TITLE:
Mindprints
Based on events in Broken
SERIES: Imperfection Deviation
AUTHOR: Macx
RATING: PG13
DISCLAIMER: None of the characters belong to me, sadly. They are owned
by
people with a lot more money :)
Author’s Voice of Warning (aka Author’s Note):
The spell-checker said everything's okay, but you know how trustworthy
those
thingies are....
FEEDBACK: Loved
The room looked like a bomb had struck. Judy
Witwicky
stood in the doorway, strangely reminded of the very same room ten
years ago. Back
then it had been assorted knick-knacks, a goldfish glass, clothes,
posters,
boxes. All the stuff a teenager collected, and stowed, and left all
over his
room, and parents would try not to get a coronary over.
Things had changed a little, but not by much. The room had been cleared
out
long ago, stuff thrown away, others sold off on eBay, and some kept.
Now it was
a guest room with a bed, a wardrobe, a desk; the adjoining bathroom
only used
occasionally.
Today the room looked like someone’s printer had exploded and the paper
had
been left everywhere. Judy smiled at the scene. It was more familiar
than it
was strange. The papers were on engineering, mechanics, and whatnot.
She
understood little of it. Some papers were written in Cybertronian. It
looked
alien, and it was.
A strange kind of pride filled her. Her son, the
double
doctorate, special advisor to the military. She would never have
dreamed
of that particular career for him. Nor would she have ever believed in
aliens. Or technopathy. But there were
aliens and her son was a
technopath. He was also bonded to one of those aliens.
Judy smiled almost wistfully now. There would be no grandchildren, but
the
extended family, the ‘in-laws’, were making up for that. Okay, Sam
would
probably throw a fit if he ever caught her thinking that way. Bumblebee
wasn’t
a girl, nor was he human. He was an alien mechanical being with a spark
that
was bound to Sam. Whatever their relationship truly was – and she tried
not to
imagine it too vividly – he made Sam happy.
“Hey, Mom,” her son drew her out of her thoughts, looking up from
something
that she probably didn’t understand either.
It was eight in the morning and from the looks of it, Sam hadn’t slept
a lot,
if at all.
“Good morning, Sam.” Judy held out a mug of coffee, which was
gratefully taken.
“Breakfast?” she offered.
“Yeah. In a moment.
I need to
finish something first.”
He gave her an apologetic smile and Judy nodded in understanding. Sam
had come
here for some peace and quiet to do his work. She might not understand
what he
was working on, but she understood that the past weeks had interrupted
his
schedule. She knew about
“Pancakes or waffles?” Judy asked.
“Waffles,” was Sam’s immediate answer and she smiled more.
“I’ll have them ready for you.”
“Thanks, Mom.” And he was bent over his books again.
She left the room, still smiling. No, her family wasn’t normal. Maybe
it had
never been, right from the day Captain Archibald Witwicky had
discovered the
alien creature in the ice. But Judy didn’t care any more. She had a
happy and
healthy family, and that was what counted.
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Sam came down as promised twenty minutes later, empty mug in hand. He
refilled
it and continued working on raising his caffeine level. The night had
been
long, filled with engine structure reports from the Arctic base where
the teams
around Finch were busy with the Ghost-2. The launch had been postponed
for a
while now, and Tony Stark was still sending input on what he thought
was the
best design for the engines, the on-board system, for all kinds of
gear.
And since Sam, aside from Tony, had the best understanding of all human
engineers when it came to hybrid human-Cybertronian technology, he got
all the
designs. Due to the busy going-ons around the base and the tendency for
people
to interrupt him, even if it was only for a chat, Sam had fled to a
place where
he knew he could work all he wanted, whatever hours, and as much as he
wanted –
and he had free rooming, food and company if he chose to.
His parents had been very understanding and his mother didn’t hover.
She just
reminded him of food.
As he passed by the window, Sam looked outside and frowned.
“Honey?”
Sam shrugged. “Just a sec.”
Judy peered out the window as Sam opened the front door and saw a
police
cruiser parked on the other side. A police cruiser she thought she
recognized.
“Is that…?”
“Yeah. Barricade. Uhm,
rain-check on
the breakfast?”
“Is something wrong, Sam? Has something happened?”
“No. Everything’s okay.”
“Sam?”
“It’s fine, Mom. Really.” He gave
her a little
kiss. “Later.” And he was out the door.
Judy watched as he slid into the police car and the Mustang pulled
away. Despite
the fact that Sam had assured her that the former Decepticon was now an
ally,
Judy didn’t like the idea of her son alone with that particular mech.
She
pondered calling Bumblebee, then didn’t. Sam wasn’t helpless. And he
had this
special connection to Bumblebee. He would use it if he was in trouble,
she told
herself.
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Sam had no ill feeling about riding with Barricade to wherever the mech
wanted
to take him to talk. It turned out to be an abandoned warehouse. The
contact
between them had been brief and to the point, Barricade requesting this
conversation, Sam agreeing. Bumblebee wasn’t with him. Since Sam had
wanted to
get some work done, his partner had simply dropped him off and told him
to call
when he was ready.
“What’s up?” he finally asked as the Saleen pulled into the old
building.
The door opened and Sam got out, then
watched
Barricade transform. He looked almost the same as before his near-death
at
Chromia’s hands. He was still using the same car form, though the
latest model,
still a police cruiser, still with the same markings – probably to piss
off
Ironhide. Part of him told him that this wasn’t unlike ten years ago,
when
Barricade had attacked him. Sure, the location had been a different
one, but
the general set-up…
He pushed that thought away. He wasn’t helpless any more. And Barricade
wasn’t
the enemy.
