CLL-MT9 wrote:Duo, previously pulled from his sworn duty only by a programmed superior interacting with him, seemed to self-consciously start when the human stepped nearby. Giving a preprogrammed standard response a little too quiet and full of static to be heard as he turned back to his post by the door ("patron" "excuse" "bartender" "enjoy"), he left Clementine alone with the balding human.
Clementine turned his whole body in order to get a good look at him, causing his necklace of artistically mutilated restraining bolts to rattle and clank, quieter than the background noise for all but Farkas. His response time was slow, as usual, which the technically inclined might have attributed to market-default processing speeds. In truth, Clementine was rarely approached directly in conversation by patrons, and even if he was Farkas was taking some time to fit into Clementine's taxonomy of organics. Clearly not lower Providencetownie. Didn't give off a vibe like cop. Sometimes uptowners came to slum, but usually, Kaneesa pegged them for special treatment on entry. And most of those people didn't speak binary. Most of everyone didn't speak binary.
At last, he let out a series of beeps, boops, sounds that were a little on the deep end to be described as chirps before switching in to his slow, loud basic -- [I am CLL-M29, designated] -- "Clementine." To a practiced ear, his binary speech was low-pitched but perfectly regular, if a little less verbally dextrous than the chattier sorts of astromech. He stops there, either deciding it's Farkas' turn to speak, or just taking a long time to think of a follow-up.
Farkas gives out a low whistle... that pitched oddly. It was imperfect binary, about as close as an organic could muster without getting cybernetics for it. [Nice.] Clearly the human would not be able to keep a full conversation, but apparently he had practiced enough to have an extremely limited vocabulary of those binary words that could be whistled. "I like your necklace. The only good use for those things other than breaking them down for scrap, in my estimation."