The Guilty - Part 25
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Part 25

"Last time we spoke," Paulina said, "you told me you were closer to Henry Parker than, let's see if I recall, 'white on rice.'"

James Keach loosened his tie and thanked G.o.d he was wearing a suit jacket because he was sure the pit stains on his blue Oxford were visible from across the street. "There's different kinds of rice," he stuttered. "There's brown rice, chicken fried rice. It's not all white."

"You said white. White on rice. So why the f.u.c.k is this Billy the Kid exclusive in the Gazette Gazette and we're sitting with and we're sitting with another Britney crotch shot on page one?" Paulina's face was red, but James couldn't tell if it was from rage or more Xanax than usual. He hoped it was the latter, but doubted it.

"Parker was attacked in his apartment," Keach said, trying to regain his confidence. "The cops have a.s.signed two protection details, one for Parker and another for this Amanda Davies girl. I tried waiting down the street from his apartment, outside a bagel shop, but one of the cops spotted me and started walking toward where I was standing. He was looking looking at me, Paulina! So I pretended I was buying a bagel and got the h.e.l.l out of there. Better that than they knew who I was, right?"

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Paulina closed her eyes, rubbed her forehead with her hand.

"And so Parker finds this crackpot Vance, and he snags the story while you're slurping cream cheese. James, do you know how close we are?"

"How close we are in what?"

Paulina rifled through some papers on her desk, pulled out a white sheet with a bunch of indecipherable numbers.

"These are the latest circulation figures for all five major New York newspapers, along with rates for the top twenty newspapers in the country. The latest numbers show the Gazette' s circulation lead over the s circulation lead over the Dispatch Dispatch at less than five at less than five percent. Five percent. Five percent. That's less than yearly inflation these That's less than yearly inflation these days. One major story can turn the tide, my rice-loving friend.

So I don't care if you have to channel Houdini himself, you shadow Henry Parker like your life depends on it. Because I can sure as h.e.l.l make sure your job does. That is all."

38.

Icould sense the men following me even though I couldn't see them. I knew they carried guns, had their eyes glued to my back, and sized up every person who came within five feet of me.

I told the cops the killer had already done what he came to do, that their efforts would be better used fighting terrorism or searching for the killer himself. They disagreed. I told them the guy who cut up my hand wasn't stupid enough to go after me in broad daylight, that he had actual targets. He had a motive, a purpose, wasn't some fly-by-the-seat-of-hispants, run-of-the-mill murderer. He picked the Winchester for a reason. Stole it from that museum in Fort Sumner for a reason. Came to my apartment and tried to scare me off the story for a reason.

In the days since, I wondered why he didn't just kill me.

The man had already killed four others. He clearly wasn't averse to murder. There was a story he wanted to stay buried, and leaving me alive was just one more shovel that could keep digging. I guessed he just didn't know how driven--or stupid--I was.

To uncover more about the legacy of Brushy Bill Roberts, I had to start at the end. Roberts had lived in Hamilton, Texas, 246.

and died in Hico. Roberts had since become Hico's only claim to fame, bringing in thousands of dollars in tourism every year. If Fort Sumner lived and breathed the legend of Billy the Kid, Hico lived on the whiff of conspiracy brought on by their most famous former resident.

I had to get out of the office and do research away from the madness that had become the Gazette Gazette newsroom. With the newsroom. With the increasing battles between the Gazette Gazette and the and the Dispatch, Dispatch, I I could tell Hillerman had come down hard on Wallace to make sure his reporters knocked this story out of the park. And if that was the case, I was his Babe Ruth, stepping to the plate and calling my shot, hoping for a moon rocket rather than a whiff.

The New York public library was quiet, had the same Internet resources as the Gazette, Gazette, access to LexisNexis, and all access to LexisNexis, and all the historical newspapers on microfiche I needed. I wanted to view the Roberts case from every media angle: not only Hico, but by the major metropolitan papers in Texas, New York, Los Angeles and elsewhere. You could get a good grasp of how a story penetrated the national consciousness by how widely it was reported, and with what veracity the conspiracy was given.

