The next morning,
Ronald said goodbye to Mrs. Hudson and left the lodging apartment where he lived.
What was different today was that he didn't take the "Coastline Daily" from the mailbox at the door.
To be honest—
In the entire Berenwich, aside from the local governor's office building "Beren Mansion."
The most timely and accurate information probably belonged to the headquarters of the investigative bureau.
Except for those secret files directly delivered to the hands of top officials at the bureau classified as mysterious events, a sample of every newspaper issued that day would be sent to the front desk of the investigative bureau.
However, for the investigative bureau,
These were of only general reference value.
Usually, within three days, someone would gather these newspapers and send them to be stored in the neighboring police station's archive.
For Ronald, he thought this was bad news.