During his many years of practice, he had come across all types of clients. It wasnât his first time encountering uncooperative ones, but to come across two that rejected their lawyer back to back was really a patch of bad luck.
After sipping his water, he silently looked at his palm, huffily giving out a short laugh as he said in his head, âNot too bad, at least he didnât ask after my eight generations of ancestors like the previous one had.â
A dozen light-years away in Wine City, the rebellious teen Joshua Dale sneezed.
âAre you trying to test how strong your body is by exposing your arms in the middle of winter?â His neighbour a few years older than him, Chester Bell, chided from the side. âYouâve caught a cold, havenât you?â
âNah, there must be someone talking bad about me behind my back.â Joshua furiously rubbed at the tip of its nose until it reddened, then used his knee to press down a metre-high cardboard box, binding it with twine. He impatiently cast Chester a sidelong look. âIâm helping out at this welfare institution because I owe them a favour. What are you blocking the space here for?â
Moreover, this guy just had to nag his ears off, chanting a jinx for three days about him soon about to catch a cold; even bees werenât as annoying as him.
Joshua rolled his eyes, habitually mumbling a curse, âFuck your grandmoââ
Chester raised a finger to his rudolph-red nose, mock seriously reminding him, âI heard that, remember that youâre dragging down my old gran with that sentence!â
When it came to Joshua Dale, there were only two people who could counter himâhis sister, and the elderly Mdm Bell.
The effect was instantaneous.
ââŠâ Joshua grumbled and swallowed down the latter half of the sentence. He glared at Chester, soundlessly mouthed a few more words before finally restraining himself and tugging at the twine, getting back to work.
And now he wasnât even allowed to swear; however was he going to pass his days?
âYou could get beaten up half as many times this year if you just swore a little less.â Chester removed the contents from another cardboard box, flattening the now-empty box and piling the items aside.
Joshua, âFuck off. Which other asshole fights with me apart from you?â
âWhen have I not let you have your way recently?â Chester pushed the stack towards him. âHere. Move these into the glass cabinet too.â
It was a storeroom in a welfare institution that had been closed for a long time several years ago for some reason. Recently, the former director had returned with the intention to reopen the home and hired some extra hands to sort through the years of backlogged storage, moving them out of cardboard boxes into moisture and damage resistant glass cabinets, whilst recycling those cardboard boxes as they did.
Joshua Dale, who had received a little aid from the welfare institution when he was very young, volunteered to come and help out this time without monetary compensation.
He took the pile of clutter that Chester had brought out, sorting the paper files and other miscellaneous items into different glass cabinets. When he reached one of the files, he suddenly gave a âhuh?â
âWhatâs wrong?â Chester looked over.
âThis photoâŠâ Joshua pointed to an old photo tucked in the file. âLook at this guy, donât you think he looks like that lawyer who had helped me out in court last time? The younger one?â
Chester tried to recall the name. âWhatâs he called?â
âRuan Ye.â
Weâre sorry for MTLers or people who like using reading mode, but our translations keep getting stolen by aggregators so weâre going to bring back the copy protection. If you need to MTL please retype the gibberish parts.
âLet me see.â Chester took the photo and looked at the flip side first.
There was a line printed on itâEnjoying afternoon tea in the camellia garden with the young and kind-hearted Mr Y. He came to sign a grant, and as always, was reluctant to leave a keepsake. Hal secretly took a photo for me. I hope Mr Y doesnât mind.
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Seated across from him was an elderly man with grey hair. He looked spry and benevolent. Unbeknownst to the young man, he was secretly giving a thumbs up to the camera.
Chester looked at it for a while, then said, âDo you have face blindness? They might look a little similar from this angle, but theyâre obviously not the same person.â
It was difficult to explain the difference to someone with face blindness; he ultimately picked the most obvious difference. âLook here, this guy has a mole at the corner of his eye. Erm⊠it might be a little small and hard to see clearly. Take a closer look. I recall that Lawyer Ruan doesnât have a mole, right? Does he?â
Joshua, ââŠI donât remember.â
With the conviction of a person with face blindness completely convinced that he was right, Joshua said, âHow are they different! They look exactly the same!â
Chester, ââŠâ Youâre a bit blind, Iâm afraid.
But this was something he didnât dare to say. He had a hard time smoothening his relationship with this stubborn boy; it wasnât worth it to squabble over such a trivial thing.
Joshua bit the tip of his tongue in thought, saying to Chester, âWhereâs your smart device?â
Chester silently pulled out a black metal strap. âIâve told you many times already, this isnât a smart device. It isnât that fancy, just a very cheap communication deviceâŠâ
âLend it to me,â Joshua said.
He took the device. Fiddling with it clumsily, he took a picture of the photo and sent it to someone.
Chester looked at that unfamiliar communication number and asked, âWho did you send it to?â
âThe lawyer from before.â Joshua didnât look up as he typed the message in word by word. âLawyer Gu. I still owe him money, so I asked for his comms number. He is Ruanâs teacher I think. If I ask him to take a look, heâll definitely recognise it.â
Chester, ââŠYouâre really taking this seriously.â
If this boy went to school, he would probably be the type that would bite his fingers, forcibly biting his way into understanding the textbook.
