Wine and Gun

Chapter 252

I could only continue to sort out the known clues by myself, hoping to sort out the cause and effect of Langdon's murder of the pianist, and then I had to admit: the most suspicious person in the entire Langdon case was actually Albarino. Bacchus.

This man is the chief forensic officer of the Westland Forensic Bureau, and according to the Westland Criminal Secrets website, he is a typical brilliant playboy. One of the victims, Sarah Aardman, was his girlfriend, and Aardman was seen clashing with Bacchus on the night of the crime, apparently because the victim accused Bacchus of being unfaithful to her.

Hours later, the woman was found dead in the alley behind the bar.

The knife in her chest had Bacchus' fingerprints on it, and it seemed clear who the murderer was in this case. Bacchus was quickly arrested and awaiting trial in prison. But what happened next is as everyone knows: Langdon collects memorabilia from his victims, and the CSI finds Aardman's hair in his home.

Although the police still can't explain why Bacchus's fingerprints appeared on the knife, they can only release him on the grounds of insufficient evidence. In addition, of the several crimes that Langdon committed, only the Aardman case showed mint on the chest of the deceased, while the same mint appeared on Langdon's own body.

Albarino Bacchus seems suspicious from any angle. I had my doubts about whether Bacchus could actually kill Sarah Aardman and put the blame on Langdon, and I didn't understand the hidden meaning of the bunch of mint, so I started looking for information about Bacchus in a haystack.

It turned out that the situation was not optimistic. He was indeed released before Langdon was killed, but I doubt that the time difference was enough for him to commit the crime. I guess he had to be a guy with terrible work efficiency to kill in such a short period of time. Dead Langdon and set up like that, and that's almost impossible.

Bacchus also seems to be well-known in the high-society circles, which is the reputation his parents have accumulated for him, so I have no trouble finding a lot of information on this. Dr. Bacchus is one of those -- the kind of guy in the world that you can't imagine he's a murderer, a well-off, well-educated, very sensible since he was a child, outstanding in grades, not even for fighting or pranking his classmates or anything like that. The matter was invited by the school to the parents. This man has a bit of a playboy momentum as an adult, but the most amazing thing is that even those male and female partners who have a dewy relationship with him are full of praise for him.

It's better to put it this way: it is impossible for people to imagine that he will kill. It is estimated that in the eyes of some people in Westland, it is impossible for Prince William to kill Dr. Bacchus to kill.

And Sarah Aardman was more or less an accident: because the woman was said to be very possessive, anyone who dated Dr. Bucks should have known he wasn't planning to marry, and Sarah was the kind of guy who went out three times. Just the type who wants to spend the rest of her life with people, and it's no wonder she would yell at Dr. Bacchus in that bar for giving up.

From the available information, things seem to be just an accident from start to finish.

But I'm not going to give up. Rather, I actually don't believe in my bones that someone is as perfect as they appear on the surface. I believe that everyone has some dirty thoughts in their hearts. So I continued to investigate aimlessly and found something interesting.

Actually, it's not strictly about Albarino Bacchus, but about his mother, Shana Bacchus.

His mother, also a surgeon, immigrated to the United States from Spain through marriage, and several people I interviewed said Shana and Dr. Bacchus were "very loving."

The unfortunate lady died in a drowning accident with her son by her side - it's interesting, the absence of parents during the teenage years often has all kinds of effects on children, Dr. Bacchus himself gave the public an impression It's so perfect that it doesn't feel like it's ever been affected. Unless, of course, we're going to say he doesn't really have a long-term intimacy, but he's even fine with most exes and doesn't seem like the kind of guy who would mess up a personal relationship.

It didn't seem like much, the whole thing started when I managed to get my hands on old documents from the hospital where Albarino Bacques' parents worked, and I'd go through the documents as a desperate struggle to give up.

But in the process of browsing, I found a subtle phenomenon. It's hard to find clues like this in my industry, but bounty hunters are really good at dealing with numbers like that.

Inpatients at that hospital frequently died of the same cause in an imperceptibly fixed pattern, and because most of them were critically ill, they were considered to have died of ineffective treatment—this part of the evidence was too cumbersome and would have I put it in the portfolio attached to this manuscript, which, in addition to the patient file, also includes two testimonies from the family members of the deceased.

In conclusion, one conclusion can be drawn from those files: there is an angel of death in that hospital.

I believe that if an experienced police officer looked at the files, they would come to the same conclusion. But the murderer was very careful, so no one in the hospital noticed anything abnormal, no one reported the case if no one noticed the abnormality, and no investigation was done if no one reported the case. Not a strange thing anymore.

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