Athena clicked on the information Cora sent over.
Perhaps due to Cora’s meticulous investigation, the data only captured events from a month before Zilvia’s disappearance. Specifically, it was the last month before kindergarten closed for the holidays.
The kindergarten officially closed for the holiday on Advent Sunday.
The documents Cora sent were arranged in reverse chronological order, starting with what happened at the kindergarten on December 31.
“At half past 2 in the afternoon on December 31, Nellie Lambert the honorary chairwoman of Rose Academy in Osceiton, visited Rose Academy privately with her assistant, without any official personnel or media coverage.
She spent an hour touring the middle school, followed by another hour in the elementary school, and arrived at the kindergarten at half past four. The visit was very low–key. Aside from the principal and a few teachers, no one knew who she was.
Throughout the visit, she wore sunglasses, which she even kept on indoors.
She toured the various classrooms and facilities without attracting the children’s attention, and there were no unexpected or strange occurrences.
Some teachers recalled that she didn’t seem well, appearing somewhat dazed, but she was polite and spoke appropriately, leaving a good impression on the staff.
At five, Nellie had dinner in the kindergarten cafeteria with the head of the kindergarten.
Since the kindergarten was holding an Advent Sunday celebration that evening, Nellie accepted the invitation to stay and watch the performance.
After dinner, the head of the kindergarten and the teachers were busy preparing for the event, while Nellie took a stroll around the kindergarten with her assistant until she arrived at the playground shortly before the performance, sitting front and center.
The event began at half past six.
Because Catherine and Zilvia hadn’t informed their family about the Advent Sunday celebration in advance, and Zilvia was not fond of discussing kindergarten activities at home, no one from the Donovan family attended.
Zilvia’s performance was the sixth on the program.
She recited a poem.
Nellie praised Zilvia briefly, and nothing more came of their interaction.
The head of the kindergarten noted that Nellie removed her sunglasses during the performance, revealing her blank stare, as if she hadn’t slept well or was unwell. She frequently checked her phone and sometimes lowered her head to stare into space, appearing troubled.
Overall, the event was lively and bustling, but nothing particularly noteworthy occurred.
At exactly 8 in the evening, the performance concluded.
Nellie quickly presented awards to the winning students, including Zilvia, before hurrying off, with no significant interaction between her and Zilvia.
Catherine later drove Zilvia home.
Regarding the information about that day, Cora clearly recognized Nellie’s significance, focusing her notes around her. However, Cora mentioned that this was 17 years ago, and the teachers and parents of that time could hardly recall the details, only having a general impression.
Thus, the report lacked sufficient detail.
Athena murmured, “This must have been Zilvia’s first encounter with Nellie.
“From this report, it seems that Nellie and Zilvia didn’t interact much and that nothing particularly notable happened.
“Moreover, there’s no indication that these two had any further contact after that day.
“So, how did these two actually come together?”
Athena printed out the two pages of information and studied them repeatedly, highlighting a few key points with a water- based pen.
After researching for over ten minutes, she locked the two pages in a drawer and moved on to the other materials.
During that month, several ordinary events occurred at the kindergarten, like children arguing and fighting, a collective cold among the kids, and parents comparing their children, all of which didn’t escalate into major issues.
From her review, Athena noticed that Zilvia excelled in kindergarten, never caused trouble, and was exceptionally quiet and low–key. She got along well with both teachers and classmates, who all liked her. The kids even admired her.
Maria showed everyone a few photos, saying: [Joel claimed that Gavin’s family injured them. All five of them are receiving treatment at a clinic. They now have nowhere to live and no money for food, so they want us to hurry and pick them up. He also said that the four elderly members are partial to Gavin and don’t consider him family. They’re all quite hurt. Mom is the only support for their whole family.]
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