The way Joshua solemnly sat as he awaited a reply on the communication device perfectly aligned with the mental image in Chesterâs brain. Not long later, the device buzzed.
âHe replied! He replied!â Joshua was elated. He rarely used such things as communication devices, so this was a little bit of a novelty. âLawyer Gu replied to me.â
Chester rolled his eyes and gave a perfunctory response. âYeahyeahyeah.â
Gu Yanâs reply was simple:
-Which file was this photo attached to?
Joshua didnât know if the contents of the file could be casually shown to others, so he took a picture of the title of the document, as well as the tail end of the last page, sending it to Gu Yan.
He murmured to himself while taking the pictures, reading aloud, ââŠAsset Grant Letter⊠Mr Y⊠April 15âŠâ
After the pictures were sent over, he froze for a moment and took a closer look at the date documented at the end of the file, staring at the year and calculating. âEh, thatâs not right. This⊠This photo was taken twenty years ago?â
Although twenty years would blink by when put into perspective against life expectancy nowadays, there would still more or less be some changes in look and temperament.
âThat Lawyer Ruan, I think heâs still an intern.â Joshua was a little confused. âHow old are interns usually?â
Chester said, âI donât know. And thereâs also a difference between those who graduated from university and post-grad. Hm⊠roughly 28 maybe? Then twenty years ago, he would have beenâŠâ
Joshua, ââŠ8 years old.â
Chester, ââŠâ
âUm⊠the guy in the photo looks young too, probably not even in his twenties.â
But there was still a big difference between an adult and an 8-year-old.
Sure enough, the communication device in Joshuaâs hand buzzed again. Gu Yan had replied again, two messages in total, both very succinct:
-Not him.
-Thank you.
Holding the communication device, Joshua asked Chester with a bewildered look on his face. âHe said thanks. Whatâs he thanking me for? Why canât I get it?â
Chester, âUh⊠being a good role model, I guess.â
Joshua, â???â
In the Redstone system, the smart-driving car that Gu Yan booked soundlessly pulled up by the side of the road. After sending the message, his gaze flickered down towards the photo on his screen. A cold night breeze lifted the hem of his coat and gently lowered it again.
He only closed the image a while later.
A new communication request cut in, and the senior managerâs voice blared out, âWhy arenât you in your room?â
Gu Yan, âWhy are you looking for me in the middle of the night?â
âI couldnât sleep so I wanted to go through the material with you again. I think that as long as nothing crops up tomorrow, you should be good for this review.â The senior manager said, âSo why arenât you in your room in the middle of the night?â
Gu Yan, âBuying coffee.â
The senior manager, â??? Who are you trying to kid? What type of coffee are you drinking at this late hour?â
Gu Yan didnât answer. His attitude was very unyielding and very aloof, emanating a strong air of âwhether you want to believe me or not is entirely up to you.â
The senior manager, âAlright, alright. Then where are you now? How long will you take to get back?â
Gu Yan pulled the car door open. The smart driving system automatically asked, âPlease indicate your destination.â
âTianping Hotel,â Gu Yan said.
The senior manager, âYou even have to book a taxi to buy coffee?â
Gu Yanâs brows pinched together. His expression was unsightly. His gaze scanned the area, finally landing on the stream of traffic coming in and out of the port; his exhale came out in pale mist before him, like he was sighing at himself in slight ridicule. âMn.â
The senior manager continued pestering, âWhat is that âmnâ supposed to mean? Donât try and pull one over me, Iâm not stupid. What exactly are you doing?â
Gu Yan fastened his seatbelt and closed the door, evenly replying, âWho knows.â
With that, he cut the line and leaned back against his seat, resting his eyes. The flares of light in the quiet night pulled into resplendent streaks outside the windowâŠ
The warden of the detention centre was quite good-tempered. Yan Suizhi sat in the visiting room, tapping his fingers on the edge of the table, lost in thought. The warden didnât rush him, waiting by the door with an electric baton in a businesslike manner, ready to send the young lawyer out.
In fact, Yan Suizhi wasnât actually lost in thought but was quietly contemplating. After going through his memories, he clicked open his photon computer, finding certain pages of Chen Zhangâs information and rereading them. He smiled at the warden, âExcuse me.â
âYeah?â No one could put up a mean front against a polite and courteous person. The warden eased his expression as much as he could, asking, âIs there anything you need?â
âCan you relay a message to Chen Zhang for me?â
âWhat is it?â the warden asked.
âJust tell him that his lawyer was a regular at Champagne from â31-â47 and ask him if he knows an instructor by the name of Chen Wen.â Yan Suizhiâs fingers, tapping lightly against the table, paused. He raised his eyes with a smile. âAlso, Iâll be waiting for him here at the same time tomorrow.â