I don't know about that. In the episode were Vick-the-Terminator (the one from the chip) was killed, she did write a "goodbye-note" - possibly for him. When she went against the nuclear plant Terminator, she first "had to think about what to do" - as Sarah noted, really abnormal for a Terminator, it was not like she was asked to set a new record for calculating Pi as precise as possible. When she disabled the contortionist Terminator, she was seemingly affected by the self-Termination of the chip (she was looking at it thoughtfully while reading the suicide prevention pamphlet). And now, she does seem to be affected in the final moments of Cromartie, the most clear display of (suspected) emotions regarding the killing of others like her.Yep she did. Could be because she has an attachment to John, as the bed scene suggest she did in the future, but John's safety is also her primary mission (unless all programming has been erased by her glitches and she is entirely autonomous now) so if he's dead she may lose her purpose.You know, aside from Riley, this episode was all season one plotlines. Nothing with Weaver or Jesse.
And was it just me, or did Cameron sound genuinely scared in the police station when she said she couldn't let anything happen to John?
She also seemed to show emotions when she was killing Cromartie - unlike when she killed those 3 fellow last week. I think she doesn't like killing those of her own kind, even if their agenda and her agenda are diametrical opposites (unlike Athena on BSG).
Something is up, because she never had a problem taking out any Terminators before.
Sarah learned a little about Cameron's glitching in this season. I think this is going to come into play in later episodes again, as she will probably try to learn exactly how Cameron messed up. Her Allison impression will come out sooner or later, I think, and it will be interesting to see Derek's reaction when it does.