had given him the watch, who had set him on his journey.
“Nick,” Julia said, pointing at the older man, “this is Shamus Hennicot.”
“Nicholas,” Hennicot said with a bow of the head. “I’m so glad to see you alive. And I would like you to formally meet my attache, Zachariah Nash.”
Nash tilted his head to Nick, as if he were meeting him for the first time. Shamus turned briefly to Paul Dreyfus and gave a subtle nod of recognition.
“Julia?” Nick took a deep breath and licked his lips. “Do you think maybe you could get me a Coke or something?”
“Of course.” Julia smiled. She turned to Shamus and Zachariah with eyebrows raised in question.
“Nothing for us, dear.” Shamus said.
“I can’t believe you came down for this,” Julia said. “It means so much to me.”
“I understand you flew with my wife, today,” Shamus said with a warm smile. “Pleasant flight, I hope.”
Julia appeared confused.
“Petite, gray-haired, talks a lot…” Shamus prodded her.
“Katherine? That was your wife?” Julia asked in surprise.
“She spoke so highly of you,” Shamus said warmly.
“I had no idea…” Julia replied with confusion.
“Which makes your charm all the more special.”
“I’m a bit hungry myself,” Marcus said to Julia as he walked across the room and opened the door. “I’ll go with you.”
Alone with Dreyfus, Nash, and Nick, Shamus pulled a chair over and took a seat right next to Nick’s bed.
“You have an amazing wife, Nicholas, you’re very lucky.”
“I know,” Nick said.
“And she is even more lucky to have someone like you,” Shamus continued. “Only a man whose heart is filled with such love would not abuse the power that you hold in your hand.”
Nick finally opened his fist to reveal the watch that Dreyfus had placed there.
“Julia’s death, my wife’s death, were all my fault,” Shamus said with regret. “Sadly, time has robbed me of my youth. If I were a younger man, I would never have tasked you, burdened you with such an impossible journey.
“I’m too frail, too weak, to endure the leaps and machinations of time. My mind no longer has the clarity of thought to step backward and place the world back on its proper axis.”
“But wait,” Nick said in confusion. “Did the plane crash occur?”
“No,” Shamus said.
“The burglary?”
“No. Ethan Dance disappeared into the limo of a man named Rukaj, and he hasn’t been heard from since. Detective Shannon arrested Horace Randall and John Arilio on a multitude of charges after they held him and Nash hostage at the airport this morning.”
“What about Sam?” Nick asked as he looked at Paul Dreyfus.
“Sam has gone away for a bit,” Shamus explained, “to think things through. Paul wanted him arrested, but I wasn’t about to see his brother go to jail. The two other cops already have Internal Affairs issues, their karma is catching up to them. But I thought Sam deserved another try at this thing called life.”
“If nothing occurred,” Nick paused, “then how come you remember everything?”
“I don’t,” Shamus said matter-of-factly.
“How do you know then?” Nick asked.
Shamus held up the letter that Zachariah had given Nick back in the interrogation room and pointed at the small strange lettering along the bottom. The lettering he never could fathom.
“It’s an ancient offshoot of Gaelic, I wrote that part myself-
“I specifically noted why I had sent Zachariah to you and my intentions, knowing your love for your wife.”
Shamus pulled out the printout from the
Nick turned to Zachariah. “What do you remember?”
Zachariah simply smiled. “Just your bravery at the airport.”
Nick turned to Dreyfus. “What about you?”
Dreyfus took the printout of the
“With the thought of power,” Shamus said, “men’s hearts darken, with the vision of wealth, morals and values crumble, but that all becomes secondary to love.”
Hennicot pulled out a key. It was octagonal, created by Paul Dreyfus for his exclusive use. Dreyfus pulled out an identical one, as did Nash. Each inserted his respective key into the locks on the three sides of the wooden case that sat on the table next to the bed and turned.
Hennicot lifted the lid to reveal a velvet core that filled the interior almost to the rim. Within its center was a single three-inch circular recess, the exact size of the gold watch.
