was not in charge. With that, he punched in a number and the words, ‘Karsten absent. Guessing Austrian nest.’
Promptly the short cryptic message was sent via a hopping satellite line that could not be traced, thanks to one of Purdue’s innovative technological contraptions that he’d installed on the phones of his friends and his butler, the only people he felt merited this kind of privilege and importance. Once the message was conveyed, Purdue gave the phone back to Patrick. “Ta.”
“That was bloody quick,” Patrick remarked, impressed.
“Technology, my friend. Soon I fear words will dissolve into codes and we’ll be back to hieroglyphs,” Purdue smiled proudly. “But I’ll be sure to invent an application that forces the user to quote Edgar Allan Poe or Shakespeare before being able to log in.”
Patrick had to smile. It was the first time he’d actually spent time with the billionaire, explorer, scientist, philanthropist David Purdue. Before recently, all he’d chalked the man up to be was some arrogant rich boy flaunting his privilege to acquire anything he damned well pleased. Not only did Patrick see Purdue as the conqueror or ancient relics that did not belong to him, he saw him as a common thief – of friends.
Previously, Purdue’s name only instilled in him the disdain synonymous with the corruption of Sam Cleave and the hazards of being involved with the white-haired relic hunter. But now Patrick began to fathom the attraction to the carefree and charismatic man who was, in truth, someone of humility and integrity. Inadvertently he had become quite fond of Purdue’s company and wit.
“Let’s get this over with, lads,” Harry Webster suggested, and the men sat down to conclude the respective addresses they would present.
8
Blind Tribunal
Glasgow – Three Hours Later
&nbs
p; In the bland surroundings under pallid lighting, a small congregation of government officials, archaeological society members, and legal staff gathered for the trial of David Purdue for alleged involvement in international espionage and the theft of cultural treasures. Purdue’s pale blue eyes scouted the boardroom for Karsten’s despicable face, as if by second nature. He wondered what the Austrian was hatching wherever he was, while he knew exactly where to find Purdue. On the other hand, Karsten probably imagined that Purdue was too afraid of the repercussions associated with implying the association of such a high official as a member of the Order of the Black Sun, and perhaps had decided to let sleeping dogs lie.
The first hint to the latter consideration was the fact that Purdue’s case did not proceed under the ICC in The Hague, normally employed for such charges. Purdue and his legal panel concurred that the fact that Joe Carter had persuaded the Ethiopian government to prosecute him in an informal hearing in Glasgow was evidence that he wished to keep the case low key. Such low-key court cases, much as they facilitated proper action against the accused, hardly did much to shake the foundations of international legislation pertaining to espionage, of all things.
“That is our failsafe,” Harry Webster had told Purdue before the trial. “He wants you charged and tried, but he does not want to draw attention. That is good.”
The assembly settled and waited for the proceedings to start.
“This is the trial of David Connor Purdue, on charges of archaeological crimes involving the theft of various cultural icons and religious relics,” the prosecutor announced. “The evidence given in this trial will coincide with the accusation of espionage committed under pretense of archaeological exploration.”
With all the announcements and formalities out of the way, the main prosecutor on behalf of MI6, Adv. Ron Watts, introduced the members of the opposition, representing the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and the Archaeological Crimes Unit. Among them were Prof. Imru of the People’s Movement for Protection of Heritage Sites and Colonel Basil Yimenu, veteran military commander and patriarch of the Association of Historical Preservation in Addis Ababa.