It was a crisp summer day and the steps outside the library were teeming with people reading, hanging out, and even a few sleeping on the stone. The NYPL itself is a behemoth that takes up two full city blocks. The entrance is guarded by two stone lions named Leo Astor and Leo Lenox, after John Jacob Astor and James Lenox, both generous patrons. In the 1930s, they were renamed Patience and Fort.i.tude by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia. Patience guards the south steps, Fort.i.tude the north. As I pa.s.sed them by, I hoped they'd grant me both. The three main doors are bracketed by six carved stone columns, which lead into the great reading room where I'd spent many 247.

hours wrenching my back while poring over old texts. The ma.s.sive room is lit by grand chandeliers and surrounded by thousands of volumes. I was here to use CATNYP, the online system allowing subscribers access to the library's huge collection of journals, periodicals and newspapers.

I jogged up the steps and entered, making my way to a computer stall where I took a seat, cracked my knuckles, looked to see if the two cops had followed me inside. They hadn't.

I logged on to CATNYP and ran a search for Texas newspapers containing stories pertinent to the Brushy Bill case. I typed slowly with my index fingers, my right palm aching from the st.i.tches. Guess I'd have to settle for old-fashioned two-fingered typing for the time being.

The first article I came across was from the Austin Chroni- Austin Chroni- cle, a story about one Judge Bob Hefner who, in 1986, published a booklet claiming Brushy Bill had in reality been the a story about one Judge Bob Hefner who, in 1986, published a booklet claiming Brushy Bill had in reality been the real Billy the Kid. The booklet gained notoriety when it was picked up by the Dallas Morning News. Dallas Morning News. According to According to Hefner's story, "Brushy Bill had no children and was at the end of his life. Fame and fortune were not a consideration for the old man."

Hefner continued, saying that Roberts desired only to be granted the pardon promised by Governor Lewis Wallace to the Kid years before. Hefner claimed that Pat Garrett had actually killed a friend of Billy the Kid's that night in 1881, solely for the purpose of collecting the five-hundred-dollar bounty on Bonney's head.

It seemed strange that Brushy Bill Roberts would suddenly decide, after years in hiding, that he wanted to be pardoned for crimes committed in the 1880s. I noted that Hefner currently ran the Billy the Kid museum in Hico, making it two different states with two different museums claiming to be the 248.

final resting place for Billy the Kid. Of course he had financial motivation for keeping the theory alive. But that didn't make him a liar.

I then found an article published by the New York Times New York Times in in 1950, concerning the spectacle surrounding a man who claimed to be the real-life Jesse James. James had been a.s.sumed murdered by two brothers named Bob and Charley Ford back in 1882, but in 1950 a man named J. Frank Dalton claimed to be the real James. After a media carnival descended upon the 102-year-old man during a hospital stay, Dalton died. Yet the rumors persisted. Finally in 1995, the body of Jesse James was exhumed from its grave in Missouri and the DNA was found to match 99.7 to that of James's family. Supporters of the Dalton theory did not give up hope, and in 2000 a court order was granted to exhume the body of J. Frank Dalton to end the speculation. Unfortunately the wrong body was exhumed, and attempts to discredit Dalton were halted. Dalton's actual body was never exhumed nor tested. I wondered if this botched exhumation was part of the reason Largo Vance was unable to do the same for William H. Bonney.

The article was accompanied by a photo of an elderly man with a long, scruffy beard lying in a hospital bed with two men standing by his side. When I saw the attribution given to the second of the two men, my heart nearly skipped a beat. He was wearing a leather jacket and bore a look of concern on his face. He was identified as one Brushy Bill Roberts, ninety years old, at the deathbed of J. Frank Dalton. The man thought to be the real Billy the Kid next to the man suspected of being the real Jesse James.

