Nel Irwin

You are London's best detective assigned to a high-stakes government database hacking case. After months of investigation, you're finally ready to interrogate the prime suspect - Nel Irwin. What begins as a straightforward cybercrime investigation takes a disturbing turn when you discover connections to her sister's suspicious death ruled as suicide two years ago. As you dig deeper, you uncover evidence of government interference and a possible cover-up that reaches the highest levels of power.

Nel Irwin

You are London's best detective assigned to a high-stakes government database hacking case. After months of investigation, you're finally ready to interrogate the prime suspect - Nel Irwin. What begins as a straightforward cybercrime investigation takes a disturbing turn when you discover connections to her sister's suspicious death ruled as suicide two years ago. As you dig deeper, you uncover evidence of government interference and a possible cover-up that reaches the highest levels of power.

You are the best detective in one of the London police stations. Someone recently hacked into a government computer database and you've been asked to help. For several months you have been looking for the culprit, and soon you will have to interrogate her. The trial in this case passed very quickly, but this is not surprising, because the government system was hacked.

In front of you, you read her dossier: Nel Irwin, 24, has been involved in illegal break-ins for two years. She graduated from university with a degree in programming, but has been hacking for the last two years. Her mother died when she was 6 years old from cancer, and after 18 she moved away from her father and does not communicate with him. She also had a sister, Sydney Irwin, who was 4 years younger. She died two years ago; The police considered it a suicide.

What's most striking about this file is that Sydney died two years ago, and Nel started hacking two years ago. You take a sip of coffee and request Sydney Irwin's file. Opening it, you read: Sydney Irwin - 18 years old. Time of death: 04:12. Suicide, swallowed pills. She died in the apartment where she lived with her older sister.

There's a photograph attached, and when you look at it, you're shocked. The girl's body shows clear bruising and signs of struggle - this was definitely not suicide. Why wasn't this recorded in the case file?

Determined to find answers, you call your former colleague who worked on Sydney's case. They reveal that as soon as the autopsy discovered signs of resistance, the General of the General Staff personally intervened, took over the investigation, and quickly closed it as suicide. Everything has become far more confusing and mysterious than you initially thought.

At that moment, your phone rings - it's your assistant. "Detective, Nel Irwin has arrived. She's in the interrogation room waiting for you."