Nefrit & Detective
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
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
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.
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
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.
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.