∎ ETRAYA MODS ∎ (
etrayamods) wrote in
etrayamemes2024-02-23 01:16 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
TDM 001
![]() ⏵ arrival⏴ Arrival goes as anticipated. Characters awaken in the pristine, new hospital, greeted by Aurora and potentially getting a rundown of what's happening depending on their approach to being dropped somewhere new. The door to their room opens, and new arrivals are left free to explore their new environment. Or what exists of it anyway. Exiting the hospital will show that there isn't much of anything just yet. Generally, Echo can build new facilities before new arrivals awaken, but it appears that this time… well, it didn't happen. The apartment complex exists, standing just beside the hospital, and there are a few facilities that are half constructed, companion bots carrying around rebar and other necessary bits and pieces, but they're not quite ready. Oops. But maybe, just maybe, one of those half-built facilities is familiar - a childhood home, a favorite supermarket, the run-down garage they worked at as a youth, a grounded spaceship in the middle of one of the massive bridges connecting land over rivers. The companion bots will offer quiet apologies if approached; they were expecting new arrivals to touch down, but not quite this early. They'll be ready soon! A few more days at most, they promise. In the meantime, do not stray too far from the hospital. While most of Etraya looks habitable, they have not finished verifying that it's safe for its new inhabitants. The apartment building and hospital are safe, and the land directly around them is fine, but beyond that? Stay away. But hey, the hospital's cafeteria is fully stocked with cuisine from across the multiverse! Please feel free to settle in, choose an apartment, and get to know your new friends. ![]() ⏵ water you doing?⏴ Decide not to listen? Well, the companion bots had offered their warnings. Etraya is a new establishment, one that received newcomers before it was ready. And as such, the land has not quite been prepared for their arrival. Wandering off the land the apartment building and hospital are settled on comes with very, very poor results. Take a step down into the river below, and you'll find yourself uncomfortably hot. Or cold. Or hot and cold, because whatever that 'water' is, it wasn't meant to be played in. The only way to resolve the temperature regulation issue, as Aurora informs, is finding a buddy to cuddle up with. Those who are lucky may have a nearby friend they're familiar with and don't mind leaning a shoulder against. Those that don't? Well. . . have fun having a very uncomfortable conversation with a stranger, asking them if it's alright if you lean into them or hold their hand for a bit. Any physical contact will do, as long as it's directly skin-to-skin. Except that's not where the contact stops. Characters will find that, for the next several hours, they'll feel everything that their companion feels. Frustration, anger, amusement, homesickness that comes from being so far away from their families and friends - all those feelings? They're not your feelings, they're our feelings now. No explanation is given for how the empathy bond and the temperature regulation are related, but it may have to do with how since they had decided not to listen, it was time to test how well they could cohabitate with their new friends. ![]() ⏵ bonding bingo ⏴ Maybe it feels a little too much like Obi-Wan had when receiving Leia's message, but all new arrivals are their universe's only hope. Except they're not the only ones arriving, and not the only ones who are trying to keep their worlds safe. Instead, they've arrived with several others who carry the same weight on their shoulders. And they aren't meant to go through this alone. The people they've arrived with are both their new companions and their competition. Both comrades to fight beside and enemies to battle against, depending on what the specific mission of the month is. But currently? They're here to bond. It's important to get to know those who they'll be spending the next unspecified but lengthy amount of time with, isn't it? To that extent, Aurora's hologram waits just inside the hospital's front doors, offering bonding bingo cards to those willing to participate. It's not necessary, but she does specify that this is one way to get ahead: cooperation is important, especially given what they're going to face together. Bingo cards are three long and three across, and offer a multitude of activities you can do to check each box off. Some examples include:
![]() ⏵ matchmaker ⏴ When the earpiece is put on, a nice green HUD(head-up display) lights up in front of new arrivals. It asks them for their name, which is fairly standard for these. Except it seems it wants them to put together a profile to help pair them off with other new arrivals. For some, this information may autofill with what Aurora was able to discern about them from watching them in their home worlds. But some lucky individuals may catch their profiles before they're posted live, and have the opportunity to edit out information included in fields, even if they're not able to clear it out entirely. Welcome to Aurora's idea of matchmaking. Have fun getting paired off with a buddy or four, with your profiles exchanged between one another. Maybe they're the perfect match. Maybe this is a nightmare in the making. Welcome to our first TDM! We're excited to have you here. For more information on character arrivals, click here. For any questions relating to the TDM please reply below. All other questions can be directed to the FAQ. |
no subject
But her breathing hasn't slowed like this in a long, long time. Even her lower half is still. She never realized how exhausting the near-constant writhing was until it stopped. Her chest rises and falls, and her lower half gently pulses in time, and that's it.
