Provided in this addendum is a collection of notable test logs, designed to (1) further clarify the mechanism of RPC-268, (2) determine if RPC-268’s effects are causative or simply predictive, and (3) frustrate the capabilities of RPC-268 if possible. The tests and their results are listed below.
(Currently under audit by the Office of Ethics and Review)
Date: 08/11/1976
Testing Design: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographer: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: CSD-6921
RPC-268-1 Instance: Unknown, by test design.
Hypothesis: If research personnel resist viewing the RPC-268-1 instance, then the depicted death will still occur.
Results: CSD-6921 was killed in action on 12/09/1976 by RPC-███.
Additional Notes: RPC-268-1 instance was observed retroactively and displayed an image of death that was compatible with the means of expiration. This test confirmed that looking at the RPC-268-1 instance itself does not cause the observed effects.
A terrible tragedy to be sure. But we can learn something from this, and not let the horrible death be in vain. This is valuable information due to the unusual and unmistakable manner in which RPC-███‘s victims die. By this, we can remove the previous ambiguity in the means of death, and conclude with sufficient reason that the -1 instances are very specific in their prognosis. — Researcher Oliver Issac
Date: 08/12/1977
Testing Design: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographer: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: CSD-6980
RPC-268-1 Instance: Shown to be a single low-caliber headshot wound to the back of the head.
Hypothesis: If tied to a chair and given lethal injection, then this will prevent the death shown in RPC-268-1 from happening.
Results: CSD-6980 was given a lethal injection and was pronounced dead ten minutes after. As the site security guard removed his restraints, CSD-6980 lunged for the guard's firearm. The guard evaded CSD-6980 and shot him once in the head out of self-defense.
Additional Notes: Review of CSD-6980's vital signs at the time of his pronounced death displayed faint ECG activity, which was not noticed at the time.
Date: 08/21/1977
Testing Design: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographer: Researcher Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: CSD-6990
RPC-268-1 Instance: The cause of death is presumably natural causes via old age.
Hypothesis: If the subject is executed by gunshot trauma, then this will alter the cause of death and prevent the death shown in RPC-268-1 from happening. A security guard was ordered to shoot CSD-6990 in the chest several times.
Results: Researcher Issac, disobeying protocol brandished his own firearm and proceeded to fire six shots (a full magazine) into the mandible and cranium of CSD-6990. The test was discontinued. Miraculously, CSD-6990 did not die from the injuries but was placed in life-long acute medical care due to a resulting anoxic brain injury. CSD-6990 expired forty years later in his sleep.
Additional Notes: Olivier Issac is currently under suspension per Internal Judicial Affairs. He has thus been removed from his position with RPC-268. Oliver Issac was re-assigned to RPC-268 under conditional participation.
Date: 09/07/1977
Testing Design: Senior Researcher Barry Stevenson
Photographer: Research Assistant Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: RPC-218
Hypothesis: Anomalies are subject to RPC-268's effect.
Results: RPC-218, given its reliable appearance at events of great historical importance, was photographed using RPC-268 at the treaty signings between Panama and the United States. RPC-268-1 instance featured a blank, black photograph. Analysis determines that the chemical film was successfully developed and that the shutter of the camera was open at the time of photography. Further testing on the instance revealed an ACS level approaching 0. The significance of this is uncertain. A message on the posterior side of the instance read:
Prepare for unseen circumstances.
Additional Notes: The RPC-268-1 instance was incinerated by order of the Global Directorate.
Date: 11/12/1977
Testing Design: Senior Researcher Barry Stevenson
Photographer: Research Assistant Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: RPC-███
Hypothesis: (1) Anomalies are subject to RPC-268's effect. (2) RPC-███ has a definitive and final death.
Result: RPC-268 produced an instance of RPC-268-1, immediately followed by another instance of RPC-268-1, ad infinitum. By the time the experiment was ceased by depletion of film from RPC-268, it had produced over nineteen instances of RPC-268-1, each showing RPC-███ dying in a plethora of varying circumstances.
