BegoneThought
begone thOT
Gian frowned, shaking another large aquatic bug into the tank with the long spiked weapon. She angled her head down, running the still-mumbling bot's words over in her head. She cleared her throat.
"I do not know what a street is, but I apologize for thinking what I did of you. I have yet to become accustomed to speaking mechanics, let alone thinking ones." Gian looked thoughtfully through the waters they were fishing in. "If the others think of me as a trained savage, they are not wrong. It is a good assessment. I did not know what a computer was until I was well into my 19th year. My hammer is tipped with the skull of a beast I killed with sharpened stone. Savage is a good word."
She turned to the bot with her eyebrows raised, trying to soften her expression. "This is work I am accustomed to. I was born in nature like this. Perhaps Liz placed me doing this work because she doesn't trust me. Perhaps she placed me with you because she doesn't trust you. Perhaps she placed me here knowing the wilderness is what I am most comfortable with. One cannot gauge the thoughts of another. At least, I certainly have trouble doing so. You seem to be having less trouble than I if you understood my thoughts."
Gian turned her gaze back to the aquatic insects, scooping another one up with the weapon. The music the bot was playing seemed to fill the air with its dramatic rising and falling. "But I do not dislike Isek, and I don't think the others dislike him either. I also do not dislike you. I am wary of you, I can not lie, but I do not dislike you. Perhaps once I know more of you and your mechanic brethren, my caution will be lessened. Try to understand, I come from a land of deadly beasts and fighting for survival; wary is my default state."
Gian sighed, rubbing her throat. That was more than she had spoken in a long while, and her vocal chords expressed their irritation with her. "Perhaps you do not understand me. That is alright. I will do research and try to understand you. My apologies, again."
Gravitational Force
"I do not know what a street is, but I apologize for thinking what I did of you. I have yet to become accustomed to speaking mechanics, let alone thinking ones." Gian looked thoughtfully through the waters they were fishing in. "If the others think of me as a trained savage, they are not wrong. It is a good assessment. I did not know what a computer was until I was well into my 19th year. My hammer is tipped with the skull of a beast I killed with sharpened stone. Savage is a good word."
She turned to the bot with her eyebrows raised, trying to soften her expression. "This is work I am accustomed to. I was born in nature like this. Perhaps Liz placed me doing this work because she doesn't trust me. Perhaps she placed me with you because she doesn't trust you. Perhaps she placed me here knowing the wilderness is what I am most comfortable with. One cannot gauge the thoughts of another. At least, I certainly have trouble doing so. You seem to be having less trouble than I if you understood my thoughts."
Gian turned her gaze back to the aquatic insects, scooping another one up with the weapon. The music the bot was playing seemed to fill the air with its dramatic rising and falling. "But I do not dislike Isek, and I don't think the others dislike him either. I also do not dislike you. I am wary of you, I can not lie, but I do not dislike you. Perhaps once I know more of you and your mechanic brethren, my caution will be lessened. Try to understand, I come from a land of deadly beasts and fighting for survival; wary is my default state."
Gian sighed, rubbing her throat. That was more than she had spoken in a long while, and her vocal chords expressed their irritation with her. "Perhaps you do not understand me. That is alright. I will do research and try to understand you. My apologies, again."
Gravitational Force