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Episode 02: Cosmic Imperative / Re: Epi S: [Day 03 | 0800] Meeting of the Minds
Last post by Ellen Fitz -Hirek did not move at first. The bowl had long since been emptied, set aside with absent precision, and he had reclined into the chair as though it belonged to him by right. Eyes closed, fingers loosely steepled against his abdomen, he had let the pain come and go in measured waves—catalogued, compartmentalized, dismissed. A discipline learned young, refined under less… conversational conditions. Voices droned on around him. Orderly. Polite. Inefficient. A faint breath slipped through his nose.
Tal’Shiar interrogators could learn something here, he mused. If only in how to prolong suffering without ever raising one’s voice.
Frost’s voice cut cleanly through the room, and Hirek’s eyes opened at last—clear, sharp, and faintly amused. He did not sit forward. Did not rise. The invitation not to was noted… and accepted with quiet defiance. His gaze settled fully on Frost now.
“Hirek tr’Aimne,” he said, voice husky, clipped, carrying that lilting island cadence beneath its restraint. “Bioengineering, biosynthetics by formal education. Botany and zoological integration by inclination… and necessity.” A slight shift in the chair—enough to ease the pull along his ribs, nothing more. “As for my laboratory…” He gave a partial shrug. “I do not have one.” He let that sit. “I was not issued dedicated space upon my arrival. I have, instead, made myself useful wherever doors were not barred.” A flicker of dry amusement crossed his expression. “A practical arrangement. If not an efficient one.”
His eyes moved briefly across the table—Zarqan, Angharad—acknowledging the earlier discussion without interrupting it.
“I have spent the last several days working within existing facilities—primarily assisting with analysis related to the Infested.” His fingers tapped once, lightly, against the armrest. “Prior to my latest mission to my home planet, I conducted a series of controlled bio-integration experiments. Cross-species adaptability under parasitic influence. Behavioral thresholds. Cellular resistance. There was one specimen of note. Highly promising.” His gaze returned to Frost. “It demonstrated partial resistance to neural override while maintaining host viability longer than any comparable sample observed.” A slight tilt of his head. “It was destroyed during the attack. If Starfleet wishes to pursue that line of inquiry, we will require a replacement.” His expression sharpened, just a fraction. “And ideally, a controlled environment in which to do so.”



