![]() "Isn't being early a good thing?" Tendi asked, glancing at Rutherford and Boimler, who usually agreed with her about the importance of getting placed ahead of schedule. "Eh," Mariner said around the last bites of her waffle. All of this was entirely wasted because her bridge buddies were much less concerned about the time, slouching in along with most of their shift and leisurely eating their food. She was the first through the showers and first in line for breakfast. This was on top of the extra fifteen she'd always given herself to get to sickbay, since the bridge was an entire three more decks higher on the ship. Tendi got up thirty minutes early on the day of her first bridge shift, just to make sure that she wouldn't be late. ![]() What's really exciting is that because of how the schedules worked out, for my first bridge shift I'm going to be there with not just my red-shirt buddies but Rutherford too! The ship is just going to be cruising through empty space while we head to our next mission so it's going to be super routine BUT it's still so exciting. It's a good thing Orions need about two percent less sleep than humans! Of course, the Cerritos doesn't have a full-time bridge science officer right now anyways, but that just means the junior officer watch rotation goes faster, which means more bridge time for me! Not as much time as junior command officers like Mariner and Boimler, but I also have away team science officer training and laboratory support duty and mandatory personal self-guided experiments to design and research papers to write and I also want to keep up my certifications for medical so I've got plenty of stuff to keep me busy busy busy! Science officer! Not the science officer since I'm still just an ensign but as of this week I am officially certified to be a junior bridge science officer.
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