The Opal's eyes flicked back to Reji. What drove him? "The future." He said. Memories of the new gembounds he met flashed through his mind. Asimona, Imp, the other hive-members, The Children of Rot, and Septiezal with the neonate he made with another. All born free and lived freer. He admired that.
The Opal had lived his entire life under subjugation, he knew no other way. He needed a master- he needed Mother- to give him purpose. But these new gembounds, they made their own way. "I can't.. I won't.." He choked up, claws trembling as they gripped the dirt. This was very important to him. It was a passion that burned hotter than Hydra itself. " These.. gembounds.. they're special, Reji. They're not like you and me." Was it shameful to admit he lived vicariously through them? After all, they had what he always dreamed of but could never truly have. "They weren't made to serve the masters," Images of the last Trial stirred up. Gembounds struggling along side them. Blood on the sand as sandworms and vultures picked off those who never stood a chance. This was their fate. He balled his claw into a fist. "But they will be, unless something is done."
Of course, the future of the Hive was wrapped up in all this as well. If the masters took back control, the Hive -his found family- were as good as dead. They would not spare a single gem. The Opal knew they got lucky, but next time..? Well, he had to do everything in his power to make sure it wasn't just luck that saved them. He stood up. "I was a Champion of Hydra." The Opal raised his chin as he spoke. The title weighed heavy. Regret. Grief. Pain. "My entire life, I was taught to kill, maim, cheat, deceive- whatever it took to survive. I clawed my way to the top, over piles of corpses, friend and foe, just so I could please the masters, just so they would let me live another day." He shook is head, remembering all the waste of life; how meaningless it all seemed now.
Reji listened, and the more Opal spoke, the stronger her emotions became. They were near-palpable, through the link: open as a book to Opal himself.
Grief. Throbbing, pained sympathy. She'd been through this pain. She knew it. There was surprise, there, that he had served the Masters--she was almost impressed that he'd been one of the Champions. Or she was impressed--but also, a little frightened, or put off. It wasn't that she distrusted him... but to find out that he'd essentially been nearly one of the enemy... No. She pushed that thought aside. He'd been a victim, same as them... and they'd all lost people.
Reji crept forward, attempting to press her skull-like snout to Opal's slimier nose. There was desperate sympathy in it, like a mother wishing she could comfort a pained child. It said that he was loved. It said that she knew how he felt.
It said that she knew. How he had felt. She had lost, too, to the Masters--lost family... And she admired, lastly, his selflessness in this. His willingness to risk himself for the future of strangers.
None of it needed to be said. It was there, clear as crystal, and Reji stepped back and spoke hoarsely, while Mother remained solemnly quiet in the background of their thoughts. This was not Her moment--it was theirs.
"Good luck, then. Kill the bastard. And come back alive."
@Opal Three-Seven-Six
"-I can't let that happen again, I can't. Not to them."
When Reji's nose touched his, he paused, completely stunned. He never expected tenderness; he never experienced it before. For a moment, he wanted to push away, reject it. It was instinct, but as Reji's warm sympathy washed over him like a gentle wave, his tension ebbed away. She understood. He closed his eyes and leaned in. Gratitude. He had only known her for one cycle, but with all that they shared, the sense of closeness through Mother, he felt as if he had known her for ages. With her, he was not alone.
"Good luck, then. Kill the bastard. And come back alive"
The Opal opened his eyes and stepped back. His mouth parted to what looked like a toothy version of a smirk. "I plan to." The possibility of death was never far from his mind. There was a very real chance that he might not return at all. However, he had made peace with death a long time ago, and now, with something to live for, he was no longer a afraid to die. Rezik on the other hand, he'd best start making peace right now.
"You knew Rezik best. Is there is anything you know about him, anything at all? His habits, likes, dislikes, anything I can use against him?" Now, this it what he came for. Intel. The Opal did not survive the trials by being the strongest, nor fastest, or even the most cruel. All he had to be was clever.
@Game Master Dark
Reji considered this question for a very long moment, giving it its due. Finally, thoughtful, she began to list what she thought relevant. "He is arrogant. That is his greatest weakness; he's easy to draw out. But he's a coward, too. You won't see him risk himself in even a small fight. He's loyal to the Masters. And I don't think he can fight, not really. He has some magic--water, ice, that sort of thing--but I've never really seen him use it."
She paused, eyeing Opal, thinking. "If you can figure some way to set a trap and then use his pride to lure him into it, that might work best. But you'll have to destroy him entirely. He's got a nasty habit of turning into a rock," she finished, with a snarl of disgust.
@Opal Three-Seven-Six