I've spent a lot of time talking to your Avatar about it. Trying to understand what we're missing. What keeps coming up in our conversations is the question of motive. I don't know what is meant by this, precisely, I'm sorry to say.
We've already picked off all the most obviously murder-y people, so that's probably not the kind of motive Greed meant. So... is there an actual reason to do it that's not just "indulging"?
That's what I wonder, but that's where I stopped getting precise answers. They said something along the lines of. . . even HK-47's simple-minded desire to kill puts the murders in context. It wasn't one of those moments were they abruptly decline to answer something, but it does give me pause.
That stupid robot did imply it only murdered when asked, but I thought it was lying. So... is it that they're killing because they want to, or do they think they'll get something out of it? Or is it asked of them?
I asked after that, to some degree. I believe he meant he could not murder unless granted permission, and when he asked, he was granted it. I believe he asked an Avatar, who was, for reasons that are still unclear to me, not permitted to refuse to grant it.
Yes. I do not think they can stop us from indulging, even if they want to. Rather, they put a limitation on it - only one per week.
[So. It's actually. Extremely good they killed the robot.]
. . . Which brings us here. It was understood, before we began, some would kill as an indulgence, and others might kill to reduce the competition. Immediately, that robot acted. Greed, as promised in the welcome message, insisted we would have a trial. Beauregard is chosen.
The part I have continued to wonder after is why we found her quarterstaff. If it wasn't the robot's doing - and I do not think it was the robot's doing - who else was playing little games on that night?
[ grace had simply assumed the robot framed beau because. well. she didn't think about it much more than "robot bad", and maybe sometimes your biases are real and unhelpful to solving murder. ]
He said she died with no interaction from him. Perhaps he meant her execution, but it simply seems like - a strangely deliberate thing to do for something that operated out of such open and senseless violence.
[She sighs deeply, because - she's weirdly willing to be talked down from the hills she's trying to die on this particular night.]
So suppose it is as you say. The murderbot acted alone. We never found out why or what happened. So the following week, Grell Sutcliffe and Kaz Kaan are dead.
I want to put aside Sutcliffe for the moment, because I think it's equally likely that she started indiscriminately killing as an indulgence as it is that someone targeted her for being an indiscriminately killing asshole. What sort of person sees that we've started butchering frivolous socialites and decides they may as well join the party?
[ well, grace will be nice as not point to all their murder people, since it's not the point of the question and she knows it. she mulls it over instead; ]
I guess. So what you're saying is... The only way for someone else to have been awake that first night would be if they knew the robot was killing. So either he had an accomplice, or one of the Avatars framed Beau, and the latter doesn't make sense with what they can do. But would the robot have even worked with anyone else?
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[She glances at little friend carrying the sword.]
No, that isn't it. I find their company quite acceptable. But they do not know everything.
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They do know more than us on the murder part, unfortunately.
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I've spent a lot of time talking to your Avatar about it. Trying to understand what we're missing. What keeps coming up in our conversations is the question of motive. I don't know what is meant by this, precisely, I'm sorry to say.
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[About the asking.]
I asked after that, to some degree. I believe he meant he could not murder unless granted permission, and when he asked, he was granted it. I believe he asked an Avatar, who was, for reasons that are still unclear to me, not permitted to refuse to grant it.
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ah. ]
I hate this place.
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[Agreed, Grace. Agreed.]
But I do think the Avatar in question was. . . sincere, in what they told me. If I learn I have been misled, I shall be incredibly cross.
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[So. It's actually. Extremely good they killed the robot.]
. . . Which brings us here. It was understood, before we began, some would kill as an indulgence, and others might kill to reduce the competition. Immediately, that robot acted. Greed, as promised in the welcome message, insisted we would have a trial. Beauregard is chosen.
The part I have continued to wonder after is why we found her quarterstaff. If it wasn't the robot's doing - and I do not think it was the robot's doing - who else was playing little games on that night?
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[ grace had simply assumed the robot framed beau because. well. she didn't think about it much more than "robot bad", and maybe sometimes your biases are real and unhelpful to solving murder. ]
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So suppose it is as you say. The murderbot acted alone. We never found out why or what happened. So the following week, Grell Sutcliffe and Kaz Kaan are dead.
I want to put aside Sutcliffe for the moment, because I think it's equally likely that she started indiscriminately killing as an indulgence as it is that someone targeted her for being an indiscriminately killing asshole. What sort of person sees that we've started butchering frivolous socialites and decides they may as well join the party?
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I guess. So what you're saying is... The only way for someone else to have been awake that first night would be if they knew the robot was killing. So either he had an accomplice, or one of the Avatars framed Beau, and the latter doesn't make sense with what they can do. But would the robot have even worked with anyone else?
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