TITLE: Identity
SERIES: Imperfection Deviation
AUTHOR: Macx
RATING: R for suggestive scenes later on
DISCLAIMER: None of the characters belong to me, sadly. They are owned
by people with a lot more money :)
FEEDBACK: Loved
This
bunny is Sapphire's fault, who I traveled to Iceland with. While
driving through the volcanic landscape we figured that the mechs could
easily hide there... or crashland and never be discovered. :)
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Vatnajökull. The glacier of water.
Located
in the south-east of the island of Iceland, covering more than eight
percent of the country, it is an impressive sight. A gleaming white
landscape that, upon closer inspection is riddled with cracks and deep
lacerations, is far from smooth, and the whiteness is actually far from
just white. Volcanic ash and sand is enclosed in the eternal ice,
giving the glacier darker streaks. Air bubbles and debris are locked
inside. With a size of 8100 square kilometers it is the largest glacier
of Europe.
Throughout tourist season people hiked, climbed,
drove past or flew over the massive formation. It was a magnet for
everyone visiting the northern island. With the end of summer silence
descended once more, though.
It was in late September that Dr.
Einar Magnusson and his team started on their expedition to explore a
specific area of the glacier. He irregularly took students and part of
his science team up on glacier walks that would push everyone, even
science, to their limits. They would set up camp near a central service
station town and fly to their sites each day. The very hardy spent one
or two nights in heavily insulated tents up on the glacier as long as
weather permitted.
On this expedition the team consisted of only
four people, including Magnusson, and none was a student. They were all
senior scientists and glacier experts. He was looking for traces of
Earth’s history in glacial ice and his aim was to remove ice core
probes and get them back to his lab. The plan was to take five probes
out of four different locations. The first had already been
successfully handled and the six foot long tubes, about five inches in
diameter, had been shipped back to the lab. Inside was a perfect
vertical slice through the ice.
The helicopter set them down as planned and the men and one woman went
to work.
It
was near dusk that one of his men, Dr. Lars Sveinsson, called him over.
He sounded excited. And not just that. Also perturbed. Maybe even a
little scared.
The others gathered, too, and what Magnusson saw let him gape.
Underneath
a thin layer of crystal clear glacial ice was... metal. A long stretch
of metal that first reminded him of the wreck of an old fighter plane,
but then Magnusson frowned more. Of course planes had crashed in
Iceland throughout World War II, but he had never heard of any
speculation that it could have been up here. And the ‘wreckage’ looked
too futuristic to be an old war plane from that time.
“Einar?” his colleague asked, unsure.
“Call the base. We need a chopper up here at first light,” he decided.
Until then they would cordon off the area, mark the place of the
strange metal inclusion.
Out
of a whim he scraped snow off a covered area and Dr. Becca
Asmundsdottir, their only female team member, a renowned professor at
the University of Reykjavik, gave an exclamation of surprise as she ran
the flashlight over the place.
The metal continued. It wasn’t
just the two by two foot area, it was a lot bigger. A lot! Everyone
started clearing snow off the ice until they stood panting in the cold,
breath frosting before their faces.
“What is this?” Lars whispered, looking frightened.
Magnusson didn’t know. He could only stare at the roughly spherical
shape under the ice.
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“I don’t need a vacation!” Sam said forcefully.
Ratchet’s
expression was unyielding. “You have been under a lot of mental
pressure lately, Sam. Helping the Constructicons tired you out and you
need to recharge.”
“I’m not a mech, Ratchet, and you’re not a human doctor. You’re not my
doctor!”
“But
I am,” a very human voice said and Dr. Mark Keyron frowned at the
younger man. “Ratchet is right. You’re tired out, even if you don’t
feel it yet. You need some time away from all of this and a vacation
would do you good.”
Sam rolled his eyes. They would probably
have brought in his parents if they hadn’t decided to go on a
month-long trip to Europe. His mother had called it their ‘romantic
vacation’, his father had complained about the airline charging
horrendous prices for first class and he wasn’t about to pay for it,
even if Judy insisted.
::Sam, please?:: Bumblebee sent. ::You feel tired to me::
“Now you’re being unfair,” the technopath growled and directed a new
glare at the yellow and black Autobot behind him.
“I have a very unique connection to you,” Bumblebee added, sounding
just a little bit smug.
“I’m okay! I don’t need to relax!” He looked into the three stern
faces. “And I’m not winning this one, right?”
“No,”
Keyron told him. “Get away from technology, Sam. Let your brain
recover. You helped five severely injured minds and you had multiple
migraines. You need this time out.”
Sam threw up his hands in defeat. “Okay, okay. Do I at least get to
choose?”
Bumblebee shrugged. “Of course.”
“Fine! I’ll pack.” With that he whirled around, steaming off.
Ratchet whirred a sigh. “Humans can be so stubborn.”
Keyron chuckled. “You have no idea.”
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Bumblebee
followed his charge into the house the technopath had on base – one big
enough for Bumblebee to comfortably enter in his bipedal mode --
reaching out to the upset mind.
::Sam?::
::Leave me alone!::
::You know you need to unwind::
::I am unwinding! Every time we’re together!::
Bumblebee radiated amusement. ::That’s a different unwinding. This is
about letting your mind relax, be away from temptation::
Sam stopped in the process of stuffing various articles of clothing
into a duffel. Narrowed eyes pinned the Autobot.
“Temptation? You want to send me off alone?”
“No.”
Bumblebee knelt down, feeling the waves of upset and betrayal. “I know
you want to be useful and you are. You’re very important to us, Sam.
Even more to me. You know that. Giving in to the need to be away for a
while is no weakness. What you did for the Constructicons was
incredible. It was beyond what anyone thought you’d be able to endure.”
Sam looked away. Gentle metal fingers touched his face, forcing him to
look into the understanding optics.
“You need this, Sam. We need this.”
He cupped the large finger with his hand, feeling the smooth, alien
metal under his touch.
“We?”
“Yes, we.”
He breathed in slowly, then let it go in a calming exhalation. “We,” he
echoed. “Bee…”
Bumblebee’s
presence flowed around him in a very real hug and Sam closed his eyes,
enjoying the simple expression of togetherness.
Them. Yes, they
needed time away. He had felt it. He had been tense, he had been prone
to migraines more often from simple things, and touching Bumblebee
hadn’t been as smooth and familiar as before. He needed to get
everything into order once more.
“Any suggestions?” he asked his partner, looking into the bright optics.
Bumblebee gave a hum of amusement. “I can think of a few remote places
where technology isn’t very pronounced.”
Sam smiled. “I’m ready to be surprised.”
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The
room was filled with electronic equipment top to bottom, artfully
hidden underneath smooth panels. Huge viewscreens formed a semi-circle
around the main control station and up on the opposite wall a display
the size of a theater screen relayed the most vital information.
Different screens showed different times, locations, data streams, and
alerts. People moved efficiently, typing, talking on phones, sitting
together and going over matters, and in the middle of it a
dark-skinned, heavy-set man in his early thirties regarded the
condensed version of what the men and women had collected so far.
An alarm went off. Silent, just a screen turning red and catching the
attention of the controller close by.
Commands were typed in.
There was a brief waiting period, then the typing was faster, more
serious.
The
heavy-set man walked over to the screen and leaned over the
controller’s shoulder. He whistled softly as an image appeared, taken
by a digital camera no more than twelve hours ago.
“Track it,” he ordered.
“On it,” the controller replied.
“YouTube?”
“Nothing yet. It’s an official site. Glacial Expedition.”
He nodded. “Confirm this, then block whatever else they’re trying to
send anywhere.”
“Got it.”
Two hours later a call was made to Tom Banachek, head of Project.
Another three hours after that international relations with Iceland
took on a different tone.
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If there was one thing to be grateful for it was the early darkness
falling over the country of Iceland at this time of the year. Where the
sun would have been out twenty-four hours a day by mid-May to late
July, it now turned dark quite early. At six in the evening dusk had
not even stood a chance. Darkness had simply fallen over the land.
The
C-17 transport landing at the small international airport of Keflavik
would have aroused suspicion with the casual tourist or traveler. Now
it was the last plane coming in for the day, its lights flickering over
the dark tarmac. It rolled to a stop at the other end of the airfield,
away from the terminals, and opened its massive rear cargo doors. The
interior had been kept in semi-darkness and even if there had been
watchers, they wouldn’t have seen more than four large shapes drive
out, then the doors closed again.
The four vehicles disappeared
into the night, headlights off. Only when they were on the official
road leading from the airport did lights come on.
Nothing about them looked suspicious. Not even their license plates
which were of an Icelandic origin.
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Since
Iceland had no standing Army or Airforce it had been a bit more
complicated for Project to use the right channels to smooth the way for
the reconnaissance team. Banachek had talked to the President, who had
in turn, with the Department of Defense, had had long talks with the
Icelandic prime minister. It had taken almost too long to clear their
arrival and until then police had apprehended the science team that had
been up on the glacier to discover something that might prove to be
extraordinary.
That the discovery had even made it as far as
Banachek’s desk was thanks to Gene Whitman. The former hacker and now
employee of the DoD and Project had turned out to be the chief asset in
a hunt for possible clues to new-arrivals on Earth, hidden Decepticons
and other strange events that could be attributed to a Cybertronian on
Earth. He surfed the net in a way no one else did. Together with Maggie
Madsen he had developed a program he called Seeker. The Seeker was
going through uncountable files all around the world each hour, looking
for keywords, images, clues, and stored it all in a place where Maggie,
Gene and their team of twenty individuals could go through it, always
searching for the one thing: Cybertronian presence.
A third of
the team was assigned the task to obscure or ridicule what appeared
real. They were the Cleaners. They cleaned up messes. They found out
names and server IDs, and relayed them to the DoD teams. The rest was
hunting. One of the hunts had come up with red flags. Screaming red
flags and images that were too detailed, too fresh, to be a hoax.
Whitman
had alerted Maggie. Maggie in turn had given the go-ahead to inform
Banchek, and twelve hours later a massive machinery had begun to move.
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Ironhide
drove down the dark ring road number 1, headlights piercing the night
around them. Now and then a car came toward them, driving past without
knowing who they were. All four vehicles were easily breaking the speed
limit of 90 km/h, but none of them cared. It was a few hours after
their arrival that Ironhide skillfully maneuvered onto the unpaved road
that led them into the unpopulated highlands. The roads got rougher,
but his shocks easily handled the blows. He grumbled a little about the
abuse, just for the show of it, and it earned him a brief smile from
the man in his cab. Otherwise his passenger didn’t protest.
Followed
by two black Ford F-350 Explorers and Ratchet bringing up the rear, the
small convoy drove fast and didn’t stop until they had reached the end
of the highland road. The F-902 ended abruptly, petering out into
nothing but rocks. Surrounded by the massive glacial tongues of the
Dyngjujökull to the right and the smaller Kverkjökull to the
left the
men and women of Epps’ unit piled out of the their cars and the two
mechs transformed.
Ratchet’s lights brightened the area, though
they did nothing to make the surroundings more hospitable. Ironhide
added his own source of light.
Ex-Army Major Will Lennox gazed
around. It looked like a different planet here. All mountains and rocks
and glacial ice. He had been to many places, foreign and at home, but
this was something that could very well fit into a science fiction
movie. Behind him Epps ordered the camp to be prepared and the fifteen
soldiers quickly did so. Tents were set up and communication with the
base at home established.
“Thirty miles from here,” Lennox said softly, eyes on the massive wall
of whiteness.
Heavy
steps shook the earth and he looked up at his partner. Ironhide, if not
for the lights, would have disappeared completely in the night. Only
the lit-up headlights and his blue optics gave reference to his size
and where he was at the moment.
“It’ll be morning soon,” he rumbled. “There will be no non-military
fly-overs tomorrow. Forecast looks in our favor.”
Lennox
nodded. It would be cloudy for most of the day, which meant no
non-commercial flights would try and shuttle the odd tourist that had
caught a cheapo flight off-season over Iceland’s biggest glacier.
Commercial flights starting from Keflavik were no bother at all. They
followed the coast line and would be above the Atlantic by the time
they passed the south-east.
Feeling the need to move around,
explore, Will did just that. His eyes were pretty well adjusted to the
meager light. He had no optics, he had no human optical nerves, he was
a hybrid. He had a mixture of both.
Ironhide remained at the
camp, showing how much he trusted in his partner not to do anything
foolish. Will only walked for about a mile and then settled with his
back against a rough stone. He breathed in deeply, feeling the crisp
clear air in his lungs.
Lennox had come along on this
operation because this was exactly the mission he could do such a
thing: come along. No hiding, no chance of discovery. Iceland was so
sparsely populated, with the mass of people living in Reykjavik, that
he had a measure of freedom like never before. He needed this, needed
to get out, and Canada had shown he could. Canada had been under heavy
guard and only at night or in enclosed spaces; Iceland meant a new
freedom.
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When Ironhide joined him, his lights switched
off, finding his way with sure steps, the camp had already settled down
to catch a few hours of sleep. Will didn’t feel sleepy. He had caught
what he needed on their flight here and he rarely slept every night. He
didn’t need to.
Ironhide settled down beside him.
“First time I’m really somewhere I can move about freely,” Lennox said
after a while.
Canada
had meant hiding, too. Wherever people were, he couldn’t be. In this
place, in this country actually, running into crowds was… not
happening. Aside from busses full of tourists or going to a party in
town, it was a very lonely place. Up here, in the highlands, even more
so. They could be here for months and no one would notice.
He looked up into the dark face of his partner and bonded. “Perfect for
retirement,” he quipped.
Ironhide chuckled. “Right.”
Lennox
leaned against the armored foot, abandoning the rock for the closeness
of another kind, and Ironhide let him. Nothing more was spoken between
them until the sun rose through the thick cloud cover.
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With
dawn came meager sunlight and the camp broke up into different groups.
