The woman's face was nearly identical to Suri, only appearing her twenties instead of teens, with traces of Furi's characteristics, especially the eyes. They were the same color as Furi's, and even seemed to shimmer the same way in certain lights. She was incredibly beautiful, John admitted internally.
And she was without a doubt Furi's daughter.
John regained his composure despite the shocking turn of events.
'This woman seems certain I know of Furi's demise. I need to find out why before I answer.'
A reply formulated in his head, but the woman spoke up again before he could say anything.
"There's no use in trying to hide it," the woman said, her gaze narrowed, as if skeptical of John and his involvement with Furi's disappearance. "I know you were with him before contact was lost. Nothing you say will convince me otherwise."
John frowned at her strongarmed approach.
"Why are you so certain that I know your father? Or was there when you lost contact with him?" John asked, trying to dig for answers.
The woman leaned back in her seat, her guard still raised but eyes distant, as if she were recalling some troubling memories.
"Several weeks ago, my father sent me a message through a transmission disk. It was brief, but indicated he might have found the solution to his cultivation problem," the woman said, focus returning to her eyes.
"He didn't give much information, but indicated he had found a youthful talent that could obtain him what he needed, and in return, he needed to provide the youth information. Information regarding a woman that fell from beyond this world to this land. Quite an…oddity, wouldn't you say?"
The woman emphasized the word oddity, and that was one of the ways John described what kind of information he needed when shopping around the city for it.
John remained silent, as he could tell there was more.
'I guess this is related to the information network Furi mentioned.'
The woman continued after noticing he was not going to interrupt her.
"Then a short whole later, I received just a single word transmission from him. 'Danger'. That was all he sent, and then the connection between our transmission disks was lost."
The woman stood up and walked to a nearby table which contained wines and another alcoholic drinks. She posed herself a glass of fragrant red wine and downed it, then poured another glass and sat down once more.
"I have heard nothing from him since, and no one else has heard, seen, or found any trace of him since," she continued, taking another sip of wine. "And then several weeks later, I receive news of a Dao Transformation youth stumbling out of the Immortal Forest, a place where no Dao Transformation cultivator can survive for long. And then that same youth happens to find our hideout by instincts alone, and even has the combat prowess to avoid my attacks and overwhelm one of my Late Dao Transformation assassins. So tell me, are you still going to deny the youth my father mentioned is you after everything I just said?"
John studied the woman for quite some time, weighting the pros and cons of admitting the truth. The pros eventually won out in the end.
"I won't deny it," he said calmly.
The woman sighed softly, relieved, but also conflicted. Her gaze hardened further, as if she would kill him unless he gave her a reasonable answer, one that did not implicate him in her fathers demise.
"What happened?" She asked, voice tense. "Is my father…. Are my siblings?"
"They're dead," John said softly.
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