- "The biggest mass-murder in modern American history. Enough good forensic evidence to fill a semi trailer. And still the killer or killers are at large."
- ―Agent Hooper
"Americarnivore (Part I)" | |
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The Texas Chainsaw Massacre | |
Title: | "Americarnivore (Part I)" |
Volume: | 1 |
number: | 1 |
Cover date: | January, 2007 |
Cover price: | $2.99 |
Publisher: | DC Comics WildStorm Productions |
Credits | |
Executive editor: | Jim Lee |
Writers: | Dan Abnett; Andy Lanning |
Pencilers: | Wes Craig |
Inkers: | Wes Craig |
Cover artists: | Lee Bermejo Tim Bradstreet |
Cover inker: | Barbara Ciardo Grant Goleash |
Colorists: | Randy Mayor |
Letterers: | Wes Abbott |
Assistant editors: | Kristy Quinn |
Editors: | Ben Abernathy |
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Next: | The Texas Chainsaw Massacre #2 |
"Americarnivore (Part I)" is the first chapter in the six-issue comic book limited series The Texas Chainsaw Massacre by DC Comics and WildStorm Productions. The story was written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning with artwork by Wesley Craig. The cover art illustration for this issue was composed by Lee Bermejo and Barbara Ciardo. The story was colored by Randy Mayor with lettering by Wes Abbott. It was edited by Ben Abernathy with Kristy Quinn as assistant editor. This issue shipped with January, 2007 cover date and carries a cover price of $2.99 per copy (US); 4.00 CAD in Canada.
"Americarnivore"[]
June 13th, 1974
Travis County sheriffs are in pursuit of a runaway Blair Meat Co. truck. They shoot out the tire and apprehend the crazed driver. When they open up the back of the truck, they find a dead young man hanging like a fish on a hook from the roof. Suddenly, Leatherface appears on the top of the truck with his chainsaw at the ready. The driver, sitting in the back of the squad car laughs with glee as Leatherface dives into the sheriffs.
June 21st, 1974
F.B.I. agents Baines and Hooper are assigned by the agency's cold cases division to do a follow-up account on the unsolved "Texas Chainsaw Massacre". Driving through town, they receive very little cooperation from the locals. They meet with Officer Christie of the Travis County Patrol who gives them access to all of their files relating to the case.
Five miles away, Kim Burns of WTX News and her camera crew stop at a trailer home off Route 17. The owner of the trailer is a corpulent woman who offers them tea. Kim asks her for directions to the town of Fuller. From within the trailer, a mysterious person intently watches the conversation.
Agent Baines and Hooper set up a small command center at the Fuller Gas Stop. They review old footage relating to the case, including the recovered video shot by Texas State police officers on the night of the failed raid of the Hewitt Farmhouse. They find a private office once occupied by the Hewitt family patriarch, the late Sheriff Hoyt. The office is filled with dozens of strange items and memorabilia, and the agents cannot understand why none of this stuff was accounted for during the original investigation. F.B.I. profile agent Henkle suspects that someone in Travis County law enforcement went to a lot of trouble to make sure the entire 1973 investigation was swept completely under the rug.
That evening, Agent Henkle inspects a small cabin located on the Hewitt property. He finds a secret passageway that leads down into a well. He believes this might have been the place where Sheriff Hoyt kept all of the people he arrested. He falls through a weakened floorboard and lands on a pile of rotting bodies.
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