by Jason Pinter
Mya could feel her blood warming as the alcohol swam through her veins. The door opened, and she felt a gust of cool air. Mya closed her eyes, knocked back the rest of the drink.
Then she heard a creaking sound, opened her eyes and saw a man pull out the stool next to her and sit down. He was young, early twenties, very tan with sandy blond hair and a sweet smile. His eyes flashed a striking blue, and Mya felt her cheeks grow warm. The guy raised his hand to order a drink. Mya noticed how cracked and calloused his palms were. He took off his coat, was wearing a blue T-shirt underneath. His forearms were tanned and toned. He looked like no other guy she’d seen at this bar. He was naturally lean, not possessing the kind of strength born in a gym, but born out of honest blue-collar work.
Gregory acknowledged him and came over. He placed a coaster in front of the stranger and said, “What’ll it be?”
“Gin and tonic,” the guy said. His voice sounded slightly older than Mya would have expected. “Light on the tonic.”
Gregory held out his hand, palm up. “Lemme see some ID.”
He looked moderately embarrassed, and offered Mya a sheepish smile before opening his wallet and handing the plastic over. Gregory looked the man over, looked at the picture, made sure the faces matched.
“William…Roberts?” Gregory said.
“That’d be me.” Gregory, seemingly satisfied, handed the card back and poured the drink. He went heavy on the gin, surely in apology for the embarrassing age verification.
When Gregory left, the boy took a sip of his drink and said, “You think that’d never get old, but sometimes all you want is a drink.” He said it softly without turning his head.
“I know what you mean. I still get carded half the places I go to.”
The boy swiveled his stool toward her. He had a nice smile, dimples. “You’re what, twenty-two, twenty-three?”
“Twenty-six,” Mya said, failing to hide her pleasure in his guess.
“BS.”
“You’re right, I lie to pretend I’m older.”
They shared a laugh. Mya took another sip of her drink, found she was sucking on ice. Her body felt warm. She was unsure if it was the alcohol or this stranger. Either way, she didn’t want it to stop. “So let me guess. You walk into bars and try to flatter all the girls.” Immediately she regretted uttering such a line, but what was the worst that could happen?
The boy laughed. “You’re right,” he said, a hint of sarcasm in his voice. “I have nothing better to do than wander around until I finally meet someone who needs flattery. Please. I talk to who I want, when I want. And right now I want to talk to you.”
“I bet you say that to all the girls, too,” Mya said.
“Actually, I do. You got me there.”
“So here you are. I guess I should be flattered you’re talking to me.”
“Actually, I’m the one who should be flattered.”
The boy smiled, his face a strange but alluring combination of youthfulness and maturity, like he’d seen more and done more than anyone his age had experienced. He wasn’t in a hurry like most guys she met, hadn’t overplayed his hand within the first ten seconds of their meeting. He looked confident enough that if she rebuffed any possible advances, he could pick up, move on, quickly find someone who wouldn’t. Not that she wanted him to move on. But there was the deliciously dangerous possibility of it all.
“William Roberts,” he said. “It’s nice to meet you.” He offered his hand.
“Mya Loverne.” She took it, shook it. “So, William Roberts. Do you have a middle name?”
“You want to know my middle name? I don’t know, that’s a pretty big step. Once I’ve given that out, we’re linked until one of us leaves this bar. Are you prepared for that kind of commitment?”
“Is it really that big a commitment?” Mya asked.
“Of course it is,” he said. “See, a boy and a girl can sit in a bar talking for hours. They can share the most intimate secrets of their life, loves and hates, lovers and ex-lovers, pet peeves and fetishes, but there’s always a layer of protection between them, this subtle, unspoken boundary where they both know the biggest intimacy has yet to be allowed.” She felt the boy move closer, inching his stool toward hers. She pretended she hadn’t noticed.
