a little initial resistance, given they were divorced. But once the circumstances had been explained, and the fact that they were remarrying each other made clear, the Church agreed. It had been a lovely ceremony. One he would remember for the rest of his life. Paul thanked the priest and stepped from the altar.
"That was nice," McKoy said. "A good way to end all this shi-I mean, crap." Rachel smiled. "Children cramp your style?"
"Just my vocabulary."
They started walking toward the front of the cathedral.
"The Cutler family off to Minsk?" McKoy asked.
Paul nodded. "One last thing to do, then home."
Paul knew McKoy had come for the publicity, the Russian government grateful for
the return of one of its most prized treasures. The big man had smiled and backslapped his way though the unveiling yesterday, enjoying the press attention. He'd even done the Larry King show live last evening by satellite, fielding questions from around the world.National Geographicwas talking to him about a one-hour special on the Amber Room with a worldwide distribution, the money they'd mentioned enough to satisfy his investors and resolve any issue of litigation from the Stod dig.
They stopped at the main doors.
"You two take care of yourself," McKoy said. He motioned to the children. "And them."
Rachel kissed him on the cheek. "Did I ever thank you for what you did?"
"You'd have done the same for me."
"Probably not."
McKoy smiled. "Any time, Your Honor."
Paul shook McKoy's hand. "Keep in touch, okay?"
"Oh, I'll probably need your services again before long."
"Not another dig?" Paul said.
McKoy shrugged. "Who knows? Still lots of shi-stuff-out there to find." The train left St. Petersburg two hours later, the journey south to Belarus a five-hour
ride through dense forests and sloping fields of blue flax. Autumn had arrived, and the leaves had surrendered to the chill in bursts of red, orange, and yellow. Russian officials had intervened with Belarussian authorities to make everything possible. Karol and Maya Borya's caskets had arrived the day before, flown over by special arrangement. Rachel knew that her father wanted to be buried back in his homeland, but she wanted her parents together. Now they would be, in Belarussian soil, forever.
The caskets were waiting at the Minsk train station. They were then trucked to a lovely cemetery forty kilometers west of the capital, as near as possible to where Karol and Maya Borya had been born. The Cutler family followed the flatbed in a rental car, a United States envoy with them to make sure everything went smoothly. The patriarch of Belarus himself presided at the private reburial, Rachel, Paul, Marla, and Brent standing together as solemn words were said. A light breeze eased across brown grass as the coffins were lowered into the ground.
"Say good-bye to your papa and nana," Rachel told the children.
She handed each a sliver of blue flax. The children stepped to the open graves and tossed down the buds. Paul came close and held her. Her eyes teared. She noticed that Paul's were watery, too. They'd never spoken about what happened that night in Castle Loukov. Thankfully, Knoll had never finished what he started. Paul risked his life to stop him. She loved her husband. The priest this morning cautioned them both that marriage was for life, something to be taken seriously, especially with children involved. And he was right. Of that she was sure.
She approached the graves. She'd said good-bye to her mother nearly a quarter century ago.
"Bye, Daddy."
Paul stood behind her. "Good-bye, Karol. Rest in peace."
They stood for a little while in silence, then thanked the patriarch and started for the
car. A hawk soared overhead in the clear afternoon. A breeze rolled past them, neutralizing the sun. The children trotted ahead toward the gate.
"Back to work, huh?" she said to Paul.
"Time to get reacquainted with real life."
She'd won reelection in July, though she'd done almost no campaigning, the aftermath and attention from the recovery of the Amber Room springboarding a victory over two opponents. Marcus Nettles had been crushed, but she'd made a point to visit the cantankerous lawyer and make peace, part of her new attitude of reconciliation. "You think I ought to stay on the bench?" she asked.
"That's your call, not mine."
"I was thinking maybe it's not such a good idea. It takes too much of my attention." "You have to do what makes you happy," Paul said.
"I used to think being a judge made me happy. But I'm not so sure anymore." "I know a firm that would love to have an ex-superior court judge in its litigation department."
"And that wouldn't be Pridgen and Woodworth, would it?"
"Maybe. I have some pull there, you know."
She wrapped her arm around his waist as they continued to walk. It felt good to be
near him. For a few moments they strolled in silence and she savored her contentment. She thought about her future, the children, and Paul. Practicing law again might be just the thing for them all. Pridgen & Woodworth would be an excellent place to work. She looked over at Paul and heard again what he'd just said. "I have some pull there, you know. "
So she hugged him hard and, for once, didn't argue.