Ten boxes are scattered around the bottom of the cage, and each box has the same number as the wooden box above. With a dozen splashes of water on my feet, I swam towards the box marked No. 1.
I saw that Reid had opened the first box. The cloth bag with the puzzles in the box floated because of buoyancy. The program team ethically tied the cloth bag with a rope to fix it. On Dillon's side, four boxes had already been opened, not in sequence. He didn't untie the ropes tied to the sacks, but just let them float.
There was a faint sound of "click". Although I was observing Rhett and Dillon, the movements of my men did not stop, and the first box was opened by me. Seeing Dillon dive again, Rhett was trying to maintain the depth of the dive and opened the second box. Instead of turning my head to check their progress, I focused on my own actions.
Without taking a second look at the first box that was opened, I moved forward and turned freely in the deep water. After a month of fishing on the bottom of the sea, I practiced more proficient swimming skills than in my previous life. Now I can even use the water and the buoyancy of the water. Balanced, showing a situation of stagnation in water.
The second box, without accident, was opened by the key I chose. And then the third one... After Reid opened the second box, he couldn't help but float up to the top of the cage to look for oxygen to breathe. It seems that to open ten boxes, Rhett needs to go up and down many times. And the oxygen stored in my lungs is still enough for me to stay in the water longer.
By the time Dillon opened two chests again, progressed to six chests, and resurfaced to the top of the cage with the wrong key, I had already opened the seventh chest. Breathe without stopping.
Just as I was about to swim to the other side of the cage and open the eighth box, I felt suffocated. As a last resort, I kicked a foot on the railing at the bottom of the cage and floated up quickly. Then the port of the oxygen tank took a breath of oxygen, and I turned and dived again.
Meanwhile, Dillon also dives with his last four keys. My answer is correct, all ten questions are correct at once! So I got all the puzzle pieces earlier than everyone else.
One by one, I opened all the bags containing the puzzles, and I embedded these scattered puzzles on the puzzle sand table one at a time, so as to avoid these puzzles from floating away due to the buoyancy of the water. I devoted myself to putting together this figure, and when the puzzle in my hand was nearly one-third completed, I realized that this puzzle is exactly the pattern on the beautiful tribal headscarf!
Knowing what I was fighting for, I was relieved and turned to see the progress of Rhett and Dillon. They have also obtained the puzzle pieces, and they are taking out the puzzle pieces from ten bags and embedding them in the sand table. I turned and floated up again, taking another breath.
Because our game was played in water, Jeff's commentary on the sea could not be transmitted to my ears, and the water pressure in the deep water kept pressing on my eardrums, so in such a dozen minutes, I was the first Once felt like living through the years.
When I dived again, because I was at a height relative to Reid and Dillon, I could clearly see Reid's fast hand speed when he was doing the puzzle. Dazzling moving puzzle pieces, people who don't know may think that Rhett is not thinking at all. But he is really thinking, but the speed of thinking is too fast, and the movements of his hands are not even the progress of completing the puzzle in his mind.
Then he turned to float again and inhaled oxygen, but it took me half the time just now, and he also completed the same one-third of the puzzle progress as me. Maybe this is the strength of being a genius in the fbi.
Dillon held his breath longer than Rhett, and while he didn't even do the puzzle faster than me, his lung capacity saved him a lot of time. I dived down to the sand table again, holding the railing at the bottom of the cage with one hand, preventing myself from floating, and began to quickly complete the puzzle.
Because of the idea, my speed is much faster than before. Soon I finished most of the places, only the top right piece was left, and the whole puzzle can already see the overall image. I felt like I was suffocating, but I still insisted on completing the puzzle.
With a quack, after I inserted the last piece of the puzzle into the puzzle, the puzzle became pushable. I pushed the puzzle aside and saw four keys in a hidden compartment below.
Holding these four keys in my hand, I didn't immediately try to open the lock, but floated up to take a breath of oxygen and rested for a while. The long-term suffocation and lack of oxygen made my chest feel dull and burning just now, and my legs began to tire from the desperate snorkeling and snorkeling.
With another "ga", Rhett also completed his puzzle! He didn't take the four keys, but immediately ascended to inhale oxygen. On the way up, he even sprayed a series of bubbles. Obviously, he had also reached the limit just now.
