Salutations. Well, since we're only one page in I don't have a ton of feedback, however, there are some things that I noticed that I'll share.
In the third panel from the top her left hand is on backwards. If she's going to point at her face, her index finger would be on the outside of her hand, not the inside. Try it yourself, point at your own face with your index finger just as she's doing, with your left hand. You'll notice that the index finger is on the outside of your hand and that your other fingers will be under your chin, rather than being on the outside of the hand. If you ever need a reference, you can look online or in the mirror at home for some of the simple stuff, like with hands or facial expressions etc.
Another thing I noticed is that, you have spelling errors. On your introductory page, when you say Doctor May's name, May isn't capitalized and it should be, in fact there are a couple of instances where Doctor May's name isn't capitalized, so I'd go back and edit that so your audience doesn't get confused. You also have a spelling error in this line - "To preserve my memories incase they get wiped sagain." Those bolded words should be "in case" and "again". Another issue with dialogue: In the first page you say Doctor May's name four times, almost every other dialogue box. Once you've established a character's name, repeating it a lot is actually distracting to a reader.
I'll give an example. Say you're talking to a new friend and they start off like this:
I live with my roommate Jim, Jim is good at X. I'm trying to work on projects with Jim and while I'm very busy Jim likes to laze about. Jim isn't very good at staying on task, but I like Jim. Jim's got a good sense of humor.
See how overuse of a name can start to make you as a reader have pause? Once you introduce a character, you don't need their name constantly. I'll make an example of your dialogue so that you can see what I mean:
Edited: - "Hi, my name is Ryuka and I'm an assistant for Doctor May. Today marks my twelfth day with her, and I've learned so much since I've moved here. Unfortunately I don't remember anything before I started living here, and I'm afraid I might forget the precious memories I've made with her."
Now, you do not have to redo your dialogue in this exact way. This is just an example. This falls more along the lines of narrative dialogue flow. If you reiterate a name too many times, it'll begin to stand out and hamper your dialogue. This also goes for overuse of any word, so I've got this here that can help you edit dialogue and catch misspelled words, and so on. Now, some of the suggestions Editminion makes is more for novelists than for comic dialogue so, it's okay if you don't take all of the advice it gives, however, if you don't have a way to catch misspelled words, when you write your text in the dialogue box, it red-lines the text that's misspelled so, I figured it could help.
In regards to the actual art style it's nice, your lines are clean, you've got a nice color scheme so far, you'll just have to practice proportions and a few fundamentals here and there, but ultimately those come with time and you're well on your way anyhow. You're going to do just fine if you keep at it and look out for spelling errors. I hope this feedback helps you and here's wishing you luck with your new comic!
Fair is fair, if you've got any feedback for me, I'd love to hear it.