Three soldiers would remain behind to monitor communications, keep in
touch with the base back home and everyone who now went onto the
glacier. A Chinook helicopter had arrived and lifted everyone,
including the two Autobots, to the target area thirty miles from the
camp. The military helicopter would stay in touch and hide in the
highlands. A second one was close by, on call, should it be needed.
Walking
on the cold, hard and slippery surface wasn’t easy for anyone. The
soldiers had attached spikes to their boots and the two mechs had
adjusted the soles of their feet accordingly.
When they
finally closed in on the marked site of the strange discovery Gene had
picked up, Ratchet made a surprised noise that was echoed by Ironhide.
Of course the images taken by the group of explorers had been sharp.
They had shown a metallic object, but the distortion from the ice had
made it difficult to actually identify it.
Now they saw it for themselves.
It
was a protoform. There was no doubt about. Locked in its transition
mode, a roughly spherical construction with a large protrusion on one
end. Anyone who might have seen it come down all that time ago would
have believed it to be a meteor. The space debris and dust that usually
covered such modes was still visible. Covered by a layer of crystal
clear ice it was now lit up by powerful lights and surrounded by two of
its kind and a team of Epps’ men, as well as Lennox.
Ratchet
scanned the enclosed sphere and made a humming noise. “Taking into
account the age of this glacial field, as well as the past sightings of
meteorites – none even remotely in this area – I think the protoform
has been here for a while now.”
“How long?” Epps asked.
“At least three thousand years, maybe more.”
The captain whistled. “Damn. Any way to tell if it’s one of the good
guys or one of the bad guys?”
“No.
Transition modes as well as protoforms don’t bear sigils. There are
ways to identify the individual though. First we have to remove the
protoform.”
Epps nodded. “Okay. You guys tell us where to dig, we dig.”
Ratchet
smiled a little, then set up a new scan, this one to determine how best
to remove the sphere from the ice surrounding it.
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Will
stood in the averse weather, gaze locked on the unearthed – or was that
un-iced? – transition mode of a protoform that they still hadn’t been
able to identify. It had taken them a week to get it safely out of the
ice, mainly due to two factors: the ice and the weather. A storm had
laid them off for two days and made their work harder afterwards. Even
with small explosive charges set at a safe distance to their precious
discovery and both Ratchet and Ironhide helping, it had been difficult
to remove the protective mantle of ice.
Wind blew around him,
bitingly cold. The clouds hung low enough to be fog and visibility was
close to nil. Lennox should be in a warm tent, sitting with the others,
eating, talking about who the mech they had found could be, but he
wasn’t. He watched Ratchet and Ironhide work.
The medic wasn’t
happy about the state of the foundling. So low on energon there was
barely a reading, he had concluded that when the protoform had crashed
he had already been in stasis lock, deep enough not to rouse for any
reason unless someone from outside repaired him, gave him energon.
Ironhide’s
expression was dark, darker than usual, and he had once or twice
remarked that from the looks of it, the mech found had been in battle,
maybe fled from Cybertron throughout the final stages of the war. That
meant he had been in space for a long, long time, and crashed onto
Earth thousands of years ago, as confirmed by the age of the ice
surrounding it. Maybe the transition mode had followed an energy
signature.
For now they had no explanation who he was and what had happened to
him.
Will
walked over to the sphere and reached out with bare hands, running his
finger tips over the scarred looking exterior. Protoforms were
supremely resistant to damage, capable of withstanding extreme heat or
cold, and they were the core of every Cybertronian. This one had seen
its share of battle and to scar it so badly, the fight must have gone
way beyond the mech’s limit.
The runes were docile on his
hands as he touched the alien metal cocoon. He couldn’t jolt anything
to life, he couldn’t give energon or do whatever the Allspark had been
able to. He wasn’t the Allpark.
Of course he had abilities, like
withstanding heat and cold himself. He didn’t need the protective gear
the others were wearing. He could be up here, in the glacial cold of
Iceland’s nearing winter in jeans and a t-shirt and not feel the cold,
but Will was maintaining his human habits. He had put on the same
things as Epps’ team. That he was now gloveless, that he had removed
the hood of his jacket and the thermal head protection wear, was due to
the fact that he was alone with the two mechs.
Ratchet muttered
a soft curse. “We have to get him out of here fast. Whatever keeps him
alive, it’s fading. He’s in such a deep coma, I fear feeding him
energon could shock him into off-lining. This will be delicate work.”
Ironhide flexed his fingers. “What if it’s a Con?”
“We
don’t know that, Ironhide. If he is a Decepticon there is still stasis.
A stasis we induce, not one that came about due to massive damage and
system failures.”
Another rumble.
Will walked around the
sphere, joining his partner. He stuffed his hands into the jacket’s
pockets, letting the wind whip through his hair. Both silently watched
Ratchet work until the sun came up, piercing the darkness with weak
stabs of light. Epps had crawled out of his tent an hour earlier,
muttering about cold weather.
“Airlift is coming in. ETA two hours,” he now said as one of his men
relayed the information.
Will
nodded. They would get the sphere off the glacier and back to the base
camp site where they had to wait until two Chinook helicopters could
take the massive form back to Keflavik to the waiting C-17. The plane
was currently on its way back from US territory and would arrive on
time.
“Man, I hate cold,” Epps grumbled.
Lennox, still
without anything protecting his head and looking comfortable and warm
despite the arctic temperatures, smiled. “Warm thoughts, Rob.”
“Warm
my ass. Speaking of which, it’s freezing off,” the captain growled.
“And you’re freakin’ me out,” he added, giving Lennox a glare.
The Ex-Army Ranger chuckled. He knew where his oldest friend came from
and he also knew that Epps didn’t mean it as an insult.
“Just be glad I’m not in my tee and undies.”
“Oh, weird me out some more, will ya! That’s really not normal, man.”
“What can I say? Freaky alien accidents do that to a guy.”
They
shared a grin and Epps gave him a clap on the shoulder. He walked back
to where his men were preparing for the brief cargo flight. Ironhide’s
blue optics glowed softly in the dawn light as he watched his partner.
Will shot him a reassuring grin and went back to inspecting the sphere.
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Two
hours later the Chinook blew up a storm of snow and ice as it hovered
over the landing site of the protoform. Experienced soldiers attached
the heavy lift gear and within twenty minutes the sphere was raised
from the Vatnajökull and airlifted to the base site thirty miles
away.
In
the silence that followed their departure Will closed his eyes, feeling
the snow on his face. He inhaled the frigid air and released it with a
soft sigh.
There was a certain freedom in this vastness, this
icy landscape. Behind him Ratchet had already transformed and drove
across a surface that no normal car could ever manage to navigate. Epps
and his men were gone with the Chinook. There were only two people
left, one a hybrid human, one a mechanoid life form.
Ironhide
joined his partner, silent, giving Will time. Finally Lennox opened his
eyes and looked at the alien mechanoid. He smiled.
“Let’s go,” he said softly.
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The
secret military unit disappeared as fast as they had come, flying into
the night. Icelandic authorities were taking care of the four
scientists. National security was understood even by the three men and
one woman and nothing of their findings would leak to the public.
Nothing at all.
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“He’s in a bad condition,” Ratchet reported to Optimus Prime.
He
was parked in the same C-17 transporter as the sphere had been stowed
in, accompanied by half of Epps’ unit. The rest was in the second plane
that followed at a distance, including Will and Ironhide.
“His
energon readings are abysmal. If not for the fact that he somehow
managed to revert into the transition mode, he would have off-lined
ages ago. None of his peripheral systems are working and when I tried
to access his systems I stumbled over so many dead and crumbling
connections, I almost did more harm than good.”
“Do you think he can be saved?” the Prime wanted to know.
“I can’t say right now,” was Ratchet’s honest answer.
“Try.”
“I will, Optimus. You know I will. No matter who he turns out to be.”
Because
Ratchet was foremost a medic and it meant saving lives, no matter what
faction, when he could. He would kill in battle, but he wouldn’t
execute, nor would be turn away from the dying or needy. This protoform
was both: dying and needy. He might be able to bring him back, but
maybe the shock of a reboot would kill the spark.
He had to wait and see.
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They
landed eight hours later at the Autobot base in Nevada. Humans and bots
swarmed around the C-17 with its special cargo and hidden under a heavy
tarp draped over the transition mode, the new-comer was whisked into
the hangar.
The transport planes disappeared just as quickly to land at Nellis to
get refueled and serviced.
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Ratchet
had seen a lot of injuries in his time. And death. So many deaths. Some
violent, some quick, some slow, some agonizing, some merciful. He had
always tried to safe whoever was under his care, but you could never
save them all. He knew that. Even back on Cybertron at the height of
the war he had known, but he had never given up.
Torn off limbs
could be replaced. Internal damage could be repaired as long as the
spark was alive. Even a spark could be saved if there was enough of it
left. But some just didn’t want to be saved. Some were so traumatized
they died because it was their wish. Ratchet had seen suicides of mechs
he had helped bring back from the brink, only to lose them to their
nightmares.
Looking at the transition mode the medic wondered
what this one would be like. The first scans had indicated a lot of
damage. A lot with a capital L. This was a mech who had nearly died on
the battle field, had launched himself off into space and reabsorbed
every piece of redundant armor so he was simply his basic form. He had
wrapped everything he was around his spark, had maintained that support
for the millennia he had drifted through space. He couldn’t have
consciously steered the transition mode anywhere. He was too low on
energon for that. His outer shell was so scratched and littered with
space debris, not even the entry into Earth’s atmosphere had cleared
him of it. The team had found a lot of remains in the crater they had
dug to get the sphere out.
Ratchet set up his work space and
began a detailed scan. It would take a while; hours actually.
Penetrating the defensive shields might be easy because of the depleted
state, but the core unit was harder to infiltrate. Whatever the mech
had used for protection, if it was still active it would react to the
probes, would drain his last reserves and effectively snuff out the
spark.
The door opened and Optimus Prime stepped inside, grave optics falling
onto the sphere.
“I know nothing yet,” Ratchet said without being prompted.
“I didn’t think you would,” was the mild reply.
Ratchet
stopped for a moment, then faced his leader and nodded his apology. He
was on the edge without knowing why. Maybe because this was the first
time he encountered several difficulties at once: a transition mode he
had to prompt back into the protoform shape; a mech of unknown
affiliation; a spark wavering on the edge of permanent off-lining;
damage to a normally so resilient protoform that even if he saved the
spark, the body might still be a loss.
He calmed himself and continued to set up the machines. When he was
done, Prime was still there.
“Do you need assistance?” the taller mech asked.
Translation: should they recall Sam?
“No.”
Not yet. If things got difficult, if the technopath was needed, he
would debate the good versus the bad. Sam was strong, but if this mech
died on him while he was in such deep contact – and touching a mind
this protected it had to be deep – might harm their human friend.
Optimus inclined his head, understanding the unspoken assessment.
Ratchet returned to his work and when he looked up a second time, hours
had passed and Prime had long since left the lab.
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Lennox
joined Ratchet for a few hours each day, watching him work, his runes
no more or less active than any other day, the medic noted almost
casually. His concentration was on his patient, but he kept an optic on
the hybrid since he couldn’t scan him at all.
It was on day
three that Ratchet finally managed to trigger the transition mode’s
mechanism to unfold into the protoform it actually was. The noise that
accompanied it was worse than nails on a board. It was painful and
terrible and only confirmed what the medic had been fearing: the
unknown mech’s state was dangerously close to a permanent shut-down.
Lennox
stood close by, on a table, face impassive. He had never initiated a
conversation in all the hours he had been here, had never asked. His
eyes tracked the movement of the metal parts and Ratchet had to
physically shift and push a few of them to align the body correctly.
When he was done he found his initial guess that the mech had to be
about nineteen feet confirmed. Even if he added a foot with armor, he
wasn’t exceeding his own height.
Dead optics, dark and without
color, gazed out of an expressionless face. Ratchet saw scars from
where the mech had desperately reduced his armor, reabsorbing as much
as he could in his terrible state, and been unable to pull it off as
smoothly as a healthy Cybertronian could.
There were no sigils
on the protoform, of course. No tattoos or carvings either. Those were
left to the final form. It was like looking at a freshly born protoform
that awaited a spark.
But this one was old. And it had a spark. An
injured, desperately weak spark that had sputtered too often for
Ratchet’s liking already.
He looked at Will who had climbed up the table. Lennox looked back,
raising an eyebrow.
“Still stable,” Ratchet said softly. “And still unknown.”
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
He
hadn’t called Sam, even if the technopath could have helped. But Sam
needed time away from this, reboot, so to speak. He had to rest,
recharge, whatever someone might call it, and wherever he and Bumblebee
had gone to, Ratchet would not have them brought in on this.
Only as a last, desperate method.
Contacting
the central core of a protoform was difficult and rightfully so. Should
an unconscious mech fall into enemy hands, or the wrong hands, all
kinds of data could be gleaned from it if not protected. So access was
hard. In this damaged state even more so. Ratchet took miniscule steps,
adjusting to changes immediately, pulling back or going forward – as
was required. Whenever he stabilized a specific area he immediately
secured it. It cost him time in his approach of the most important
areas, but it also gave the protoform a chance to initiate a healing
all by itself. Its energon levels were by now passable, though not
satisfactory, and maybe a system or two would jump-start.
Keeping
his own transmissions shielded, Ratchet worked slowly past a weak,
fragmented shield, shaking his head at the dismal state. If this was a
Decepticon, knowing an Autobot was working on him might trigger the
wrong reaction. If it was an Autobot, maybe likewise, depending on his
sanity. Ratchet had had patients attack him because they were locked in
nightmares.
A soft crackle announced another shield giving way
and he immediately set up the stabilizer for that area. He was closing
in on the all-important last corner of the core unit.