And it all became clear.
“It was found by my grandfather,” Shamus said. “Stolen, I believe, from a man in Venice, Italy, who had stolen it himself from the Martinots in France. It was how grandfather made all of his money, slipping back and forth through time, manipulating fate. His empire was built upon it. An empire whose growth continued with my father. Both were men of greed who lusted for power without grasping the consequences of their actions.
“When it was passed down to me on my father’s deathbed, I promised myself that I would never fall prey to the lust that had consumed them. I made it my goal to use it only to do good in the world. But I soon learned that good intentions could lead to disastrous consequences, so I tucked it away, refusing to make use of its abilities. Instead, I made it my purpose to distribute the billions acquired by my forefathers, acquired without regard to the end results of their actions, or the effect their travels had on the world.
“Who knows how our fateful interactions affect one another? If a butterfly flaps his wings in China, does it beget a war in Europe? The what-ifs of fate are endless: If Queen Isabella had not financed Columbus, if Hitler had won the war, if Einstein hadn’t written to Roosevelt urging him to develop the atomic bomb. Who are we to know, who are we to decide, who are we to be playing God?”
“But if you knew how dangerous the watch was, why didn’t you destroy it?” Nick asked.
“We are all fallible, Nicholas. No matter how noble we imagine ourselves to be, we each think of ourselves as righteous in our actions and beliefs, strong and of steadfast character. I thought I could resist its temptation, only making use of its ability in the most dire of circumstances.”
“And your wife’s death was such an instance,” Nick said in understanding.
“Actually, Nicholas, it was your wife’s death that was such an instance.”
Nick tilted his head in query.
“You leaped through time to save Julia. You would walk through the fires of hell and back if it meant she would live. Well, I know that level of love. I knew through your travels, seeing the death around you, you wouldn’t just stop your wife’s death but my Katherine’s and everyone else’s on that fateful flight.”
Shamus held up the letter Nash had given him and pointed to the Gaelic writing. “Hearing of Julia’s death, I sent Nash to you with the watch and this letter. It is one thing for my wife to die in the plane crash; it’s another for your wife to die innocently as the result of my failure to properly dispose of this thing. I love your wife like a daughter, Nicholas, and when I die, when my wife dies, my estate will fall to Julia, but let’s keep that between us.” Shamus smiled, patting Nick’s hand.
“If you would be so kind,” Hennicot said as he tilted the mahogany box toward Nick.
Nick looked at the gold watch in his hand, flipping open the cover, reading the engraving one last time:
Dreyfus took the box from the table and closed the lid, turning each key and removing them, handing one to Nash, one to Hennicot, and tucking the last into his pocket.
Hennicot took hold of his elephant’s-head cane and stood. “Thank you, Nicholas, for being who you are.”
Hennicot shuffled toward the door to leave, Dreyfus and Nash right behind him.
“What are you going to do with it?”
“No worries. Paul and Zachariah are taking a little sailing trip in the western Pacific over the Marianas Trench. It’s almost seven miles deep there.”
Dreyfus and Nash nodded to Nick as they followed Shamus out the door.
JULIA WALKED IN, Coke in hand, along with a pack of Oreos. “Breakfast of champions.” She popped the Coke and handed it to him while she opened the blue wrapper on the Oreos.
“I sent Marcus home, he was making a play for the nurses; you know how he gets after making some money, the whole world is beautiful in his eyes.” Julia laughed. “I saw Shamus in the elevator. Did I ever tell you what a great guy he is? I love him like a second father.”
“He feels the same way about you,” Nick said as he stuck a cookie into his mouth, washing it down with a swig of soda.
“If I left my job,” Julia said slowly, “we’d be okay, right?”
“We might have to cut things back a bit but that’s fine with me.”
“I don’t care if we live in a shack as long as we’re together. I’m just thinking it’s time to focus on things besides money.”
“Funny you should say that,” Nick said. “I don’t think we’ll have any money troubles going forward.”
“How do you know that?” Julia asked.