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Authors: Olen Steinhauer

Tags: #Milo Weaver

An American Spy (13 page)

BOOK: An American Spy
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PART TWO

BROWNSTONE JUNGLE

FRIDAY, JUNE 6 TO
SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 2008
1

“When the world ends, Milo, no one will even notice.”

“You’re drunk.”

Alan set his Heineken can on the flat, pebbly rooftop, then stretched hands and smoldering cigarette above his head, yawning. “Not yet. I’m just saying that when all this finally collapses, it’s going to smell sweet. There won’t be terror in the streets. No blood, no starvation—nothing like that. Just the scent of peppermint.”

“Peppermint?”

“Lemon, caramel, jasmine . . . peppermint—take your pick. The next day will look the same, maybe a little better. They’ll have no idea that everything important has just died.”

Milo had been drinking tonic water; his glass was already empty. He took a position along the raised edge of the apartment building, as if falling four stories weren’t a possibility. “If you’re trying to sound smart, you’re failing spectacularly.”

A rare breeze swept over them. Alan sucked on his Marlboro, looking like the new smoker he was.

“Here,” said Milo. “Gimme some of that.”

Alan passed the cigarette, and as Milo took a drag, they gazed over rooftops toward Prospect Park. Despite it being a little before midnight, they were forced to wear shirtsleeves. Alan’s wife, Penelope, had dredged up the phrase “global warming” five times that night.

It was three weeks after Xin Zhu’s visit to Qingdao, though neither man knew about that. Nor did they know that, downstairs in the Weaver apartment, their wives were discussing marriage. Later that night, Milo’s wife would relate the entire conversation to him, while Penelope would tell her husband nothing, not for some days at least.

“You really should stop,” Milo said as he handed back the cigarette and took a blister pack of Nicorette from his shirt pocket. He squeezed out a square of the gum and popped it into his mouth. “You’re not even addicted yet. Just quit.”

“Makes me feel in control of something. I haven’t felt that way in a long time.”

“And Pen? What does she think of the new Alan?”

“She says he’s a moron.”

“You guys having problems?”

“Oh, no. That’s the one thing that’s going right.”

Milo didn’t quite believe that. He’d noticed the slow progress of Alan Drummond’s depression over the course of periodic couples dinners that had begun after Milo had returned from the hospital. Alan claimed that that initial invitation had been his wife’s idea, but as soon as they met in the Drummonds’ Upper East Side apartment with Stephanie in tow, Milo saw plainly that it had been Alan’s idea, and he read their future conversations in his ex-boss’s young but dreary face: endings. Their careers, the bloody full stop to the Department of Tourism, and, distantly, their own mortalities.

The truth was that Alan had initiated the dinners because he wanted to jointly lick wounds, but Milo’s only troubling wounds had been physical. After nine weeks, the doctor had pronounced his recovery “remarkable,” but he still wasn’t allowed alcohol. Some gin in his tonic might have made these conversations more bearable.

Unlike Milo, the drunken man wandering his rooftop still saw his future entwined in the intelligence world. Unlike Milo, he hadn’t been shot point-blank by the weeping father of a girl who had been killed by the intelligence world—that could wash away anyone’s illusions about their industry’s virtues. In fact, Milo hadn’t even planned to follow up with his own dinner invitation until they got home that first night and Tina raved about Penelope—
She’s
funny.
And smart as hell. See? That’s the kind of couple friends I’ve been hoping for
.

Alan squatted again and lifted his beer. “Did you know that he’s in trouble with his own people?”

“Who?”

“Who do you think? Turns out his little massacre wasn’t even sanctioned. He’s weak now.”

“Who told you this?”

“I’ve still got friends, Milo. I’m out, but that doesn’t end friendships.”

Milo wondered who in the Company would be dumb enough to share secrets with someone as bitter as Alan Drummond. Unless he wasn’t really out after all. “Are you still unemployed, Alan?”

“Unemployed, yes. Dead, no. I’ve had a wonderful idea.”