“See, once you cross that line, once you allow that intimacy, you can never go back. See, knowing my middle name isn’t such a big deal on the surface, it’s what it represents. So if I tell it to you, be sure there’s no going back. Are you ready for that?”
“Mine’s Helen,” she blurted out. Everything seemed to stop for a moment, the boy seeming to soak it in. Now the night was open to all sorts of possibilities.
“Henry,” he said. “William Henry Roberts. It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mya.”
Henry.
“It’s a pleasure to meet you, William Henry.”
William smiled. “Hey, barkeep,” he shouted. Gregory turned around. “Another round down here, if you please.”
CHAPTER 40
William put down the copy of the Gazette. His fingertips had become black with ink. He licked his thumb, rubbed his fingers until the smudge had congealed, then wiped his hand on a napkin which he then tossed in the garbage by the bed.
The article was smartly written, insightful, and one hundred percent true. Parker had done a surprisingly good job. In a short amount of time, too. He wasn’t quite sure how Henry had pulled all the facts together, and part of him was rather impressed. Still, William knew there were many unanswered questions to which Parker—and the rest of the city—would beg the answers. This was the beauty of the whole thing. William felt a great surge inside. Pride and ambition. Those four deaths were just the beginning. Athena Paradis, the other three martyrs, they were stepping-stones to a greater good.
Two pages after Parker’s story was an article about the turmoil at Franklin-Rees publications following Jeffrey Lourdes’s murder, as the empire ran around like a headless chicken hoping to find some stability. William knew, as soon everyone else would, that regardless of how many Frankenstein-esque heads they tried to bolt on, the animal itself was dying. Everything would crumble from the top down. And out of that rubble would come something beautiful.
Once the guilty had hanged, the innocent had nothing to fear. It was human nature to fear the executioner. Most never realized their job was to cleanse the earth of the guilty, the evil, those who poisoned society.
Despite the truths Henry Parker had unearthed, William felt no anger toward him. Being attacked and brutalized hadn’t stopped Parker’s pursuit of the truth.
Parker, of course, only knew what William wanted him to know. Because he was the Regulator. He was the last of the great bloodline. And even if the line died with him, it would have died claiming a destiny so abruptly halted many years ago.
Just as William had uncovered his history despite those who had wished to keep it a secret, so would Henry Parker discover it, as well. Two sides of a coin—one clean, one dirty—both needed to create the whole. The same way Billy the Kid had his chronicler in Pat Garrett, so would William in Henry Parker.
William heard a groan. She was waking up.
He nudged the prone body on the floor, gave her a little kick. She shifted, uttered a muffled cry through the rag soaked through with saliva.
William knelt down to her, gently shook her until those eyelids—crusty with eyeliner and mascara—fluttered open. The pupils took a moment to register, but as soon as they did fear came racing back to those pretty hazel eyes. The very eyes that had once gazed upon Henry Parker with an intense love that she still felt for him. Mya had made that clear in Paulina Cole’s article. Surely Henry still felt something for her, too. Perhaps he could still feel her pain. They’d find out soon enough.
The Boy smiled. He gently stroked Mya’s cheek with the back of his hand. Her face trembled, lips quivering, blubbering.
“Don’t be scared, Mya.” William’s fingers traced soothing circles over her forehead un
til her trembling lips began to calm. “You have no idea how important you are.”
CHAPTER 41
Jack sat perched on the corner of my desk, swaying slightly, like a column debating whether or not to tip over. It was barely ten in the morning. After catching one whiff of his butane-flavored breath, it was clear that Jack was either coming off a night of wicked drinking, or that his wicked night of drinking hadn’t yet ended.
“What you need to do now,” Jack said, “to follow up on today’s article, is start full court press into this Willian Henry Roberts’s background. What did his parents do? Are any of his childhood friends willing to say he was ‘the quiet type’ or pulled the wings off of insects? You need to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that this psychopath is in fact the great-grandson of Billy the Kid. You planted the seeds, Henry, now you gotta water that sucker.”
