I was on the floor. Sitting up against the radiator. My hands were strapped behind my back. I couldn't see what was holding them together. My head throbbed and my neck felt sticky. My legs were numb, the tingling sensation of poor circulation. I had no idea how long I'd been here, but every muscle in my body felt some measure of pain.
The room was dark, a faint amber glow dying on the carpet. The sun was going down. How long had I been out?
My heart beat fast, fear and adrenaline spreading quickly, my pulse racing as panic began to set in. Water dripped down my face. It got into my eyes and I tried to blink it away.
Then I heard a sucking sound, looked over and saw a man
I'd never seen before sitting at the living room table, smoking a cigarette like he didn't have a care in the world. He was
flicking ashes into a neat little pile on the floor. There was an empty glass in front of him, water beading down its sides. I recognized it as a piece Amanda bought from a mail order catalog a few months back. She'd said my glassware looked so worn it was ready to turn back into sand.
The stranger cocked his head and smiled at me, like he'd just noticed I was there.
"You're a heavy sleeper, Parker. I thought I'd have to bring a marching band in here to get those eyes open."
I blinked the spots from my eyes. The man in my living room was young. Mid-twenties. His face had no lines from age, but looked slightly weather-beaten, like he'd grown up in the sun and hadn't yet learned the dangers of UV rays. He was wearing jeans and a hooded sweatshirt. A blue bandanna was wrapped around his head. His eyebrows and sideburns were dirty blond, but the bandanna hid his hair's length and style.
He wasn't from the city. Nobody got natural tans living here.
Immediately I knew this man, like me, had come to New York from far away. He'd come for a reason. He'd killed four people without mercy or remorse. And now he was in my home.
The skin around his face was taut but smooth, like an older man squeezed into a younger man's body. His hands were veiny and strong, his expression one of both deep thought and intense malice, like he'd take a long hard thought before slitting your throat. This was the man who had ended four lives.
Mixed with fear, I felt a strange dose of excitement. The man sitting in my living room presented a fascinating story, one that I'd been dying to uncover. A spool that unraveled here-leaving me beaten and vulnerable, at a murderer's mercy.
He peered at me through a smoky haze as he took another drag and exhaled. I couldn't see any weapons on him, didn't know what he'd hit me with, only that it was heavy and knocked me out with one blow. I had a burning urge to write a very strongly worded letter to the landlord about the shitty security in this apartment building, but there were more pressing issues.
"How did you…" I said. My mouth felt like it was filled with cotton, my words slurred and slow.
"Please," he said. "Your building is easier to get into than my jeans. And it costs a whole lot less, too."
He stood up. Moved closer until he was hovering over me.
My heart was pounding. I tried futilely to struggle with my bonds. I could smell the stink of sweat. He was breathing hard, but not enough to keep a sick smile from spreading over his face.
"Part of me just wants to kill you right now," he said.
"Lord knows you deserve it."
"Like Athena deserved it," I spat. "And Joe Mauser, and
Jeffrey Lourdes and David Loverne."
"Damn straight," he said. "Fact is, you belong right in with the whole lot of 'em. I could fucking kill you right now and nobody would know until some shitty two-line statement in your newspaper told 'em."
I had nothing to say. I tugged against my bonds, felt pain in my shoulder. It was useless. My legs were asleep, and I had no leverage. The boy watched me with odd fascination, like watching a fly struggle to free itself from a web.
Finally I stopped struggling.
"If you wanted to kill me-" I started to say.
"I would have done it right after I knocked your ass out," he finished. "No, I don't aim to kill you just yet, Henry.
You've been useful so far. I'm sure you were flattered I left one of your writings behind."
"You're demented."
He eyed me with disappointment. "Killing you is still a possibility, you don't get a lot smarter."
"Smarter?" I said, rather stupidly.
"I've read your paper," he said. "I've read all those stories about the guns and the bullets and the blah blah blah. Fact is your stories don't mean anything. What are you doing, son, other than just repeating shit that's already happened?
You're a goddamn stenographer with a fancy business card, my friend, and just because you happened to look under a log nobody else wanted to get dirty enough to look under doesn't make you any less of a maggot than the dirt you find underneath."
"Like you," I said. "The maggot I found underneath."
"Maggot, whatever. All depends on your perspective," he said, dropping his cigarette onto the floor where he stubbed it out with the toe of his sneaker. "Funny thing about maggots is, people hate 'em, but the whole world would go to hell without 'em. Maggots strip dead flesh from bone, make sure the smell doesn't bother your pretty nostrils."
"Billy the Kid," I said, tasting my own blood. "What do you…"
"Shut the fuck up," the boy said. Without warning, he stomped on my leg hard with his foot. I let out a cry of pain.
"You don't know anything. You know what you do, Henry
Parker? You write about history. Me?" he said with a sharp laugh. "I am history. I decide what makes tomorrow's headlines. Without me you'd have nothing to write about Athena
Paradis, her shitty singing, and David Loverne screwing some whore instead of his wife. Without me Jeffrey Lourdes would have nothing to write about except no-talent hacks getting high and crashing their cars. Fact is, guys like you need a guy like me to survive in this world. You reap what I sow. Nothing you can do to change that."
"So why are you here?" I said, the words spilling out of my mouth. "You say I can't live without you, but I didn't break into your home and whack you over the head."
He laughed, one time, sharply.
"See my problem is, ungrateful asshole like you doesn't even know I'm doing you a favor. You might not be able to see it past your six-dollar coffee cup, but Athena Paradis,
Lourdes, those people are ruining this place. You take the spotlight off of them you find what really matters. You talk about maggots? They're the vermin. Guys like you put a spotlight on the vermin, pretend you can't see how diseased they are. Then they infect you and everyone else. And what do you do? Blame people like me. And since you, Parker, are too chicken-shit to do it yourself, I'm going to do it for you. At some point there won't be no Athenas left. No more maggots to celebrate. And then you'll thank me."
"So why are you here, exactly? You have some grudge against the world? You didn't get laid until you were eighteen 'cause the girls didn't like some freak with a chip on his shoulder?"
He looked at me, as though confused and saddened by my ignorance. "You're even dimmer than I thought. Maybe I would be doing folks a favor 'n' get rid of you."
"Then go ahead, get rid of me or get the fuck out of here."
"Trust me, I have something better in mind." His mouth curved into a vicious smile that made my skin crawl. "The real reason I'm here is because there's some history best stayed buried. I've seen you going to talk to all those people.
I watched you leave that college professor's office this morning. And you know what I was thinking when you left?
When I saw that broad's face watch you from her dirty window? I pictured what her head might look like with a rifle slug going through it at five hundred feet per second."