Wine and Gun

Chapter 64

The evidence was overwhelming, and all charges against Dr. Backus were quickly dropped. Almost at the same time that WLPD officers rushed to the scene of the murder created by the Westland pianist, Dr. Bacchus's custody officially ended.

The moment one suspect is released from custody, another is officially pronounced dead, which may have been an ironic ingenious plot for the Westland pianist.

But even if Dr. Bacchus is cleared of charges, the police are still puzzled why the Westland pianist chose Bob Langdon as a target, or how Albarino Bacchus' fingerprints appeared on the blade. Up. But in the end, the matter came to nothing and became one of the unsolved mysteries in countless unsolved cases.

But now, looking at this old case, we might think otherwise: if Herstal Armalette was the Westland pianist, Bob Langdon was just the middle of his long, twisted game. of a victim.

It made no sense to the pianist whether it was Langdon or who the dead were, because he was just a plaything and a pastime, the foolish protagonist of an intermission burlesque, a puppet dancing with the suspenders; because he never intended to punish Langdon's Crime, his target from the beginning was Doctor Bacchus.

It is well known that Doctor Bacchus was probably the most peculiar and most difficult to categorize victim of the Westerland pianist - and the only one who survived the vibrating strings of the Westerland pianist, even though he Another homicide a year later.

While the WLPD has never admitted it, we are all but certain that the victim of that shocking case in late 2016 was Dr. Bacchus. Among his many crimes, the Westland pianist, who was judged as a madman by spiritual pathologists, only sexually assaulted his victim once, and that was this special case.

The police's public statement is that in that case, he attacked a person involved in the pianist's case, tortured and assaulted the person, but did not kill him in the end.

Prof. Olga Molozze's profiling of that case is still something that students of Criminal Psychology have repeatedly observed, so let's directly quote what she told reporters at the press conference after the case. Report made:

"Like the Sunday gardener, the Westland pianist sees his victims as a work he presents to the public. He mocks the police in his letter to the police, insults the police with force, and at the same time It is also an insult to the deceased.

"I know what you want to ask me, and I'll answer - 'No, he's not the kind of pervert who puts his own sexuality on the victim'. He does get a kind of a pleasure, but infringing them is not his direct route to pleasure. What he did in this case was not for pleasure, but for a metaphorical expression: he despised us, destroyed him for us Annoyed by the works presented, he imposes upon us the same 'sin' as he punishes sinners.

"As we dismantled his work, he tortured the victims of this case, assaulted them in a way that he himself disdained, and proudly displayed them in front of us in order to mock us— - This is the only reason why he did not kill the victim. Because only in this way, this work will not decay, will not turn into dust, and cannot be destroyed by us; only in this way, one day the victim is alive, we will all recall this shame rǔ day."

If, as we guessed, Armalette was the Westland pianist, he had been eyeing Albarino Bacchus long before the case at the end of 2016—with malicious intent.

Then it can explain the many suspicious aspects of the Bob Langdon case: perhaps, Dr. Bacchus's fingerprints appeared on the murder weapon, just because of a failed framing of the pianist; perhaps, Sarah Aardman The bunch of mint herbs on the chest was placed by the pianist, otherwise there is no way to explain why the criminal signature did not appear on Langdon's other victims.

We can imagine why the pianist turned his sharp anger towards Albarino Bacchus: this skilled forensic doctor was responsible for the autopsy of many major cases in Westerland, including the Westerland pianist and the case of the Sunday gardener.

These crazy works of art were dismantled and restored under the hands of Doctor Bacchus, returning from the psychedelic dreams to the ruthless reality of the human world. The creation of a murderous man is of course disrespected, and the forensic physician may rightly have provoked the wrath of the Westland pianist and acted on that horrific anger.

The arrest of Dr. Bacchus in Langdon's case, then, was only the first experiment, and the pianist did almost completely destroy the forensic doctor in that horrific case not long after. And—if, if Armalite really was a Westland pianist—his anger was apparently not quelled.

After Armalite was arrested for attempted murder, the WLPD searched his apartment and found a large amount of fresh blood in the apartment - it is almost impossible for anyone to shed that much blood and still be alive, and the traces of blood splattered at the scene tell people, There was once a person who was murdered and his throat cut off in a crisp and clean apartment in this tidy and unpopular apartment.

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