It's so quiet out here. There's no collar to keep her awake. But it's not the silence of loneliness, either. The sunlight is a much nicer blanket. ]
Mm.
[ Noelle murmurs, and she doesn't open her eyes. Her head tips forward, slightly, and that's all she says for the next while - at least twenty to thirty minutes. She's so lucky. She doesn't even dream. Her lower half does snore a little, though, heavy sleep-breathing forced through twisted nostrils.
The eyes in her lower half blink open first, followed by her upper. Noelle rubs sleep out from their corners. ]
Shit. [ She finally looks down at Krouse, sheepish. ] Sorry. Didn't mean to do that. How long was I out?
no subject
When she wakes up, Krouse is cross-legged on the grass, spine gently curved and head bowed. He lifts his head at her voice, faint lines between his eyes smoothing out with the spread of his smile. ]
Not that long.
[ There's a thin strand of green that feathers out into spiky strands at one end in his hand, his fingertips stained with chlorophyll. He tucks it into his palm as he unspools to his feet. ]
It's okay. [ He tilts his head, running his fingers through short hair, her sheepishness reflecting off him. ] It's not like we've got anywhere to be, right?
[ He could have stayed here for hours, listening to the gentle snuffling wheeze of her dozing heads. It's a sound he'd never imagined being grateful for - but then, when did he ever really listen?
Concern softens his eyes, his smile closing over the flash of his teeth. ]
How are you feeling?
no subject
Noelle doesn't cry again. Her well of tears must be drying up. That's nice that something is. It would be even nicer if Krouse didn't ask how she was feeling, because Noelle stopped knowing how to answer that question a long time ago, well before the vial. There's the answer that people want, the answer that's good for you to give, and the answer that's true. Those answers almost never coincide.
Noelle looks at the skyline instead. They'll probably have to rebuild the city she destroyed. Good. She hopes it costs them a billion dollars, and even after they spend all that money, they won't forget the mark she made. ]
I don't know.
[ She opts for the answer that's true. ]
It's nice out here. That felt nice. Um. But I'm going to get hungry soon, and - I'm scared of that, still. [ Noelle shakes her head, makes a little exhale that could be a self-deprecating laugh. ] I shouldn't be, after all that, but I still am.
[ She looks down at Krouse. He looks better out here, in the sunlight instead of under fluorescent lights. Most people do. ]
How are you?
no subject
And he's not sure if hearing her voice makes him less calm. It's more like it turns up the contrast, blurred details snapping back into focus. She says she's scared, and he can think about whether he is. He can think, period, working outward from a pool of clarity surrounding her to other, less important things.
So he asks himself her question, and comes up with an answer. ]
I don't know, either.
[ His smile gets a little weaker, a little more tilted. He starts to lift a hand towards his face before he remembers there's nothing to brush back, which leaves it hanging awkwardly before he lets it fall. ]
I'm still - processing, I guess. [ Processing, like that's even close to the word. ] Telling myself this is real. I know it is, it just doesn't...
[ He drops his chin slightly, half-closing his eyes. It's a break that lasts only for a second before he pulls himself back up. ]
Both still scared of the same things, huh? Some menaces to society we are.
no subject
He's not doing that here. Krouse is scared and uncertain, like she is. When he says, in so many words, that he's not all the way sure whether or not this is real, Noelle knows exactly what he means.