I dive again and my progress is number one this time! Dillon hasn't even fully solved the puzzle yet...I have to get out of the cage first, and get some distance from Dillon in the water before he can. Otherwise, the situation will be repeated in the first personal immunity game. His swimming skills are better than mine.
Maybe it was luck, or maybe it was God who favored me again. When I tried to use the four keys to open the four locks at the bottom of the cage, I only got two locks by trial and error, and the wasted time was not worth mentioning. As soon as Dillon's side made the "ga", the sound of the puzzle board, I was just one last key and one last lock to escape!
"Da" is an inaudible sound that reaches my ears through the medium of water. I quickly twisted the last lock and opened the escape door at the bottom of the cage. Because of the buoyancy, it is not easy to get out of a "hole" that is not big enough for a person to pass through, and is still opened in the direction of the seabed.
I held both sides of the exit, and pushed my body downward with both hands, and then I finally got out. Sink a little deeper, because I'm not going to circle around the cage, but a straight distance past the bottom of the cage and swam towards the shore.
…
"Bryan!!! This time, Brian was the first to escape the cage! He swam to the finish line on the coast without stopping. It seemed that he didn't use up much energy for the task just now, and he even continued to speed up! !!..." When I swam a certain distance from the bottom of the sea and finally decided to go up for air, I heard Jeff's live commentary at the moment when I emerged from the sea.
Great... I breathed a sigh of relief in my heart. The freestyle stroke of raising my hand to hit the water did not relax because of this. I blocked the fatigue signal from my body in my mind, and mechanized the execution of the optimal swimming posture.
It wasn't until I felt that I was high enough to stand up and halfway out of the water that I stopped swimming and stood up on the sandy bottom. It wasn't until my feet landed on the ground that I intuitively felt the extreme load on my body. The moment I stepped on the sand, my feet almost went soft and I fell into the water.
Fortunately, I controlled myself and didn't make a fool of myself in front of the camera. Step by step toward the shore, Jeff, who arrived at the beach ahead of me by motorboat, was at the end of the rug with the Survivor logo next to where he was standing.
…
"Congratulations Brian! You got this personal immunity necklace!" Jeff announced loudly with a laugh, wrapping the necklace that Dillon had worn for almost a century around my neck. "This is your first personal immunity match, but it's also the most important personal immunity match. Rhett and Dillon will be voted one person at tonight's tribal meeting."
In fact, when I stepped ashore just now, Dillon's pursuit was very close, he was about the same distance between the cage and the finish line. But in the end I won the game this time. The big picture is set.
"You win in the end, Brian," Dillon said as he walked up to me at the end of the game. His tone was not rigid, even with a helpless smile. "The decision is in your hands now. All I can do is wait for your decision."
Rhett touched his dripping blonde hair and walked over without feeling embarrassed at all. He tilted his head strangely and asked, "Brian, we should have something to eat at the camp."
Back at camp, none of us were discussing what the Horde recalled tonight. Because everyone knows that, in fact, there is no need to discuss anything.
The bonfire of the tribal meeting was lit, and we came here again in our usual fishing canoes. Seven jury members sat on the other side watching us, and they will again receive a new jury member today. The vote will fall to them tomorrow, with questions and speeches to the last two survivors to determine the real winner.
But for me, it's not so much that they took the initiative, it's more that they gave me the opportunity to use them again. This kind of canvassing speech is like marketing and selling things, but the things that are sold are themselves.
I found that most people looked at Dillon when they saw us coming in. However, it was only after realizing that Dillon's neck was not wearing a personal immunity necklace like he used to, and then he turned his eyes to me in surprise. I didn't expect that I, who had never won an immunity before, would win this last most important game? After all, it was Rhett who won a personal immunity once.
To be honest, this primitive tribal style necklace is not as easy to control as ordinary jewelry. Especially when there is no makeup by a stylist like walking on the runway and taking hard photos. This necklace is actually more suitable for Dillon to hang than to wear it around my neck.
"Okay, I believe that after an afternoon of discussion. Brian, you should have already made a decision." Jeff saw that we had taken the initiative to take the torches and lit them on the tribal bonfire, and began the opening remarks of today's meeting. "Everyone tell me what you think now."