I leaned back in my chair, looked out across Rockefeller Plaza. Tried to let my mind wander, because when it did it usually ended up in the right place. The police had finally pulled their surveillance off of myself and Amanda, convinced my injury was just a warning and the officers would be better suited hunting than guarding a guy who sat at his desk typing while his eyesight got progressively worse.
And it was just as well. I needed to look into Roberts’s birth certificate, family history, anything that could prove who he was and who he knew. He had parents—they would know if their son showed early signs of violence. Or if he had a preoccupation with family history. Perhaps a predilection toward antique weaponry. Or maybe he just spent a few too many hours with his Nintendo playing Duck Hunt.
I knew who William Henry Roberts was. Knew where he was from. When he had committed his atrocities in this city. What kind of monster he was.
“I need anything you can possibly help me with, Jack. I want to talk to anyone who’s ever been in contact with William Henry Roberts. Schoolteachers, classmates—”
“Neighbors, pets, yada yada, I know the drill.” For a moment Jack teetered on the edge of my desk before planting an unsteady hand on my keyboard to steady himself. He looked at me, a quick splash of embarrassment appearing and then vanishing. Like it never happened.
“Jack?” I said.
“Yeah, kid?”
“Are you okay?”
Jack looked at me incredulously. “If by that statement you’re asking whether I am in perfect health for a man of my age, with the virility of a tiger and countenance of a Viking—then, yes, I am very much okay.”
“No,” I said, my voice pressing a little harder. “Are you really okay?”
This time Jack didn’t answer so quickly. The veined hand left my tabletop and mounted itself on my shoulder. Jack gave a warm smile as though flattered that I cared so much about his mental and physical state.
“I’m fine, Henry. People are full of bull. So don’t believe everything you hear.”
I blinked when he said this. Everything you hear?
My concern for Jack was based solely on what I could see right in front of me. His too-sweet breath. His slightly off-kilter equilibrium. His refusal to acknowledge any problems whatsoever. Nobody had said a word to me otherwise, and I had no clue if it was being discussed on the news floor. Obviously others were aware of the problem, as was Jack. Not that he cared one way or another.
We both stood up. Jack began to walk back to his desk.
“So,” I said, “did you go out last night?”
Jack barked a laugh. “Go out? Kid, when you’re my age going out means ordering in Chinese food and hoping they remembered the sesame chicken.”
“So you stayed inside.”
“Same as I do every night.”
“Any company?”
Jack’s eyes closed as he tried to understand what I was asking. “What’s all this about?”
“I just want to know if anyone is there to, you know…just in case.”
“Just in case what?”
“In case you need any help…anyone to talk to. If anything, you know, happened.”
“Help?” Jack said. “What I hear, you need help more than I do. Don’t think I didn’t hear about Frank Rourke and his infamous crap-in-a-sack. You’d better work on your interpersonal relationships with the other reporters before you start asking if I’m okay. Otherwise that won’t be the last bag you get. Help yourself, kid. There are only so many hours in the day.”
As he left, I tried to think of something to say. Jack clearly had a problem, and if it were anyone else they would be confronted, put on leave, made to do something to right the ship. But Jack O’Donnell was a living institution. You didn’t take the Michelangelo in for a cleaning until the marble was covered with so much grime you couldn’t tell its ass from its elbow. Jack was still Jack, pumping out quality stories, but it was only a matter of time. And from the look of things, this wasn’t an issue about to go away on its own.
I needed to focus. I still had a job to do, and there was still a killer out there. Maybe if I could uncover more information about William Henry Roberts, I could save more lives than just Jack’s.
I logged into LexisNexis and performed a search for William’s parents, John and Meryl Roberts. I found records of them owning two homes—one in Hico, Texas, and another in Pecos Valley, New Mexico. Pecos Valley, if I remembered, was where John Chisum ended his famous cattle drive which began in Paris, Texas, and where Billy the Kid wreaked havoc during the Lincoln County Wars. Hico was where Brushy Bill Roberts had died.
