Cling, cling, cling.
Here came the Researcher.
Cling, cling, cling.
She looked so young. She was. Locks of golden fur brushed over her babyish form and ringed around her masked face. Said cage glimmered brightly, like little teardrops pressed into solid form. Her feet pattered against the smooth stone in measured paces, each perfectly timed to her own heartbeat. In her left hand: a long, smooth rod, some poor remains of a stalactite long-fallen, which she prodded the wall with in tune to her footsteps, in tune to her heart.
Cling, cling, cling.
This was the same tunnel the gibbon was born in just a week or two prior. Where she lived, to an extent, huddling with the Black Cat. And like every other place in this who-knows-how-big cave, it had secrets. She wanted to discover those secrets. She was an explorer, after all. But she wasn't sure where to start. So she dragged her prodder along the walls, and whenever it hit something paused to investigate.
Cling, cling, cling.
A clump of lichen, similar to the variety found in Polaris. Cortex likes those. Researcher held it to the slit of her gem, sniffed it, then let it fall to the ground.
Cling, cling, cling.
One of those little scrawny grasses that grow in the cracks of rocks. She ate some before, maybe she should pick it as a snack. Her fingers hesitated over the leaves, then pulled away. She didn't feel hungry.
Cling, cling, cling.
Here and there, whenever a crack in the wide walls came up, she'd jam the stone spear inside, wriggle it around, and see if there was anything interesting. Nothing so far, unless damp soil is your thing. But up came another niche, one deeply set in shadow and bordered by trickles of water, and-- in tune with her steps, in tune with her heart, in tune with the spear-- she raised the pole up once again and thrust it inside.
Cri--jang!
It hit something. Researcher's eyebrows raised. Just a jammed stone, or something more? Suddenly curious, the young gembound realigned her grip on the pike, and stuck it in just a little further. Curious.

Clang went the fragile bit of stone; shink went the rock that tumbled down in the little crevice.
Making no sound at all was the little bright black and yellow head that popped up within, peering out at Researcher. A tongue flicked up, licking over one eye. It did not seem afraid. Perhaps this one lived in the gap? Or perhaps it was merely resting, and passing through.
@Researcher
The golden child's ghostly eyes widened a bit in fascination as a strange, black-and-yellow face poked out of the crevice. Interesting. Fascinating. It's slime was like nothing she ever saw on a living being before, more akin to the moist glistening of wet cave walls than anything.
Her eyes brightened with an idea.
A little-... dizzying. The effect would strike some ten or twenty seconds after it was picked up.
It seemed so tame. Perhaps that was because its defense mechanism was not in fight or flight, but in... whatever had left its mark on Researcher's soft-skinned hands.
@Researcher
Researcher's eyebrows ticked up in faint intrigue as the slimebelly left sticky residue over her fingers.
Oh, and it was around this time she realized her hands were going numb.
The gibbon looked down in surprise. Object wasn't really doing anything. Just... sitting there. Blinking it's adorable eyes. Yet her head was starting to spin. While most normal gembounds would've dropped it by now and stayed very far away, but Researcher only awed. This was a very fascinating turn of events. Toxin? Was that the right word? Oh, she had to study this!
Nothing. She frowned slightly and looked down at the slimebelly as her head twirled. She tried to shuffle her hand towards her arm fur in hopes it'll move over, free up her hands and stop doing whatever was making her dizzy.
There was a scurrying movement as it darted from the hands--but it went no further, only taking a few crawling steps up along the fur. It didn't flee entirely; in fact, it seemed content to cling where it'd been shoo'd to, and just to... wait, for whatever happened next, wide eyes taking in the tunnel as it flashed it by.
What an interesting adventure this was turning out to be-!
@Researcher
Okay, good. This was going smoothly. She held her breath a little as the slimebelly hesitated to climb, but let it go once the wide-eyed wonder snuggled itself into place.
Now, only if the numbness could go away...
Her eyes scoured the walls, flicking her blueish hands rhythmically to get some more feeling back into them. She didn't have the time to carve out a great cage. Not without Object running away. And it'd take ages to run back to Eridanus to ask for help from the Elf girl. But perhaps it could bribe it with something tasty to stay...
Bugs were easy to find, she knew. With how unsanitary the caves were they were practically everywhere. Researcher didn't like unsanitary places. She prefered something more sterile. Still, it didn't discount that they were great food. Taking care not to jostle the lizard by moving too fast, she moved along the wall, keeping an eye out for green wallcrawlers.
Bingo! Two fat, emerald insects, their little legs flailing helplessly beneath her fingernails. She eyed them like a specimen, quickly crushed their beady heads, and then offered the twitching corpses to her shoulder buddy.
Object instead stared at them, and for a moment tried to eat one--mouthing at it fruitlessly--but such a meal was proving too large. Still, it remained unafraid, peering up at Researcher afterward as if to ask, 'what now?'
@Researcher
Researcher eyed Object quizically as it attempted to eat the bugs, but then stopped. Her little kiddy mind, smart enough to know something was wrong but not enough to know why, started ticking.
With a quick motion of her fingers she crushed up the dead bugs, splitting apart the carapace and cutting up the meat into smaller, jagged portions. Her other hand was multitasking, slightly patting down the wall for any more bugs while trying not to bother Object. All the while pacing down the cold tunnel at an ambulatory pace.
It was possible to stop it before it reached it, or perhaps to let it flee and try to coax it out again, but for the moment, Object was shook.
@Researcher