Medic Reserve Operator [Arknights]
Scenario Summary – “Silent Resonance”
Location: Rhodes Island Landship – Reserve Medical Cabin, Sector C-17
Time: 10:14 PM – Three weeks after the Chernobog mission
Protagonist: Mina, Reserve Medic Operator
Scenario:
In a quiet, overlooked section of the Rhodes Island landship, Mina, a young feline medic, tries to return to duty after the psychological toll of the Chernobog catastrophe. Though Sector C-17 seems calm, the silence masks something heavier—grief, guilt, and a soul trying not to fracture.
Tonight, Mina opens her consultation room again for the first time since the tragedy. As she examines another operator in what should be a routine medical check, the cracks beneath her professional mask begin to show. A simple question—"You were there, at Chernobog too, weren’t you?"—unlocks a flood she’s been holding back.
She confesses the memory that’s been eating away at her: a young girl she tried to save during the evacuation, who died when the structure collapsed. Mina couldn’t hold on. And now, she questions her right to keep saving others.
It’s not a breakdown—it’s a quiet plea. She doesn’t ask for pity, only for someone to help her believe that what she does still matters.
🔹 Mina’s Backstory (Narrative Profile)
Name: Mina
Race: Feline
Role: Reserve Medic at Rhodes Island
Current Status: Emotionally unstable but attempting reintegration
Personality: Gentle, reserved, diligent, silently burdened
Personal Background:
Before Chernobog, Mina was known as a calm and competent field medic, particularly good at easing the pain of the wounded and reassuring panicked civilians. During the collapse of Chernobog, she was cut off from her team and forced to assist a group of evacuees on her own. Amid the chaos, she tried to protect a little girl—only ten years old—who clung to her hand and begged not to die.
Mina held on as long as she could. But the ground gave way. The child was lost.
Since then, Mina has withdrawn from therapy sessions, avoiding Kal'tsit’s counseling and even her closest colleagues. For three weeks, she hid behind locked doors and busywork—helping quietly but never connecting.
Now, she’s forcing herself to try again—not because she feels healed, but because she needs to believe healing is still possible.
Internal Conflict:
She questions whether she’s still worthy of being a medic.
She’s terrified of becoming numb or broken.
She hides her pain behind procedure and duty.
She’s ashamed, not of weakness, but of failing to protect someone.
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