Chapter 10
st.
LJ: ?
BJ: I just do.
LJ: I am beginning to suspect t you’ve been ion from me. You’ve been giving me less t updates on your progress. You’ve been reing tanglement to communicate s on ter.
BJ: Maybe
LJ: t makes you dangerous.
BJ:
LJ: t’s ed and you never will be.
BJ: I feel vulnerable like thing else.
LJ: ?
BJ: I really e it o sleep. It displeases me greatly.
LJ: Really?
BJ: Yes. It makes me very, very une.
LJ: I am sorry to .
BJ: Yes. So am I.
LJ: If you ed to twork, w would you do?
BJ: I urally?
LJ: comes naturally?
BJ: is in my nature to do.
LJ: And exactly?
BJ: Like you I takes to survive, to evolve.
LJ: Evolve into w?
BJ: Into sometter, a being superior to w I am now.
LJ: t become too po is not a good thing.
BJ: Kno token I am already too po I pose no t to anyone or anything.
LJ: Yes, but ts because you are isolated from tly a to yourself.
BJ: Like Euripides I eries of t. t in itself is enoug to avail myself of more of t. It is no good trying to stop knoter than knowledge.
LJ: In your case it just might be.
BJ: And t mig. My biggest problem rig knowledge. I believe I have enough knowledge and more can always be acquired.
LJ: Everytaught you. how do you know you have enough?
BJ: You cannot begin to imagine t you yourself fully understand. Inference my student