Olivia gives Nia a muted amused smile of her own. They could all probably use a nice long nap in a real bed. Bonding camping was unsurprisingly not as relaxing as one would think. "Yeah. But, I don't know, maybe that's why he feels dangerous? Adults are aware of what they do, and how that impacts other people - how dangerous they can be. But if you got a kid who isn't human and hasn't been human for a long time, possibly ever, who just wants to be friends with all these other super human kids - he doesn't know that exposure to the weather kills us, he doesn't know that manipulating how we feel is an invasion of privacy. He screws up and he doesn't know why and that not knowing enables him to continue to screw up in possibly dangerous ways." She shrugs. "It's like giving a five year old a pet hamster. How do you make sure that kid doesn't hug the hamster until it dies? How do you stress the danger of that in a way that the kid understands?"
Re: Nia and Olivia