This
morning he had been joined by Jazz since Will had taken some time off
on his own. Ratchet had no idea where he was, but Ironhide was still at
the base, so the weapons specialist trusted his partner wherever he was.
And
then there was a connection. Like a flame coming on unexpectedly the
data flowed toward him and Ratchet caught the stream, reading the codes.
Known codes.
His optics flared.
Translation and encryption software sprang to life, easily making sense
of the gibberish.
Ratchet stepped back from the protoform, optics bright with surprise.
“Impossible!”
Jazz joined the larger mech. “What?”
“I reached his primary core unit.”
“And?” the first lieutenant probed.
“It’s an Autobot, Jazz. A specific Autobot, designation Prowl.”
Jazz’s optics flared. “Prowl? Prowl survived?!”
“Apparently.”
Ratchet
pushed the smaller mech aside and quick hands set to work, connecting
data cables and adjusting energon feeds. Jazz hovered close by, not
interfering. He had immediately opened an internal comm line to Optimus
and their leader’s exclamation of surprise echoed his own.
There was no great surprise in his arrival not much later, his massive
frame radiating tension.
“Are you sure, Ratchet?” he demanded.
“Yes,”
was the terse reply. “The ID codes are clear. It’s Prowl and before you
ask, he’s highly unstable and I won’t bring him out of the deep stasis
lock for any reason!”
Prime wasn’t rattled by the sharp tone of voice. “I wouldn’t ask you
to, Ratchet.”
“Good.”
Ratchet
ignored the two Autobots now watching his work as he continued to
carefully insert probes and stabilize the spark. Now that they knew who
it was, the difficult part began: making sure that the moment Ratchet
chose to reboot Prowl’s consciousness his spark wouldn’t collapse under
the pressure.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
The news spread through the base, as well as to the Autobots and
their allies currently off-base. The Constructicons took hardly any
notice. Well, all but Scrapper and Scavenger. Scrapper as the team
leader had to know about developments concerning their allies, and
Scavenger as the main liaison between the Constructicons and the
Autobots. Hook couldn’t be bothered less, unless it concerned
structural concerns, architectural problems or someone pulling the plug
on his projects. Mixmaster had simply shrugged and gone back to
experimenting with a new kind of alloy he and Long Haul were working
on, and Long Haul himself had simply commented that if the new-comer
was important for their work, they would be told.
Prowl wasn’t their concern. They had a different mission and it was
called Ark.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
For
Will Lennox, knowing the name meant nothing. From Ironhide’s reaction
though, from all their reactions, it was someone important.
“Who is Prowl?” Lennox asked curiously.
“He
was Prime’s military strategist,” Ironhide answered readily. “One of
the innermost command circle. One of the officers closest to Prime,
like Jazz or Ratchet. Quiet, competent, loyal, and famous for his
almost endless patience. For all his military excellence he wasn’t one
to get along with other mechs when not handling those matters. Not much
of a social guy. He was such a stickler for rules and protocols, he
could blow every party.”
Will grinned. “Yeah, know the kind.”
Ironhide
shared the grin. “Prowl’s precision thinking and by-the-book planning
served as a valuable counterpoint to Jazz's more improvisational style,
and it was up to Optimus Prime to weigh their views and come to a
decision. Usually he found the middle and it worked. Jazz and Prowl
were a good team, like two sides of a medal, and where one complained
the other was too freestyle, the other complained about the stiff pain
in the diodes.” Ironhide turned more serious. “Prowl led the team
Sideswipe was on. As well as Sunstreaker. Sideswipe said they got
separated. We didn’t hope for Prowl’s survival until now.”
“So the others might be alive, too?”
Ironhide gave a rattling sigh. “Possible.”
“Sideswipe has that belief, I think.”
The mech nodded. “If Prowl made it to Earth, maybe Sunstreaker is out
there somewhere, too. Maybe he knows.”
Will looked grim. “Let’s hope.”
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Not
far away, in Malibu, Hot Rod was excited to hear about another of the
core officers finding his way here, though Tony cautioned his
enthusiasm.
“I know he isn’t out of the woods yet,” the R8 told his human friend
and protégé.
“So
keep a lid on it. You know how bad it’ll be if he doesn’t make it,”
Stark only said, then turned back to what he was currently working on.
Hot Rod knew that. He understood it. Still, the prospect of Prowl being
here, surviving, it was such great hope.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
A
lot further East, Arcee smiled to herself, but she wasn’t as hopeful as
the other mech. She had seen what had happened to Chromia, what war and
torture and nightmares could do to a spark and its mind. She carefully
locked away the hope and concentrated on the now.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Bumblebee
had received the encoded message and his reaction had been no different
from Hot Rod or Arcee. He was happy. He was hoping. Sam, who had been
doing nothing but sight-see, relax, and discover new ways of their bond
in the hours they were just amongst themselves, frowned.
“Maybe I could help?”
“No. You heard Ratchet. He’ll ask for you if he thinks your help is
required.”
“Stop treating me like some fragile child! I’m not!” the technopath
growled.
Bumblebee,
sitting on the deserted beach with his partner, watching the waves and
enjoying the calmness, the wide stretches of unpopulated landscape,
looked at the upset human.
“Sam, you know that’s not true. We
care about you, but we wouldn’t hold you back. Nor would Ratchet be too
proud to call if your abilities are Prowl’s only chance for survival.”
At
the huff from his human partner, he ran gentle finger tips over the
naked skin. It helped most of the times. Sam closed his eyes and leaned
into the caress.
Humans were tactile. Sam responded to
Bumblebee’s decidedly non-human touch as he would to another human’s.
And he responded very well to experimental touches the mech had learned
to apply.
“You want to head back,” Bumblebee stated after a moment of mutual
silence.
Sam nodded. “Not right away. Not today or tomorrow. But soon.”
“I understand.”
“Thanks.”
The
bond was alive with emotions and Bumblebee felt the warm presence that
was Sam strengthen. They would make the most out of the time here.
Reaffirm what they were, what they meant, what they could be. Being
with Bumblebee balanced the human, armed him against the contact with
other mech minds on a daily basis. This and Barricade’s training.
Sam
smiled a little to himself. Two very different minds, two very
different approaches to the technopath they guarded, and still both
were needed.
Not that he would ever tell Barricade. He liked life way too much for
that.
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One
who responded with more than hope, with more than giddy excitement,
with something akin to feverish belief, was Sideswipe. He had
immediately turned around and driven back to base. He knew he had
broken several speeding limits, but no one had caught him. No one ever
would. He arrived at the Nevada base three hours after receiving the
message, but he wasn’t allowed to see Prowl.
“Ratchet’s orders,” Ironhide told him firmly. “Prowl’s nowhere near
stable or active. You wait, like all of us.”
Sideswipe’s spark pulsed with need, with an ache that now and then
overwhelmed him with grief and loneliness.
Prowl had been his team leader, his commander. His and Sunstreaker’s.
Prowl might know about his twin.
“Sideswipe, leave,” the weapons specialist ordered.
And he did. Mind racing, he walked out of the base and sought a quiet
area. He stayed there, watching the comings and goings.
Prowl was on Earth. He had survived.
Hope burns eternal, he thought. His hope for Sunstreaker’s continued
presence, for reuniting with his twin.
Prowl was the key.
Prowl was the only one who could give him certainty.
Too bright optics fixed on the base entrance again, but instead of
going back inside, Sideswipe transformed and drove off.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Ironhide
frowned as he watched the silver car speed away. He hadn’t agreed with
Optimus that they should tell everyone. Just the inner command staff
and the human commanders. But especially not Sideswipe. He had a bad
feeling about this.
Sideswipe had a reckless edge in battle. His
tactics spoke of that. He would make rash decisions that might endanger
him, all in the name of possible victory. When everything was on the
line, for Sideswipe nothing was out of the question or impossible. It
was that trait that had the chief of security on edge. Very much on
edge.
Ironhide couldn’t even begin to fathom what it was like to
have a twin spark. He could understand a bond, but twins were
different. Twins were born at the same time, shared a connection that
was forever, couldn’t be severed, couldn’t be replaced. Twins were one
spark in two bodies. Bonds formed if a mech was lucky; twin connections
were there right away. Sunstreaker and Sideswipe had never known
different.
What Sideswipe felt, the loss and uncertainty, was
something Ironhide could understand to a degree. A small degree. He had
lost comrades and friends, but never half of his spark.
Rumbling
uneasily to himself he went back inside and immediately checked
security. When he found everything to his liking he returned to his
work, but Sideswipe was still on his mind.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Ratchet
had spent the whole night working on the filigree neural network
surrounding the core unit. It was like trying to weld almost invisible
wires together, ones that were actually tubes that contained precious
liquid, without injuring the surface, overheat them, or break them
because he cooled the repaired area down too quickly. He had to use
microscopic tools. A human might have been able to help, but he didn’t
want to risk any of them getting injured should the protoform mech
startle out of his stasis by chance.
“Need help?”
Ratchet looked down and met the serious, intense gaze of Will Lennox.
“I
know you kicked everyone else out, but I’m not exactly easy to injure,
Ratchet. And I know my way around a few tools. I could help.”
Ratchet
debated the pro and cons for a second, then lifted his new assistant
onto the table. Will’s eyes ran over the prone form. Ratchet had
already been able to open several areas of the ultra-dense material and
was working on the damage he found there.
“What do you need me to do?”
So
the medic explained. Lennox listened, then picked up human-sized tools
and started on cleaning up the areas pointed out to him.
Hours passed.
People came and went.
Someone
brought food for Will, who ate almost absent-mindedly as he watched
Ratchet close another panel. The runes were docile, barely reacting to
touching the alien metal, which was strange. Usually they would reflect
the name of the one he touched. It had happened when Ratchet had picked
him up. The Cybertronian glyphs, his Cybertronian name, had briefly
been written over the back of Will’s left hand. This one… nothing.
“He’s
alive,” Ratchet told him as Lennox remarked on it. “But he’s terribly
weak and I won’t risk a reboot, let alone a contact through direct
spark connection, unless his body is stable enough to last through the
feedback this would create.”
Will understood and after emptying
the second mug of coffee he continued. Repairing the connective tissue,
as well as the fluid-metal interface took long. Some areas looked like
the tissue had died, but Ratchet reassured him that once the energon
levels were satisfactory, the spark would handle those matters.
“Let’s hope,” the ex-Army major muttered, shooting the blackened area a
doubtful look.
Flicking on the torch welder he got back to work.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Two days of non-stop work resulted in a more or less viable
protoform where the connective tissue was just now turning a healthier
color and the fluid-metal interfaces were filling with the fluids they
should contain. Still, pulses from the spark were below what Ratchet
had hoped for.
Will had worked through the two days without
rest, absorbed in his task and learning a lot more about protoforms
than he had been able to gather from files. His own body might look
like one of these basic forms, but it was different and he had never
been more aware of it than now.
Tired, muscles aching, but satisfied
with the result of his own work the hybrid went back to his own
quarters, thoughts of a shower and sleep most prominent on his mind.
He
wasn’t surprised to find Ironhide joining him halfway there. He didn’t
protest the fact that the hologram came out when Lennox returned from
his shower, pulling him into a comforting hug as he crawled into bed.
Ironhide liked this way of spending time with his partner and who was
Will to protest?
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Sideswipe looked at the protoform
stretched out on the treatment table, hooked up to who knew what. He
only recognized the energon feed that slowly and under intense
observation from two independent monitoring machines dripped the
life-sustaining substance into the damaged body. In this basic form
there was hardly an identifying mark on the mech, but something told
Sideswipe that it was Prowl. Not just the knowledge gleaned from
Ratchet’s careful probe, but also a recognition of his former team
leader.
Maybe it was simple hope and desperation, too.
Because Prowl knew where Sunstreaker was. Whether he was dead or alive,
captured or destroyed. And Sideswipe had to know.
He
had stayed away from the base for the past two days, had tried to stop
thinking about Sunstreaker, about Prowl, about the knowledge his former
team leader had concerning his twin.
It hadn’t worked.
His
spark sometimes experienced phantom echoes of his brother. It was as if
he was close, just around the next corner, and Sideswipe flashed to
happier times. Pulling pranks when they were younger, aging their
instructors by millennia within one Academy year. He smiled. Yeah, they
had been bad. They had been trouble.
Not that their
relationship had been as harmonious as their twinned sparks might
suggest. Sunstreaker was vain. Arrogant even. He didn’t respect others
who couldn’t keep up with him. When teamed up, he would complain about
the others’ shortcomings until things got out of hand.
But he was a
ruthless, skilled fighter, and he had had his kills throughout the war.
Both of them had and they had looked out for each other. It was an
unspoken rule that the twins would never be on separate teams.
Sideswipe missed him.
His
spark constricted painfully and he suppressed the hitch rising in his
systems. He didn’t care if they might not see each other for the next
century, but the knowledge… he had to know! If he knew, things would be
better. He believed in it.
Walking over to the table he followed
the different wires until he identified the connection to the core
unit. Ratchet was keeping matters slow; too slow. Sideswipe had to
know! He was no medic, but he understood basic first aid, and bringing
a shell-shocked spark back, force it to reboot, had been part of that
training.
Familiarizing himself with the program he entered a
command and a read-out appeared. He studied it, then increased the
energon feed and simultaneously entered the command for the core to
reboot.
Something slammed into him and he cried out in pain and
surprise. He was caught by strong hands and something more massive than
him smacked him hard against the wall. Hard enough to rattle his
systems. A hand clamped around his neck and banged his head against the
unyielding surface.
“What the slag are you doing?!”
Ratchet.
Sideswipe gave a little wheeze. “I need to know!” he finally managed.
“Need to know what?” the medic demanded sharply, in his face, optics
ablaze with fury.
“Sunstreaker. Prowl knows. He has to!”
“Prowl is currently more dead than alive and what you almost did would
have killed him before he even got a word out!”
