I was thrilled. I turned on the Bluetooth, exported all the contacts and their phone numbers from the device, imported them into my new phone, then deleted the export record.
The gallery in this phone was squeaky clean, not a single photo.
There were just a few friends on his WhatsApp, and most didn't have any chat history, except for one nicknamed AzureEnchantress, who was pinned to the top.
From the chat history, it seemed they were in frequent touch, but oddly, all I could see were timestamps and texts like, "The usual place, I'll be there later," suggesting they mostly arranged to meet and didn't chat much here.
I checked their meeting schedule, and it seemed they met weekly, although at irregular times.
Opening AzureEnchantress' profile revealed nothing.
I took a screenshot of her WhatsApp profile and saved it on my phone. Then, I zoomed in on her profile picture, which was a digital drawing of a blue flower, drawn with refined and graceful strokes. Its vibrant, clear blue color was soothing to the eye, probably what people refer to as Klein blue.
Despite not being able to determine its gender, I guessed that AzureEnchantress must be a woman.
There was an active group in the WhatsApp directory that caught my eye, named "High-rollers Hangout."
This group was quite conspicuous in the directory, with thousands of unread messages indicating its activity.
I assumed it was a group for up-and-coming entrepreneurs in Goldenvale Town, but the chat history suggested otherwise. It was filled with all sorts of off-color jokes and nonsense — exactly the kind of lowbrow humor that Jaylan would enjoy.
To my surprise, I found AzureEnchantress in the group, and she was the group admin.
Curious, I took a screenshot of the group member list.
The chat history kept increasing, and I didn't have the patience to keep reading. After a quick scan, I exited.
Disdainfully, I muttered to myself, "What a bunch of rabble!"
I then opened the text messages and was shocked to see that they were all from various banks. I checked one by one, and they were all transaction records.
A few were for large sums of money, and I didn't understand where the money was going. The receiver's address was in a foreign language, so I quickly took a screenshot.
Could it be a foreign bank?
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