“You trying to get rid of me?” He forced a smile.
“Hell no. Just trying to finally figure you out. Remember when you first stopped me and asked if I was hiring? You didn’t talk again for about four months. Just nodded all the time, wouldn’t even look me in the eye. Then I had you hold my notebook that one time, and you quietly pointed out that I was double billing Ron Neil. You failed to mention you’re a genius with numbers.”
“Hardly a genius.” A Catholic school education with accelerated math is all it was.
“Ok, let’s see who gets a trim tomorrow.”
William sat down and looked over at the notebook. “Right off the bat, this is wrong. We did Eddie three days ago. His grass will burn if we cut it again.”
“No, that was Mrs. Hoffman—”
“Hoffman lives down the street. We did her two weeks ago. She’s due. You’re off.”
“Just do it.” Carlos slid the notebook across the table. “Hey, I hired those two guys from the Pancake House.”
“I don’t suppose they have papers.”
“Just focus on getting us on track please.” Carlos stood and walked over to the fridge.
He’d been on Carlos to hire the two young men who hung out in front of the restaurant. They were obviously fresh off the truck that had successfully snuck by Homeland Security to transport them from Texas to Arkansas. That ride, and getting across the border, had certainly cost them everything they had.
“You’re running a booming enterprise,” William said.
“My vast empire is growing, thanks to you.”
Grandpa Tom would be proud of his miniscule efforts for job creation. “The Democratic party has lost their way, Willie boy,” he often said, pointing his finger at William. “We’ve got to return to the working class. Focus more on creating good jobs and realizing people are desperate to get here because of what America stands for. Sure, we need strong protection at the borders, but do people really think that illegals are sneaking in and taking all the well-paying jobs?”
Nanna would usually tried to change the subject then, and his brother, Brian, would announce, once again, that he was voting Republican. And the kitchen would erupt in chaos.
William closed his eyes. Is it always going to hurt this bad—?
“You got ice?” Carlos opened the freezer. “Damn, this is frosted over!”
“Told the landlord about it two weeks ago.”
“Can’t drink hot Dr Pepper,” Carlos walked back over to the table. “You got us figured out?”
“You were just off on addresses. You’re good now. Ready to take on the overgrown lawns of Little Rock.”
“Good man, Nick. Then I’m out. Mrs. Gonzales told me to come by and see her after work. I got just enough time to take a shower and shave. She likes a clean workspace.” Carlos winked.
“Go on with your bad self.”
“What are you gonna do? Sit in here and read? No man is an island, Nick.”
Not true. “Cards play the Reds tonight.”
“I’m gonna see if Mrs. Gonzales has a daughter for you.” Carlos swatted him on the shoulder.
As soon as Carlos closed the door, William walked to the cabinet and pulled out the magazine. The badly needed shower would have to wait.
He leaned against the counter, flipping to the article.
William’s last appearance in public was at the funeral for his grandfather, former U.S. Senator Tom Roseworth. Since then, sources say, William failed to return to Belmont University, where he was to finish his senior year.
“He no doubt moved to a smaller college and is laying low,” said a source close to the family. “He just needed time to grieve.”
If only it were that simple.
He looked up from the magazine, sliding open another drawer. The Cricket phone inside was dark. It would need to be charged before he could send the texts.
Afterwards, he’d quickly destroy it. Using a ghost number, he would text his parents, brothers, and Nanna. I’m OK, he would type. Just need space.
He’d add that he loved them too. They’d all know it was definitely him, as the message was an inside, morbid joke. “The boy back from space just needs space,” William would quip to his parents when he was in a rotten mood.
When he sent the monthly texts, they were always followed by a flurry of calls and texts. Where are you? This has gone on long enough! Just call us! We’ll come get you! Don’t you know that you’re making this worse?
Nanna’s texts were less demanding. Please come home.
He’d then immediately smash the cheap phone so it couldn’t be traced. Even the sight of it brought on a familiar unease in his stomach. He slid the drawer shut and resumed scanning the article.
The piece picked up as they always did, with the same damn recap.
How the world watched him grow up, clamoring for details of how he’d been found by his grandmother, Lynn Roseworth, the wife of a US senator and vice presidential contender, who hid from her own family that at one point in her life she was a researcher of UFOs.
The paragraph broke to feature a screen grab of the now-infamous video of his grandmother meeting with extraterrestrial researchers in Illinois. Once, a few years ago, he’d gotten on YouTube to see how many views it had received. At that point, it was more than two hundred million.
The article went on to detail how his grandmother never publically discussed how she found him or what happened in the town of Argentum, only saying at a brief news conference afterwards that a great government conspiracy was hiding the truth from the public about extraterrestrial abductions.
Almost immediately, the man suspected of abducting and killing William, Dr. Steven Richards, was released and was never seen in public again. His alleged accomplice, Barbara Rush, was also freed, but refused to talk to reporters.
The world held its collective breath after the town was locked down for three months by the Department of Homeland Security. Despite the isolated and brutal conditions of the area, the network news divisions set up temporary bureaus outside. Families of missing people arrived from across the globe, holding an almost constant vigil.
When the government finally allowed the media in, the experience for the reporters was a disappointing and resounding thud. No spaceships, no alien bodies, no Roswell. Only a sad little broken-down town, with hardly any residents, who knew nothing about what had occurred. In interviews, they were mostly agitated that their streets were lined with satellite trucks and just wanted to go back to living off the grid, thank you very much. Their main complaint was that after the military occupation, the only hotel in the town had shut down when the well-liked front-desk girl skipped town.
“How she did it when the rest of us couldn’t leave is really the only mystery we’ve got,” grumbled a former occupant, who said he was forced to move in with his girlfriend and now had to clean his own room.
The government encouraged everyone in the town to do interviews, including the staff at the hospital, who claimed William was simply never there. Despite rumors that other abducted people were brought to the town, the doctors explained they were basically a small research clinic for people with amnesia and had very few patients, given the dwindling population of the town. They preferred the isolated location because the quiet and calm was soothing to their troubled clients. They’d considered shutting down for years after their prime source of income, a private donor whose wife had suffered from amnesia, had died.
“Perhaps,” the lead doctor had told reporters, “Mrs. Roseworth is deeply troubled.”