Gaia's machines were intended to be part of the natural world as it repaired it. They wouldn't be violent if HEPHAESTUS weren't sentient and trying to make them more formidable.
[ she's turning curious eyes on A2. ]
What are the machines like where you're from? You talked about Pascal before. Are they your friend?
[HEPHAESTUS, HADES... subroutines, she thinks Aloy had called them. Networked machines, maybe, except their master program was benevolent, unlike those eerie children from her world. And yet they had broken free to defy her.
Beta's curiosity about Pascal and the other machines isn't unexpected, but A2 closes in on herself a little anyway.] ...
[She sighs.] At first they weren't anything. [This is said with some disdain.] They weren't like us. They were just mindless killers. That's what — what we thought. They were [she almost says "stealing," and amends herself.] learning from us. Some were cut from their network and started to... evolve. To change.
Pascal was... Pascal was the head of a machine village in the Forest. It was full of peaceful machines that had been separated from the main network. None of them wanted to fight.
[There's a hopeful note in Beta's voice that A2 can't help but hear. It occurs to her to lie, to say something that might confirm what she's likely thinking. But instead she says:]
... I don't know. It's not easy to exist like that in my world. [She rubs absently at her wrist. Thinking of Pascal. How the pointless cruelty of their world had destroyed him.
Had he been happy, though, before? Had it been worth it?
...] Peace never lasts very long.
[Her gaze drops. Then she sighs, stands to her feet.] C'mon. I'll tell you more as we walk.
[ she can't hide her feelings for anything outside of life and death; Beta's smile turns sad. that seemed to be a trend, she noticed, whether ancient history or warring tribes, there was always some kind of fighting going on. it never really went away, just blessed for brief periods.
[It's a while before A2 answers. She's giving the question thought, searching among the debris of her short and ruined life for something in the rubble.
The words are soft, hesitant.]
The ocean. When I first saw it, I couldn't believe how much it shone in the daylight. [...] Trees. Birds. The Earth is beautiful.
[She rubs at her arm. More quietly:] ... It's what I think, anyway.
[Barely jostled by the nudge, A2 is caught off guard by it nonetheless. She mulls over what Beta has said — her captors had prevented her from seeing anything non-artificial. A nightmare. She tries not to think about how this place, as realistic as it seemed, was very much the same.
She wondered who their captors were. But she doesn't say this.]
...
I think there's an ocean here. Might be able to make a trip, one day.
[There's light ahead — their cave adventure is almost through.] Almost to the end. Got anything else you wanna grab?
[ She gives the cave one last look around, swinging A2's hand a little again. It's pretty, but it was clearly more for the effect than anything. Ah, well. There's plenty here to explore. ]
I think I'm good. It was fun just seeing it. Thanks for coming with me.
no subject
[ she's turning curious eyes on A2. ]
What are the machines like where you're from? You talked about Pascal before. Are they your friend?
no subject
Beta's curiosity about Pascal and the other machines isn't unexpected, but A2 closes in on herself a little anyway.] ...
[She sighs.] At first they weren't anything. [This is said with some disdain.] They weren't like us. They were just mindless killers. That's what — what we thought. They were [she almost says "stealing," and amends herself.] learning from us. Some were cut from their network and started to... evolve. To change.
Pascal was... Pascal was the head of a machine village in the Forest. It was full of peaceful machines that had been separated from the main network. None of them wanted to fight.
no subject
[ from violent machines to peaceful...it's a dream compared to Gaia's corrupted machines or the Faro plague.
she manages to restrain the urge to start enthusing about that. now isn't the time. ]
It must have been a shock. [ almost hopefully, ] A good one?
no subject
... I don't know. It's not easy to exist like that in my world. [She rubs absently at her wrist. Thinking of Pascal. How the pointless cruelty of their world had destroyed him.
Had he been happy, though, before? Had it been worth it?
...] Peace never lasts very long.
[Her gaze drops. Then she sighs, stands to her feet.] C'mon. I'll tell you more as we walk.
no subject
she rises with A2 anyway. ]
Is there anything about your world you like?
no subject
The words are soft, hesitant.]
The ocean. When I first saw it, I couldn't believe how much it shone in the daylight. [...] Trees. Birds. The Earth is beautiful.
[She rubs at her arm. More quietly:] ... It's what I think, anyway.
no subject
[ she's gently bumping shoulders with A2 again, don't be nervous!!! ]
I haven't seen the ocean yet, but it must have been wonderful.
no subject
She wondered who their captors were. But she doesn't say this.]
...
I think there's an ocean here. Might be able to make a trip, one day.
[There's light ahead — their cave adventure is almost through.] Almost to the end. Got anything else you wanna grab?
no subject
[ She gives the cave one last look around, swinging A2's hand a little again. It's pretty, but it was clearly more for the effect than anything. Ah, well. There's plenty here to explore. ]
I think I'm good. It was fun just seeing it. Thanks for coming with me.