(she types and sends it, but she doesn't mean it. abby can't commiserate with him on this one. she built herself up to fight, and kill. it's familiar to her, too much so to be difficult.)
How long have you been at war? (and then, because it suddenly occurs to her,) How old are you?
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How do you fight a droid?
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I've only ever fought people, if you can call the infected that. but people who weren't infected too
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It never seems to get easier.
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(she types and sends it, but she doesn't mean it. abby can't commiserate with him on this one. she built herself up to fight, and kill. it's familiar to her, too much so to be difficult.)
How long have you been at war? (and then, because it suddenly occurs to her,) How old are you?
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And I'm thirty-eight.
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(he conducts himself with the wisdom and common-sense of somebody much older than that, in abby's opinion.)
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I don't want to say
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(has she found an unexpected weak point)
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Do you think the war will end soon
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You want to go home too, then.
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(well. abby's just shown her hand so it's time for a bad joke–) I've heard that pros and cons lists work pretty good in these situations
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