And so, Cain was... pleasantly surprised, by the fellow feline's personal awareness. It had been prepared for cockiness, aloof pride, and when it was met with a simple explanation that she did not know her limits or capablities to their full extent, a smile could be found curling Cain's whiskers.
This? This Cain could use. It listened intently to Obieth's list of skills: arcane-like magic, eating, hiding. As the larger feline reluctantly admitted that she had been disallowed use of her magic by the Hand, Cain's crimson eyes slipped thoughtfully toward Aethril.
Aethril, in turn, handed permission over to Overseer Cain to do what it felt was correct. There was a danger in corruption magic, one that seeped into ones bones if exposed too often, but Cain had been careful to avoid it. A few small glimpses would not hurt, and it presumed Master Vargas would know a way to keep the corruption from taking hold of it if it were to ask him.
If not, then it would be more careful in the future. For now, it had a job to do, and it did not shy away from the gritter aspects of the task. Obieth was aware of her shortcomings, and willing to learn. The Overseer nodded, and it opened its mind toward its fellow feline.
"You may reach into my mind, while we train," it offered voicelessly into Obieth's thoughts.
"I am telling you this through my own magic. It is capable of seeing into your mind, but I will not pry. Instead," Cain swept its tail through the air behind it as it rose to its feet.
"I would like to show you... some, of what I know." This was a dangerous prospect: there were, of course, secrets that Cain did not want to expose to anyone. Though it was entirely possible that both Obieth and Aethril could snatch that paltry privacy right from its skull without warning, Cain figured they would be unlikely to if Cain acted as though there was nothing to hide. After all, who would think much at all of the smallest fragments of memories, sparsely noted through days and weeks of training and working for its Master?
What Cain instead focused on was that training:
Its memories started small. It did not impose them into Obieth's mind, but instead left its own mind open for Obieth to reach in and take what she would from the experience.
It began with Master (then Overseer,) Vargas supervising it and its clutchmates, gathering them up for a game of sorts. The group was instructed to hide, and try to catch one another. It was here that the magic of hiding was brought to the forefront of then-Delta's attention, more so than ever before, but an important lesson came with it: a clattering of bones in the fortress, giving away its clutchmates. One could turn completely invisible, but it meant nothing without awareness of one's surroundings. A single pawprint in the dust, and you had a trail.
The next came: hours dedicated to the memorization of escape routes in Orion.
You have an advantage, Overseer Cain thought softly over the memory of its own paws finding a new hole to vanish into.
When protecting Aethril here, you can know every hallway. Every room. Every escape. Your enemies will not know it as intimately as you, and she would need to know every inch of it, and know when something was out of place.
Master Vargas had taught Cain much of assassination. Though there were many more memories it could reach to, it instead looked toward an important conversation, back among the bones of Canis. Master Vargas towering over it, speaking words that it had since stitched into its very soul.
In this memory, Cain's body was perfectly invisible, blended flawlessly into the surrounding stone. It was a-- well, an imagined bird's eye view, not something it had seen with its own eyes, obviously.
"The reason I am giving you all of these... fallbacks; all of this insurance to learn about, is an important one! Perhaps only one in ten of those you are to watch will sense you as I can." But Cain's memory did pulse with the thrum of red sense, a sixth sense that Obieth wouldn't have experienced before. Its magic outlined its own body with each heartbeat, as well as Master Vargas's looming presence.
"And if you have a plan, with a nine out of ten success chance, surely that would be enough-?"
The memories shifted through these words. Cain started to show more of its magic, through its memories, to Obieth: a much younger Delta, crouched in a frozen, narrow tunnel, looming on its perch.
"What of ninety-nine out of one hundred-? It depends on how long you want to live." That heart-sensing magic picking up the life of a young lesser rat, and suddenly seizing it.
"Perhaps you will be lucky and your first ninety-nine tasks will succeed, flawlessly, with an excellent--" Delta's magic drove it toward a waiting ice fang.
"--but not perfect!--plan." The memory ended abruptly with the death of that rat.
And came the next, featuring a strange group of survivors from the Trial: Obieth would not have the context as their words were drowned out by Vargas's words, but they barked and bayed at Delta and Alpha, until they were chased from the tunnel by the Orthoclase's snapping jaws and the force of Garnet's magic.
"Perhaps you examined it for loopholes and found nothing, or only one, one small chance of failure--" One of them returned, the white-furred hog, and the next memory showed her: Sora, whispering to Bloodstone. Again, the Sentinels chased off Sora and Delta had ushered Bloodstone back into the tunnel.
"-- and deemed it 'unimportant.'" Yet, mere days after, the Bloodstone turned upon them, teeth bared and furious at their Master. The Bloodstone fled, yet the betrayal left Delta feeling cold.
Perhaps
Bloodstone should be the one that Cain brought to Aehtril. Hm.
More memories, shorter, briefer. Cain grabbing the wills of lessers by their blood and forcing them into their deaths, again, and again.
"But eventually--first, or tenth, or fiftieth--it would fail." And then, the Overseer allowed Obieth to see a moment of weakness it had not admitted to anyone: its magic backfiring, sending a surge through its body, holding it so tight that it could do nothing but crumple to the ground. This, however, was done in private-- with no one around to endanger it.
"So it is a matter of how long you wish to live. Long enough for ten missions? One hundred? A thousand? -Plan to never fail. Never. Again, it rose to its feet, found a dark corner, and surveyed its options. While lurking somewhere obscured, it continued to wreck havoc upon more lessers. Practicing, again, and again.
"Ensure your plans are as foolproof, as flawless, as you can make them. Study your approach. Study your prey. Study your magic, and practice. And if you do so, well. One with a one hundred percent success rate is not going to fail."
"Do you understand?" Cain's voice came softly from its throat, keen and curious.
"Are you ready for practical training, or do you have questions?" Either way, the lessons moving forward would be fascinating to witness.
