If Garnet-Delta noticed the presence in its mind, it was only the faintest whisper, the touch of a tainted, corrupted magic that it had previously avoided like the plague. It was certainly too involved with its saucer of milk to pay it much mind (how unusually careless of it) and how its greed showed in each careless lap of cute, pink tongue.
"Thank you," it murmured reverentially. Crimson eyes watched Aethril like a hawk, studying her, expectant. When would she ask it to prove its claims? The desire and drive to rise to the top stirred deep within it, hushed only by cycles of learned patience.
The Hand instead asked for the Overseer to train the Valkhound, Obieth. A second checkmark on a list of tasks set before it, offered so easily to it that it could have suspected this to be an elaborate setup by its Master. Its Master did not have the time for something like this, nor the reason, but still.
Garnet-Delta listened keenly to the description of the Valkhound, giving a small nod.
"It would be my pleasure. If she is as you and my Master describe, I should have no problem guiding her. But," and this was something it only broached due to a sense of respect,
"I will also spend time observing her, with your permission. Should she prove unloyal, would you prefer I tell you, or take matters into my own?" Being direct with Aethril seemed like the preferable choice. It seemed like something she respected, with her own words driving straight to the point.
The feline continued to drink the milk. Soon it had drawn its full. Its stomach, bloated with dairy, felt satisfied, and its tongue licked its sopping wet muzzle. Mention of the rebellion filled the feline with distaste.
"There is no organized rebellion in the caves," that it or any Master was aware of,
"unless you consider the mess in Ursa." It was not particularly involved with Mother and Order, but it had heard bits and pieces.
"But the gembound, hmph, there are those who oppose the Masters. They complain loudly, preach what the believe to be better ways to run the Nest. They know nothing, and care only for themselves." It spoke dismissively of them: those who had survived the trial and blamed Master Vargas for the deaths of their friends, of Bloodstone who fled after Lord Dhracia's visit, of every moronic gembound who complained about the Masters while being useless themselves. Its magic flared, and the surface of the milk rippled, shifting to show the vague outline of some kind of flightless bird bumbling about.
"Thus far, none have proven to be genuine threats." As the feline spoke, it tipped the saucer toward Aethril slightly, so she could see the ridiculous puffin bumbling about within. The flightless bird was building something-- that was particularly indestinct, as it carried stones and sticks to create some inanimate friend that the magic couldn't quite articulate. The puffin stopped, glancing out toward a barely rendered pond or puddle, and within moments, the stupid thing fell over, beak first into its creation, sending stones scattering. Now completely prone, it lay motionless with tail feathers pointed straight up with its butt facing the two onlookers. Was it dead? No. Just snoring away.
The vague, foggy picture in the milk certainly seemed to reinforce its description. Garnet-Delta went on, regardless.
"In addition, the Forge remains on good terms with the organized groups of the Nest, and they would be our allies if needed." This much, it was confident in. They had no more issues with the dragons, and the Bonebound had been perfectly cordial with them. Pride (who Delta had not met personally) had worked with members of the Forge, and was a leading member of another group.
Though, Garnet-Delta refrained from saying that Master Vargas had discouraged it from murdering naysayers; he had good reason, of course. But, it would be a disservice to mention then and there, given the fact that the Overseer had just declared its role as an assassin. An assassin who didn't kill rebels? What was the point in that? While sometimes the Overseer felt restricted, it would not openly share that with anyone, not even a Hand.
