Garret C. Wembly, 88, died in his Zionsville home on August 20 of complications arising from being the penultimate surviving member of his WWII Army unit’s tontine. According to the blood oath taken by the men of the unit in 1945, the cache of gold the men had pilfered from a German castle in the closing days of the war was to be claimed by the member of the unit who lived the longest. Mr. Wembly, who has no living family, is survived only by his housemate and former comrade in arms Earl Westlake. Mr. Westlake is reportedly so grief stricken that he has closed the Slow-Acting Poisons Museum that he ran out of the home he shared with Wembly and has retired to Monaco.