“If Chandra and his cohorts died in that tragedy, then Palas wouldn’t seek him or anyone related to his arrest. The stone, on which the letter was wrapped seems like a construction stone, something that comes from the crusher. But I am no gemologist.
“But let’s assume it is from some blue collar construction. Palas might be working in the blue collared construction job. Another of my grand assumption, since, prisoners who are released usually pick up manual labor to make ends meet.
“What’s the nearest construction site? In the city, it’s construction twenty-four-seven. Which points to the suggestion that whether Palas now lives in the city, Lakewood? The blast that took place in the factory area. Where Palas used to run the illicit businesses. But better let me think more on this armchair.
“Before, I hit full schizophrenia, I would somehow glance back to my records in the notebook. Oh, diary keeping, ensues to memory, for things that had lost into the oblivion.
“There it is! August 14, 2011. ‘Palas was arrested and taken to the sheriff’s precinct after found guilty on twelve counts of felony, and espionage. This wasn’t a jury trial but verdict from the federal judge. The earlier jury trial was challenged by Palas’ attorney, and then opted for a bench trial…’ That means, the case was closed with the counts of felony proved on Palas.
“Who was his attorney? Let me flip these damned pages… There! Carson Osborne. It’s really into a serious matter now. If Palas was released, again a shot in the wild, he might settle scores with Carson.
“However, due to the grave crimes he did commit, he might not be released at all. Case closed on Palas. Which brings the question back to the language of the letter and the way it hit my vase. Who’s immitating Palas?”