given it a second look.”
Not even Noel Almond?
Dylan stuck his hands in and began sifting through the sand.
“What the hell?” Dylan mused. We both felt it … the anticipation … like when you’re a kid and plowing through the Styrofoam popcorn to find the Christmas gift hidden inside the big box. “Nothing.”
“I don’t get it,” I said. “Why keep sand under lock and key.”
I didn’t have the answer.
But I knew this was the question.
Oh, and then there was another question in the room. “What the hell are you two doing?” Big Eddie Baskin asked.
“Boss!” Dylan said, reverting to his security guy persona. He pulled his hands from the sand as if he’d been caught with them in the proverbial cookie jar and wiped them on his pants.
“I didn’t expect you back so early, Boss,” Dylan said. “How’d you make out playing golf at the lake? Get a hole in one?”
Golf balls pinged and bounced on the floor like angry white punctuation marks as Big Eddie threw the bag down.
“What the fuck’s going on here?” He growled.
Dylan spoke quickly. “Miss Dodd here,” he gestured to me as if Eddie needed direction as to which Miss Dodd he was talking about, “bet me I couldn’t get into the cabinet.” He smiled widely. “Guess I showed her, huh?” He turned to me again. “Pay up, lady!”
I didn’t have my purse with me, but pulled a folded twenty from my pants pocket and put it in his hand. “Guess you were right, Dylan.” I looked to Big Eddie, smiling to piss him off all the more.
He was thinking things over. Wondering how much I knew … just what I’d figured out so far by my access to the cabinet. His eyes shifted from Dylan to me, and back to Dylan again. But he wasn’t jumping down Dylan’s throat, so apparently he believed him.
Dylan was still grinning like a fool. “Twenty bucks!” He turned to Big Eddie. “It was only supposed to be ten, but when she found out I didn’t know the combination, she doubled it! Guess I showed her,” he repeated, pocketing the money, still grinning.
The guy deserved an Oscar.
If I was reading Eddie’s glare correctly, it was me he wanted to tear to shreds.
He said. “You’ll find no jewels in there. Don’t you think you’d be better off hunting to see where your mother stashed the ring?”
“What’s the sand for, Eddie?” I asked.
“Building castles.”
“That ring meant the world to my mother.”
“Then she shouldn’t have lost it, Dodd.”
“I know you took it.”
“Prove it.”
“Oh, I will.”
He chewed on that a moment. Then he kicked me out — out of the maintenance room, out of Complex C. And I could hear the reaming out he was giving his poor, simple “security guard” even as I walked away from the building. But I wasn’t worried about Dylan. He could handle Big Eddie.
The sand. I clutched tightly the handful I had in my pocket. Sand is sand? Well, I’d seen enough CSI shows to know things aren’t always as they appeared.
I didn’t yet know who Eddie’s accomplice was, but I was getting closer to fingering him. I didn’t yet know what the sand was for.
But soon enough I would.
Chapter 15

~*~
“So have you got things figured out yet, Dix?”
Mother wasn’t quizzing me. Certainly she wasn’t fretting (much). She was simply asking. She didn’t seem terribly worried. Why? Mountain dew and cupcakes will do that to you I guess. It was as if Mother had relinquished worry over to me.
Kind of cool.
Yes, she’d be glad when these things were resolved. Yes, she’d be glad when the jewels were returned to their rightful owners. (Especially her diamond to herself). And yes, she’d even be glad to know where Frankie Morrell was. Though, as more and more time passed, I believed the latter was the least of her concerns.
She and Mrs. P were dressing up for a night on the town. Cotton Carson, though he couldn’t attend with the two ladies himself this evening, had gotten tickets for Mother and Mrs. P to dinner theater, live band, five course meal — the works.
That male attention was helping Mom become her old self again. Not that she