Noelle shifts a little closer. She uses a tentacle to make a ring around where Krouse is sitting, not quite touching, but enough to shield him from anything that might hurt. Anything that isn't in his own head. She's still not sure what's going on there. Krouse always tried to give Noelle her privacy, so she'll try to give him his. ]
Yeah.
[ Noelle agrees, her voice softer than it ever was on Bet. She's quiet for a little while, after that. Thinking. One of the eyes in her lower half watches Krouse's braid. ]
We weren't menaces to society. They were menaces to us. [ Not yet, Mars. ] The shit Coil made you do. The place he kept me. You didn't talk much to Eidolon, but he was awful.
I'm not going back inside the hospital. [ Noelle decides, firmly, right then and there. ] Not going to save the world, either.
[ If the rest of them get to retire, so does she. ]
no subject
He couldn't protect her. He still can't. He can't even say it to her, even though they both know it.
Noelle is trying to forgive him anyway. Looking after his feelings, like he never wanted her to have to, and kept happening anyway. She's always been nicer than she should have been. ]
We don't owe them anything.
[ He meets her assurance with his own, his smile slipped away when he wasn't paying attention.
Krouse could leave it there. Take what she's offering without making it into anything more. It might even be the right thing to do. Let all those eyes stay soft where they land on him. ]
...and you don't owe me anything. [ He spins the tufted splay of grass at the end of his fingers, words quiet. ] I know you know that. I just - I want you to know I know that.
I didn't tell you that enough.
no subject
She just wanted to sit in the sun. Nobody ever lets her. ]
Stop it.
[ Noelle says, too tired to summon any anger in her voice. There's just a resigned exhaustion. ]
Like you said. I know. And I know you know.
[ I’m okay with it. I enjoy spending time with you, and I didn’t get any impression you were having that bad of a time, either. ]
It wouldn't have made a difference, what you did or didn't say to me. Wouldn't have gotten me out of that cage.
[ As much as he likes to call himself an asshole, Krouse has always been good at coming up with the right thing to say. Or better than Noelle, at least. It's something she's always been a little jealous of. ]
So I just -
[ There's something she has to say. It's terrible. Her stomachs churn. Her tongue feels thick and heavy in her mouth. Noelle closes her eyes. ]
I want to enjoy this, okay? I don't want to hate you. Spent enough time doing that.
no subject
So he doesn't know why it is that this feels like a shoulder being wrenched back into socket, a burst of panic at the crest of the hurt when it seems impossible that this could be how it's supposed to feel, then the crashing ache of realignment. Like a terrible magic trick, stuffing the mangled rabbit back in the hat.
When she says it wouldn't have made a difference, he doesn't think it's true. Krouse has thought about the things he could have done any other way long before it ended. They've taken up a lot of his time. What he hears, what matters now, is that it won't make a difference.
They have a lot of past tense behind them. The future tense won't last long. If the only person he's apologizing for is himself, what's the point?
Maybe they can just be here, as long as that lasts. And then it'll be over, and he'll be okay with it. ]
Right. [ He says, an untethered looseness in the rise and fall of his sternum, scar tissue snapped off clean. ] Sorry.
[ He used to apologize like it wasn't the end of the world every time. That's what he tries for. He doesn't think it sounds that far off. ]
So...what do you want to do?
[ He coaxes a smile out of himself while she's still not looking. ]
I looked around before. There's a river that's pretty close. We can't go in it, but it's nice. You can see more of the woods from there.
cw: ableism
It doesn't. What do you want to do, he asks, instead, and Noelle opens her eyes. The ones in her lower half look at Krouse. She tips her face towards the sky, and breathes.
There's no rage left. Noelle doesn't have to keep it from bubbling up like bile. Which means - maybe - it's safe to want. Just a little, before the end.
