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Not too long after Alex healed Leokhares of his infirmities, Arwen returned with the items Alex had requested along with a diary and an additional quill to record the minutes of the conversation.

"Now then, you write and I talk," Alex said. "My na is John Smith. What’s yours?"

Hesitant, the man ultimately used the quill after dipping it in so ink to spell out his na. "Leokhares."

"Okay, Leo. Why are you here?"

"I’m looking for my daughter."

Alex stared intently at the write-up, his deanor turning sour with each second that passed.

Finally, it took a cough from Arwen to snap him out of his reverie.

"Apologies. Tell , how long has she been missing?"

"Three days." Leokhares wrote with trembling hands. "I left for work in the mines that day and when I returned, she was gone. I tried to ask around once it got late but everyone I asked told that I didn’t have a daughter!... So even said I was mad, but I know, sir, I know I have a daughter and she is missing!"

Alex glanced at Arwen, unsure of what to make of the case.

"Did those you asked genuinely not know or were they lying?" Alex asked.

"I don’t know, but they sounded really genuine."

Alex glanced at Arwen who didn’t hesitate to write down Leo’s neighbors as suspects.

Once he was certain she’d penned this down, Alex continued his questioning. "Have you reported this to the task force?"

"Those bastards didn’t even take seriously," Leokhares replied in slight annoyance.

"I see." Alex took a mont to ponder before writing down a question. "Your daughter, what does she look like?"

Leokhares’ hand hovered over the paper, his expression twisted as he struggled for so reason.

Finally, he penned a response. "I can’t rember."

"Do you have a photo of her?"

"Sir, I live in the lower districts. How can I afford such a luxury?"

"I see. Fine then. " Alex wrote. "How old is your daughter?"

"I don’t know."

Alex frowned, unsure of what to make of the situation.

Pursing his lips, Alex took a mont to gather his thoughts, before asking yet another question. "What about your wife?... Surely she should be able to prove your claims?"

"She left a few years ago to be with one of those snobbish bastards in the upper districts. I tried to convince her about our daughter’s disappearance but she also claid that we never had a child!... But I know, Sir Smith, I know I have a child and she is missing!" Leokhares penned down, his deanor betraying a great deal of urgency.

"Forgive , Leo, but I find it hard to figure out how to help you. So far you have given nothing I can use to resolve your problems." Alex wrote. "So I ask you this, why should I believe that you have a daughter and that she is missing?"

Leokhares paused, reading each word with a pained expression on his face.

Then, after several seconds of inaction, he began to write, even more aggressively than in previous attempts. "I live in a one-bedroom apartnt in District 28. I work as a coal miner and I am paid peanuts. By the Ancestors, I have never attended a school, and the only reason I know Impala is because my wife taught . I have only five pairs of clothes, four of which are rags. I cannot afford to pay for gas lamps and even if I could, gas lamps in the lower districts would not survive very long, I..."

Alex reached out and grabbed Leo’s hand, putting a stop to his rants.

"Get to the point." He simply said.

Leo nodded before proceeding to take off his cloak, revealing what was underneath.

There was a little girl’s dress along with a pair of dirty ballet shoes and a textbook titled, History of Truth, Thirty-First Edition.

Then, opening the first page of the textbook, he showed Alex what was written on it.

’From a father who wishes for nothing but the best for his daughter, Niobe.’

Then, placing the textbook aside, he revealed a necklace which was basically just a rope with a coal pendant.

After showing Alex these things, the man wrote. "Sir Smith, I cannot rember my daughter’s face or even how she looks, but tell , do I look like a man who would purchase all these items for myself?"

Alex hesitated before responding. "You could have stolen them."

"I didn’t!" Leokhares argued. "I would never. Please, Sir Smith, you have to believe . Please, if you don’t, I have nowhere else to go."

Leaning back into his chair, Alex rubbed his mouth while staring intently at Leokhares.

There was no sign that the man was mad nor were there signs of corruption or supernatural interference.

All he could see was genuine concern and as a man who also couldn’t recall his daughter’s features, Alex saw Leokhares as a fellow brother.

If nothing, at least to put Leo’s mind at rest, he owed it to the man and in so way, to himself as well.

In any case, it would be over quickly, or at least he hoped it would.

Taking a deep breath, Alex glanced at Arwen. "Docunt everything."

Though still skeptical about the case, Arwen nodded before rushing up to her room to get the materials she needed to docunt everything they’d learned so far.

Alex learned forward and wrote. "I believe you, Leokhares."

Leo’s eyes lit up as he saw this, swiftly responding. "Thank you, Sir Smith, thank you!"

"My assistant and I will begin looking for your daughter tomorrow. Stay away from trouble for the ti being. We’ll reach out to you in case we find anything."

"Alright then." Leokhares wrote.

"Also, leave the items you bought behind. They might help us with the search."

Leokhares hesitated, his eyes shifting to the items before glancing back at Alex.

After a bit of ntal back and forth, he wrote. "Can I keep the necklace?"

"Absolutely," Alex replied.

"Thank you."

Soon, Arwen returned and helped Leokhares write a statent after which the man took his leave, back into the waiting night with Arwen closing the door once he was gone.

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