Deep Into St Louis
ll
disappearance of a young m
disappearance of a high-school g
of disappearance of a little
ecord of disappearance of a mal
s of disappearance of many different peo
the whole country, as if the Earth had split and swallowed them inside its guts. The cases were rather impossible and unrelated, so the investigation showed that these events were probably natural or even not related to a same criminal. Many had
e victims are not similar in any trait nor even knowing each other, also the times of the disappearance are differen
y, since that time, all of the bodies were nowhere to be found and those people were unable to contact them or answer their phones. So, they thought i
ery, where did those people disappear? If they were killed, where are their bodies located? There is no signal of their devices nor any trace of their shadows, did the criminal hide them in a place we
ced, if covered them with cement we can find a new building and search it and if he melted them we might have received a notice that
he ran away with him afterwards, the young man was fired from his job and his fiancé had left him after he lost his money source so probably he had committed suicide, the adult one was already aimin
e the bodies? We had searched the young man's house, his neighbors' and the city for
, a police officer "Because that's ridiculous, please get yourself together and think like the ge
idden outside the ci
, so the criminal could not have teleported more than six bodies out of St. Louis without anyone noticing, and i
of the cameras, ask the police around, search every bri
ius interpretation and respected her as his upperclassman "I believe you will always solve this case as
than the others, it is a bit of illogical so we have to depend on reasonable int
," added Joseph "but I believe that she is wrong
plied Flora "but you will regret i
as people call smart or having a high IQ, but a worthy of the genius status, where she had weird traits includin
g and uncovering previously unexplored ideas, with the deep desire to pursue knowledge in an almost obsessive ma
pprove information and facts on face value. Instead, she would want to defy and test conventional thinking of other people
route, especially if she felt she was about to making an important discovery. She always put her life at risk, wheth
ideas and questions running through her weird minds. Very often, she was nocturnal and would cont
ople hating her and being jealous, so she made a lot of en