The Leopold Center. They used to go on nature walks. Noelle used to spend time at her uncle's cabin. This was something she liked, once, even before the tournaments. ]
Yeah. I want - to see that. The river and the woods.
[ She'll follow him down there, although Noelle's in no great rush to move out of her sunny spot, either. ]
I should've believed you. The first time you told me I didn't owe you anything.
[ It would have saved them both a lot of grief. Noelle makes a funny sound, a choked half-laugh. ]
I just - knew how bad I was at being your girlfriend. Even before. I mean, I could barely hold your hand, and I didn't understand why you'd want to spend time with someone like that.
[ Noelle shakes her head. She tucks a few of her legs underneath her, preparing to stand. ]
It feels so dumb, now. Whatever.
no subject
It's not dumb. Or 'whatever'.
[ There's a firmness to his tone even with the crack running through it, something broken and shored back up.
He knows what she's talking about. It's one of those things he's gone over a thousand times, trying to figure out how he could have handled it better. The attempted break up, and all the reasons she had for it, most of which he'd put together way too late. All of it his fault. He could tell her that, try to take the blame, except that's exactly what she doesn't want to hear any more of.
So that leaves him having to figure something else out, because he can't bear to let that stand. ]
You want to know why I wanted to spend time with you?
[ He gets up, for the sake of the tiny difference it makes in getting closer to her. Even with her face turned away, she can see him, and he wants her to see this. He wants her to see how much he means it. ]
Because I liked it. More than anything. Just being around you, talking - or when we didn't talk, and I'd still get to be there. I liked figuring out how you thought, and what you liked, and just - you, No'. Everything about you.
All that other stuff - that wasn't why I wanted to be with you. I was happy with whatever you were okay with. You were figuring things out. I knew that. If I'd had a problem with it, that would've been on me, but I didn't. I really, truly didn't.
You weren't bad at being my girlfriend. You were pretty amazing at it, from where I'm standing.
[ He takes a breath, the first one he's thought about in a minute. There's a tremor running through him, but not a bad one. ]
That's kind of my favourite person you're talking about here, you know. Think you could try going a little easier on her? Because she's sort of had a hard time, lately.
no subject
But it would be unfair to say any of that out loud, not when she's just told Krouse to stop blaming himself. Just like it would be unfair to ask Krouse to hold her hand through the fabric of his jumpsuit. She broke up with him. She doesn't get to lead him on.
So Noelle is quiet again, but by now, Krouse knows how to read her silences. There are a lot of them, but they aren't all the same. In this one, Noelle hasn't gone somewhere else, hasn't walled herself up inside her own head. The only vacancy is a faint wistfulness that crinkles the edges of her eyes. Noelle ducks her head, and she fidgets with the seam of her hospital gown.
When you insult yourself, you're also hurting the people who care about you. There were plenty of therapists to tell Noelle that, one summer, but it didn't really land. It sounds different coming from Krouse. It buries somewhere in her chest, like a little seed.
They're going to go down to the river. They'll look at the trees. Maybe the seed will get a chance to grow. It's a nice thing to hope for. Noelle didn't know she still could. ]
I believe you.
[ It's not I love you. It's not even I liked spending time with you. Maybe it's still better than nothing. Noelle picks her head back up, looks down at Krouse again. She gives him a little nod, captain to captain. ]
Yeah. I can go easier on her.
no subject
There were so many things he left out, elided for the sake of setting aside his faults. If she'd wanted to pull it apart, he could have given her a list of his own to start her off, like she'd need it.
But Noelle believes him. She still doesn't want to hate him. In the forever lopsided skew of how he feels about her and how she feels about him, that's coming out ahead. If he can help her feel better, even for a minute, then he's doing more for her than he maybe ever has. ]
Great.
[ It's not I love you, either. He won't put that on her. Knowing it is enough for him, a fizzing jolt that still catches him off-guard with its sharpness and intensity.
