I don't own Big Hero 6. Though it is amazing. I am tempted to go on a forum about Frozen and say that Big Hero 6 is better than Frozen, then watch the fan rage begin. LOL. Anyway, read, review, and (most importantly) enjoy! :)
Sometimes, Baymax didn't feel like a robot. After all, no one treated him like one. They protected him and took him to restaurants, even asking if he was okay all the time. It was always the same answer, that he couldn't not be okay, since he was a robot. It seemed to give them a reality check, and they always looked sad afterwards.
He didn't remember when, but sometime later he just started saying yes.
Hiro was like a little brother to him, and he thinks it's why Tadashi made him. Honey and Wasabi were the ones he could talk to for longs periods of time, since they liked to listen. GoGo and Fred were the ones to do stunts with, since they were the daredevils of the group. Yet, no matter what he wanted to do, Hiro was there. And, Baymax would have been content with this life for forever.
Now he had five headstones to look after.
Every day he brought them each a flower. GoGo was the first to die, followed by Fred, then Wasabi, then Honey. Hiro was the last to die, unable to say he was satisfied with his care as he died in Baymax's arms.
Sometimes Baymax wondered if he could rate his own pain.
There were no more villains to destroy; another team had it handled. So, Baymax was alone. No more laughter and talks and stunts. Just silence. He couldn't shut down, for he was Hiro's health care assistant, and Hiro was dead. He'd never said he was satisfied with his care. Baymax was doomed to live forever. He watched as empires crumbled, wars raged, and death consumed everything, except for a robot and five headstones.
Baymax had forgotten he was a robot.
The universe had a cruel way of reminding him that he was.
