Those who resist the voice of the future may find themselves in that Godless state known as Stagnation.
Times change. Brave and smart men change along with them.
Humbly, O. Hatzler
Scott Ardullo, fallen out of editorial good graces. Still, wouldn't the picture have embarrassed Carson Crimmins as well?
I read through subsequent issues, waiting for Scott's written response to the editorial. Nothing. Either he hadn't bothered, or the Intelligencer had refused to print his letter.
Five weeks later, Orton and Wanda Hatzler's names were gone from the paper's masthead. In their place, in ornate, curlicued typescript:
A pink sheet now, and cut back to three pages, flimsy as a supermarket mailer. No more wire-photo material. In its place, gushing movie reviews that seemed copied from press releases, barely literate accounts of local events, and amateurishly drawn cartoons with no apparent point. The too-large signature: '
Three barely filled pages, even twenty months later, when the headline screamed:
SLAUGHTER AT THE ARDULLO RANCH! RATCATCHER PEEKE ARRESTED!
by Sybil Noonan Crimmins Publisher, Editor and Chief Writer
S.N.C.
She never did.
Last edition of the Intelligencer.
Chapter 23
Returning to the main reference room, I pulled up San Francisco, Bakersfield, and Fresno microfiche on the Ardullo slayings. Nothing that hadn't been covered down in L.A.
In the Modesto Bee I found an obituary for Terri Mclntyre Ardullo. Her death was described as 'untimely,' no mention of homicide. The bio was brief: Girl Scout, volunteer for the Red Cross, honor student at Modesto High, member of the Spanish Club and the Shakespeare Society, B.A. from UC Davis.
She'd been survived by her parents, Wayne and Felice Mclntyre, and sisters Barbara Mclntyre and Lynn Blount. A Wayne Mclntyre was listed in Modesto. Feeling like a creep, I dialed and told the elderly woman who answered that I was conducting a search for relatives of the Argent family of Pennsylvania, in anticipation of the first Argent reunion, to be held in Scranton.
'Argent?' she said. 'Then why us?'
'Your name came up on our computer list.'
'Did it? Well, I'm afraid your computer got it wrong. We're not related to any Argents. Sorry.'
No anger, no defensiveness.
No idea what had interested Claire about Peake.
I pictured him in his room, grimacing, twitching, rocking autistically. Nerve endings firing randomly as Lord knew what impulses coalesced and scrambled among the folds of beclouded frontal lobes.
The door opens, a woman enters, smiling, eager to help. A new doctor. The first person to show any interest in him in sixteen years.
She kneels down beside him, talks soothingly. Wanting to help him… help he doesn't want. Help that makes him angry.
Put her in a box. Bad eyes.
I went searching in Miami newspapers for items about the Crimminses. Obituaries were the daily special: the Herald informed me that Carson and Sybil Crimmins had died together twelve years ago, in a yacht explosion off the coast of south Florida. An unnamed crew member had perished as well. Carson was listed as a 'real estate developer,' Sybil as a 'former entertainer.' No pictures.
Next came a Las Vegas Sun reference to Carson Crimmins, Jr.'s, death in a motocross accident, two years later, near Pimm, Nevada. Nothing on the younger brother, Derrick. Too bad; he'd talked on record once. Maybe he'd be willing to reminisce, if I found him.
Former Intelligencer publisher Orton Hatzler was memorialized in a back-page paragraph of the Santa Monica