“If the rumor that he is actually Tomás Gomez is correct then it looks like all of this was a political attack on the NRA and the gun laws. From today on you’re a hero, whether you like it or not,and right now people in this state will be interested to hear your opinions. We’ve got a presidential election coming up and research shows that the majority of people make up their mind which way to vote the last two days before the election. I don’t know where you stand politically on gun control or anything else, and it really doesn’t matter to me. But just think about it, Mr. Oz—right at this moment in time there’s a small window open for you when you do actually have some kind of power.”
Bob unlocked the Volvo. “You think I can change anything?”
“Contributeto change, perhaps.”
Bob looked across the roof of the car at the young man standing on the other side. His cheeks were flushed. He looked as if he cared about things, looked like a decent kid.
“You’re an optimist,” said Bob. “What’s your name?”
“Bob.”
“Another one?” He laughed. “How old are you?”
“Twenty-two.”
“Okay. I envy you, Bob.”
“Envy me being twenty-two?”
“That as well.”
The older Bob got into his car and started the engine. As he drove off he looked in the mirror and saw the boy following with his eyes. A naive optimist, twenty-two years old. Had he once been like that himself? Bob hoped so. And he hoped that it was the Bob in the mirror who would use the little bit of power he had, not himself. The city—and the world—needed naive optimists more than it needed resigned realists.
55
Cashmere, October 2016
Sunday was another sunny day. Kay Myers followed the handwritten directions showing the route through Minnehaha Park. They invited all adults and children along to something entitled “Emma the Hare and Freddy the Fox.”
She came directly from 1025 Bar, the place where the cops drank, where those who wanted to had gathered to pay tribute to the memory of Olav Hanson. That not everybody did might have had something to do with the fact that it was a Sunday. It might also have been connected to the fact that on the Saturday theStar Tribunehad already run a story about the thirty-year-old killings known as “the McDeath massacre” involving Mike Lunde’s family, in which it was implied that the late Olav Hanson had protected the guilty. Walker said a few words that were so vague they could have meant anything at all, and a tearful Joe Kjos started reading something from written notes but had to give up. Bobwasn’t there, but it was Bob and not Olav people talked about as they drank at the wake. Walker told Kay he had rescinded Bob’s suspension with immediate effect following the hostage drama on Saturday. That meant it was operative from Saturday morning, so they didn’t have to explain to the press what a cop under suspension was doing in the middle of the whole drama. And with all the other stuff going on around them at that particular time, the MPD definitely needed a hero.
“I’m telling you this as an example of the sort of trade-offs you’re going to have to make when you take over,” Walker was saying. “Have you got the stomach for it, Myers?”
Kay thought about it before replying that, as regarded Bob Oz, that decision was one she would have had no problem taking.
As she walked along the path that twisted through the centrally located park she passed families with children on their way to the waterfalls. They looked happy. And safe. This is what our job is, she thought. It’s to keep these people, these citizens of our city, safe. She realized she had thought of Minneapolis asourcity. Was that maybe for the first time?To protect with courage, to serve with compassion.MPD’s motto. She had to smile a little at herself. But maybe it was a day for big words and big thoughts.
She had arrived at the wooden deck in front of the paddling pool where many of the families were now gathered. This must be where it was going to happen, here, where the roar of the waterfall wasn’t too overwhelming. A number of children were already gathered in front of a barrow on which a miniature stage had been built.
“You came,” said a voice next to Kay.
She turned. She’d never seen him without his mask but recognized the voice at once. He was black, but much lighter-skinned than she was. Younger than she had thought too.
“Kay,” she said.
“Alex. Maybe you’d like a coffee afterward?”
She looked at him. “Maybe,” she said.
“Then let the show begin,” he said with a smile.
He disappeared behind the wagon. A blaring fanfare emerged from what sounded like a ghetto blaster that had seen better days, then the curtains parted and a hand puppet that looked like a hare wearing a princess’s crown made its entry. The children cried out “Look, Daddy!” or “Hey!” or else just cheered in general excitement. Then everybody quieted down.
“You think maybe I’m just a hare?” the hare said in Alex’s rather feeble imitation of a girl’s voice.
The kids responded with an excited mixture of yeses and noes.
“The ones who answered right got it wrong,” the girl’s voice said. “And the ones who answered wrong got it right.”