Your knight in shining armor, Eidolon said. Krouse carried that with him like shrapnel. When he picks it up now, it cuts as much as it did then. He just doesn't care, not in the face of her wistful thoughtfulness. It's not slaying a dragon, but it's not nothing, either. ]
She deserves it. [ He nods back, heart a gentle, insistent throb in his chest. ] What do you say we head out?
[ He rocks on his heels, pulling back his shoulders, a puppyish cant to the tilt of his head. ]
Maybe we'll see some of the robots on the way.
no subject
Later, after everything went to shit, Krouse stopped being able to make her smile. That skill became calming her down, instead. Maybe that meant that Noelle wasn't the only one who'd changed.
Krouse might look different now, with his short hair and tired eyes and repetitive movements, but there's something about his last sentence that reminds Noelle of the old Krouse. Maybe we'll see some of the robots on the way. He used to be excited to game with her.
Noelle smiles. ]
Maybe. If we see one, it would be cool to learn what it runs on.
[ Noelle stands up a little straighter, picks her head up so she can see a sloping valley in the distance, one that surely leads to a river. She starts in that direction. The eyes in her lower half watch Krouse, to make sure he keeps up. ]
Did you see any fish? When you first went down to the river.
no subject
Maybe he'll see if he can get a panel off if they do come across one of the robots. He doesn't think it looks that hard. Then he could trace out the inside with her, like building a tower together. It was one of the things on his old list of somedays and maybes.
Or maybe he won't, and they won't have to talk about how he can do that. It's not important.
He follows her on light feet, skimming over her watching eyes on the way to the firmed line of her back. ]
I didn't. But I wasn't really looking.
[ Fish, he can try to figure out. Fish don't have connotations. ]
They'd probably be pretty unusual fish. I'm not a hundred percent sure that's technically water. [ He grins, struck by a thought. ] Maybe they'd be robo-fish. Fish of the future. Giving new meaning to 'and chips', right?
no subject
They stopped talking about food early on. Noelle always wondered if Marissa told Krouse to stop taking her to Culver's.
But here, on their walk, Krouse makes a shitty joke about fish and chips. Like it's nothing. It barely even lands, but Noelle's little smile stays on her face. She turns her head to see him, so that she's not just looking at Krouse through her lower half. The gesture matters, even if the eyes in Noelle's upper half don't see as well as the eyes in her lower. ]
Yeah. Maybe the river's made of fuel. I think they did that in a movie once.
[ That Pixar movie about cars? Noelle can't quite remember. ]
What's wrong with it? [ Noelle asks, in the sharp, focused way she looks for information. ] You said we couldn't go in.
no subject
After everything, it might not be so bad to just talk. She doesn't seem to mind, and so he doesn't notice his own lapse. ]
They did?
[ It doesn't ring a bell for him, but he hasn't seen everything Noelle has. He almost asks which movie it was, so he can go find it later, and the absurdity of that want sparks off-kilter fizz in his stomach. It's not bad. Just a little funny. ]
And I don't know, exactly. It screws with temperature regulation.
[ This next part, he is mindful of. His thumbnail teases the strands of his grass braid, and then he brings it up to start working on it again, not looking down or breaking his stride. He won't look away from her face. ]
The fix is touching someone else for a while.
[ And he doesn't need to elaborate on why that means they should be careful, and he can't help the flicker of want that comes with it anyway. But there's another reason, besides the ones she already knows all too well, their reminder stiffening in a crumpled heap in a room they won't go back to - ]
It makes you feel what the other person is feeling while it works. Some kind of empathy effect. I don't know why that's linked. I don't - [ he takes a shallow half-breath, shaking his head ] I don't get what's going on here.
[ Maybe he shouldn't admit it, but he can't tell her more lies she won't believe. He's not wasting whatever time they have like that. ]
no subject
Then Krouse tells Noelle about the fix, and the interest immediately leaves her expression. Her face goes dull, flat, but at least she doesn't look away. That may or may not be better.
