Wine and Gun

Chapter 63

As the victim list grows longer, WLPD finally has its sights on Bob Langdon.

Langdon was thirty-eight years old at the time of the incident. In his previous case of violently wounding his wife, he stabbed his ex-wife with a dagger, causing his ex-wife to be disabled in the second degree. During his arrest, his ex-wife applied for a restraining order against him, preventing him from being any closer to his ex-wife and their children.

During the pretrial hearing, Langdon pleaded not guilty and was released on bail on a professional surety. Police found Langdon's activities were restricted to Westland at the time of the crime and that his home address was only three blocks away from the bar where Sarah Aardman was killed.

Langdon's bào force injury case was supposed to go to trial at the end of October 2016.

——Should be, because when the officers of the Westland City Police Department rushed into the apartment where he lived, they did not find him.

According to the police officers who participated in the crime scene investigation, his room was dirty, gloomy, and filled with the stench of spoiled food. Members of the CSI team found some long-coagulated blood in the van he had parked outside the apartment, and the DNA matched the body that had been dumped outside the police station, almost identifying Bob Langdon. The one who committed the second crime.

But Bob Langdon himself was nowhere to be seen.

Was Sarah Aardman killed by him? Were the other two women in red who were suspected to have died of robbery and murder also killed by him? Why does that knife have Albarino Bacchus' fingerprints, and what does that bunch of mint mean? These are the questions the police want to ask.

But the apartment was empty, and the tabletop was already dusty, like a sneer from the black mouth.

Bob Langdon had apparently been on the run after he defiantly threw the corpse at the police station gate, and no one would want to stay put after doing something so appalling. Unanswered questions from Westland Police Department detectives were never answered, and Langdon was never found.

—At least, Langdon was never found alive again.

Meanwhile, Albarino Bacques was in a very embarrassing situation: at his pre-trial hearing, the judge ruled that he would not be allowed to bail, so he was temporarily detained in New York until his case was heard. Tucker Federal Penitentiary — the same as the future imprisoned Herstal Armalite — Bob Langdon was a ray of hope for his escape, but Langdon had apparently escaped.

If the WLPD doesn't catch Langdon, Dr. Bucks' trial will undoubtedly go ahead as usual, and with the ambiguity of Armalite's lawyers, it's hard to imagine whether he will ever be convicted at all. The future must have been bleak for Doctor Bacchus at that time, and the great hand of fate was clearly still playing tricks on him.

Or in other words, the Westland pianist still hasn't let him go.

Eight days after a judge issued a warrant for Bob Langdon, on Monday, October 17, 2016, around 9:00 p.m., Officer Bart Hardy of WLPD received a letter from West A letter from the pianist Lan.

The specific content of the letter was never released to the public by the police, but no doubt, as the pianist always does, he pointed out a path for the police - a path full of irony to pursue the murderer.

When the WLPD police officer arrived at the address stated by the pianist in the letter, he saw a blood-soaked and terrifying scene, just like the pianist's usual style, bloody, crippled, and revealing a strange joy during the slaughter.

The police found the body of Bob Langdon in a filthy alley in the lower city. He was hung from the eaves of the piano strings. There were more than 50 stab wounds on his chest, and his chest was almost bloody. The canvas, his blood was almost flowing, and a huge pool of blood gathered under his feet.

Bob Langdon's chest was cut open, and his ribs were neatly snapped outwards, stubbornly protruding. In his chest, the heart disappeared; what replaced the heart was a very delicately woven ball of mint grass, and the mint leaves were even mixed with lavender mint flowers. This flower group is likely to be hard-won, after all, the mint flower season has passed in October.

Given that Langdon also left a bunch of mint on Sarah Aardman's chest before killing her, most scholars agree that the pianist's move was nothing more than a satire of Langdon—as if he were to him The same irony of every criminal ever killed. In the midst of his slaughter, he apparently looked down upon them condescendingly, holding up his own balance and sword.

That's what happened to Bob Langdon and his, every day after he was identified as a serial killer by the WLPD, on the run, and even that didn't last long, in a matter of days he used a very dramatic The way died at the hands of the Westland pianist.

Since then, it seems that with the death of Bob Langdon without evidence, Dr. Bacchus cannot escape the end of prison. But around the same time that the WLPD discovered that Langdon was dead, something dramatic happened at the same time.

On October 17, while re-examining Langdon's apartment, CSI's field investigators found Langdon's memorabilia from a series of homicides under the floor. A diary detailing his killing process; the female hair, neatly bundled in four strands, was found to correspond to Langdon's four victims through DNA testing.

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