I searched for all newspaper articles in the state of Texas containing references to either John or Meryl Roberts. Aside from previous known addresses, there were half a dozen other clippings. I clicked on the first piece.
It was from the Pecos Valley News, a local paper from a town sleepy enough that high-school football was front-page material. The article had run in the Church Briefs section of the paper, and was about the baptism of the Roberts’s newborn son, William Henry. A photo accompanied the article, a robed priest holding an infant, nestled in between folds of cloth. I could just make out William Henry’s eyes, which were peaceful, closed.
It was hard to imagine that this child, renouncing evil, would eventually become a servant of the devil.
The second article was also from the Pecos Valley News, and it was written in 1995. The article was titled “Roberts Family Sells Home, Wish Them Luck in Texas!” An accompanying photo showed John and Meryl with their young children standing in front of a For Sale sign in their yard. The parents looked young, vibrant, like they were about to start a new chapter of their lives. An eight-year-old William stood to the side with an expression on his face that showed neither happiness nor sorrow. It was a blank slate, as though he was simply going along because there was nothing he could do to stop it.
I clicked on the third article. It was from the Hamilton Herald-News out of Hamilton County, Texas. It was dated August 23, 2004. The headline read Five Dead in Deadly Hico Blaze: Family Of Four Trapped Inside Their Home, Die Along With Beloved Chaplain.
The accompanying photo showed the charred embers where a house once stood. There were police cars, ambulances and fire trucks spread out with abandon. Men and women in white jackets with filters over their mouths combed through the wreckage.
I could see at least one body draped with cloth and another, uncovered, lying among the timber.
My stomach clenched. I read further, my pulse quickening as I read the awful details.
Late last night John Roberts, his wife Meryl, their two children William and Martha, and beloved Pastor Mark C. Rheingold died in a four-alarm fire at the Roberts ranch in Hico, Texas.
…bodies were burned beyond recognition…
…unknown how the fire began…
…Rheingold had just returned from a thirty-city tour for his latest book and was set to break ground on a new 15,000-seat church in Houston…
…the Roberts family had just moved to Hico three years ago…
…joined John Henry Roberts’s father, Oliver…
&
nbsp; …William Henry and Martha James had recently graduated from Hamilton High…
…police have not ruled out arson…
I read the rest of the article, stunned. It was impossible. Either I’d made a huge mistake, or something was terribly wrong. Because according to the newspapers, William Henry Roberts had died in Hico, Texas, nearly four years ago.
CHAPTER 42
The next three articles were all follow-ups to the story of the tragic fire that had claimed the lives of four of Hico’s newest residents, as well as the life of one of the state’s most beloved religious servants.
According to Sheriff Chip Youngblood, experts determined that the fire was electrical, and may have been exacerbated when one of the Roberts children foolishly attempted to extinguish it with water. According to the local energy supplier, there was a small spike in the Roberts family’s electrical usage around the time the fire was believed to have started.
The county held a small, private ceremony for the burial of John Henry Roberts, his wife and their children. A photo ran of the burial. There were about twenty people in attendance, including several reporters from local papers.
The funeral service held for Pastor Mark Rheingold, however, was a very different story. The proceedings were held in Rheingold’s old church in Houston, a ten-thousand seater that was filled to capacity for the ceremony. Ushers were needed to corral the crowds. At least four people were confirmed to have fainted. Another tried to drown himself in the hopes of meeting Mark Rheingold in heaven.
I came upon hundreds of photos of Mark Rheingold taken during his various pilgrimages in various newspapers, pamphlets and photo-ops. Rheingold was a thin man, not skinny but lean, with the lithe physique and stretched facial muscles of a jogger. His jet-black hair was always slicked back in a neat coif and his suits, like his wife’s jewelry, were decent but not gaudy. Every photograph bore the pastor’s thousand-watt smile. Though I did wonder why a man of God needed veneers.