Even linked as they were, there was so much Vin didn't understand about the creatures. She looked up, and found the koloss staring at her with its bloodred eyes. Its skin was stretched tight across its face, the nose pulled completely flat. The skin was torn near the right eye, and a jagged rip ran down to the corner of its mouth, letting a flap of blue skin hang free, exposing the red muscles and bloodied teeth below.
"Don't look at me," the creature said, speaking in a sluggish voice. Its words were slurred, partially from the way its lips were pulled.
"What?" Vin asked.
"You don't think I'm human," the koloss said, speaking slowly, deliberately—like the others she had heard. It was like they had to think hard between each word.
"You aren't human," Vin said. "You're something else."
"I will be human," the koloss said. "We will kill you. Take your cities. Then we will be human."
Vin shivered. It was a common theme among koloss. She'd heard 1others make similar remarks. There was something very chilling about the flat, emotionless way the koloss spoke of slaughtering people.
They were created by the Lord Ruler, she thought. Of course they're twisted. As twisted as he was.
"What is your name?" she asked the koloss.
It continued to lumber beside her. Finally, it looked at her. "Human."
"I know you want to be human," Vin said. "What is your name?"
"That is my name. Human. You call me Human."
Vin frowned as they walked. That almost seemed . . . clever. She'd never taken the opportunity to talk to koloss before. She'd always assumed that they were of a homogeneous mentality—just the same stupid beast repeated over and over.
"All right, Human," she said, curious. "How long have you been alive?"
He walked for a moment, so long that Vin thought he had forgotten the question. Finally, however, he spoke. "Don't you see my bigness?"
"Your bigness? Your size?"
Human just kept walking.
"So you all grow at the same rate?"
He didn't answer. Vin shook her head, suspecting that the question was too abstract for the beast.
"I'm bigger than some," Human said. "Smaller than some—but not very many. That means I'm old."
Another sign of intelligence, she thought, raising an eyebrow. From what Vin had seen of other koloss, Human's logic was impressive.
"I hate you," Human said after a short time spent walking. "I want to kill you. But I can't kill you."
"No," Vin said. "I won't let you."
"You're big inside. Very big."
"Yes," Vin said. "Human, where are the girl koloss?"
The creature walked several moments. "Girl?"
"Like me," Vin said.
"We're not like you," he said. "We're big on the outside only."
"No," Vin said. "Not my size. My . . ." How did one describe gender? Short of stripping, she couldn't think of any methods. So, she decided to try a different tactic. "Are there baby koloss?"
"Baby?"