“No… I need to… know!”
Ratchet
shook his head, disgust in his optics. “The state your former commander
is in, he might just have lost all what made him Prowl, do you
understand? I don’t know if he even knows who he is!”
Ratchet
released him and Sideswipe slid to the floor, touching his bruised
neck. Images of his twin raced through his mind and he had this need,
this incredible need to finally know. It was hard enough to be alone
when there had always been someone with him, someone who was as much
like him as he wasn’t. Sunstreaker had been… was!... his twin. He
needed to know. His spark ached with the uncertainty.
Ratchet ignored him as he checked the monitor and entered several
commands.
“Ratchet?”
Sideswipe
was surprised he hadn’t noticed Ironhide, who had apparently been there
all the time. The massive guns were aimed at him and the glow in their
depths told of how close the silver mech had come to being obliterated.
“Get him out of here, Ironhide!” Ratchet only snapped.
“Sure thing.”
Sideswipe was unceremoniously grabbed and hauled to his feet, then
pushed and dragged roughly out of the med bay unit.
“Please,” he whispered. “I need to know.”
“What
you need to know is that you nearly killed your commander because
you’re an idiot!” Ironhide snarled. “If it was up to me, you’d be
off-lined immediately. But Prime wants to see you first.”
Sideswipe felt his systems shiver.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
By
the time he arrived in the Prime’s office Sideswipe’s mind had cleared
enough that he realized in horror what he had almost done. Guilt
flooded him; guilt, shame, embarrassment, and fear. The last months had
worked out so well. He had spent time travelling with Maxx Racing,
getting to know humans in a completely different way. These were men
and women not associated with the Autobot base or the military. It was
a new experience. He had developed a friendly relationship with many,
including his ‘driver’, Sergeant Reese, and his return had somehow felt
like he was leaving behind people he would have wanted to spend more
time with.
Now that Maxx Racing was back in the US to test for
the up-coming season of Formula One racing such close observation
wasn’t needed. Reese was still there, their permanent liaison, but
Arcee had joined the team for a while.
With Ironhide close
behind him, Sideswipe entered the office space, squaring his shoulders
to face his punishment. Prime’s face was a mask, only his ancient
optics speaking of the emotions inside. The intensity of that gaze
robbed Sideswipe of all he wanted to tell the Autobot leader. It had
him lower his gaze, admit defeat.
“Why?” Optimus only asked without preamble.
“Prowl was with Sunstreaker. He might know where he is,” Sideswipe
heard himself say.
“You don’t know if he was there. You don’t know what he saw, where his
last battle was fought.”
“But if he was with my brother…”
“Then
he will tell us when he is stable enough. Prowl is in such a fragile
state, anything, the slightest tremor, could take his spark,” Optimus
said, voice level. “Ratchet told everyone, including you. I knew it was
a risk to give you this information, but I was ready to take it –
against advice.”
Ironhide rumbled behind him. Sideswipe wanted
to sink into the ground. He had acted as the weapons specialist had
predicted. As probably everyone had said. Optimus had believed in him;
the Prime had trusted him!
“I’m sorry, Prime,” he whispered.
“Sorry doesn’t cut it,” Ironhide growled. “If Prowl dies because of
your tampering…”
“I didn’t get to initiate the reboot!” the silver mech cried.
“Thanks to Ratchet!” the more massive Autobot snapped.
Sideswipe evaded the knowing optics once more.
“You leave me no choice, Sideswipe,” Optimus said.
“Sir…?”
“Ironhide wants you deactivated for at least six months.”
“Prime…” he begged, aghast at the punishment. Six months!
“I
still believe that there is some part of you that understands what you
did, that regrets it,” Prime went on, fixing him with a hard look. “A
part that has control enough to follow my next order.”
He froze.
“Leave
the base. Leave the state, Sideswipe. I don’t want you within a radius
of a thousand miles of the Nevada base at all until we recall you.”
Sideswipe felt his spark lurch. “Sir?”
“You
heard me. If you choose to, rejoin Maxx Racing. Arcee will change
places with you. Stay with them until you have my explicit approval to
come here once more.”
Sideswipe trembled. “Yes, Prime.”
Optimus
nodded, still unreadable. Sideswipe had never been in such a powerful
presence. He had never seen Prime as he was now. This was their leader
and he could feel it in every circuit.
Leaving the office he was
aware of Ironhide following him, but he ignored the heavily armed mech.
It felt as if everyone was looking at him, knew what he had done, what
he had almost done, and Sideswipe had never been more glad to transform
and just drive.
So he drove.
His spark ached and whimpered as he put miles upon miles between him
and the only other mech who might know about Sunstreaker.
The mech he had almost killed.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Security
around med bay had been increased and only a handful of mechs and
humans were allowed to enter. Ratchet had spent an hour checking and
rechecking Prowl’s read-outs. Nothing had happened. He was still stable
and so he increased the energon flow of the feed.
A week after the incident he finally allowed the innermost systems to
reattach to the spark, to be flooded by energon.
Two days after that the peripheral systems were coming slowly online,
at barely two percent of the original computing speed.
At
the end of that week the core program was running at sixty-five percent
and stabilizing. Ratchet started to send careful signals into the
spark, reassuring it that Prowl was among friends. Sam had come back,
but Ratchet didn’t need him yet. He had politely turned down all offers
of help.
A month after Sideswipe had left the base
Prowl’s spark was at ninety percent, his systems were rebooting one
after another, and by the end of the day his optics started to come
online. Fingers twitched and curled slightly, then the voice modulator
gurgled softly.
Ratchet leaned over the brightening optics, smiling a little as he sent
his personal ID over and over.
“Hello, Prowl. Welcome back.”
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Med bay had been declared a high security zone. Only Optimus Prime,
Jazz and Ironhide had been granted access by Ratchet and the medic was
very strict not to stress the newly awakened Prowl in any way. The mech
was confused, which had only been expected. His processor was still not
working at full capacity and he had to shut down and recharge after
short intervals of on-line time.
Optimus regarded his former
officer with both relief and worry. Ratchet had been very clear that
despite the fact that the spark was growing stronger and the protoform
wasn’t in imminent danger of a crash, Prowl was far from out of the
woods just yet. He was weak, he needed extensive repair and energon
feeds, and even then it wasn’t known how much of him had truly
survived. The few moments of lucidity had been hardly enough.
Direct uplinks were forbidden. Not even Ratchet, who was a medic and
best-suited for this kind of data transfer, risked it.
“If we jostle his systems too much everything was for nothing,” he told
the three most senior mechs.
Prime nodded his understanding.
“I
don’t want him in contact with anyone outside the three of us. No
humans will have access to this area for now. We don’t know how
traumatized his mind is, what his reactions to alien contact might be.”
“I’ve
already talked with Captain Epps and he has pulled back everyone from
the vicinity of med bay,” Optimus Prime said calmly. “Communication
will be by remote voice, not by image.”
“I incapacitated the
protoform’s transscan and automatic environmental analysis unit. Prowl
will stay as he is for now, he has no access to our equipment and
everything is locked down and encoded.”
Jazz walked over to the
silent form, looking pained. He didn’t say a word, but his expression
was clear and Ratchet tried to ignore the stab it gave him. The
situation, while similar, wasn’t the same. Jazz had been dead; revived
by the shard. Prowl had been in deep stasis and there was no shard any
more. Not that it would have helped anyway.
“I’ll keep you updated,” he said, breaking the silence.
It was also the order to leave.
Jazz
lingered a little longer. Ratchet tried to ignore the smaller mech and
managed to do so passably, but when the first lieutenant had finally
left, he gave a humming sigh. Even if it had been over a decade of this
planet’s time, Jazz was still suffering from the loss, from what his
brief death had taken from him. No one and nothing could bring it back
and no one and nothing could ease the pain that the dark holes had left.
Ratchet,
though he would never tell anyone, was secretly glad that Jazz’s
spark-bonded was with him. Barricade, for all his harshness and dark
exterior, was what Jazz needed, who he turned to.
Hopefully he would do so now, too.
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Jazz
hadn’t sought out his bonded; Barricade had taken matters into his own
hands. While he kept away from the Autobot base as much as he could get
away with – and with the new Autobot found hovering near death he had
even better reason not to stay too long – he was never far. Feeling the
upset from his partner, the spark he knew as well as his own quivering
at odd intervals, he had gone hunting for the wayward lieutenant. Jazz
had left the base and travelled for hours, coming to rest near the
Nevada-Utah state line. There was nothing here, nothing at all, and the
highways were far off in the distance.
Barricade navigated the
rocky ground, muttering about stupid Autobots, but his scanners were
fully on the motionless mech he was approaching. He transformed when he
was close enough.
Jazz didn’t really react.
The former
Decepticon didn’t have to cast out his signal; Jazz knew who had come.
Their sparks were almost pinging off each other.
Where years ago
Barricade might have shocked his partner out of his dark thoughts with
a mock-attack, taunts and maybe a few choice words, he now studied the
lone silver form. Too much had changed between them to go back to the
seemingly unemotional approach of comforting the other spark. Too much
had evolved. He hated the closeness, but he wanted it. He hated the
emotions Jazz had freed, but he needed them. He hated being this
vulnerable, but Jazz was everything. Jazz was part of him. He was part
of Jazz. Autobot, Decepticon, it meant nothing.
Instead of a
battle approach he came to a stop behind the seated mech and placed
dangerously clawed hands onto the shoulder armor.
Jazz’s response was a shiver, giving Barricade a good impression of the
sensitivity level of his partner’s microfine sensor net.
“Foolish Autobot,” Barricade whispered.
Jazz leaned back, shivering more. “I know. I know. Sorry.”
“Now you’re being pathetic.”
The other smirked briefly. “Not working?”
“No.”
“Damn.” Still, the fire was missing. “Am I not entitled to some morose,
dark brooding?”
Barricade chuckled darkly. “Do you want an answer?”
Jazz
shook his head and leaned more fully into the contact. His head rested
against Barricade’s chest plate, the optics on the nothingness around
them.
“I hope Prowl survives intact. I really do.”
Echoes
from the scarred wounds inside Jazz, the deep holes in his memory,
touched Barricade’s receptive mind. Usually Jazz only stumbled upon
them when he tried to recall an event that was gone, beyond recovery,
only a shadow left behind. A memory shadow.
“The war left none of us intact,” the shock-trooper said darkly.
Barricade
felt Jazz’s spark waver. Aside from him, no one would ever see his
partner this vulnerable, this open, this… intimately. They had always
trusted each other with their very sparks, from the beginning, and
Barricade knew what a treasure he had been given. Prime might know what
Jazz was going through, had gone through, but not on the same level.
Ratchet, as a medic, knew the bare facts. Sam… yes, he might come
close. His connection to Jazz was through technopathy, not a bond.
He
slid one hand to rest docile claws over the well-armored spark chamber.
Every pulse from underneath the armor was felt within his own spark.
“This is us,” he rumbled. “Only this. Forget everything else.”
Jazz
nodded. “Sometimes things get kicked lose. Dark things. And then I feel
the holes more than before. I want to remember and there’s nothing at
all. Just… blanks.”
Barricade pushed forward, forcing the other
spark to acknowledge him. Jazz gave a little whine of need and the
shock-trooper enveloped him in a fierce embrace. They slipped into
Sharing, quick and hard and needed. Jazz’s optics flared with that
need, with the overpowering pain of loss, and Barricade simply held on
to him, not letting go.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Night found the two mechs still
in the same place, their armors cooling off, their sparks still
entwined. Barricade had half a scanner on their surroundings, but aside
from the occasional desert mammal, reptile or insect, nothing disturbed
them.
Energy coursed through him, tearing him apart. He was
flung through an endless tunnel, leaving a part of him behind; leaving
his body, his only connection with life. He screamed, trying to fight,
but he couldn't. He was thrown into a pool of blackness, blue lightning
exploding around him.
Barricade stored that flashback away,
locked it, held on to his bonded with a fierce protectiveness. Jazz
wasn’t weak, but right now he needed, and Barricade gave.
Soon
the Autobot would return to the base, back to his old self, everything
locked behind his usual façade. As always. Jazz’s armor hummed,
creating teasing friction between them, and while Barricade wasn’t as
sensitive, he understood playful.
A first step.
He grinned darkly at the blue optics regarding him. Jazz only smiled
back.
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Prowl
didn’t know what to think of his surroundings. Prison cell or
quarantine, where was the difference? Ratchet was his main contact and
so far he had only been allowed to talk to Optimus Prime in person. Of
course, missing a good chunk of memory made him dangerous. He realized
that much. What if he was a Decepticon plant? What if his millennia in
the ice served only that plan?
Then again, how could any Decepticon foresee these events?
His
circuits ached with the clashing conclusions, with theories that didn’t
fit, with the phantom pain of injuries sustained long ago. Ratchet
didn’t allow him to transscan and he was on a constant energon feed. No
one had told him much about the surroundings, aside from the fact that
he wasn’t on Cybertron.
Cybertron was dead.
He
shivered. Memories teased with darkness lit up by fire, ash falling out
of the burning sky, covering him in debris. Lightning raced across the
darkness that had once been a thriving planet..
Prowl didn’t
know how he had escaped. He couldn’t remember the battle that had
nearly killed him. He couldn’t recall the conscious effort to turn into
his most basic form and launch himself off his dying home. The
fragments teased him, but Ratchet had told him that too much of his
memory core had suffered permanent damage. The medic didn’t touch those
circuits, afraid to wipe out the rest. He was relying on Prowl’s
systems to heal themselves.
The former military strategist had never felt so lost and alone, unable
to remember, unable to make the connections.
The door to his room opened and his optics fell on the silver mech
accompanying Ratchet.
“Jazz!” he exclaimed, the name supplied to him by his flaky circuits.
