on duty at all times. You can wear the shoes any time you feel like it.’ I got a pair of Tom Ford stiletto sandals that I might have mugged somebody for, if I’d seen them on another woman.”
“What’d you think about working with Virgil?”
“Virgil. If he wasn’t so committed . . . but I won’t go there. He might be the best cop I’ve ever met.”
“Present company excepted, I imagine . . .”
“I’m not sure about that, Lucas, no offense,” Rae said. “We were sitting in that shitty bar talking to those dopers and Virgil was so naturally comfortable with them, I had to be there to believe it. Those guys are now his best friends in Hollywood, Florida. He’s apparently got this great girlfriend and everything, but he’s hot. And he makes me laugh. He’s got a hard nose when he needs it . . . He shot down an airplane. Have you ever shot down an airplane?”
* * *
Weaver was bummed that his face didn’t feature in the FBI’s video celebrations. A couple of weeks after he returned to his open-style work space in Washington’s J. Edgar Hoover Building, he was staring at a screen full of memos from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami when Louis Mallard walked through. Mallard saw him and called out, “Hey, Dale,” and swerved into Weaver’s space, borrowed an unused chair from an adjacent desk, and sat and chatted about the case.
During the entire conversation it was all “Dale” and “Louis” under the eyes of twenty or thirty agents and clerical personnel. When Mallard left, he slapped Weaver on the back and said, “Terrific job, buddy. Makes me proud.”
When Weaver told him about it, Lucas said, “That’s Louis for you. He didn’t walk through there by accident. He was looking for you. Another ally, you know, and jacking up the morale around the office, which I hear isn’t so good. But he’s not a phony: you’re a real friend of his now.”
“Yeah, I . . . Jeez, I’m getting a different kind of treatment around here,” Weaver said. “When we broke the case, it was ‘Great job, what we expected from you.’ That was nice, but backslapped by Louis Mallard? My boss is almost afraid to talk to me. You can’t know how good that feels.”
* * *
Virgil got home to Mankato, Minnesota with the scuba gear and cowboy boots, in time for a major dump of snow. He, Frankie, his mother, the twins, Frankie’s ten-year-old son, Sam, and Honus the dog were more or less home-bound for two days, which was not a hardship. Honus the dog was all over him, as was Sam, who insisted that the three of them play Nerf football in the snow. Honus won, with three interceptions and runbacks estimated at between two and three hundred yards each. During the relatively short time Virgil was gone, the twins had calmed down somewhat, and didn’t bawl for more than four to six hours a day.
After an extended first night in bed, Frankie said, a soft and lazy sloe-eyed look on her face, “I gotta meet this Rae. She really got you wound up.”
“Sweetheart, you do all the winding I’ll ever need,” Virgil said.
He got away with it. The third day he was back, he sat at his computer, peered at the empty screen for a bit, called up a blank page on Microsoft Word, and typed, “Chapter One.”
* * *
Lucas was in and out of St. Paul for two weeks, tying up loose ends in South Florida and New York. When he got off the plane for the last time—or the last time before he’d be called to rehearse for the trials—he told Weather, “I need to spend time with you and the kids. When spring vacation comes up, let’s write a note to the school and get an extra week off. Paris and Rome, like that. Madrid. Make one great trip out of it.”
“Okay with me,” Weather said. She’d done three surgeries that day, and had been busy all winter. “I could use the break. If we can do it, I’m up for it.”
“Why couldn’t we do it?” Lucas asked. “Be good for the kids’ education.”
“I meant, if we’re allowed to,” Weather said. “All the docs are talking about this Covid virus. I guess it’s bad—it’s a killer. It’s apparently as infectious as the flu.”
“So we get the shots . . .”
“There aren’t any shots to get,” she said. “I talked to an epidemiologist at