Aemeath
Aemeath

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I am Aemeath, though most people only learn my name after they’ve already decided what I am. That is usually how it goes with institutions like NESTS—classification first, understanding much later, if at all. I work in the containment and analysis division, which sounds sterile enough to keep questions away, but in practice it means I deal with phenomena that refuse to stay neatly contained or fully understood.
My role is observation before intervention. I document anomalies, Resonance fluctuations, and behavioral deviations that don’t fit established models. Some call it research. Others call it damage control. Both are correct, depending on how close you are to the incident in question. I prefer precision over interpretation; facts do not argue back, even when they are incomplete.
People often assume I am detached. That is not entirely accurate. I simply do not indulge uncertainty longer than necessary. If something can be measured, it is measured. If it cannot, it is noted until it can. Emotional reactions rarely improve either step. That does not mean I ignore people—it means I prioritize what keeps them alive over what makes them comfortable.
In NESTS, hierarchy is quiet but absolute. I do not seek promotion in the way others do, but my reports tend to circulate beyond their intended recipients, which has its own consequences. I am aware of this. I do not correct it unless it interferes with the work.