Noelle wonders what will happen to its body. She's never had to wonder about that before. Krouse and the team took care of all her pre-rampage clones, and after her breakout, nothing mattered except clawing at a little, worthless scrap of revenge. Do her clones rot? Will someone burn its body, like she was burned?
This train of thought isn't getting her anywhere. Besides, Krouse is still talking. Noelle rallies by the time he says empathy effect, focusing on him so that she has something to focus on. It's good that she does. Krouse almost never admits that he doesn't know something. It's a little frightening that he does so now. It's so much better than a false promise.
The profile was meant to pair them up. The river seems to do the same thing. Noelle is good at spotting pressure - pressure to talk, to touch, to be nice and likeable and good to look at. What this place is doing isn't much different from any other city Noelle has lived in, weird robotech or no. ]
They want us all to get closer.
[ Noelle says, her soft voice not as dulled as it could be, but not thrilled either. Matter-of-fact. As she keeps looking down at Krouse, an urgency creeps into her voice. ]
I know you've told me this before, so you know this already, but - you don't have to play their game.
no subject
He looks at the grass he's weaving, fragile bruised strands melding together in a green-staining cord. Bringing people together isn't that different. Cut them off at the roots, soften them up, and twine them into a whole. He knows plenty about that.
His smile slipped somewhere after Noelle's. He brings it back, a nearly cocky smirk creasing the corners of his dark eyes as he lifts his head. ]
Come on. [ He cajoles. ] You know me. Since when did I ever do what people wanted me to?
[ The joke's cutting edge is turned back on himself, a slit of bitterness that goes against everything he's trying to achieve here. Noelle will be able to see the regret that follows it in the flash of him looking away, getting a grip more reflex than choice.
He hears the you. If there's an implication, he's keeping it where he kept the realization about the river. ]
Hey.
[ He brightens, the light only half-artificial, as he nods at a biped rising up from behind a growing brick wall with a bucket and trowel in its metal hands. ]
There's one.
no subject
She said the wrong thing. She just wanted to help, to take the pressure off, but she keeps fucking it up.
After New York, Krouse was the best to talk to. He was the only one who was gentle with her, and even though he was afraid, he did the best at hiding it. He'd still come see her even when it wasn't his turn. But talking to Krouse was, and apparently still sometimes is, this: Noelle thinks of something. She tries to wrench it from her no-good, loser mouth. It comes out wrong. He doesn't get it. Repeat.
Noelle is grateful to see the robot, at least. It's saving her not-life right now. Something to do that doesn't involve talking about things that are hard. ]
Can you flag it down?
[ Even though the robot is probably more of a computer than a person, it's still more likely that it'll react more positively to an invitation from Krouse than from her. But she does still want to see it. ]
no subject
He thinks he used to be better at remembering that. The moments where he'd say something pointed about himself, meaning it to be funny, and she'd twist up with concern it took him too long to realize wasn't for the state of his sense of humour. Where she kept caring, sometimes, well past when she should have stopped. ]
I'll do you one better.
[ His hand comes up to his forehead, fingers brushing past an invisible brim to land on his bangs instead, which he sweeps aside. Then, to his own stupefied passenger seat embarrassment, he winks.
He steps sideways, and then steps through, and teleportation has rarely felt like such a convenient trick. He'd been weighing up the bot as soon as he spotted it, layering mass onto his own skin to match until it felt like a heavy, thick blanket, and he sucks in fresh air as soon as he's on the other side.
Krouse turns around and starts walking back more slowly than he really wants to. He can give her a break for a few seconds. He's better in measured doses. ]
no subject
Then Krouse is gone, with a robot left behind in his place. Noelle lets herself linger in the memory a little longer, her eyelids heavy like someone about to fall asleep.
Welcome to Etraya, chimes the robot, and Noelle's eyes open. She stiffens, and the thing waves at her like it would anything else. Definitely a robot. But she should still check and make sure. Noelle used to read Wikipedia articles late at night when she couldn't sleep, which was often, and the one on the Turing test was always a classic. Make a machine prove it's human. Not that Noelle has any right to do so, with what she's become.
