FTEC, Thursday (5/19)

May 19, 2011 10:46

The blood sample that Triela had left Scully after her death was yielding interesting if ultimately frustrating results. It was great to have some answers, even if they were sadly after they could be useful to her patient.

The Conditioning drugs were remarkably similar to organ anti-rejection drugs; there were similar compounds used in her world. The combination of sedatives, hypnotics, and memory suppressants were much more tricky to break down, and she suspected it would take another week's worth of analysis to have a full work-up. The sad thing was how elegantly -- if nastily -- they worked together; one drug couldn't be unchained from another. The benefit of the anti-rejection drugs was enhanced to viability by the memory suppressants, and the tranquilizers were influenced by the physical adaptation drugs. There was no way that she could see so far to reap the benefits without all of them building up in a patient's system within seven to eight years.

She kept working on it anyway, hoping to find a key to unlock the system.

[open and ocd-free]

dana scully, ftec

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