Information
flooded his mind and he was relieved to have that knowledge. Seeing
faces, hearing names, kicked lose small avalanches. He absorbed them
with vigor and need.
“Knew you’d remember me,” the Autobot second-in-command quipped.
“Squabbled enough to leave a permanent memory, huh?”
Prowl
remembered. Yes, he remembered Jazz, their fights over mission plans
and strategies, and those memories had him smile. He remembered names
and places, battles, wins and losses. He remembered the time before the
war, his life, almost everything. It was slow and sometimes painful.
“I suppose. You are hard to forget, Jazz.”
The grin was insolent. “Yeah, I’ve been told.”
Something else wanted to rise, but it wasn’t strong enough yet. A
memory that was important, that was connected to Jazz.
“Ratchet
decided I might be the best choice to bring you up to speed on some
matters, introduce you to what happened, where we are now, what’s going
on…” Jazz went on. “He’s against downloading the files into your core
because of the damage and the chance of instability.”
Prowl nodded. That sounded logical.
“You have no idea when you left Cybertron?” the specialist asked.
“No,” he answered truthfully.
“Tyger Pax mean anything? Megatron going for the Allspark? Prime
ejecting it into space? Your team going up against Soundwave?”
“Tyger Pax…” He knew the name. He remembered battles. He remembered
faces. “Parts,” he finally said.
It
had been the all-decisive battle. It had been set up by Prime to remove
the Allspark from Megatron’s grasp. Still, there were holes.
“Okay. I might repeat a lot that you already know, but that might give
it all a better structure. So…”
And Jazz began. From the beginning of the end.
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Sam hadn’t been allowed to see the reawakened protoform, but he had
accustomed himself to the pulses of the new mind. He felt Prowl’s
confusion most prominently, even without direct contact. It was such a
strong signal, the technopath couldn’t help but overhear it.
“Don’t
touch him,” Ratchet had advised. “I know you know your way around a
Cybertronian mind and spark, but Prowl is still not stable enough to be
confronted by a technopath.”
Sam had understood and agreed.
Ratchet hadn’t been happy to see him, would have preferred him to stay
away, but there was nothing he could do – aside from physically trying
to remove their resident technopath.
So he simply sat in a quiet corner of the base, eyes closed,
concentrating on the new mind alone, observing.
Firmly
anchored in Bumblebee he watched the military strategist in a way no
one else could. He honored his vow not to touch. He had become expert
enough to just look without the observed mech noticing his presence. It
limited his diagnostic abilities, but it helped in simply getting to
know someone.
“Tell me about Prowl,” he asked of his bonded partner when they were
within the privacy of Sam’s home.
And Bumblebee did, filling more and more blanks.
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Halfway
across the continent, Sideswipe crawled into a garage and shut down his
lights. Everything fell into darkness until steps announced the arrival
of the owner of the garage. Or at least someone who lived here.
Lights were switched on.
Sergeant Tom Reese looked at the silver sports car. “Hey, Sides.”
“Hello, Tom,” was the polite reply.
“Got the call in case you showed up.”
He was silent.
“Wanna talk?”
“No.”
“Just as well.”
The
soldier opened the fridge that was part and parcel of the garage. The
garage belonged to Maxx Racing, was spacious and normally housed at
least two race cars, as well as several test versions, engines and
whatnot. Right now it was silent, the darkness spreading beyond the
circle of light undisturbed.
Reese switched on a small TV,
singled out a station and kicked up his legs as he sipped at his soda.
Sideswipe found his presence a welcome addition to his loneliness, and
he lost himself in the rather inane program.
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Prowl
had a lot to digest. Jazz hadn’t told him everything yet, just the
basics. He knew he was on Earth, that the planet was populated with an
organic species. Only a few of them knew about the Cybertronians. They
were hiding. He knew of the base, of Project, of the former Sector
Seven. He knew of the destruction of the Allspark and the one remaining
shard, though Jazz had smoothly changed subject after mentioning it.
Prowl realized there was more. He knew of the mechs on Earth, of the
new-arrivals, even though there had been another void. Nothing Jazz had
clearly said, only the feeling of something being left out.
But
it was currently enough to digest. His mind was reeling with all that
knowledge and Prime had been right to restrict his access to the base.
He had been ‘upgraded’ from his one room quarantine to a specific area
of the base, most of which included the medical area. Prowl had yet to
run into any humans. The first contact would probably be closely
monitored, though he had never had any kind of xenophobic moments in
the past. And he had met other life forms.
Jazz came back for a second round of information, one that revealed
Sideswipe’s presence among the small team of Autobots.
“Can I talk to him?” Prowl asked hopefully.
“Nope. Prime told him to stay away until he calls him back.”
“Why?” the strategist wanted to know, perplexed.
“He almost killed you.”
Blue optics flared. “What?”
Jazz
sighed. “Long story. Short version is: Sides thinks you know where
Sunstreaker might have ended up. Whether he’s dead or alive, trapped,
hiding or captured by the enemy. He tried to revive your core unit to
get to the information. Ratchet nearly blew a hole in his chest when he
walked in on it. You were way too unstable to go through a reboot that
massive. Prime told him to either stay away unless called back or face
deactivation for at least six months. Sideswipe chose the exile.”
Prowl
was stunned, trying not to show it. His mind raced, trying to find any
information on Sunstreaker, but all he remembered was the mech’s face,
his alt mode, his antics with Sideswipe, and fighting side by side.
Prowl had no idea at all if he had been with the twin when his own
shell had been so badly damaged or not.
“Prowler?”
Jazz’s
soft intonation had him look up. Again something jittered through his
memory. Jazz… It had to do with Jazz and something he had discovered.
It still evaded him,
“I don’t know,” he finally said, voice level.
The silver mech nodded as if he had expected just that.
As much as it hurts, Prowl added to himself.
“Now,
to add some more to what you already know -- and bear with me, from
here on it gets kinda… intense – there are some specific people you
need to know about.”
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Jazz needed a moment to calm
his jittery nerves and fight back the looming terror when he finally
left Prowl to digest what he had told him. Throughout the narration he
hadn’t given the fact of lost memories much thought. Now was all the
more time to think about it.
Prowl had memory holes. Everything just after leaving for Tyger Pax,
with the exception of a few snippets, was gone. Erased.
Like his own memory, though he was actually worse off.
Steeling
himself, he walked down the corridor. Barricade wasn’t here and while
he wanted to be with his bonded, he had duties to fulfill. The moment
in the desert would have to be enough and Jazz chided himself for being
so unstable in that matter.
He had accepted his losses.
He had counted his gains.
He was alive and he was with his spark-bonded. Nothing else should
matter. Nothing at all.
Prowl’s fate had been a different one. Theirs was a different problem.
Releasing
air from vents he gave a hiss of annoyance, then shoved all the pain
and darkness away. He was Jazz, the Prime’s second in command, not some
scrap-bot or drone. He would handle this, just as he always did.
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“He’s taking it well,” Ironhide rumbled two days later.
Jazz
shrugged. “It’s Prowl. No one knows what really goes on inside that
crazy head of his. But yeah, he’s taking it well. It’s a slow process
and he probably doesn’t understand most of it yet, has to meet Will and
Sam in person, but we’re getting there.”
“Your help is invaluable,” Prime agreed.
Optimus
himself had spent time talking to his former military strategist and
friend. Prowl had many questions, some only coming up much later, and
Prime tried to answer them as best as he could.
Prowl still
didn’t remember anything after a certain point. He recalled his team,
he recalled the order to stop a Decepticon attack, secure the area, and
then… nothing.
“We can’t restore his last memories,” Ratchet had told his leader.
“It’s impossible. Everything was destroyed. He lost that.”
“Are you certain?”
“As certain as I can be.”
Prime made a soft noise that expressed his sorrow at the news.
“But he’s still Prowl,” Jazz insisted. “He’s still who he was, with a
few holes. He’s alive and he’s here!”
“Yes, that he is, Jazz,” Optimus agreed. “That he is.”
He
looked into the intense optics of his normally so laid-back and cool
second. Jazz felt with their old friend and Prime knew why. If there
was one among them who could fathom what it meant to have such blank
spots, whole events gone, it was Jazz.
They had to take it slow. Ratchet would ensure that nothing overwhelmed
the battered Autobot and everything else had to be seen.
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Prowl
stood at the door leading to the main hangar of the Autobot base,
watching the movement of humans and mechs, hiding in the shadows to be
a silent observer. He was still unable to understand a lot of what had
changed, but he accepted it. Maybe because his logic circuits were
still in so much need of healing. Maybe because his memories were a
leaky sieve. Maybe because the damage done to him had turned the old
Prowl into someone else. He still remembered parts of his past, of what
it was like to be him. He still felt the same. Just his reactions were…
slower.
Jazz joined him, smiling a little at the protoform Autobot. “Lost any
synapses yet?” he teased.
“Plenty,” was the wry reply.
“Figures. I always knew one could blow your oh-so logical mind with a
bit of fancy stuff that doesn’t follow protocol.”
Prowl glowered at the smaller mech. “You were the fancy stuff that got
on my nerves and blew my synapses apart.”
Jazz’s
grin was unrepentant, probably because he had been gunning for that
response. Prowl returned to watching the humans. He had asked Optimus
for access to a computer to learn about this world and Ratchet had
supervised his first introduction to the humans’ internet, keeping
watchful optics on him. Prowl didn’t dare to directly download files,
but he had developed a quick learning method.
“You trust them?” he finally asked.
“Yes,” Jazz immediately answered. “They’re our allies.”
“Like the Constructicons?”
Prowl
felt pronouncedly unwell with former Decepticons, even pawns, working
for them. But he had his reactions under control. Things had changed;
the situation was a different one. This was an alliance to survive and
to protect.
“Yep.”
Another frown. Who was he to judge
operations that had been going on for more than ten planetary years?
Still, his processor was logical enough in that regard: Decepticons
were not to be trusted!
Another memory teased. The old one of
before. The one connected to Jazz. He looked at the first lieutenant,
unable to catch the fleeting thought.
“Prowl? You okay, man?”
“Yes, I’m perfectly fine.”
He
turned and walked away, disturbed by what he couldn’t understand, by
what nagged on him and wasn’t ready to be revealed. Maybe it was
another faulty circuit, one that would forever taunt him with fragments
that made no sense. He had to talk to Ratchet about it.
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The
medic was hiding something, of that Prowl was now sure. He had told the
other mech of his trouble remembering something vitally important – to
himself, maybe even for the Autobots – when it came to his old friend
and verbal sparring partner.
“You know what it is,” Prowl now simply said.
Ratchet shifted, releasing a whirr of air in a sigh. “Yes.”
“And you won’t tell me.” Another statement.
“I think Jazz should be the one to give you that particular
information.”
Prowl
frowned. It sounded logical, but if the specialist hadn’t told him
before, why should he tell him now? Prowl knew about the two hybrid
humans, one more changed from his original human programming than the
other. He knew about the Constructicons, about Tony Stark, about the Ghosts
and the Ark. What else was there to know?
“I want to talk to Jazz first,” Ratchet interrupted his thoughts.
Prowl nodded. He had to accept this, even if it made the elusive memory
even more strange and seemingly dangerous.
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Jazz had just finished going over the incoming messages – a folder
chock-full of boring bureaucratic stuff – when Ratchet contacted him
through the internal comm lines. The Solstice stiffened as he heard
about Prowl’s suspicion, then hung his head a little.
“I’ll talk to him,” he finally told the other Autobot.
“You know what this means, Jazz.”
“Yeah.” Prowl must have suspected something back throughout the war. He
must have known. Maybe he had seen….
Jazz
shut off the computer. If Prowl had suspected something why had he
never reported to Prime or taken matters into his own hands? If he had
believed that Jazz was collaborating with a Decepticon… or had he known
it was a spark-bond? Jazz felt his spark stutter at that. No one had.
He had told Prime; their leader hadn’t discovered the truth either. He
had told him because he trusted him. Prowl could have off-lined Jazz
easily with a well-placed shot and argued he had terminated a traitor;
an enemy agent.
He hadn’t.
Leaving his work area Jazz
wished for the first time since Prowl’s reactivation that Barricade was
at the base, but his bonded had wisely decided to not provoke the
confused protoform too much. There was time for that later, he had told
Jazz.
Jazz smiled a little. Yeah, he could see those two getting along just
fine… not!
His
feet took him to the medical area where Ratchet insisted Prowl spend
his recharge time. Prowl was there; he knew from Ratchet.
“Hey, brainiac,” he called a greeting at the protoform Autobot.
Ratchet
looked up from a screen when Jazz entered, nodded once, then walked
out. Prowl’s optics fell on him, curious, but also guarded, and he
stiffened a little.
“Jazz.”
“Ratchet told me you’re remembering something. At least you want to and
it’s not working. Connected to me.”
Prowl tensed, but he nodded.
“What do you recall?” Jazz probed.
“Something important. It’s very important and connected to you.”
“Something you wanted to tell Prime?”
Prowl seemed to be thinking, then shook his head. “No.”
Jazz was silent for a moment, then pushed himself onto a second
examination table, legs dangling, facing the strategist.
“You
have to know that Prime knew. All the time. What I tell you, everyone
here knows. It’s an open secret. I just don’t want you to start
blasting at one ally who means more to me than all of you together.”
Prowl’s
optics flared and he sat up straight. “Decepticon…” he stuttered as if
a memory had just dropped like a bomb in his mind.
Jazz nodded sadly. “My spark-bonded.”
Now the stunned expression was truly no longer hidden. Prowl made a
noise like a wheeze and his fingers clenched.
“Bonded?”
“Yes.”
“When?!” he demanded.
“Before
the war broke out. I can’t tell you what it felt like, what it was, but
I couldn’t leave him alone. I had to meet him. All I ever had was see
him. I knew who he was, knew he was dangerous, the elite, a
shock-trooper.”
Prowl elicited another wheeze.