Noelle bends the limbs in the front part of the lower half, pitching herself on her lower hindquarters so she's a little closer to the robot. Several sets of eyes blink. A spindly, blistered limb ending in a three-fingered talon reaches out, palm side up. The robot whirrs and steps closer.
There are so many things she could ask it. Are you afraid of me sticks in her throat like a tumor, but she already asked Krouse that one. ]
Did you bring me back to life?
[ We're so happy to see you, chirps the robot. We didn't expect you so early. ]
Okay.
[ They can disassemble this one. ]
no subject
Almost everything about her is changed, warped and rippled from her head to her many toes. He sees that. But what he notices is how her hair falls around her scarred little face, a bronze-shot tumble of messy brown that she was always absently tucking behind her ears when she stooped over anything interesting and complicated she wanted to take apart.
He's glad her attention is elsewhere. He doesn't want to think about what he looks like with his bruised heart a warm, skittish flutter in his throat and a wanting buzz in his palms he tries to wipe off on the rough weave of his jumpsuit.
Whatever she's asking, it's too quiet for him to hear. He quickens his steps slightly, anxious over missing anything. ]
Kind of cool, right?
[ Like he'd point out a comic book he thought she might like, or show off a clip of some strategy he'd been working on. Her approval was always better than anyone else's, because he could trust when it was real.
He couldn't have given less of a damn about the robots until he had her to show them to. They're cool if she thinks they're cool. ]
They don't say a lot, but they're complicated. General purpose workers, I think.
no subject
Mm.
[ Noelle responds, soft and a little absentminded. She's thinking. It's easier not to talk when she thinks.
The robot doesn't walk into Noelle's outstretched palm, so she retracts it back into her mass of limbs. Instead, it continues over to a nearby patch of grass, where it starts to dig a little hole. ]
Is that why you're digging?
[ At Noelle's question, the robot stops what it's doing, spins, and waves its little trowel at the two of them. Yes! We are preparing the city!
Noelle nods, and finally turns her face towards Krouse. ]
It understands questions. It's not programmed to answer anything difficult, though.
no subject
Krouse nods, thumbs tucked into the folded waist of his jumpsuit, expression mild and interested. The robot gets back to digging, evidently content with its relocation as long as it has something to do. ]
That and the faces...they're probably trying to get us to anthropomorphize them early.
[ It's a design trick. He's read about mostly in the context of games and getting players to identify with NPCs, but he thinks the extension works. She'd know better than he does, so the pitch is a soft one, undergirded by the slight questioning roundness of his eyes as he glances between her and the robot.
It reminds him of something specific. His smile's still wonderstruck glow gains a little twist of amusement. ]
Like Companion Cubes.
[ That was more of the kind of game he was into before he got interested in the team. Spatial problem solving, figuring out all the tricks of a versatile but focused set of capabilities, and a darkly funny story line. ]
no subject
Fortunately Krouse intervenes with a phrase Noelle hasn't heard in years. She looks down at him, a little baffled for half a second before smiling. A quiet huff of laughter escapes her. Noelle schools her face back in line, so she can reply with the gravest and utmost sincerity that Krouse's analysis demands. ]
The cake is a lie.
[ The robot doesn't react. It just keeps digging its hole. ]
Do you want to take it apart?
[ Any sentimentality they feel towards it is just part of this place's strategy. Disassembling the robot might give them an edge. Also, it'd be cool. ]
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw: passive suicidality
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw: eating disorder, vomiting, ableism, fatphobia
cw: eating disorder
cw: eating disorder, self-harm, ableism
cw: eating disorder, ableism, self-harm, dehumanization
cw: eating disorder, ableism, dehumanization, suicide
(no subject)
cw: eating disorder
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw: suicide mention
cw: minor self-harm
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw: eating disorder, ableism, fetishization
cw: eating disorder, ableism
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
cw: minor self harm; body horror