[i]Agent Dioxide’s Office[/i] [right]Date and Time: 8/3/2016 – 1200[/right] Agent Dioxide used to hope that [i][b]Big Boss[/b][/i] would grow some humanity rather than another five kilograms. He should probably consider the government expenses needed to cover for his expanding waistline, for crying out loud. He worked hard for a job on government salary risking his life and others'. Dioxide thought himself quite the altruist. Agent Dioxide coordinated the capture and experimentation on nearly half of the previous 28 superpow- no, the term is [i][u]Anomalies[/u][/i] as higher-ups called it. They get rounded up, cut open, and they die before we can get anything out of that. Despite all attempts of unlocking the thing - be it defective gene or contamination of a foreign source, whatever – we still know nothing. This is why Gershwin May is so important for all this. How else does someone just rise from the dead like the way Gershwin did? [hr] [quote=File #19] [i][center]United Nations Anomalies Research Mission[/center][/i] [right]Date and Time: 8/3/2016 – 1210[/right] [b][center]Analysis Report – Subject 29(3)[/center][/b] Pain is such a weird thing. What hurts for a little child is nothing to a grown man. It borders from physical pain to psychogenic. To be able to control pain and become empowered instead of refraining from injury… the possibilities are endless… One could never die. We’re banking on the assumption that Subject 29’s abilities are derived from pain, and not injury. This is a big gamble considering how closely-knit the two are. A general anaesthesia (I say general; it’s a mighty-fucking powerful anaesthesia) will be induced. Needles must be avoided: we can’t know for sure if a small prick in the skin would make the Subject go berserk. It must be administered without contact – gas. [/quote] [i]Agent Dioxide and a team of five were ordered to administer the anaesthesia through inhalation. The set-up of the cells are such that they are air-tight and have a single, unique air-conditioning unit. There was a loud struggle, and six full-grown muscle man were delicate to holding her. Gershwin was pinned down, forced to inhale the numbing gas, and she went limp unconscious. She was delivered to the SRD Building in 1230.[/i] [hr] [color=ed1c24][right]Another nightmare…[/right][/color] [hr] [quote=File #20] [i][center]United Nations Anomalies Research Mission[/center][/i] [right]Date and Time: 8/3/2016 – 1300[/right] [b][center]Analysis Report – Subject 29(4)[/center][/b] Everyone was scared. Even after she was pseudo-comatose, she was delivered to us in a straitjacket, tied to a gurney with at least three tight straps. My assistants had to pull down the collar of the jacket, too afraid to loosen her. I had originally wanted to postpone blood-testing until later, until a stroke of genius reminded me of anaesthesia and we proceeded with the preliminary – albeit limited. Vitals were stable and brain activity was just that – unconscious. We had no reason to be afraid. The prick of the needle to draw blood must have been what started it off. All monitors emitted a sharp sound that spread through the hitherto tense, silent operation room. We thought nothing of it at first – she hadn’t moved at all. Then the subject, somehow overcoming the anaesthesia, had another dream. She was barely conscious, yet her wound on her neck had started to glow. It pulsated, as if it were moving along with the blood in her veins. The glowing came from the wound. Bleeding had ceased from a formation that emanated this glow… a phantom copy of what was damaged. Then she moved. Only slightly, but it was enough to call the whole thing off. It must be linked to her somewhat acute perception of pain. Body and blood analyses were just as fruitless as Subject 30’s. There must be something in the brain that is doing all this – pain does come as a feeling reactionary to a stimuli. Neuro-imaging is the next step, but this will be even more difficult, and I have never been so afraid in my life: She will have to be awake. [/quote]