The news on the wind.
"Tsk, tsk, and here I thought we were friends, Vargas; old friends," the Collector crooned, ignoring the roll of Vargas' eyes. He swept close, around between the two--too close to Vargas, who peeled back an upper lip in faint disgust--and circled to stand before Alpha.
He looked him over.
"Still... I think we share a goal. These stones--the few that remain, the few I've collected... and I do have my share, I assure you. Past Champions. Even... other stones; but in the interest of our shared goals, then, Overseer," and the leering was audible in his voice, "I will ask only one... little thing."
He leaned forward a little, studying Alpha. A new generation, to be sure. Big, brutish; not quite Vargas, but damn close. And there was something... familiar about it, now that he looked--and it clicked, it connected.
That exoskeleton. That gemstone.
The Collector laughed. He leaned back, tall and towering, and laughed, and laughed.
When his cackling died down, he grinned at Alpha, the brief glint of sharp teeth visible beneath the hood. "I granted your mother a boon, you know," Eyes flicked to Vargas, amused; and he looked surprised. "-Oh, you didn't know?" Sweet mockery. "She was not strong enough to carry it, in the end. But she was strong enough to reject it. And you know my gifts, Overseer," he added, darkly, "Or, at least, you insist that you do. She had the strength to reject it."
The Collector turned, leaning briefly on a stack of bones, drumming clawed hands with a clickety-clack, clickety-clack, before shifting back to face them one last time in a whirl of cloak. "A shock trooper. And I suppose you'd like something to match, or improve, this bloodline? Very well. All I would ask, noble Overseer, and you beautiful Orthoclase-beast: prove yourself worthy of it. Go forth, and wreak chaos. Fight, and kill. Make your name known throughout the caves and I will grant you a stone worthy of ascendance."
He did not vanish at once: he had enough respect, at least, for Vargas not to do that. The Overseer was not his superior--but neither was he his; and the Collector believed in at least a half-decent working relationship with one's co-workers.
He enjoyed watching Vargas, in any case. Watching him wreak havoc; watching him hunt--now that was fun--and watching him scramble, or his children in this case, to do the Collector's bidding.