7 is still developing and is only around six months old. Fat chance of that now it seems, no matter what camp you’re in. 7, but Sue just wants to get a decent night’s sleep and be able to self-govern in the way she was once used to. All corners of the tropical zone are eager to be brought up to speed on No. Sue is not too excited to be at the beck and call of the Trust at any hour of the day or night but makes her way out of her cabin to run more tests on the creature after being unable to ignore the call to duty that goes off in her room in the form of an audio prompt and a flashing red light. But as it often seems to be the case, Mother has the jump on them all and is keeping her slithering child safe in a cave, feeding it pumpkins, and allowing it to be tested by Sue to learn more about its species. Elsewhere in the tropical region, Father is using Mithraic soldiers, outfitted with solar helmets and exploding packs, as bait for No. Marcus and his crew, which grows in number by the episode, set out in a tank to hunt the creature, attempting to lure it out by playing the sound of necromancer shrieks from the speaker system. It cries for attention, moves slowly and sheepishly, and doesn’t seem to be interested in eating people, like anyone with eyes would have initially presumed.Īlthough the atheist and Mithraic camps maintain ways of living that clash in almost every way, they do have one thing in common now, and that’s No. 7, which he has yet to learn is his sibling, gets a bit jealous when Mother diverts her attention from her youngest for too long but mostly describes the creature’s disposition as what he’d imagine a dog’s to be like. Lured off the top of the mountain range where it was nesting by its mother in much the same way any other child would, with the promise of treats, it’s now being held in a gated cave near the atheist camp and fed a steady stream of pumpkins. Well, the word “little” doesn’t really apply here as it’s the size of a small airplane at only six months old. 7 as a terrifying creature to be feared and hunted, episode three flops these initial prejudices on their backs, and now we can’t help but love the slithering little bastard. While the finale of season one and the first two episodes of this new season worked to showcase Mother’s “natural child,” No. It’s definitely a sign of good writing when a show can drastically change your opinion on a character from one episode to the next.
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