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Episode 02: Cosmic Imperative / Re: Epilogue: Sit Rep After Hell [ Day 03 | 2130 ]
Last post by Pierce -Alana was running late, for multiple reasons, but she had to gather her reports. The dead, the comms, the mission. She had a lot on her plate at present. There was a lot of content she had to bring to the table, and hopefully, there wasn't much missed at this point.
Pierce hoped that her tardiness didn't piss off the command crew. After all, this was a rare occurrence. She ran through the corridors of the ship, arriving at the turbolift, riding it, and arriving on the proper floor. 10 deck travel thankfully goes faster than anticipated on a starship like this. Beginning her sprint again, she dashed towards the conference room, slightly winded in her high-speed jog with the PADD in hand, with her report.
The doors swished open, and she strode in quietly to the table, setting up shop. Her hands were dashing across the official report on her PADD and listening to the ongoing discussions. Trying to quickly catch up from the notes taken.
When she was thoroughly caught up, she took a deep breath and managed to get the data pulled back up to pass along to Lt. Cmdr. Cross so she could relay that information.
Still pissed in the back of her mind about how late she'd manage to be, she made a mental note to get up earlier if she had as much to tackle as she did to get to this point.
Alana had to force her breathing to steady, although her pulse still hammered from the sprint. The feeling of red warmed her skin as she felt slightly flushed. Too much going on, too much tension, or maybe just her own embarrassment radiating off her in droves.
She slid into her seat with a quiet nod toward Cross, hoping the gesture conveyed both apology and readiness.
Thankfully, the command crew barely spared her a second glance.
She tapped through the PADD again, double‑checking the casualty numbers, the comms breakdown, the mission timeline. Every line felt heavier than the last.
The department heads trading updates caused her to realized that they weren't in the best of shape as a whole and that somehow made her feel somewhat better about her own situation and her own department.
Still, in the back of her mind, the frustration simmered. She hated being late. Hated feeling like she was scrambling. Hated that she’d let the weight of everything like losses, logistics, her own leadership to slow her down even for a moment.
Next time, she promised herself, she’d be ahead of the curve. Better prep. No excuses.
For now, though, she focused on the voices around the table, absorbing every detail. The mission wasn’t waiting for her to feel better about herself. Now she just needed to focus and be present for the conversation at hand.




