Locomotive to the Past by George Schultz (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š

- Author: George Schultz
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Jason had to laughāat the declaration that his sainted grandfather had been āa bit of a pain in the fannyā. He managed to muffle the chortleāapparently.
āOnce they moved out,ā continued the young woman, āmoved out⦠from that house, on Whitcomb⦠I never really saw any of them again. Wish that I could tell you⦠a little more than that. Tell you⦠exactly⦠where they live, yāknow. But, Iām sure that⦠if you were to ask around the stores, and restaurants, and hangouts, around the Great Lakes . . . I think that youād probably be able to get a line on them.ā
āGee,ā responded Jason. He was unused to such effusiveness. Especially from a young womanāwho was a perfect stranger, āthatās so nice of you. I mean⦠to come⦠come all the way, up here. Come way over here⦠just to meet me. To tell me⦠about the Piepczyks. I canāt tell you. I really appreciate it.ā
āWell, Junieās a pretty good friend of mine⦠although I donāt see her nearly so often, these days. Now that sheās a big-deal college student. Going to Wayne, donātcha know. Sheās never around anymore⦠or so it seems.ā
āDo you go to college?ā
āNaw. My family⦠they canāt afford it. And my grades were nowhere nearly good enough⦠to allow us, to even think about any kind of scholarships. Or anything like that. I work, yāknow. Work⦠up at āMonkey Wardsā.ā
That was a sort of accepted slang, in those days, for the Montgomery Ward department stores. Everyone referred to their many entitiesāas āMonkey Wardāsā.
āWhatās your name?ā Jason was almost shockedāthat heād waited this long to inquire.
āValerie. Valerie Krenwinkle.ā
That last name! It just about knocked Our Boy off his stool. Heād been more than interested, in anythingāliterally anythingāpertaining to the sadistic, brutal, headline-grabbing, 1969, āSharon Tate murdersā! Ever since Grandpa Piepczyk had presented him with a rather ragged-looking copyāof Helter Skelter. This was former Los Angeles County District Attorney Vincent Bugliosiās spectacular bookādetailing (minutely) the spectacular, brutal, sadistic, grizzly, blood-spattered, without-a-shred-of-mercy, killings. The author had tried the, headline-producing, case!
Jason had been absolutely appalledāby the horrible, vicious, hideous, crimes! Heād relished Bugliosiās incisive look, at Charles Mansonāand all his ādevoteesā. Had readāand rereadāthe tome! Three times!
One of the āManson Girlsā, heād always remembered, had been named Patricia Krenwinkle. For some reason or another, Our Hero had been bitterly disappointed to know that sheād been involved. Sheād had such a ābright and bubbly and cheeryā name. She shouldāve been the next thingāto Walt Disneyās āTinkerbelleā. Maybe āQueen of The Mayāāor something! āHomecomingā or āProm Queenāāor something! Yet, in the prosecutorās opinion, sheād been a ātotal animalā! A subhuman! A vile, disgusting, individual! (To put itācharitably.)
Jason could not remember whether Bugliosi had stated that Krenwinkle had actually done any of the stabbingāin any of the unbelievably-bloody, murders! Heād thought heād remembered her having, ruthlessly, stabbed Abigail Folgerāthe coffee fortune heiressānumerous times! In addition, it had seemed, to him, that Krenwinkle was always defecatingāon some landing, in some stairwell, somewhere! Or somebodyās front porch! She had definitely been a āManson Girlā. Of that fact, Jason was more than positive!
Could this attractive young ladyāthis sweet-appearing, sedately-dressed, woman, who was seated next to himācould she possibly be an ancestor? Well, maybe not an ancestor! The Tate outrageāwas only 25 years, ādown the roadā. But, possibly, some kind of relationāto that disgusting sub-human? Could she possiblyācould this lovely ladyāpossess any of those same, God-awful-sadistic, genes? Could thatāpossiblyābe?
āWhatās the matter?ā she asked. Sheād not had to have been exceptionally perceptiveāto have seen the āshockwaveā that her name had sent through her new acquaintance!
āOh⦠uh⦠nothing,ā he stammered. āI probably shouldnāt be saying things, like this⦠not in mixed company, anyway⦠but, Iād just had a bit of a cramp. Kind of snuck up on me! From out of nowhere.ā
āGas,ā Valerie had repliedālaughing heartily. āThat Vernorās is great stuff⦠but, it gives me all kinds of gas. I have watch out⦠that Iām not with some group, of people. Also something that I shouldnāt be mentioning⦠in mixed company. You can dilute it, yāknow.ā
āDilute it? Why would anyone want to do that?ā
āWell, you can cut down on the⦠ah⦠social dangers. The risks, yāknow⦠of all the gas. You can lessen the hazards⦠with vanilla ice cream. Junieāll mix you up one of those things⦠in a flash. Costs fifteen-cents, I think. Itās called a Boston Cooler. The vanilla ice cream kind of neutralizes the gas production, donātcha know. From the ginger ale. The ginger, though⦠that part⦠is really good, for your tummy. Well, actually, so is the vanilla ice cream. Our family doctor told me so. In both cases. So, to me, itās a sure bet. Ya canāt go wrong⦠not with a Boston Cooler.ā
Jason was busily engaged in all kindsāof labored, mental, calisthenics. If the Tate/LoBianco murders had occurred, in the late-sixties, as he was fairly certaināand Patricia Krenwinkle had been twenty-ish at the timeāsheād be four or five or six years away from actually being born, in 1942.
And, Our Boy felt certain, thatāin any caseāshe would not have been, from the Detroit area. He didnāt know the names of Patriciaās parents. Or where she had come from. He doubtedāthat heād ever really known any of those things. He didnāt think that Bugliosi had ever mentioned any of that sort of data, in his superb book. Like so many, of his grandfathers musings, Our Boy found himself wishingāwishing ferventlyāthat heād paid much more rapt attention to Bugliosiās excellent tome!
Obviously, it would be kind of foolish (really stupid, in point of fact) to be inquiring of Valerieāwhether she was related, to someone. Some personāyet unborn! Some sub-humanāwho was really, God-awful, nastyānamed Patricia. Still, it was a source of more than a little discomfort, for the young man! At that precise moment, anyway. For that precise moment! And who knew how long the unease would last! Another unanswered question! Oneāof so many!
Someone had just played Chattanooga Choo-ChooāGlenn Millerās wonderful recordingāon the jukebox,
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