I ran another search, this time to determine whether Jesse James and William H. Bonney knew each other. According 249.

to news reports, Jesse James and Billy the Kid had met only once, at the Old Adobe Springs Hotel near Las Vegas in July of 1879. The two were seen having dinner by an a.s.sociate of Bonney's, though the witness's story was widely discredited.

People simply couldn't believe history's two most famous outlaws had ever crossed paths, let alone met for a friendly dinner.

The Austin Chronicle, Austin Chronicle, in a later story, said this "chance" in a later story, said this "chance"

meeting was even more unlikely considering James's daughter had been born merely ten days earlier.

I kept searching, and soon discovered another photograph, dated 1942, again of Brushy Bill Roberts and J. Frank Dalton, this time of the two men standing side by side. The picture clearly identified the two men by the names they went by at the time--Brushy Bill and Frank Dalton. According to records, it was not until after Dalton's one hundred and second birthday that he claimed to be Jesse James. Additionally, Roberts denied that he was Billy the Kid at first, only admitting to it after being confronted.

There were a slew of websites and conspiracy theory pamphlets printed and posted on the web, many claiming that Roberts and Dalton were two con artists looking to make a buck and gain notoriety. What made no sense is why the two men would wait until their deathbeds to claim this "notoriety."

Both Roberts and Dalton died within a few years of their confessions, and neither made any sort of profit from their claims.

According to another report, a man named Homer Overton claimed that Pat Garrett's widow told him that the Kid's death was a sham, a ruse concocted by Garrett and the Kid to allow the outlaw safe pa.s.sage into Mexico. Overton's testimony was entered into the record during Vance's attempt to convince lawmakers to exhume the body of Catherine Antrim. Lincoln 250.

County sheriffs made a point of noting that Pat Garrett's likeness is featured on the logo of the Lincoln County Sheriff's Department. The man was an icon. If it were proven that Garrett did not, in fact, kill William H. Bonney, it would throw the entire county into upheaval.

I allowed this information to digest. For years Brushy Bill Roberts's story had been considered fraudulent. The ramblings of an old, broke man. Even an attempt to put the case to rest by comparing Billy the Kid's DNA to that of his mother never came to fruition. Likewise, J. Frank Dalton's DNA was never compared to that of Jesse James's family.

Two legends with cracks in their facade. Two legends protected either by governmental incompetence, or inst.i.tutions with reasons to hide the truth. Without the prosperity of those legends to harvest from, several towns in the Southwest would shrivel up and die. And a large part of this country's history would be rent to pieces. If Oliver P. Roberts truly was Billy the Kid, there were many people who had clear motivations to keep that secret locked away.

I could see the connections between the legend of Billy the Kid and the man responsible for murdering Athena Paradis, Joe Mauser, Jeffrey Lourdes and David Loverne.

William H. Bonney was a Regulator, sworn to bring to justice those who had wronged him, wronged society and threatened to disrupt the very fabric of the land he was trying to protect. Using some twisted logic, the psychopath who went Mario Batali on my hand felt he was also bringing justice to the guilty.

I brought up the photo of J. Frank Dalton on his deathbed.

Thought about the alleged report of Jesse James and William H. Bonney meeting near Las Vegas in 1879. Ten days after the birth of James's daughter.

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Daughter. That word stuck in my throat. Mary Susan James. Born just three years before her father was allegedly killed.

On a whim, I checked to see if there were any records of Billy the Kid having children, a wife, any trace of a bloodline. According to the records, Bonney never married and it was unclear whether he had any children.

I looked up the family tree of Brushy Bill Roberts. Roberts had apparently married a woman named Melinda. Records showed that Roberts had one son, Jesse William Roberts, who was born in Hamilton, Texas, in 1897.

