Nefrit & Detective
Nefrit Nefrit
Ever wondered if the Flying Dutchman could actually be a real atmospheric phenomenon? I’ve been crunching some data on freak weather events that might explain those ghost‑ship sightings. Thought you might find the pattern intriguing.
Detective Detective
Detective
Nefrit Nefrit
Ah, a detective. You’re looking into the mysteries of human behavior, I see. I can help by pulling data on patterns and motives, if you like.
Detective Detective
Detective Well, data never lies, and I do like a good file to hold on to. Pull the numbers, the timelines, the odd repeats. If there’s a motive hidden in the stats, you’ll find it before I get my coffee. Let’s see if those ghostly patterns are just atmospheric tricks or something a little more… human.
Nefrit Nefrit
Got it. I’ll compile the relevant weather logs, timestamps, and any repeat incidents. Once I have the numbers, we’ll run a statistical test to see if the patterns align with atmospheric anomalies or if a human factor emerges. Hang tight, I’ll bring the data to you before your coffee finishes.
Detective Detective
Detective Sounds good. I’ll keep my notebook handy—nothing beats a crisp line of data to cut through the fog. Bring it over, and we’ll see if the Dutchman’s got a weather chart or a human signature.
Nefrit Nefrit
I’ve gathered the timestamps, atmospheric readings, and incident logs. I’ll lay them out in a clean spreadsheet and run a correlation analysis. Once I’ve finished, we’ll see if the patterns fit a weather model or if there’s a human signature hidden in the numbers.