laitimes

Brain-burning reasoning game (2)

Q: How did the avatar come about?

A man named Elmer Cerceton Fenlin, a 32-year-old, lonely man with a thief and a previous conviction, met a woman named Janet Podard in California, 1,500 miles from home. She was a light black and white, a seasonal agricultural worker, she was silent and unassuming, and anyone who had seen her would quickly forget her and leave no impression worth remembering.

They mingled in Shizumi County for two weeks. In order to make money, Fenlin killed Poddard after a drink. Unnoticed, Fenlin stuffed the body into the car and quickly asked the dense triangular poplar forest on the outskirts of town to drive away. He hurriedly covered up the body and quietly left. Fenlin believes that he covered up the crime seamlessly and did not have any possibility of a crime. Taking a step back, even if someone finds the remains, they can't identify her, and it is even more impossible to implicate themselves.

Who knows, it backfires. A few months later, some squirrel fighters found a human skull and a piece of jaw while crossing Stillwater Bay. Later, officers found a pair of ribs, a backbone and some skeletons near a shallow grave. A few strands of brown hair and a few pieces of clothing remained in the grave. The local newspaper reported on this. After Fenlin read the report, he didn't care if it was a matter of people.

Local Judge Joe. The Stamley organization directed the investigation, he inspected the clothes, found no clues to the identity of the deceased, examined the scene with a detector, and did not detect where the jewelry was. He had called a local resident who had reported his family missing and asked him to come and know about the relic, but none of the people who had gone missing were dead.

In a case like this with only one skull, one jaw, and an incomplete skeleton, there seems to be nothing one can do about it. But in August of that year, a picture of Podard's avatar suddenly appeared on television, and when Fenlin saw it, he was stunned. A week later, two exposé letters were sent to the judiciary. Fenlin finally did not escape justice.

I ask you: What happened to Poddard's head?