Additional Notes: Hypothesis (1) is presumed confirmed, although it is currently unknown whether RPC-268 could successfully produce an RPC-268-1 of RPC-███'s final death. Research has been inconclusive in proving whether RPC-███ has a set amount of deaths or if it is potentially infinite.
Date: 11/15/1993
Testing Design: Senior Researcher Molly Wholefield
Photographer: Research Assistant Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual: N/A
Hypothesis: If RPC-268 is used to photograph RPC-268 itself, then the RPC-268-1 instance will depict how RPC-268 becomes inert.
Results: Taking a self-portrait through use of a mirror produced no RPC-268-1 instance.
Additional Notes: RPC-268 does not apply to objects, RPC-268 included. This result in addition to the animal studies suggests that RPC-268 only produces an RPC-268-1 instance in the presence of human genetic material.
Date: 12/10/2017
Testing Design: Senior Researcher Michael Anjou
Photographer: Research Assistant Fae Andrews
Photographed Individual: Research Assistant Oliver Issac
Hypothesis: N/A. The following test was performed as a preliminary PoI workup for the detection of anomalous traits in Research Assistant Oliver Issac, whose seeming inability to age caught the attention of Authority personnel. Any anomalous traits were hypothesized to be secondary due to prolonged exposure to RPC-286.
Result: RPC-268-1 instance featured Research Assistant Oliver Issac seemingly alive, standing directly centered in the shot and facing the capture lens. Upon photography responsibilities being transferred from former Research Assistant Oliver Issac, he immediately began to age, his physique well-surpassing his biological age.
Additional Notes: Oliver Issac is now PoI-268-2 and is to be contained within a humanoid security cell as of 12/10/2017.
Date: 12/10/2017
Test Design: N/A - Containment Breach
Photographer: Former Research Assistant, now PoI-268-2 Oliver Issac
Photographed Individual(s): Twenty-eight CSDs, Senior Researcher Michael Anjou, and two Site security guards stationed within the testing chamber at the time.
Hypothesis: N/A
Results: After gaining access to RPC-268's testing chamber without permission, PoI-268-2 took possession of RPC-268 and began producing instances of RPC-268-1, using nearby Authority research and security personnel, as well as celled CSD personnel. The flash on the camera was sufficient to stun the unsuspecting personnel, and PoI-268-2 escaped the site under guise of his former employment. PoI-268-2 remains at large.
Additional Notes: A handwritten note by PoI-268-2 was found at Site-038, detailed below:
I know by the time these words are read, my employment at the Authority will be concluded. I will have committed the unthinkable and breached the containment we established out of concern for the public. Through various tests, I have suggested that RPC-268 does not cause the deaths and that it only shows us what will inevitably happen… but █████ and a significant source of stress for me. One that I am hellbent on finding a way to resolve before I die. Which I have found a way to prolong. I was the one who damaged RPC-268 and though I didn't expect to wait this long, it will be worth it, because I can simply █████ all the time I'll ever need.
Maybe looking through this camera is like viewing the azure of ocean waves; whether or not we gaze upon their alluring aesthetic does not change that they will crash upon the shore. But in focusing on their simple rhythm, the world seems to slow. Our time feels well spent, our moments bigger, fuller — like seeing the world through the eyes of a child again, who would regard an unexpected day off of school as an infinity of leisure. When I look at the photos, I feel that infinity.
I once saw this camera as a curse, as if we are but slaves to its totalitarian glimpse of our futures. But now, I see it as a gift and an opportunity. I am like Plato's characters who freed themselves from glimpsing mere shadows on a wall. I have viewed the coming storms for the Authority and its leadership, and I refuse to let them crash upon us. I will learn to break the determinism of our reality at any cost. I repeat: At. Any. Cost.
Research. Protect. Contain.
And don’t forget; “research” comes before the other two.
— Oliver Issac
P.S. I’d recommend the GDs heed their photophobia.