Click. Click. The light dials were being turned off one by one by the head researcher of the laboratory below the Fourth District. The green boi showed his assistants to the stone staircase and asked them to leave. It was nearing the end of the day and they had wrapped up production while the sun was barely still up. He still had some things he wanted to get done. Gil was very aware that the workers that had been sent to aid him were also attempting to learn as much as they could from him and his unusual methods, and this was probably asked of them by their director. Gil was a valuable resource to the 4th at the moment, but if they learned his secrets, they could cut him out of the profits entirely. This was unrealistic of course, they couldn't glean much from simply observing his actions - maybe they could surpass the average doctor, but they'd never be able to replicate his products. Even so, the fishman was careful about showing people the minimum that he could. Sourcing his ingredients personally helped too. He often got the assistants to do the menial labour and clean up. Like today, one of them had to carve off an arm of a patient after it had started to decay rapidly. That arm was now sitting in a vat of acid, fizzling away until all of the evidence had been disposed of.
Once the assistants had left, he retraced his steps and flicked on a lamp at the back of the room and sat down at his desk. He breathed deeply and pressed his fingertips together. His methods had slowly grown more and more excessive, lacking less ethical protocol with each passing month. The pursuit of the Miracle Cure had gripped him tightly, like a ball on an incline, only able to pick up speed without slowing. He had become a different doctor to his days traveling the Grand Line in years past, even a couple of years ago when he had dwelled in the sandy city of Alubarna. Was he obsessed? He conceded that this was probably true with a deep sigh. Not that this introspection mattered though.
Once the assistants had left, he retraced his steps and flicked on a lamp at the back of the room and sat down at his desk. He breathed deeply and pressed his fingertips together. His methods had slowly grown more and more excessive, lacking less ethical protocol with each passing month. The pursuit of the Miracle Cure had gripped him tightly, like a ball on an incline, only able to pick up speed without slowing. He had become a different doctor to his days traveling the Grand Line in years past, even a couple of years ago when he had dwelled in the sandy city of Alubarna. Was he obsessed? He conceded that this was probably true with a deep sigh. Not that this introspection mattered though.