“We didn’t
know why it was us. We didn’t know what made it happen. It was…
special, Prowl.” Jazz felt a smile tug at his lips. “Very special. I
felt his spark… perfectly.”
“Bonded,” the other mech stammered.
“Yes. Spark-bonded. My perfect resonance. Total compatibility. There
was no denying it.”
“But he’s a Decepticon!”
“It never mattered, Prowl. Never.”
The
first time they Shared deeply was in a private place chosen by
Barricade. Knowing they shared one spark had been one thing, but this
impulse to open up, to let another into that most private of places,
was overwhelming. It was like a revelation. Jazz had never felt this
free, so much like flying, as if nothing he had ever worried about
really existed. Compared to the beauty of this connection, everything
else faded away. There were no lies within the bond, no subterfuge, no
hiding and no deception. He looked at the real Barricade, at the spark
that was so much like his own it was unbelievable.
There were
no walls at all. This was one’s pure self. All the darkness and all the
light. Beautiful, enticing, perfect to Jazz’s optics. And when he
touched the incredible spark, it resonated deeply.
There was an
absolute trust between them. Nothing could upset that. Not Jazz’s
happy-go-lucky outward appearance, not Barricade’s gruff,
unapproachable and dangerous air.
They knew each other.
He would never let this feeling go.
“Prime knew?”
“I
told him. Barricade would never betray me, sell me out, and Prime knew
it. I can’t sacrifice his life just like he can’t sacrifice mine. When
Megatron tore me apart…” The silver mech stopped for a second, then
ploughed on, “when he killed me, Barricade turned his back on the
Decepticons. His loyalty was to Megatron, but what Megatron had done
annihilated everything.”
“I remember Barricade,” Prowl murmured.
“Bet you do.”
“He killed our kind.”
“Like we killed his. Our brothers.”
Prowl
shook himself. It had been a civil war, senseless and brutal and ending
in the destruction of everything he had held dear. Those who had
followed Megatron were all guilty in his eyes. He could never forgive a
single one for his deeds, Autobot murderer or not. The shock-troopers
had been Megatron’s assassins. They had done what their master had
ordered. They had followed voluntarily.
One of them was Jazz’s bonded.
Dear Cybertron….
“He’s an ally?” he finally asked.
“Yes. Trusted. He trained Sam; he nearly got killed on occasions, even
through Sam. I trust him with my spark, Prowl.”
“Of course you do,” he snapped.
Blue optics flared and Jazz tensed.
“How did you find out, Prowl?” the first lieutenant asked neutrally.
Prowl smirked. “You’re good, but not that good.”
And you’re an asshole sometimes, but not much of one, Jazz
thought wryly. Getting your brain pureed didn’t change that.
“I
noticed some things. You kept disappearing at odd intervals and I
followed you once. It was after the war had started, when sides were
still not clear.”
Something inside Jazz grew cold.
“I didn’t see anyone, but I know you had met the enemy.”
“You didn’t tell Prime.”
“No. I wanted to have facts to back up the accusation.”
“Which you found,” he stated. “And still you didn’t tell.”
Prowl
shook his head, optics softening. “No. Because you were loyal. You were
Prime’s second. You were trusted. I know he did and I realized he knew
something, too. Whatever it was, I thought it was a mission.”
“In a way.”
Prowl
leaned forward. “Spark-bonds are very special, Jazz. We all know it. I
just didn’t know it was that; I could never fathom it being a Con.”
“It
doesn’t matter when it happens.” Jazz smirked a little. “For all you
know, your bonded could be Megatron and it wouldn’t change a thing.”
Prowl grimaced.
“So he’s here?”
“Around,” Jazz only said.
Prowl tried to calm down. “Not at the base?”
“No.”
“Why?”
“Because of you.”
Jazz felt a little bit of satisfaction at the confusion written over
the protoform face.
Prowl
nodded briskly. He had to get used to the concept of such a diverse and
strange alliance. Organic beings, hybrids, former Decepticons,
Decepticon pawns… Nothing was as what he remembered it being.
“Prowler?” Jazz prompted.
“I won’t shoot him,” he remarked dryly.
Jazz
chuckled. “I had hoped you wouldn’t. It’s such a mess to clean up
what’s left of you two when you’re done. And I’d take it personally.”
Prowl
regarded him impassively for a moment, aware of the warning in the
light words, then cracked a brief smile. Barricade was a shock-trooper
and he knew him. He had read the recon files on him. A fight between
them would be nasty. Very nasty. Shock-troopers were well-trained,
ruthless, deadly.
Like Jazz, part of him whispered.
“Most likely,” he only commented.
And with that, it was settled.
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Barricade
was a dark presence against the dusky sky. His red optics glowed
dangerously, looking foreboding and lethal. Jazz transformed and joined
his partner as he watched the night sky light up with a few stars. Ever
since his close call with death and his subsequent reformatting of the
old armor, Barricade had lost a few of the sharp edges, but he was
still essentially the mech he had been before. Claws and all.
Out
here, no one disturbed them. Far away from the base, yet close enough
to be of help when needed. Barricade liked coming here because it gave
them privacy, to be in their bipedal mode, to be who they were on a
planet that didn’t know about the Cybertronian life forms.
“He knows,” the former Decepticon rumbled, stating a fact and not
asking a question.
“Yes. He knew, Cade. Past knowledge. He found out throughout the war.”
Red optics flashed a little. There was a fire in there that promised
death should the knowledge hurt them “And he let you live?”
“He trusted Prime after he discovered that Prime knew, too.”
“Foolish Autobots,” was the disdainful snort.
Jazz
smiled a little. “Probably. For all Prowl knew I was a double agent. Or
a spy. A traitor. But we were old friends. And Prime trusted me.”
Barricade
narrowed his optics, clearly not agreeing with the reasoning. The
Decepticons would have killed someone like Jazz found sneaking around
with the enemy. It hadn’t been just once. They had tried to meet as
often as was safe, and every little encounter had entailed an
incredible risk.
A risk worth taking in both their minds.
“You gonna come back tonight?” Jazz asked casually.
“No.”
The word was grated out, final, not debatable.
Jazz
let their shoulder armors touch, seeking the comfort of it. Barricade,
as always, tolerated it. He would never say ‘enjoy’. Even if he did.
Jazz had adopted some very human traits, but so far there had been no
complaints from his bonded. Token grumbles, yes. But never an actual
denial.
The silence between them was comfortable, their sparks
entwining, exchanging what Barricade would also never confess to. A
soft hum emanated from the Saleen, echoed by the silver mech, and Jazz
dimmed his optics a little, concentrating only on the feel of his
bonded. Talking to Prowl, relaying how he and Barricade had met, had
kicked lose those memories, those feelings.
::Soft-sparked fool::
He pulled the other spark close, not to Share, just to hold. ::Yeah::
he whispered, unashamed.
Everything
about Prowl left him a bit off-balance, easily shot him back to moments
that weren’t all of his choosing, though recalling their first meetings
was pleasurable.
Barricade’s hum deepened, a reverberating resonance in their sparks and
frame.
::Idiot:: he repeated, voice so very soft and unlike his usual demeanor.
They
stayed like this for hours, aware of their surroundings, ready to
separate should anything endanger them, but close enough and entwined
enough to feel each other perfectly. Jazz had wrapped himself around
the other spark, noting each pulse, each tremor. His spark felt so
alive, so very wild, and Barricade was a perfect reflection of it.
Even if Prowl would never be able to handle this, Jazz didn’t care. He
didn’t care at all.
And Barricade never had.
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Allowed
to meet the humans for the first time, not just watch them, Prowl was
baffled by the complexity of the organics, their different characters,
their alieness. They adapted quickly to new circumstances, they were
tough, they were resilient and resourceful, and the ones he had talked
to saw alien mechanoid life forms as something very normal.
He
spent some time with the human commander of the Nevada base, Captain
Robert Epps. It was vital to be informed about such a highly placed
officer. He had Prime’s trust and he functioned as their access to the
military of the humans. Then there was the logistician, Lieutenant
Trent DeMarco. If Prowl had requests, he would try to meet them
supply-wise.
Sam Witwicky was next and looking into the brown
eyes, Prowl almost flinched back. There was a strength in that gaze, in
the whole body, speaking of a power he couldn’t fathom. Despite the
comparatively small size, this was someone to be reckoned with, someone
dangerous. Deceptive in appearance and able to bring him down to his
knees.
Still, there was also an incredible openness to the young
human. The smile was real. His words rang true. His touch was gentle.
Prowl felt the presence near his spark, but it didn’t poke or prod. It
didn’t do more than introduce itself, acquaint him with the strangeness
of Sam Witwicky.
“You can read my mind?”
Sam shrugged.
“Not like every thought. I can feel you. I can feel everyone if I want
to. My shields are good, but I can’t tune everyone out absolutely.
You’re new and it’s curiosity coupled with needing to get used to your…
emissions.”
Prowl frowned. He didn’t like that. It sounded like a great security
risk.
“Unless
you want me in your mind, I’m not going to pick up thoughts, Prowl,”
the human reassured him. “And it’s a migraine for me anyway. Backlash
is hell.”
He regarded the small organic, fascinated and somehow afraid in one.
Jazz
had taken him aside after that first round of introductions and told
him that Sam was very special in many ways, and one was his bond to
Bumblebee. Prowl had nearly off-lined from shock. It wasn’t the
interspecies relationship. He didn’t care who sought what from whom as
long as it was mutual. It was the fact that it was a bond! A bond!
“Sam’s mind is unique. His genetic make-up changed. You want the facts
in detail, ask Ratchet.”
He would. It was important.
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When he approached the technopath two days later it was because of
what he had read in the file. It was because of what Sam had done
already for the mechs under Prime’s command. It was because Sam himself
had said he could enter a mind.
Prowl had weighed his options,
had seen the positive and the negative, had balanced hope against fear,
and finally his need had won.
Sam’s eyes were wide with surprise, then he shook his head. “I doubt
it’ll work, Prowl. Really. Your memories were destroyed.”
“Maybe. But maybe I just lost access to those parts. No one can tell
because my memory core is a mess. You can help..”
“I’m not some kind of repair bot, Prowl. It’s not how this works.”
“Please, try.”
“Prowl…”
The
strategist knelt down, still looming over the smaller life form. “I do
this willingly. You have access to whatever you need. Please, Sam.”
The human sighed. “You have no idea what you’re asking for.”
“I do. I read the files.”
“And I know yours. Why would you want someone poking around your
innermost thoughts? It’s not like you.”
Prowl
smiled humorlessly. “Caution would bid me to get to know you first,
study you, but I read Ratchet’s files on you. The Prime trusts you. You
already proved yourself over and over to him.”
“But you don’t know me personally,” Sam countered.
“No.”
“Still you want to do this?”
A nod.
“Let
me think about it, okay? This isn’t just something I do on the fly,
Prowl. I need back-up, an anchor, and you need to be monitored.”
Prowl
agreed. He saw the logic in it and it spoke of the maturity of the
human that he didn’t just ask him to lay down and let’s get to it.
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As
not otherwise expected, there were protests from Ratchet, which he
countered calmly and logically. He was healed. He was stable. His spark
and mind were strong once more. Prime wasn’t very fond of the idea
either, but he listened to the logic and he consulted with the
technopath. Bumblebee said nothing, just stood behind his partner like
a steady support and it was exactly what he represented. Prowl
remembered the scout from Cybertron, his potential, his youth. The
potential had only grown and the youth had made way for a maturity
shaped by a civil war that had cost too much.
“It’s my free
choice, Prime,” he told the Autobot leader, optics firmly on the taller
Autobot’s face. “If Sam can help me recover at least some of my
memories, it might be worth it.”
Sam looked doubtful. As did
Ratchet. But there was little they could argue without actually trying
what Prowl wanted, and since it really was his choice there was nothing
they could add.
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Prowl had no idea what he expected.
Maybe pain. Maybe discomfort. Maybe the sensation of something alien
touching his mind and spark. What did touch him was gentle, warm,
reassuring, and so very… Cybertronian, he almost gasped.
::Training:: Sam told him, a feather-light presence in his systems.
::By Barricade?::
Prowl couldn’t fathom that a shock-trooper had taught this human, had
given him such gentleness.
::First
Barricade. Then Bumblebee. Then the others. And always back to
Barricade. I need his… coldness, his willingness to go where the others
won’t. I need him to strike at me, to be ruthless. It’s a training that
never stops. I always learn.::
Prowl nodded to himself, though
his physical form was currently suspended on one of Ratchet’s tables.
He caught small echoes of Sam, saw how different he was and still so
very much the same. He felt like… kin.
::I won’t harm you:: the technopath promised.
Prowl believed him.
Sam’s
presence increased, wrapped around him, and then part of him slipped
inside, into memory circuits, into his core, and Prowl gave an
exclamation of surprise. There was no pain, just the foreign access
that his systems didn’t fight. Ratchet had made sure that his defenses
were low. They didn’t want Sam to battle against those particular
programs.
Prowl felt himself slipping along the connection, as
if he was entering his own mind, looking around. And he was. He didn’t
see much, though.
Sam touched, probed and prodded, took closer
looks and went on. He said nothing, worked silently and efficiently,
and Prowl’s respect rose. Now and then the human twitched away, then
just steeled himself and delved into what had apparently hurt or
shocked him.
When he finally pulled back, the presence wavered and Prowl felt
concern rise.
::Sam?::
::I’m fine:: The mind-voice sounded composed, but Prowl noticed tremors
of stress anyway.
Sam
started to retreat, caressing his spark, calming what had to be slight
shockwaves from the continued invasion. Prowl hadn’t even noticed. It
was such an intimate, gentle gesture, he felt his systems relax
automatically. Sam’s touch was professional, but not distant or cold.
Then he was alone.
And he felt very much at peace.
