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Dreyfus turned away from Nick. He reached into his pocket, fumbled around, jingling his change for something, and then turned back.

He held out his two hands, one clinched in a fist, the other, palm up, with a quarter resting in its center.

“Look at my hands,” Dreyfus said. “Choose one but only one.”

Nick looked at the quarter, then at Dreyfus’s closed hand, and quickly touched it.

“That is what nine out of ten people do. They choose the mystery. Why?” he asked rhetorically. “For a host of reasons. To learn what is there, always thinking the unknown is more valuable than the known.

“How many people live in the moment? A few? How many people live for tomorrow at the sacrifice of today?” Dreyfus opened his fist to reveal it to be empty. “… When tomorrow is never a guarantee.”

Dreyfus’s words hit Nick hard as he thought of Julia, as he realized they were always looking toward the future at the expense of the moment.

“That is the box. That is why my brother is dead, that is why they will kill me if I don’t help them find it. Your wife will be killed to cover their tracks. And they don’t even know yet what it contains.”

“Dance had a trunk full of gold and yet would trade it for this box, and he has no idea what’s in it?”

“The whole thing went bad. Dance and his men were going for the antiques and the diamonds, which would have made them very happy. Then they saw the box. Not knowing what it was, and seeing my brother wanting it so badly, they thought its worth far exceeded what they were taking and thought they were being ripped off. Paid cheap for their help.”

“All over a box?”

“We all have a special box, something we hold dear. Something we dare not part with for any price. Yours is your wife, mine is my children. Shamus Hennicot’s was in a box; it weighed twenty-five pounds and was passed down from father to son to son. It was said to contain their philosophy, their family secrets.” Dreyfus took a deep breath. “We cling to our hearts, to what warms them, to what gives us hope, to things we can look upon and know the world will someday be okay again.”

“What could weigh twenty-five pounds and be held most dear?” Nick asked.

“Curiosity is infectious, isn’t it? You haven’t even seen the box and you want to know what’s in it.”

“Do you know what’s in the box?” Nick asked.

Dreyfus smiled a knowing smile. “You didn’t think this whole thing was about a handful of diamonds and some old swords, did you?”

THE REAR DOOR of the Taurus was open, Dance sat in the backseat, his hands cuffed, barely able to contain his anger.

The young National Guardsman stood outside the car, his M- 16 in one hand, his cell phone in the other pressed to his ear, waiting for his superior officer to answer.

Dance’s mind was working on overtime, looking about, weighing his options before a contingent of weekend warriors came to haul him away. He hadn’t come this far to fail.

Dance looked at his missing ring finger: They called it a down payment on his life.

No one knew it, but he had until midnight tonight or he would be dead. And that just didn’t fit into his schedule.

Dance had moonlighted on many jobs that were contrary to his profession. The sixty-thousand-dollar salary of a detective wasn’t enough to live on, not in Westchester, among the wealthy who looked to the police for protection but treated them as second-class citizens.

Little jobs supplemented his income-the thefts here and there, the shakedown and blackmailing of the young drug dealers, the kids whose millionaire parents would disown them if they knew what Biff and Muffy were selling to fourteen-year-olds.

Dance had robbed, stolen, committed arson for hire, and on two occasions, killed. Ten thousand a head, drug-related hits down county. He wrapped the bodies in nylon reinforced feed bags, wrapped them tightly in chains, and with hundred-pound iron weights strapped to the corpses, tossed them into the East River beside Manhattan. Secured tightly, they wouldn’t be found for years, if at all.

No one was wise to his dealings except for Shannon, who knew better than to talk, and Horace Randall, his mentor, who was three months from retirement. Goods were quickly fenced, evidence never found, and if legal suspicions arose, he would use his police knowledge to direct investigations in another direction.

But not all jobs went smoothly.

Fourteen months ago, he had been running a small crew of punks, teens he had arrested and blackmailed into working for him in order to avoid jail.

Two of them had hijacked a panel trunk filled with computers on East Tremont in the Bronx and had driven it to a warehouse in Yonkers where Dance was waiting. The buyer of the stolen notebooks and high-end desktop models paid him forty thousand in cash, five of which he gave to the two teens, ensuring their silence and loyalty until the next job.

A week later the two punks were found dead in an alley, shot through the head, execution style.

The following day, two wide-shouldered enforcers grabbed Dance as he exited his car in the driveway of his two-family house and drove him to a machine shop in Flatbush where they tied him to a heavy wooden chair.

He sat there in the darkened shop for three hours under the silent gaze of the two enforcers before he heard someone enter.

“You stole my truck.” The heavily accented voice came from behind him.

Dance sat still, staring straight ahead. He didn’t need to see the man, he knew his voice.

“You of all people should know better.” The short, black haired man circled Dance’s chair, finally stopping in front of him and leaning down into his face. “Now children are dead.”

The Albanian had a dead left eye and a horrific scar running down his cheek, an appearance that struck fear into his victims, particularly at night. Ghestov Rukaj was one of the new wave of Eastern European crime lords who preferred using the tactics of terror to control his territories and victims, and did not understand honor or the old Cosa Nostra ways of criminals.

“Wasn’t your truck.” Dance glared into Rukaj’s one good eye.

“I had scoped it out, it was in my territory, my two associates here were just about to grab it when your children beat us to the punch.”

“Do you have any idea the line you have crossed or what will happen to you? I’m a police officer.”

“Do you have an idea what will happen to you, Mr. Police Officer? I didn’t realize the law was in the business of stealing and fencing goods.”

At a nod from Rukaj, the two granitelike men stepped forward and stood on either side of Dance. Each took hold of a shoulder, and they pressed him down into the seat. Each grabbed a wrist and pressed it to the wooden armrests.

Rukaj sat on the table in front of Dance, reached into his pocket, and withdrew a large switchblade, flicking it open.

“There is a price for the life we have chosen to lead.” Rukaj ran his finger down his left eye and trailed it along the thick scar on his cheek. “Our egos, our invincibility, sometimes need a reality check.”

Rukaj laid the blade against the second knuckle of Dance’s right ring finger.

“Do you have one million dollars, Mr. Policeman?”

Dance remained silent, his face impossible to read, though sweat had begun to appear on his brow.

“You cost me fifty thousand dollars and I would like it back, plus damages. You have access to drug money, to drugs, stolen merchandise,” Rukaj said with his slithering accent. “This is not a question.”

Dance’s eyes were on fire as he stared defiantly at Rukaj.