[It does not bode well. Luka is taking residence in a containment cell that has housed people in it before. And in another place on this floor, where experimentations run unchecked under his own authority, monsters writhe in glass cells, gone dormant in buoyant, viscous liquid.
No, it is never a good thing to earn his scientific curiosity in this way. The company might take advantage of his continuously prodding intellect, but in the end, he cares not for businessmen and their wiles, either — only that his own mind might be satiated, by pushing the boundaries of what’s possible. His genius on display, for all to see.
How might it manifest itself with this strange cat-like man now at his disposal? He wonders.]
If it’s true, then it opens up a whole realm of possibilities, and not just from a biological standpoint. I daresay that the theoretical physicists would have quite a bit of fun trying to figure out how you arrived here. And how to duplicate those same set of circumstances.
[His grin widens enough to show a flash of teeth, tapping gently at the glass as if Luka were a fish in a tank.]
But I care more about biology, and since you’re as good as mine now, that’s all that matters. So tell me— what are you?
[He doesn’t ask for a name. He doesn’t care about the individual, only the building blocks of what makes them function, their limitations, their differences.]
no subject
No, it is never a good thing to earn his scientific curiosity in this way. The company might take advantage of his continuously prodding intellect, but in the end, he cares not for businessmen and their wiles, either — only that his own mind might be satiated, by pushing the boundaries of what’s possible. His genius on display, for all to see.
How might it manifest itself with this strange cat-like man now at his disposal? He wonders.]
If it’s true, then it opens up a whole realm of possibilities, and not just from a biological standpoint. I daresay that the theoretical physicists would have quite a bit of fun trying to figure out how you arrived here. And how to duplicate those same set of circumstances.
[His grin widens enough to show a flash of teeth, tapping gently at the glass as if Luka were a fish in a tank.]
But I care more about biology, and since you’re as good as mine now, that’s all that matters. So tell me— what are you?
[He doesn’t ask for a name. He doesn’t care about the individual, only the building blocks of what makes them function, their limitations, their differences.]