changes. Both looked at her as she settled down again and worked out the words: 'Yevgeny Primakov?'
Simmons stared at her, shocked.
Perkins chewed his upper lip. 'Could be. But my point is, this pinko pops up out of nowhere and talks Minnie into letting him have the boy.'
Simmons cut in: 'Didn't Milo have any say in it?'
'What do I know?' Then he conceded he might know something: 'Way I see it, the boy didn't know Minnie, did he? This old woman shows up and wants him to come home with her. On the other hand, there's a Ruskie who
'What about social services? Certainly they wouldn't just let this foreigner walk off with a fifteen-year-old boy. Would they?'
Perkins showed them his palms. 'What do I know? Don't listen to me. I wasn't even there. But…' He wrinkled his brow. 'These kinds of guys, they've got money, don't they? Money gets you everything.'
'Not everything,' Simmons insisted. 'The only way Mr. Primakov would get him is the will. If your daughter put him in the will, giving him paternal rights.'
Perkins shook his head. 'Impossible. Wilma may not have liked us. She may have
Simmons checked on Tina with a glance and a sly wink. She seemed satisfied by the talk, though Tina couldn't get her head on straight enough to understand what, exactly, she'd gotten. None of this helped Milo. Simmons said to Perkins, 'Maybe you can tell me one last thing.'
'Will if I can.'
'Why did Wilma and Ellen hate you so much?' Perkins blinked five times.
'What I mean is,' she continued, as if running a job interview, 'what exactly did you do to your daughters?'
Silence, then a long exhale that could have meant that the old man was preparing to bare his soul and sins to these strangers. It didn't mean that. His voice was suddenly young and full of venom as he pointed at the door: 'Get out of my fucking home!'
As they left, Tina knew that she would tell Simmons everything. Milo was a liar, and at that moment she hated him.
It wasn't until they picked up Stephanie from the television room full of doting old people that she realized something else. 'Oh, Christ.'
'What?' said Simmons.
She looked into the special agent's eyes. 'When we got back from Venice, Milo came with me to take care of Stephanie's birth records in Boston. He begged me to let him give her a middle name. I hadn't planned on one, didn't really care, and it seemed to mean a lot to him.'
'What's her middle name?'
'Ellen.'
10
About a half hour before they arrived, two doormen removed the Chinese takeout boxes, replaced his water bottle, and cleaned blood off the table, chair, and floor. It was a relief of sorts, because over the night, the stink of old kung pao and sweat had kept him on the edge of nausea.
Then Fitzhugh stepped inside, followed by Simmons. Milo hadn't seen her since Disney World, hadn't talked to her since Blackdale. She looked tired, as if she, too, had spent a sleepless night caged with her own stink.
So Milo crossed his arms over his chest. 'I'm not talking to her.'
Simmons produced a smile. 'Nice to see you, too.'
Fitzhugh wasn't bothering with smiles. 'Milo, it's not up to me, and it's not up to you.'
'You don't look well,' said Simmons.
Milo's left eye was swollen and purple, his lower lip broken, and one of his nostrils ringed with blood. The worst bruises were under his orange jumpsuit. 'I keep walking into walls.'
'So I see.'
Before Fitzhugh could reach for it, she had taken his chair. He asked the doorman for another. They waited. During that minute and a half of silence, Simmons stared hard at Milo, and Milo returned the gaze without blinking.
When the chair arrived, Fitzhugh settled down and said, 'Remember what we said before, Milo. About classified topics.'
Simmons frowned.
'I remember,' said Milo.
'Good,' said Fitzhugh. 'There's something I want to discuss first.' He reached into his jacket pocket, but Simmons placed a hand on his lapel.
'Not yet, Terence,' she said, then let go. 'I want the story first.”
“What's that?' Milo sat up. 'What's he got in there?' Fitzhugh took out his hand again, empty. 'Don't worry about it, Milo. The story first. Okay? From where we left off.' Milo looked at him.
'You were just about to head to Disney World,' Simmons said, proving that she'd at least been given an interview summary from yesterday. She opened her hands like a well-trained interviewer. 'I have to say, your last-minute escape from there was pretty snappy. Nicely done.'
'Is she going to talk like this the whole time?' Milo put the question to Fitzhugh, who shrugged.
'Just talk,' said Simmons. 'If I think sarcasm's appropriate, I'll use it.'
'Yes,' Fitzhugh agreed. 'Get on with it.' To Simmons: 'And try to temper the sarcasm, okay?'
He told the story of Disney World as it had happened, with a single omission: Yevgeny Primakov's appearance at Space Mountain. Though he had lied to Tina about so much, he hadn't lied about the purpose of the old man's visit-he had wanted to know what had happened to Angela Yates.
It was easy to leave out that meeting, because it had no bearing on the cause-and-effect that is the one concern of interrogators the world over. This ease allowed him to observe how the two people across from him acted.
Fitzhugh sat rigid, straighter than he had the day before. Whereas yesterday he had seemed as if he had all the time in the world, today he was in a rush, as if the contents of the interview no longer mattered. Occasionally, he would say, 'Yeah, yeah. We already know that.'
Each time, though, Simmons would cut in: 'Maybe I don't, Terence. You know how uninformed Homeland is.' Then, to Milo: 'Please. Go on.' She wanted to know everything.
So Milo obliged. He told his tale in a slow, purposeful way, leaving no detail untouched. He even mentioned the color of Einner's Renault, to which Simmons said, 'It was a nice car, was it?'
'This agent has good taste.'
Later in the day, when Weaver finally got to his meeting with Ugrimov, Simmons cut in again and said to Fitzhugh: 'This Ugrimov. Do we have him on our arrest lists?'
Fitzhugh shrugged. 'I don't know anything about the guy. Milo?'
'No,' said Milo. 'He's never broken a law in the United States. He can come and go as he pleases, but I don't think he ever does.'
Simmons nodded, then placed both her hands flat on the table. 'Anyway, we'll get to this in a little bit, but one thing's been nagging at me. After making all these connections, you went and killed Tom Grainger, right?'
'Right.'
'In a fit of anger?”