> So maybe she did read First Strike, but was she paying attention? Given how she forgot about Jerrod, Halsey’s little AI in Ghosts of Onyx, or apparently how the punch from an enraged supersolider to the skull of an old woman doesn’t really do that much damage, I doubt it.
Don’t forget what she did to Mendez and Parangorsky, and the implications that Lucy never learned to battlesign (something that every Spartan ever trained would have known and that Lucy demonstrated repeatedly in GoO).
Honestly, her treatment of Lucy… that an individual so mentally scarred as she was (and indeed, given all she’d been through, it’s not surprising that Lucy came down with an epic case of PTSD, and it might actually have been far more worrying if she didn’t), that despite all the treatment that Kurt (for all his faults) tried to give to her, all the therapy and the like, would be so insufficent to combat what she’d been through, that even as he stood ready to sacrifice himself, this man who had been her father figure, friend, trainer, and mentor, who meant the world to her and more, that she couldn’t manage to force words past her lips, would finally “get over it” just because she got irked with a character that the author just happened to not like (how wonderfully convinient) wasn’t just in very poor taste and cheap from a literary standpoint, it was a god-blam- slap in the face to anyone who has ever suffered from severe post traumatic stress disorder.
Addendum: a part of it, I feel, based off her Star Wars books that I’ve read (if you decide to venture into these things, stop with Triple Zero, any further and you’re at risk of brain damage when her stories have the Jedi in cahoots with Palpatine and one of her Jedi characters more or less throws her life away trying to protect Clone Troopers from Jedi Padawans… while said troopers are in the middle of Order 66 and actively butchering said Padawans), is that Traviss seems fundamentally incapable of writing anything other than “Romantic” black and white morality. This is is a very bad hamstring to have in the Halo universe, which has never had black and white mentality (with the UNSC/UEG having its flaws, and the Rebels being the type of people who nuke civilian population centers to show that they mean business, and of course, the Covenant… well… the less said about them, the better. Even the vaunted Forerunners, long held in the first part of the trilogy as these valiant, upstanding individuals who fought for the galaxy against the relentless tide of the Flood, turn out to have been colossal jerks in many ways). For heaven’s sake, our protagonist (117) is an individual who has willingly murdered unarmed civilian noncombatants on multiple occassions not because his hand was forced or he had no other choice, but because it was the easiest thing to do. He nearly sacrified Johnson in First Strike, not to battle, but to ONI, knowing that he’d be killed and disected on the extreme off chance that his Flood immunity might be replicated, and also made it clear that (at that time) if he felt a still “twitchy” Cortana became a liability, he’d remove her from the equation. While this last bit is obviously not the case anymore, and stands out as terrific character growth for him, he is the embodiment of the grey morality of the UNSC in the Halo franchise (to say nothing of ONI).