A creepy coincidence
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Deepa Bharath
Mark Louvier held a yellowed, tattered newspaper in his right hand.
It was a Jan. 16, 1971, edition of the Daily Pilot.
Louvier and his wife, Leslie, moved into their Eastside Costa Mesa
home in March 1987. Last year, they decided it was time to remodel.
The Louviers did everything with their own hands -- the paint, the
walls, the fixtures and the hardwood flooring.
And that’s how Mark Louvier found that dilapidated relic from the
past. He was tearing down one of the bathroom walls when he saw this
old newspaper wrapped around a rusty pipe for insulation. He opened
it up to read -- as is his nature.
It seemed to have been a fairly newsy day. The top story was
jurors’ beginning deliberations on the Charles Manson trial. He
flipped over to pages two and three, which had news from Sacramento,
Washington, D.C. and all over the world -- from Mexico, Brazil and
Vietnam. But Louvier stopped when he saw his own last name on that
paper in big, bold print.
It was an obituary for his grandfather, Henry Louvier, a longtime
resident of Newport Beach.
“I went to his funeral,” Mark Louvier said. “I remember my
grandfather, of course. But I had no idea anything was ever written
about him.”
Leslie Louvier said she “got the shivers” when her husband showed
it to her. At first, she thought it was “kind of spooky,” but now she
looks at it with reverence and affection.
“It felt like it was a blessing from his grandfather,” she said.
“I still get goose bumps when we talk about it. I can’t just think of
it as some fancy coincidence.”
But her husband looks at it differently.
“It’s a weird coincidence,” he said. “Here we buy this house from
someone with no connection to our family. And [nearly] 20 years
later, we find this? What are the odds of that happening.”
Mark Louvier is not new to the old and archaic. He has a penchant
for collecting antiques. He also tries to preserve the character of
what he avidly collects. There’s a Russian cabinet in the dining area
in which he left the shelf liners because they were lined with
newspapers from that country. On their mantel is the top of a
lighthouse from Sidney, Australia -- a piece from the 1880s.
“I have an affection for things that are old because I see them as
having an intrinsic value,” he said. “Most of these things are
hand-made, and the time, labor and work that goes into producing
these objects never ceases to amaze me.”
Mark Louvier decided to leave something for posterity himself.
Before he closed up the wall in their living room, he left behind a
Newsweek magazine, a newspaper and a bottle of merlot. Both he and
his wife signed their little time capsule, inspired by their recent
find.
“We even signed the wine bottle,” Leslie Louvier said.
The note on that bottle that some future resident may find some
day will read: “Good luck to the new owners.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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