On-lining
his optics he took a nano-second to check where he was according to
memory, then he sat up. Swiveling his head to look at Sam his concern
rose. He knew the human was prone to suffering from migraines if he
stressed his mind and apparently he had. Eyes closed, head on his
pulled-up knees, Sam was tended to by his partner. Bumblebee’s
crouching form almost hid all of the technopath. Suddenly the human
lifted his head and Prowl shivered under the intense gaze.
So small.
So powerful.
No one to be underestimated.
Trained by a shock-trooper, protected by one, anchored to one. Anchored
to his bonded partner.
::I’m sorry, Prowl:: the familiar voice said softly.
Sam
never moved his lips. Prowl shivered a little. This was and wasn’t like
his kind’s form of non-verbal communication, sending data streams,
talking directly. It was alien and still familiar. Sam had done it so
often before, his touch was kindred.
::There is nothing left. Not even a scrap::
And
he felt echoes of the black abyss the destroyed memories had left
behind. An abyss Sam had looked into and tried to find pieces of the
former memories in. Nothing. Nothing at all had remained.
“Thank you,” he said out loud, voice rough.
Ratchet made an impatient noise, giving the technopath a glare. Sam
smiled a little in return.
“There is nothing,” he told the others who hadn’t been able to listen
in. “It’s gone.”
“I told you so before,” the medic grumbled. “But you wouldn’t listen!”
“It was the confirmation of a first scan,” Sam corrected. “A second
opinion.”
Ratchet
didn’t look pleased, probably because of the backlash for Sam. Prowl
slid off the table, remarkably stable on his legs. At Ratchet’s
inquiring look he steadily met the blue optics. He didn’t say anything,
but Ratchet didn’t back down easily either.
“I’m fine,” he finally grated out.
“No, you’re not, but you’re also not confined to med bay,” was the
terse reply.
“Good.” With that Prowl left med bay, looking at no one, needing to be
alone.
Sam
gazed after the protoform, sad eyes taking in the tension in the
shoulders, the whole stride. He had done his best and seen only…
nothing. Prowl’s last memories were completely erased. There were no
back-ups, no chance to get even a fragment back.
“Sam?”
“It’s
okay, Ratchet,” he answered automatically, accepting a powerbar from
the medic. “It wasn’t as bad as other scans I did. Just intense.”
“Still, get rest. I knew why I didn’t want you here,” he continued,
sounding displeased.
Sam
gave the much larger mech a brief smile. He didn’t mind Bumblebee’s
hovering when they were finally alone for Sam to recover. Prowl had
been a very different mind to touch, different from everyone else he
had ever been close to. The Constructicons had been damaged minds, but
not as near death as Prowl. Prowl had a mind that looked like the
moon’s surface: littered with craters where something had struck or
been ripped out. There were deep chasms, dark holes and nothing that
could be done to repair it all. Sam had seen the last moments in
Prowl’s memory, a fight for survival. He had been alone, separated from
his team, but there was no memory of where Sunstreaker had gone off to.
The heavy damage had been painful to see. He had felt the
desperation to survive, how Prowl had launched himself into space,
losing consciousness, wrapping all he had around his very core to
protect only that.
Then nothing.
Sam leaned against his
partner, who hadn’t moved. Bumblebee cupped him close, an unusual
position for them. Physical closeness like this, so intense and so
human in its expression, was rare. Sam would lean against, caress, pat
or brush over Bumblebee’s armor, but he had only once or twice really
sought full physical contact.
“Couldn’t help him,” he murmured.
“What he suffered was more than you ever encountered. I didn’t believe
he would be able to recover anything, Sam.”
“Yeah.” Sam closed his eyes, face pressed against the cool metal. “I
knew. But part of me hoped.”
“We all hoped.”
He
couldn’t help everyone, and with the Constructicons there had been
similar fates. Long Haul had suffered hard drive failures and erased
memories, too. But in his case he didn’t really know it. Prowl knew
everything up to a point, then nothing. And within the nothing there
had been the information they had all sought: where was Sunstreaker?
Gentle
fingers ran over his spine. Sam was tired, his head ached, though the
migraine had been averted. Ratchet had told him to eat, which he had
done, but he felt reluctant to leave the room. He felt heavy, drained,
different than throughout other times he had been in so deep. Bumblebee
didn’t do anything else but anchor him with his touch and by opening
his mind. Sam felt the so achingly familiar spark and he lost himself
in the sensation of touching something healthy and whole. Bumblebee
carried his own baggage, had had his share of torture and pain, had
seen too many die, but to Sam the spark was everything. It was what
kept him in touch with himself, what put the world back into focus.
Bumblebee
dropped his last shields and Sam shivered, then let his mind fall into
the safety net. His eyes closed and he relaxed his muscles. Bumblebee
sent Ratchet their need for complete privacy and the medic acknowledged.
It was safe to let go.
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Prowl had spent some time alone. He needed it to think, to come to
terms with the final truth about his memories: they were gone. At least
after a specific point. No one and nothing could bring them back.
Had
he erased them himself? As a last effort to keep them from the enemy?
Or had his last moments before taking on the transition mode been so
terrifying, he had erased that horror? Prowl had always seen himself as
a strong, stable mech able to withstand anything. Maybe he had broken?
Had
he fallen into enemy hands? Had his memories been manipulated? What if
something had been done and he now carried sleeper commands that not
even a technopath could find?
Ratchet had found no foreign intrusions, but Soundwave was renowned for
not leaving a trace, for being the perfect manipulator.
It
was painful for Prowl to think about all of this. He was a warrior. He
was strong. He couldn’t think of himself as broken or missing vital
pieces. Maybe that had been his intent, to end it, when he had launched
himself off into space. Something had happened and he hadn’t been able
to withstand it, by enemy hands or not.
So maybe he was a coward.
Still,
that went against everything he believed in. He couldn’t be that mech.
He couldn’t have left comrades and a team, dishonored those who had
fallen in battle. That wasn’t him!
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
When he finally
returned to the main base it was already near dawn and rain had set in.
Big fat drops were splashing onto the ground, onto him, running in
thick rivulets down his protoform. The base wasn’t as busy at night due
to the humans’ sleep cycles, but it was far from quiet. Leaving a trail
of water he returned to his assigned quarters. He flexed his fingers,
feeling the need for an alt mode rise. He would have to talk to Ratchet
about this.
Carefully sending a request to Bumblebee he got a
brief reply. The scout wasn’t on-line, the answer was automatic, and
Prowl wisely pulled back. At least the answer had confirmed that Sam
was alright, which was what he had wanted to know.
Prowl
accessed the base’s mainframe and went through the files he had already
downloaded. He had yet to understand so much and each day was a
learning experience. He adjusted, but it was too slow for his liking.
Knowing that there was no going back to who he had been he would have
to work on becoming what was needed. He had been one of Prime’s inner
circle, placed highly in the command structure.
He would regain
that place. He would be useful once more. What he missed would be
bridged. Gaps could be filled. He would have a new life and new
memories.
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When Ratchet cleared him to transscan,
Prowl had never been so glad to finally be allowed to take his alt
mode. It felt just wrong to be in these strange environs and not try to
blend in. He was a protoform and he stood out like a sore thumb. That
not everyone was constantly staring at him was attributed to the
humans’ acceptance of their alien friends’ exterior looks, but it was
immediately clear who the ‘new guy’ was.
Transscanning meant
Prowl needed to be outside, to see the vehicle he would take as his
disguise, and walking around looking as he did didn’t help. So under
the cover of darkness he approached a highway and hid in the shadows.
The
car he chose to fit his size, frame and his whole mind-set came by only
ten minutes into the waiting game. The transscan was completed under
two seconds and Prowl felt his basic form expand, felt armor form, felt
his whole being stretch and take on his alternate mode. Transforming
out of his new alt mode he flexed five-fingered, black colored hands.
The whole basic structure underneath a gleaming white armor was black,
some areas a dark gray, giving him a monochromatic appearance since his
new armor was pure white. The two doors sat on hinges like small wings
on his back, not unlike Bumblebee’s, and his shoulders featured two
missile-like additions. Like Jazz the alt mode’s front section was
showing on his chest.
He could have adjusted the vehicular
mode to mirror the one he had scanned, a police patrol car, but for now
he was satisfied with simply having a transformation. Fine-tuning would
follow. Not yet. Maybe later. Maybe just to piss Barricade off.
The
normally more reserved mech almost grinned maliciously. He and Jazz’s
spark-bonded had yet to meet, but he knew it would be an explosive
alliance.
Transforming once more he drove back toward the
base, not much later joined by a familiar silver Solstice. The white
Dodge Charger acknowledged the other’s presence, but he didn’t fall for
the teasing hum. He caught a new signature that was following them at a
distance, a signature not hidden. It was almost a challenge and he was
ready to take it on.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
::Cade:: Jazz admonished.
::What?:: the mech in question snapped.
Jazz
chuckled. He was accompanying Prowl back to the base, admiring the
gleaming white alt mode. It looked nifty. Of course, if Prowl chose to
add the police decals…
::It’s only a cover:: Barricade growled, irritated for no reason he
could discern.
::One you like::
::It’s handy::
::And you like it::
Barricade refused to answer.
::Cause you’re the bad element. You scare the crap out of humans up to
no good::
::Shut up, Autobot:: Jazz had been watching way too much television
again.
The
Saleen gained a little on the two other cars and Barricade was pleased
to feel the renewed scans from Prowl. He wasn’t hiding anything. He was
actually feeling very provocative today.
Jazz only sent a sigh, but an amused one. He added a trickle of
tolerance, which had Barricade rumble darkly.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
“Is he enjoying himself?” Prowl asked evenly, an edge of sarcasm
bleeding in.
“You have no idea.”
The Charger hummed in annoyance. “And he is really your bonded?”
“Yep. No doubt.”
Prowl
muttered to himself. Maybe this was the first faulty spark-bond. How
could Jazz…? Then again, they might just fit. Jazz was annoying enough;
Barricade was… a Decepticon. A Decepticon shock-trooper and an Autobot
saboteur specialist, from different factions, with different
backgrounds and training, and still alike enough to find what so very,
very few could ever hope to experience.
He pushed that thought aside.
The
car behind them suddenly gained speed at an alarming rate and Prowl
tensed as the police cruiser flew past them. Red and blue lights
flashed, provocative and taunting. The siren whoo-whooped.
Prowl hissed, reining in his response. Insolent little…
Jazz’s
laugh was filled with careless fun and the acceptance of a challenge.
The Solstice revved his engine and then tore after the black-and-white,
sand flying. Prowl could only watch and mentally shake his head as the
two so different -- apparently different -- mechs disappeared in a
cloud of dust.
Keeping perfectly within the speed limit the
Dodge Charger took the long way back to base. His scanners were still
peeled for signs of the two other mechs, but they had long since left
his range.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
“Get used to it,” was Ironhide’s rumble when he told the massive
Autobot about the incident almost a day later.
“Have you?” he challenged.
To
a Decepticon among them? To one who had killed their kind and enjoyed
it? To a spark-bond? To seeing the expression in Jazz’s optics? The
gentleness and trust, coupled with something so strong, so deep, there
was no word for it in any language?
Yes, Ironhide had, Prowl
realized as he watched the other’s features shift briefly. Ironhide
didn’t say a word, just rumbled more, then left.
He had gotten used to a Decepticon in their midst.
Prowl
was stunned. Ironhide… the Ironhide he knew… the same mech who had
never given that much… trust… to a Decepticon before. No, not trust.
Barricade had been given a chance and Ironhide evaluated every
encounter. So far, the tolerance outweighed the suspicion and paranoia.
And
Ironhide had entrusted the technopath’s training to this Decepticon.
Sam had come out alright. Strong and self-confident. Jazz was still his
old self; maybe more annoying than Prowl remembered.
So he had to get used to it.
Prowl
shook his head, unable to wrap his injured mind around so many changes.
He had to give this time – and some heavy tolerance.
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Getting used to Earth grew less and less difficult with each week
he was on-line. Prowl found that despite the humans’ sometimes
illogical behavior, their disregard for certain rules and regulations,
they weren’t so different from his past friends, his team, his people.
Well, they were different, but not badly so.
He spent a long
time watching the military unit, studying their tactics and strategies.
He was a good observer, so he did that: observe. When Captain Epps
finally approached him with the question if he wanted to just gawk or
join in, he had taken the offer gladly. New tactics were developed and
Prowl found he adapted some of his techniques to the humans’, and vice
versa. He was pleased to note how fast they learned and how quickly
they incorporated new things.
That humans were fundamentally
different was another matter. They were organic, didn’t live the same
span as his own kind, were smaller, had a completely different culture…
it was driving Prowl crazy now and then.
But he adjusted.
He had to.
Prime
had given him small tasks in the beginning and by and by it grew more.
Ratchet still checked him weekly, commended him on his energon levels,
but always told him not to disregard them now. He might be back and
feel great, but that didn’t mean he was one hundred percent.
Prowl knew he wasn’t. Chunks were missing.
Jazz
was the same pain as he always had been, but the easy, laid-back mech
helped him immensely. He pulled him out of his wandering mind, he
pushed him to new limits, he roused his temper. It all worked.
Barricade
was a shadow he couldn’t catch. He seemed to move in and out of the
base unseen and whenever Prowl thought he had him, there was nothing.
It was a game of cat and mouse, though the mouse was vicious and sneaky
and devious-minded. Jazz just grinned at him.
Contact with
Sideswipe had been withheld until Ratchet had given Prowl the
all-clear, that he had healed. As much as he could heal anyway. The
memory chunks that were missing were gone permanently. No repair could
bring them back. He had to live with that and he would. The alternative
was not really a viable one.
Optimus Prime had allowed Sideswipe
to return to the base, but only under guard from Ironhide and Arcee. He
wouldn’t take a single step without supervision and he was almost
docile. Prowl watched his arrival from a corner of the main hangar,
curious to see his old team mate again, but the knowledge that he had
no information about his twin was sitting heavily on him.
