
With the investigation underway and the miraculous appearance of Lt. Teevo (yes, he was there, but not much else was happening, so if you want to see him, you'll have to find that strip yourself), Tracy continues his questioning of Ringo, complete with a flashback to poor Louise's gun powder and gravity induced end. Luckily, Ringo seems have been able to overcome his constant repetition of "It happened!", so this case might actually start going somewhere. Plus, Mr. Pops has shown back up on the scene, and it would seem, at least for the moment, that he might not have anything to do with this (even though that fancy gun certainly doesn't help his case, and if he were smart, he'd have handed it over for testing, but only if he's completely sure that he's innocent). Still, I can't help but read his lines without falling into that cold, unfeeling serial killer voice, so I'm not about to clear him completely just yet (I think it's the eyes).

The questioning continues, and Tracy doesn't seem too happy that Ringo didn't tell the police about the threatening phone calls. You see, Ringo, they take their death threats seriously in Tracyville, so you just remember that the next time you receive a strange phone call (even though, considering that it is a circus, they might get weird phone calls all of the time). As he continues to gather information, Ringo provides him with actual evidence: the threatening note that warned him of a possible death. Now wait just a minute here. Ringo, if you got a phone call, then why are you showing him a note? Which is it man? The two are not interchangeable, they're just...oh, just forget it. Okay, so now there's a threatening note composed of newspaper clippings (or a font that creates the impression of newspaper clippings). Looks like there's more police work to be done and newspapers to find. To the library!
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