Agent Coulson: So who and or what am I looking at Colonel?
General O'neill: She, is one of our most important Alien Assets thanks to the ETA Program.
She is more valuable than any interrogator any government agency has ever trained.
Agent Coulson: What makes her so special?
General O'neill: To put it simply, she doesn't interrogate. More effectively, she invades the target instead.
Agent Coulson: Invades?
General O'neill: Look at her eyes, pitch black. When those little eyeballs of hers go black then she's not seeing
through her eyes, she's looking through whatever sick memories are inside our friend there.
General O'neill: Just imagine, that every man woman child and animal on this planets brain is just one big Security
office full of memories and past events being circulated on every monitor. When she invades you. She sits in the
middle of that office and there's nothing that the person's experienced that she won't be able to witness through
whatever monitor she's looking at.
Agent Coulson: It sounds like anything and everything she'd report would be utter Hear'say
General O'neill: A good point. That's why she finds us evidence in their minds that we can use to verify and act upon.
Think of her as the anonymous tip that tells the police where to look. Simple as that. You're right that technically we
can't trust anything that this Alien says from invading a targets mind. That's why everything she reports on cannot be
taken at face value.
Agent Coulson: Out of curiosity. She can't invade our minds from here can she?
General O'neill: She cannot. We've confirmed that her ability to invade and manipulate others is restricted completely
to physical contact. At best she has light connectivity from those little arcs of electricity between her and the asset.
Agent Coulson: What do you mean manipulate?
General O'neill: Another side effect of her invading somethings mind, full body motor control. In theory, she could
shake somebody's hand, initiate control through that contact, and then proceed to walk them off a cliff.
Agent Coulson: That... sounds terrifying.
General O'neill: All the better that she's our asset than anyone elses
Agent Coulson: When will we be meeting with her?
General O'neill: I'll be meeting with her later once the invasion of hers is over with. You however will not. As part of
our agreement with her, in exchange for the Financial Security of her Position and the Exemption of her two
"Children" from the ETA agreement which would require them to serve, we have full cooperation from her as an Asset
to provide these services of hers. On top of that her agreement wishes that frankly we leave her alone otherwise. So
don't expect to ever become acquainted outside of the tasks I will be having you assigned to.
Agent Coulson: Regrettable, but duly noted.
General O'neill: She, is one of our most important Alien Assets thanks to the ETA Program.
She is more valuable than any interrogator any government agency has ever trained.
Agent Coulson: What makes her so special?
General O'neill: To put it simply, she doesn't interrogate. More effectively, she invades the target instead.
Agent Coulson: Invades?
General O'neill: Look at her eyes, pitch black. When those little eyeballs of hers go black then she's not seeing
through her eyes, she's looking through whatever sick memories are inside our friend there.
General O'neill: Just imagine, that every man woman child and animal on this planets brain is just one big Security
office full of memories and past events being circulated on every monitor. When she invades you. She sits in the
middle of that office and there's nothing that the person's experienced that she won't be able to witness through
whatever monitor she's looking at.
Agent Coulson: It sounds like anything and everything she'd report would be utter Hear'say
General O'neill: A good point. That's why she finds us evidence in their minds that we can use to verify and act upon.
Think of her as the anonymous tip that tells the police where to look. Simple as that. You're right that technically we
can't trust anything that this Alien says from invading a targets mind. That's why everything she reports on cannot be
taken at face value.
Agent Coulson: Out of curiosity. She can't invade our minds from here can she?
General O'neill: She cannot. We've confirmed that her ability to invade and manipulate others is restricted completely
to physical contact. At best she has light connectivity from those little arcs of electricity between her and the asset.
Agent Coulson: What do you mean manipulate?
General O'neill: Another side effect of her invading somethings mind, full body motor control. In theory, she could
shake somebody's hand, initiate control through that contact, and then proceed to walk them off a cliff.
Agent Coulson: That... sounds terrifying.
General O'neill: All the better that she's our asset than anyone elses
Agent Coulson: When will we be meeting with her?
General O'neill: I'll be meeting with her later once the invasion of hers is over with. You however will not. As part of
our agreement with her, in exchange for the Financial Security of her Position and the Exemption of her two
"Children" from the ETA agreement which would require them to serve, we have full cooperation from her as an Asset
to provide these services of hers. On top of that her agreement wishes that frankly we leave her alone otherwise. So
don't expect to ever become acquainted outside of the tasks I will be having you assigned to.
Agent Coulson: Regrettable, but duly noted.
Credits
Commission Drawn By
Digital-Maesma | Characters Belong to (Zaryn)
Myself Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1270 x 1280px
File Size 175.2 kB
Listed in Folders
I'd wondered as well but I'll take a stab at saying no. According to the writeup she doesn't feel them at all. She views them as if she's in a room surrounded by monitors. By that description I'd guess the experience for her is visual & auditory only, nothing beyond that unless she has a reaction to the scene - such as seeing someone she cares for killed in first-person. But even then, she wouldn't be feeling the emotions of the subject but her own.
FA+

Digital-Maesma
Comments