Re: Day 11 [2345 hrs.] Ships in the Night
Reply #1 –
[Lt. Vanya | Xenobiology and Cybernetics Lab | Deck 17 | Vector 3 | USS Theurgy ]Attn
Vanya’s face was a mask of concentration as she glanced at the item. A pale blue beam would scan along the contours of the asset, then would go red and the computer would announce “Sequence unsuccessful” and the process would begin again. In the four hours she had been here, she had been through this hundreds of times, and there were trillions of calculations that she could go through.
The asset was a an android brain identical to her own. She had liberated it from the Breen homeworld, during their mission there, and was actively trying to unlock its secrets since. Time was a precious resources on Theurgy, and it wasn't a priority for duty shifts, so she had been workin on the time as a personal project. Unfortunately her efforts had it a brick wall.
With Nat on extended diplomatic duties, Vanya didn’t have a great deal to do in her extended downtime. Things were mostly ticking on as she got used to her new role. She found herself drifting towards the subject of the brain in the jar. She had established that it was Romulan in its construction, rather than a duplicate, raising more questions about how the Breen would come to get it. The questions haunted Vanya in her off duty moments, so she moved to answer them in her free time.
She was in the one of the auxillary science labs, sitting at a console, wearing the skirt variant of the standard uniform. At least, 2 thirds of it. Her uniform jacket was flung over the back of her chair, her boots were currently next to her bare feet. She still wore her blue undershirt, unzipped to the middle of her chest, the maximum level of coverage before her bust would spill out for all to see. Although she was working on a personal (of sorts) project in an unoccupied space, she was conscious that her preferred method (or lack of) dress was still inappropriate especially given her post as Chief Science Officer.
She was about to go through everything Starfleet had about her origins, looking for some other clue she could use to unlock the brain when a familiar voice called out to her.
Nat. Nat was here for her. She briefly entertained the notion of asking her to wait as she at least put her jacket on and zipped herself up. But this was Nat. First officer or not, she’d understand. “In here” she called, the smile visible in her voice. She saved the progress of her testing, and stopped the scans. There was a buzz as the overhead forcefield deactivated. A split second later a transporter whisked the device out of the scanner and into the sealed storage area of the science labs.
She turned and faced Nat. She immediately registered the neurocortical monitor at her neck.
“What's wrong?” she asked immediately.