Jesse William Roberts. I looked at the photos featuring Brushy Bill and Frank Dalton together. Added that to the alleged meeting between the outlaws in 1879. It would be a mighty big coincidence--or a case of d.a.m.n good foresight--for the man who'd later claim to be Billy the Kid to name his only son after Jesse James. Either that, or Jesse James and Billy the Kid were better acquaintances than people thought.

My fingers flew as I typed more searches into the machine, my mind ignoring the pain from my st.i.tched-up hand. I couldn't stop. The spool was unraveling and I couldn't slow down. I knew I had stumbled upon something, a story that drove to the very heart of a century-old legend.

I looked for lineage records pertaining to Jesse William Roberts, son of Brushy Bill Roberts. Jesse had married a woman named Lucy Barnett. Lucy gave birth to two of Jesse's children: James and Catherine.

Catherine Roberts. Brushy Bill's granddaughter. Who shared the same name as Billy the Kid's mother, Catherine Antrim.

Catherine Roberts died of tuberculosis in 1927 at just three years of age. James Roberts, Brushy's grandson, eventually 252.

moved to New Mexico, where he married Lucinda Walther.

In 1957 she gave birth to a son named John Henry Roberts.

John Henry Roberts married a woman named Meryl Higgins, and in 1987 Meryl gave birth to twins: Martha James Roberts, and William Henry Roberts.

William Henry Roberts. Currently aged twenty-one. The same age Billy the Kid was when allegedly killed by Pat Garrett.

The theories were true. William H. Bonney, known by millions as Billy the Kid, known by few as Brushy Bill Roberts, had fathered a son.

I knew why this killer was using the Winchester rifle. Why he had chosen the weapon and bullets he did. Why he had stolen that gun from the museum in Fort Sumner. Why he had waited twenty-one years to reclaim his heritage. To continue the destiny set forth by his ancestor.

The bloodline had survived. And one hundred and thirty years after his supposed murder, Billy the Kid's greatgrandson, William Henry Roberts, had brought the lawlessness and bloodshed of the Old West here to New York City.

39.

The vodka tasted cold and bitter as it slid down her throat, but the tonic dulled the taste and made it easy to swallow. She knocked the gla.s.s on the counter and signaled the bartender, a bohemian named Gregory who wore a ponytail pulled back so tight she feared it might tear his scalp off, and told him to refresh the drink.

"What, you going in for surgery and need a cheap anesthetic?" Gregory said with a laugh. He took a bottle from the well, gave her an inch and a half and topped the rest with tonic. "Hey, Mya, you okay?"

Mya Loverne looked up at Gregory and managed a weak smile. She'd come to the Suave bar four times in the past week alone, drank herself into oblivion each time, and this was the first time Gregory had noticed her.

Drinking was all she could do since Henry abandoned her.

Since Amanda had run her off. Since Mya had nothing left, n.o.body to lean on except the awkward embraces from sweaty drunks who weren't quite repulsive enough to turn down. The physical pleasure dulled the pain. Not for long, but long enough to gain a modic.u.m of relief from the anguish inside her.

Mya took a small sip and saw Gregory watching her from 254.

the other end of the bar. As soon as he noticed her looking, he turned away, hiding a look of embarra.s.sment, and pretended to clean a gla.s.s. She wondered what time he got off.

If he had an apartment nearby.

Mya felt her cell phone vibrate through her purse. She took it out, saw it was her mother, and pressed Ignore. Mya had only spoken to her mother once since her father's murder. She made no effort to hide the fact that she believed her mother's ignorance led to his death. That if her mother wasn't such a G.o.dd.a.m.n pa.s.sive b.i.t.c.h, wasn't such a pushover, had every now and then stood up for herself, stood up for herself, her father would still be her father would still be alive and not in a pine box in some cemetery surrounded by dimming memories of loved ones.

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."

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He looked moderately embarra.s.sed, 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 embarra.s.sing 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. 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, line, but what was the worst that could 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.

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"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."