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Episode 02: Cosmic Imperative / Re: EPI S: The curious case of Humpty Dumpty [Day 03 | 2330 hrs]
Last post by Dumedion -[Show/Hide]
Arven turned to glance over his shoulder at the Romulan – Perek? Jihjek? – whatever his name was, after a reasonable amount of time had passed to ensure the man had at least put some pants on. If the man had indeed designed the torture device, that clearly spoke of useful competence; Arven chose to dump the emotional attachment described as it struck too close to home with his own history with Cardassians. Above all, it was the way he offered to help that did it, really; there was a simple confidence in the Romulan’s tone that grabbed the Doctor’s attention. Unfortunately, upon registering the yellow/greenish PJ's, (the color reminded Leux of the gooey mucus he'd irrigated out of one of the pilots not long ago, or – more accurately – the runny bowel movements of a human newborn), Arven couldn’t quite focus on much else for a moment.
“Note to self, burn those,” Arven deadpanned, "every single one, then pick a new color," then cleared his throat to compose himself before returning his attention back to the matter at hand. “No one is stopping you from getting your hands dirty – just find the head nurse for the shift and do what they tell you, if you want to help with the day-to-day. As it happens, I have a case I believe your expertise could prove useful. But first,” he gestured to the screens with a hand and made room for the Romulan to approach.
“You might not be aware, but the number of Romulans currently on board have dwindled; with our replicators damaged, our ability to synthesize plasma is limited until repairs can be made – hence my search for a suitable blood donor. Unfortunately, you seem to have a more rare type,” Arven shrugged, “so try not to let anyone poke holes in you for the next week. Anyway, by sheer luck, or…fate, I don’t know, I found this.”
Leux nodded to the screens, which displayed two sets of DNA in a rotating double helix; one belonged to the Romulan, and the other was human – minus a pair of identical genes that matched perfectly in both strands.
“It appears you have a long lost relation on board; probably five or six generations removed, I’d guess,” Leux shrugged again.
“Curious, isnt it,” he folded his arms, thinking. Cross-species hybridization was hardly new, yet was still exceptionally rare – statistically speaking. “By all means, feel free to cross-check the analysis if you like. I’d rather be safe than sorry before I give the other party the news.”