“You’ve
had
ideas, remember? I vetoed them.”

“Modified. It’s radically modified.”

Milo remembered Alan’s feverish rant, from two weeks ago, about how he could lure Xin Zhu to Japan and assassinate him in his hotel room. Then another one, more ambitious, involving terrorists from the Youth League, who would converge on Beijing during the Olympics with explosives and long-range rifles. He, like Milo, was still a young man, but when he got to raving, he sounded like a man twenty years older, fighting madness. “They were bad plans, Alan. They weren’t the kinds of things that could be modified.”

“Then let’s call it a new plan,” Alan said, standing. “Leticia thinks it’s an excellent plan.”

“Leave that woman alone.”

“I’m telling you, she thinks it’s good.”

“Who else have you been bothering with this? Zachary?”

Alan shook his head. “Zachary Klein has apparently found himself a civilian life. But you know he wasn’t the only other survivor.”

“José—”

“Let’s not name names,” Alan cut in. “But there’s also a third, who wasn’t on the Tourism rosters when everything went down. You remember him. My point, though, is that they all agree that it’s an excellent plan.”

Milo turned to give him his attention. “It might be the best plan, but I’m not taking part. I’ve made that clear.”

“Did you know he got married?”

“Zachary?”

“Xin Zhu. Last summer he got married to some sweet young thing and—”

“Stop it.”

Alan stared at him, then wiped his mouth with the back of one of his red hands; it made him look like a drunk. His bare arm, Milo noticed, was dense with muscle; he’d been working out. “Sixty years.”

“What?”

“Sixty goddamned years,” Alan said. “The department chugs along. Complete secrecy. Complete freedom. I get control of it for two months—sixty
days
—and the entire thing’s wiped out.” He looked at his can, as if it might hold answers. “You have any idea how that makes me feel?”

Milo had no idea how it made Alan feel, so he said nothing. Besides, Alan wouldn’t have heard him.

“I keep seeing those dots. Red dots turning blue. I have nightmares about those dots. Do you?”

“Sometimes,” Milo lied. His own nightmares covered different territory.

“Well, I have them all the time. Damn near every night.”

They didn’t speak for a while, just turned back to the vista of nighttime Brooklyn. Cars rumbled along Seventh Avenue, music drained from bars, and a couple argued somewhere up the street. Chewing hard and getting too much nicotine, Milo tried to suppress a hiccup, but it slipped out, and Alan looked at him as if he’d cursed. Milo said, “Look, it’s not your problem anymore. Zhu played it better than we did. That’s all.”

“You think that was a
game
?” Alan flicked his cigarette off the roof; it glowed and arced slowly down to Garfield Place. “Thirty-three corpses—a
game
?”

“That’s how we treated it when we ran operations.”

“You’re con
doning
him?” Alan said, slapping one of his red hands against his hip. “When we ran operations we had reasons. Security reasons. Xin Zhu killed thirty-three Americans for revenge. How can you not see the difference?”

“We don’t know why he did it,” Milo said quietly, hoping to calm the man down. “We think he did it for revenge, but we don’t know anything for sure.”

“You don’t even know their names, do you? Sandra Harrison, Pak Eun, Lorenzo Pellegrini, Andy Geriev, Mia Salazar, John—”

“It’s not your problem,” Milo cut in, irritated. “Not anymore. You know what your problem is now? That woman downstairs. You need to find a job so you can keep your life running.”

“This, from an unemployed man?”

“I’ve got an interview next week. What about you? You look like hell, you know. You’re going to sit around in your underwear hatching some plan to—to what? Wipe out all his agents? Kill his wife? Bomb his office? No, Alan. I’m not helping with your revenge.”

“I wasn’t planning to kill—”

“No!” Milo said, raising a hand. “Enough. I don’t want to know. I’ve told you before—I’ve wasted too much of my life, and too much of my family’s life, fighting losing battles. I looked into Andrei Stanescu’s eyes before he shot me. I listen to his disconnected speech—the man is completely destroyed, and I’m not going to be part of the machine that does that to people like him. Not anymore.”

