What can I say? The guy knew me.

There were two stools in the work room behind the long laminate-topped counter. I took a seat on one of them. Dylan sat down beside me. He half leaned, half pivoted as he reached for the two coffees on the shelf below.

Yes, he did know me. I’d jacked up on caffeine before I’d left Mother’s, of course, but this was a welcome bonus. I grabbed my cup from Dylan, and our knees touched as he swiveled a bit to touch his Styrofoam cup to mine in a salute.

And yes, this small knee-to-knee contact did send a little thrill shooting through me.

Okay, more than a little thrill. Compared to Almond … well, there was no comparison. And yeah, I swallowed down the wee bit of guilt I felt over the other night’s date/non-date thing.

What was it with Dylan Foreman? What was it with me?

Dylan didn’t move his knee away. I waited to see if he would, half wondering if I should edge away myself. But I didn’t and he didn’t, and the moment passed when either of us could have done so without awkwardness.

My mind drifted to the other night when Dylan and I had gotten more physical. Closer than just touching knees….

Did I say drifted? My mind shot back to that memory like it had been launched from a rocket.

Dylan taking the glass from my hand, hauling me down on the bed. His body so solid and exciting against mine. His mouth on my mouth, his hands on my body. Oh, God, his mouth on my….

“Still, thinking about Big Eddie, Dix?”

My sexually-charged, rocket-launching mind pulled a 180 and came crashing right down to earth.

“Er, yeah. Big Eddie. That’s right. He’s the one responsible for the thefts, Dylan. I know it.”

I did know it. All signs pointed to Eddie Baskins. More importantly, my intuition was screaming and pointing the bony finger of blame at him. But the way he acted when I accused him, how easily he accepted the search of his the premises…. Now, that baffled me. How could he be that cocksure that the jewels wouldn’t be found?

He couldn’t be. Unless they were no longer on the premises.

But Eddie said he’d not been off the grounds for weeks. Had no need to. No extra money to be spending these days. And it happened that no-one had left since Roger’s broach was stolen. But the small tool/charm Dylan found in the hallway, the opportunity, my clamoring intuition….

“So, who is his accomplice?”

Clearly Dylan had gone over this same ground in his own mind and reached the same conclusion I had.

“It has to be someone on the inside,” I said.

“Right.”

“Someone close to him, obviously. And someone who wouldn’t raise the suspicions of the residents.”

He nodded. “For sure.”

“Someone he trusts.”

“Someone he’d take off to Cuba with, you think?”

Huh? Where had that come from? “Maybe,” I said. “But really, Dylan, what does that have to do with….”

From his back pants pocket, Dylan hauled out a piece of paper. A photocopy. I quickly unfolded and read the document. “Holy shit.”

“Yeah,” Dylan agreed. “Kind of puts a rush on the situation, huh?”

Rush wasn’t the word for it. We were way past rush — rush was yesterday. The page Dylan handed to me was a copy of a travel agency itinerary from Ridley Travel. Apparently, Eddie Baskin was heading to Cuba, via Cancun. Tomorrow evening. Flying first class.

“Where’d you get this?”

He smiled. “I found it when I was dusting Eddie’s apartment.”

“Dusting?”

“Yeah,” he said “My favorite. I got the pleasure of dusting Big Eddie’s place — I’m sure the first time in years. Anyway, Eddie left me alone there while he did some errands. And well, he had a ticket for Cuba that just needed a good dusting.”

“He left this out in plain sight.”

“Hell, no, but dust gathers on the inside of locked drawers. In envelopes marked ‘confidential’. Even the ones that need to be carefully steamed open.”

I smiled at my apprentice. I’d never been so proud.

“And while there is only one ticket here. The credit card receipt that I also, ah dusted off. Is for double the total on the ticket. Exactly. Big Eddie is flying first class. And he’s not flying alone.”

“Leaving with his accomplice?”

Dylan nodded. “That would be my guess.”

“Tomorrow….” I looked at the itinerary again. “That doesn’t leave us much time.”

“It’ll be enough.”

God, I hoped so. But there was still so much work to be done yet. We had to figure out who Eddie was working with, and fast. “So Big Eddie has a ticket,” I mused aloud, perusing the itinerary closer. “One way, first class.” I raised an eyebrow as I read further. “He must have been stealing these jewels for awhile. I mean, apart from the Dodd diamond, if he fenced everything, it wouldn’t fetch more than a few thousand dollars. Enough for a first class ticket, sure. But enough to skip town on?”

“I know. Makes you scratch your head, doesn’t it?”

I looked the pages over again. “This is good investigative work, Dylan. Fine work. Brilliant, in fact.”

“Just brilliant?” He cocked his head and smiled. “Come on, Dix, give me a six letter word for it. I know you want to. Starts with G.”

“Pfft.” Dylan and I were far too competitive for me to dub him the genius of our duo.

“Come on, Dix. You gotta admit it was sheer genius the way I came in here posing as Dylan Hardy. The way I snuck around, did all this damned grunt work just so I could get closer to the unsuspecting suspect.”

“Work?” I snorted a contemptuous laugh. “Why, look at this place. It’s a mess.” I ran a finger over the counter and held it up for inspection. “You call this clean? You call this dusted? Why I’ve seen cleaner counters in my—”

Dylan saw it the same time that I did — the little grains shiny on my fingertips.

“I call it sand,” he said.

While I’m no sand expert, this was just too coincidental. Fine sand at mother’s condo; fine white sand right here. And when I looked closer, there wasn’t just a dusting of it on the counter, there was a trail of it. Leading all the way to the cabinet in the corner.

Dylan and I stared at each other. Then did a double take back to the cabinet. It was padlocked.

“Got the combination?” I asked, not even trying to keep the please please please out of my voice.

Dylan frowned. Obviously the answer was no. Then that I’m-so-smart look crossed his handsome face. He grabbed a screwdriver and started working on the cabinet’s hinges.

“I would have thought of that,” I said.

I wouldn’t have thought of that. If I’d picked up a screwdriver, it would have been for leverage to pry the damned door off. Or a chisel and hammer to beat the lock off it. But leaving the cabinet and lock intact made so much more sense.

“Were you present when Almond’s team searched in here?” I asked him.

“I was in the room, but not over here. Had my ears open. No one noticed anything out of the ordinary. It’s just sand, after all.”

Sixty seconds later, the left side of the cabinet door was off. Among the expected stuff — the pile of girlie mags, the florescent paint (presumably for the magic golf balls), duct tape, more duct tape, six rolls of quarters and two rolls of dimes — there was something else. Filled half way with fine sand, was a child’s plastic beach bucket.

“Didn’t the bucket of sand strike anyone as off when they searched in here?”

“Apparently not. Of course, lots of places use sand in their outdoor ashtrays. Probably no one would have

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