If the thought of robots who are visually indistinguishable from humans getting tune-ups where parts of their bodies are replaced and/or serviced, then I’d say yes. The robots obviously don’t feel pain when this happens, though
I read Annie as an autistic-coded character. From the very beginning, there are instances of her trying to interpret others’ actions and words and respond appropriately. This clearly takes a lot of effort on her part, and she sometimes gets yelled at for small mistakes or faux pas that are very obviously not malicious
Several. There are scenes where Annie is charging in a closet. Most of these are neutral, but there’s one scene where Doug locks her in there as a punishment
Annie is a virgin when she comes to Doug. We do not see the moment she loses her virginity, but he is the only man she has ever been with at the start of the book.
Early on, Annie is convinced into having sex with her owner’s friend, who tells her to keep this a secret from the owner. Later, the owner gets another bot that he sometimes sleeps with, despite Annie getting jealous. We find out that the owner got Annie while separating from his wife, who cheated on him. Jacobson cheats on his wife and is separated from her but won’t divorce her so she can keep his health insurance