“But Xin Zhu
sent
him to you,” Alan said, not understanding a thing. “We can
get
that bastard!”

Milo rubbed his eyes and took a breath before speaking. “You’re not listening, Alan. Killing the Tourists didn’t bring back Xin Zhu’s son, and getting rid of Xin Zhu isn’t going to bring back your agents. This is nursery-school moral philosophy. It’s time to get your priorities straight.”

Alan seemed to be considering it.

“Come on,” said Milo. “Let’s go downstairs and talk about the primaries. Or our glorious president. Let’s talk about Barry Bonds, for Christ’s sake. And if anyone brings up China, all you have to say is that it’s a shame so many died in the earthquake.”

“How many at last count?”

“More than sixty thousand.”

“A lot,” Alan muttered.

“Yeah, it is.”

They stared at each other a moment, Milo feeling a dull throb in his gut, reminding him of the miles he’d trekked looking for a mole, the many ways in which Xin Zhu had fooled them all, and the disheveled, mourning Moldovan man who had tracked him here with a pistol.

Alan wiped his lips again. “Maybe you’re right.”

“I’m not far from it.”

“Listen,” he said, his voice lowered slightly. “I’m thinking about taking a vacation.”

“What do you call what you’ve had?”

Alan blinked at that, as if fighting down a rising tide of anger, but then it was gone. “Take Pen away from the city for a while. There’s a great place up in Colorado, cabins on Grand Lake. Totally secluded, totally off the grid. Grand Estes Cabins.”

“You want to be off the grid?”

“It’s useful,” Alan said, then winked.

Milo patted Alan’s hard, muscled shoulder. “Come on, let’s go downstairs.”

Alan stepped forward, then paused. “But if you do change your mind—if you suddenly feel the urge for vengeance—you just let me know.”

“I won’t.”

“Or if I’m not available, contact Leticia. You remember how to do that, right?”

Milo turned to him again. “I’m not going to change my mind, and I’m not going to go through Leticia’s Byzantine contact procedure.”

“But just in case.”

“Sure, I remember. Now let’s go try to fool our wives into thinking we’re just nice guys.”

He led Alan to the access door, and as they descended, ducking to avoid hitting their heads, they heard music filtering up the narrow, rickety staircase.

“What is it?” asked Penelope.

“I don’t know. I—” Tina leaned to squint at the screen of Milo’s iPod, which was wired into their stereo. “Françoise Hardy. It’s pretty.”

“You said this is Milo’s music?”

Tina returned to the couch and scooped up her wine. “Yeah. Weird, huh?”

Penelope rocked her head from side to side, as if she wouldn’t be pinned down to an opinion. “You’re right, it is nice, but I have a feeling you put that on to change the subject.” She spoke with a sly smile, then leaned back, cradling her own glass in her palm.

“No, no—just gave me a moment to think. The answer’s yes. We’re getting along well, though we’ve taken a break from the marriage counseling.”

“His idea or yours?”

“Both of us, really. Stephanie saw her father in a pool of blood. Our focus now is on her. She sees someone once a week, and she seems to be dealing well. I’m sure we’ll get back to the marriage soon enough, though I’m not sure we need it anymore.”

“But . . . ?”

“No but. Not really. As soon as he finds a job, he’ll be happier. You don’t just go from living your life in hotels all over the place to sitting unemployed in this dinky apartment—not without a little tension. I know I sound stupidly optimistic, but I have reason.”

Penelope shook her head. “I’m not saying anything. You know me, discreet as a Buddhist.”

They both laughed at that. “It’s just this place,” Tina finally said, motioning to take in the whole apartment. “I wouldn’t mind moving. Every time I go downstairs my chest tightens.”

“You expect to find a guy with a gun.”

“It’s ironic, really. Last year, Milo wanted us to run off with him, to Europe. I said no. Now, running off sounds great to me, and he’s the one who, as he puts it, never wants to get on a plane again.”

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