sɪɴɴᴇʀs ʙʏ ᴅᴇᴇᴅ ʙᴜᴛ ʀɪɢʜᴛᴇᴏᴜs sᴛɪʟʟ

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Artificial sensory lines contained within afforded an approximation of feeling.
Of nerves.
Of touch.
Of something so distantly familiar, so nostalgic. But it was all wrong now, neither warm nor cold, like trying to feel through another's skin— Ha'rangir she hated it. But it wasn't the stone's fault. Though worn by a lifetime of abandonment the old Nite Owl bunker was surprisingly intact and incredibly dry. Maybe a little too dry, actually, but relatively speaking her secret fortifications held up well. The supporting struts which doubled as cover in a firefight that never came continued to hold up the duracrete sky despite bombings and construction in the city above. Some of the tunnels leading in had filled with rubble but the important ones, the most secret ones, remained.
And though she could spot it's black surface beneath where the corners had worn, the scan-proof reflec backing survived.
Nite Owls built their coverts to last, and the Grandmaster should have been pleased with her owlet's work.
But all she could think about were the people who used to work with her in these very halls. She passed an old server room, the piled data disks beside it still melted to useless slag which had long since cooled, bearing the mark of her very own plasma-caster.
A desk where they once processed vital intelligence now lay empty, save for a dusty old helm. She wiped away the gray-brown substance, creating dark blue streaks where old paint showed.
She remembered watching the woman leave her buy'ce behind when the owls disbanded.
What was her name again...?
...Kast. Riin Kast, that sounded right.
What really struck her though were a pair of familiar doors, welded shut.
High above these doors was a blue banner, frayed and pocked with moth holes, the emblem of her owls now off-white.
Aloy clenched her cybernetic fist.
Why the frak am did I come back? she thought.
Logically, it was because

<"Gar oyacir, jor'bic ni partaylir."> she murmered.
Then she leveled her gauntlet at the pole from which the banner hung, quickly melting through either end with her plasma-caster.
It descended and she caught it in her metallic grasp before a single thread could touch the ground.
Then she began to respectfully fold with military precision it while she waited.