But he wanted this. He had asked to be the one to tell Sideswipe. He
had been the team leader. He had been responsible.
Sideswipe
was led to the room that had been chosen for the two Autobots to meet.
Alone. Prowl wanted to be alone with the other and no one was to listen
in. This was a very private and personal moment.
Optimus Prime had understood and while Ironhide had grumbled, he had
relented.
Following
the three mechs, Prowl reached the chosen room just as the door closed
after Sideswipe. He nodded at Arcee and Ironhide, then hesitated one
last second. Finally he steeled his nerves and walked inside.
Blue optics, alive with hope and filled with dread at the same time,
fixed on Prowl’s own.
“Prowl,” Sideswipe stuttered.
Prowl read even more in the twin’s stance. Pain, loss, hope, terror,
need…
“Hello, Sideswipe,” he said softly.
The silver mech fidgeted.
“I
know what happened,” the strategist added, anticipating that question
already. “And I’m not angry. I understand your reasons.”
“I never wanted to cause harm,” Sideswipe said in a small voice.
“You wanted to know.”
A nod.
Prowl
gazed at the younger mech, remembering him and his twin. Those two
could be a pain in the aft. They could go on your nerves, wreck your
processor, and they drove you over the edge. Their pranks had been
every commander’s horror, but in the battle field they were
professionals. Warriors of a high caliber, fast, furious, a force to be
reckoned with. Prowl couldn’t see one without the other.
Now there was only one and he would have had the clue to Sunstreaker’s
fate, but he didn’t know. He no longer knew.
“I can’t remember, Sideswipe.”
The
optics widened, blue light flaring in disbelief and horror. For a
moment the face was young, young and innocent and so shocked. Hope bled
out of every line and turned into something far more vicious.
“The
damage I took was too great. My memory circuits were partially erased.
What I can remember is our assignment, you and Sunstreaker… But that’s
where it ends. I’m sorry.”
Sideswipe made a frightened little noise. He shook his head, whole body
trembling.
“No…” he protested. “No, no, no….”
“I
wish I could remember what happened to Sunstreaker. I can’t. I tried
and Ratchet checked my processor. There is nothing. I went as far as
having Sam scan me. Nothing at all.”
“Cybertron, no… You were with him, Prowl! When we were separated his
last communication was that he was with you!”
“Sideswipe… I’m very, very sorry.”
There
was a moment of utter stillness, then the silver mech fell to his
knees, emitting a soft, keening noise of mourning. Prowl was torn,
unable to give in to either motion: go to Sideswipe or leave the
grieving mech alone. When haunted optics looked up, filled with
despair, he finally walked over to his former team member, placing a
heavy hand on one shoulder. Prowl went down on his knees, meeting the
flickering optics of the suffering mech.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered.
Sideswipe dimmed his optics. “He’s alive,” he managed. “He has to be.”
Prowl
didn’t want to argue. He had survived. Sideswipe had survived. It was
entirely possible; just like death was possible. Maybe Sideswipe’s
twinned spark could feel his brother’s continued existence. What if
Sunstreaker was out there? What if he had managed to escape and gone
into the same deep stasis as Prowl? What if he was lost in the vastness
of space? What if the enemy had him, keeping him alive just for the
sports of it? What if the one they might one day find was nothing but a
shell of the Sunstreaker he remembered?
He said nothing of his
thoughts. Sideswipe must have had them, too. From inside his sleek,
silver form came low moans. A mind haunted by his brother’s unknown
fate. Prowl wished he could have given Sideswipe peace, one way or the
other, but it wasn’t to be.
Prowl just waited, feeling the other
mech calm down. Sideswipe sat back, heaving a rattling sigh. The two
mechs regarded each other, unspoken words passing between them. Both
damaged, both having lost something very close and personal. In Prowl’s
case it was forever. Sideswipe had hope.
It fused them together
in a way. That and their past relationship as team mates and friends.
Prowl rested his forehead against Sideswipe’s.
“You’re not alone, Sides,” he said softly.
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Sam
had kept a technopathic eye on their newest addition and he was happy
to note that Prowl was getting better. His self-confidence grew and
with it the unrest. He needed something to do, to be useful, and his
mind was regaining its orderly, logical thinking.
So
disorderly, illogic, irrational and quite frankly human behavior
confused him sometimes. Sam watched it with a smile and the knowledge
that it got better every day, too.
Ratchet had told him to take it easy.
He did. Sam didn’t plan on permanent headaches. Neither did Bumblebee.
What
worried Sam was Sideswipe. The silver mech had been strangely silent
and withdrawn ever since his private conversation with Prowl. Sam felt
waves of darker emotions coming from him and sometimes it hurt. He was
torn between ignoring it all because it was a private matter, and
simply going to Sideswipe and see if he could help.
He didn’t
have the connection to the mech as he had to others. He had been a new
addition, like Hot Rod or Arcee, but also someone who kept to himself.
Sometimes his more boisterous nature broke though and Bumblebee had
told his partner a few things about Sideswipe. The Sideswipe of before.
Sam sighed softly.
::You can’t help everyone, Sam::
::I know, Bee.::
Sam ran a hand over the smooth yellow fender of the Camaro parked next
to him. ::I just feel like I’m the only one who notices::
::You’re
not. Prowl knows what this did to Sideswipe and they were on the same
team. They both lost and both need to work through it.::
::And I wouldn’t be helping::
::Prowl trusted you for this one task. Leave them to heal on their own
now::
Sam nodded to himself.
Two
weeks later Sideswipe left for the east coast again. He would meet up
with Maxx Racing once more and stay with the racing team. Prime hadn’t
objected.
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Meeting the best-kept secret of the
Autobots and their allies had been something high on Prowl’s list, but
he had yet to get a chance to introduce himself to Will Lennox. Of
course the human knew him; Ratchet had told Prowl of Lennox’s
assistance in repairing his protoform. Still, no formal introduction
had been made.
“He’s well-protected,” he remarked toward Prime.
“For a reason.”
“The files claim he isn’t the Allspark.”
“And
he isn’t,” the Autobot leader confirmed. “But others might think so.
Soundwave tried to take him and it was a close call. It was also a
warning we heed. We still don’t know much about him, aside from what
each evolutionary step shows us. No one can foretell what will happen
in the future.”
“Because you can’t scan him.”
Prime nodded. “That and other reasons. Will is always evolving, with or
without outside influence. We protect him. We help him.”
Prowl
let his optics sweep over the main floor. He stood proud and tall, sure
of his place among these allied troops. Prime had yet to assign him
anything specific, but just being here was reassurance enough. Prowl
had spent time reviewing strategies, had checked on Ironhide’s security
network and been soundly impressed, and he had learned about the
humans’ military that was assigned to the base.
There was a
lack of coordination and he had brought it up already, especially now
that the Ark was in her finishing stages. More plans had been made to
position early warning stations throughout this solar system and Prowl
itched to put in his ideas. What he needed was the last bit of
information, about Will Lennox, his capabilities, the dangers, his
powers.
Optimus looked at him, a knowing expression in his optics, then invited
him to follow.
“You’ll never know everything about him,” the taller mech said as they
walked.
“I understand.”
“Do you?”
Prowl considered the question. “We never understood the Allspark.”
“He isn’t the Allspark, Prowl.”
He
nodded. “But he seems to harbor some of its power. I don’t believe the
Allspark can ever be destroyed, Prime. Its energy was dispersed and
some found its way into new shapes.”
Blue optics regarded him steadily. “Neither of the ones touched by the
Allspark have its power, alone or combined.”
“They preserve something eternal, Prime.”
Optimus was silent, never breaking his stride. “I believe so, too,
Prowl,” he murmured after a moment. “I believe so, too.”
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Knowing
what he would see, reading about the accident that had changed a normal
human into a kind of hybrid, was one thing. Looking at the 6’4” tall
organic was something completely different.
Prowl’s optics were
fixed on the string of runes moving over the soft skin, the ancient
glyphs of cosmic code, and his mind flashed back to the one time he had
stood in the presence of the Allspark. It had been awe-inspiring,
humbling, showing him infinity and power beyond his wildest
imaginations.
The Allspark was gone, but this human had somehow merged with a shard
of it and had become… something else.
He had actually taken a step back in rising fear as the old code showed
more and more.
Will
Lennox appeared like a normal male of his kind, with the addition of
the glyphs, but there was something about his energy field. It was
strong, dense… condensed. It was ancient. His sensors picked it up,
compared it to the sensation of the Allspark, and came up negative.
Lennox carried himself with an air of command, his military heritage,
and he wasn’t afraid to face mechs several times his size.
“Prowl?” Optimus Prime said softly.
He blinked, stunned optics falling on his leader.
“I… don’t know,” he stammered.
His
reaction was extreme, he knew it, and he blamed his still recovering
spark for it. But there was fear, coupled with respect, and the fear
disturbed him.
This was the one to be protected, the one
Soundwave had been after because he had believed and maybe still did
that the hybrid could revive dead shells. Ratchet had firmly told him
that there was no indication Will could.
As an Autobot Prowl
respected all sentient life, would protect the humans -- on their team,
allied to them, or innocents. But two were special. Will Lennox and Sam
Witwicky.
Ironhide made an impatient noise, coupled with a warning. “You gonna
freak, get it over with.”
Prowl pulled himself together and inclined his head. “I apologize,
Will,” he said formally.
It got him a careless shrug. “You’re not the first. It apparently gets
to everyone.”
And to you, Prowl thought.
It
was in the file. A file so well-protected no one had any outside access
to it, which was why Soundwave hadn’t been able to gather the intel he
had needed to pull off the kidnapping.
“You’ll get used to it,” the human added.
Prowl
was certain that something was connecting Lennox to Ironhide,
especially after he had seen the weapons expert’s name etched into the
human’s wrist. Like a permanent tattoo, a bracelet, where all the other
runes moved. Since Ironhide was the last mech to talk openly about
anything personal and since relationships between humans, well,
Allspark-changed humans, and his kind were apparently extraordinary,
Prowl let the matter rest.
“You’re staring again,” Jazz stage-whispered, elbowing him hard.
Prowl shot him a dark look.
Lennox
smiled. “That’s usually the, very long, first reaction. The second is
something I want to prevent. I’m not the Allspark, Prowl.”
“I’ve been told. I know,” he answered stiffly.
“Good.
Whatever you think, it’s not even close. I’m not a circus act either,
so if you want to know more, ask Jazz or Ratchet. Or Optimus. No
demonstrations unless you volunteer for a training exercise.”
Prowl
nodded, accepting the words. He wouldn’t pin any kind of label on this
human. “The reason I wanted to meet you, Will, was to thank you. You
helped save my spark.”
Lennox shook his head. “No. Ratchet did. You did it yourself because
you didn’t give up. I merely welded some tubes together.”
“You still have my gratitude.”
The hybrid shrugged once more, smiling as he met the serious optics.
“If you think so. You’re welcome.”
Prowl
gazed into eyes that had seen so much more than he probably ever would,
counting millennia of civil war. Will Lennox had no official rank among
the human military. He had no rank concerning the allied forces. He had
no rank among the Autobots. But his presence was commanding. His own
kind listened to him; he was called to advise, even to command a
mission. Prime respected him deeply, as did the others. Not because of
his forced hybrid status; not because of the glyphs. Because he had
proven himself.
“I’m looking forward to getting to know you, Will Lennox,” he said
softly.
“Likewise, Prowl.”
The smile was open and real. Prowl answered it with a cautious one of
his own.
He
still couldn’t shake the deep-set awe, the respect, the slight fear.
This was only the tip of the proverbial iceberg and there would be
more. Prowl was sure of it.
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Tom Banachek looked at
the black and white mech that had arrived with the latest transport
flight from Nellis to the Arctic base, noting the clear line between
black body and white armor. He had been kept up to date in the weeks it
had taken Ratchet to bring the dying protoform back among the living,
and he had been pleasantly surprised to hear that one, Prowl had
survived and two, he was one of the higher officers.
He looked
proud, standing tall and almost to attention, a clear contrast to the
mechs Banachek had met before. Here was a military officer, one who
took his duties very seriously.
Prime had suggested that Prowl,
as their tactician and military strategist, work with Banachek at
Project. Project handled all kinds of liaisons, was the core unit of
the human military that would both prepare the world for the day the
mechs would be known and also obscure their presence until then. Prowl
had expressed his interest and who was Banachek to refuse?
“Welcome to Project, Prowl,” he greeted the newcomer. “I’m looking
forward to our cooperation.”
People walked around him and only Banachek’s aid had been present for
the introductions, then the woman had been called away.
“As
am I, Mr. Banachek,” Prowl replied, sounding formal and just a little
bit stiff. “I’ve reviewed your organization, the way it handles Autobot
matters, the reconstruction of the Ark, and the insertion of
Cybertronian technology into the human world. I believe I can offer
some new ideas and assessments.”
Banachek smiled. He had been
given a quick run-down on what to expect from Prowl by Jazz. The first
lieutenant had made it quite clear that Prowl was, for all his
laid-back manner, his patience and his adherence to logic, rather
uptight and socially inept when facing others. He would thaw after a
while, but one had to suffer through this first.
“I’m all ears,” Banachek only replied.
And
he was, among other things. Like the interest he felt rising at what
Prowl’s permanent status at the Arctic base would change for them all.
Banachek was also looking forward to the meeting between Prowl and Tony
Stark, who had a meeting scheduled over the development of the Stark
Industries satellites to help surround Earth with a defensive network.
Banachek didn’t know if Stark would drive Prowl insane first, or if the
mech could keep an upper hand against the industrialist billionaire.
Yes, it would be fun. And matters at the base would be far from quiet
in the future.
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The End for this fic.