“You’re still in my head,” the shock trooper growled.
Red optics bore into Sam’s brown eyes and he frowned.
“I’m what?”
“In my head. You left part of yourself.”
Sam shook his head. “There’s nothing but the connection we’ve had
before. Nothing more, nothing less. And
even that is voluntary. Like
an open com line.”
Barricade’s optics flared and his claws twitched. “I know what I feel,
human. It’s
you.”
He shook his head again. “Maybe it’s just a lingering shadow. I didn’t
leave a
connection, Barricade, believe me! And it would be impossible. I mean…
you’re
bonded. I wouldn’t do that!”
And Sam was connected to Bumblebee. His mind didn’t need another
connection to
anchor itself. Of course he had used Barricade’s mind and spark before,
when he
had been the only one around, when he had been training Sam. That had
been
years ago.
Barricade went down on one knee, still hovering over Sam, the
terrifying face
very close. Sam met the blood red gaze.
“You are in my mind, imprinted on the matrix. I can feel your thoughts,
Sam
Witwicky. Your memories.”
Sam paled. “Impossible!”
“I know what I feel, human.” One dangerous looking claw pointed
at Sam’s
head. “You left yourself behind.”
Sam stared. He couldn’t think of anything to say, simply felt the shock
course
through his system. When he had lunged for Barricade’s fading spark he
hadn’t
thought twice. He had wrapped all he could around the dying mind and
kept it
safe. The idea that he might be too close, that something of himself
might be
absorbed into Barricade, hadn’t crossed his mind.
“I didn’t… I wouldn’t…” he stammered.
“I want it gone,” the mech said, voice rougher than usual in Sam’s
ears.
“I don’t even know how it happened!”
Barricade leaned even closer. “Part of a human is inside my processor
matrix. Part of you. Remove it.”
“Barricade, I can’t! And you said yourself they are shadows. In time
the whole
thing could just evaporate. Your recovery was touch and go, but I
didn’t
transfer anything of me into you.”
There was a soft hissing sound, a sign of barely suppressed
frustration. “You
know about bonds, human. You know it because of your own with the
Autobot. Part
of the other is always with the bonded. Part of me is with Jazz,
changing him. Part
of him is imprinted on me. Molecular shadows of another presence. You,”
the
claws poked his chest, “are imprinted on Bumblebee. He is imprinted on
your
organic mind.”
Sam felt something cold settled within him. “We aren’t bonded!” he
exclaimed.
“No, we aren’t. My spark belongs to only one other. But your mind is
new and
nothing my kind ever encountered before. It’s why you connected to an
Autobot
spark. Your presence within me… is secondary transfer.”
“No! Barricade, no!”
::Yes:: the dark voice whispered. ::Yes,
you left your imprint on me. You opened a door and couldn’t shut it
completely.
There’s a crack and it’s there, always there::
Sam sank back against a pillar, sliding down to sit on the dusty
ground. He was
shaking his head, fingers clenching into his hair.
::I didn’t want this, Barricade::
“It was already there before you saved my spark,” the former Decepticon
rumbled. “Jazz told me that you were hit by my echoes.”
He nodded.
“I didn’t open a connection.”
“We talk like this from time to time,” Sam said tiredly. “Might
have been instinct.”
Barricade’s expression shifted into one of disgust. Sam refused to be
baited
into an argument. He just leaned back against the dirty pillar.
“We have a comm line connection,” he said. “Nothing
more,
nothing less. I can communicate with all of you guys like that.
It’s
nothing like a bond, okay?”
“Your memories are here,” Barricade snarled and tapped his head.
“Which ones?”
“The strong ones,” was the reply.
“Uh-huh.”
“And knowing what human sexual intercourse feels like is not a memory I
want to
have,” the black-and-white mech added wryly.
Sam felt heat rush to his face. “W-what?”
Barricade was smirking darkly. “Though sharing between a human and a
mech is
quite different. And you enjoy it.”
“WHAT?!”
“Your memories. My matrix. Shadows,
but with strong spikes.”
“Oh gawd…”
“Erase them, Sam.”
“I can’t! I can’t go into your mind and erase specific parts,
Barricade! It
would be even more difficult than brain surgery! I could kill you!”
Barricade rumbled softly, not pleased. Finally he moved back a little,
still
close and almost oppressing. Sam felt no hostility, only confusion.
“I can block this,” he murmured.
“It’s not the current feedback that bothers me, it’s the memories.
Human
memories,” Barricade stressed.
“Sorry. I didn’t… want this to happen.”
“I believe you.”
Sam smiled a little. “Can’t you just… store it all somewhere?”
Barricade’s optics reflected rare amusement. “I don’t even know where
you left
your mindprints. They surface, flash across my processor, flicker out
of
existence. All intense emotions.”
“Like of me and… Mikaela?”
“Yes. As well as fear. What you felt
when you
met your Autobot guardian for the first time. Or
me. Or Megatron.” There was a kind
of dark pleasure there at the
fear Barricade had instilled.
“Don’t let Jazz catch you getting off on that,” Sam heard himself
mutter, then
he caught himself, eyes widening.
Ah hell, his mouth again!
Barricade chuckled. “The fear of my enemy and my prey helps in
completing a
mission, Sam Witwicky. I don’t replay the moments and revel in them.”
He sighed, evading the blood-red gaze. “Just ignore my fast mouth,
okay?
Maybe,” Sam tried to switch tracks, “maybe I could try and net the
memory
fragments? I mean, I know your mind planes, and I glued you back
together
again, so to speak. Maybe I can follow the cracks and sniff them out?”
“And do what? Tear them out of the scar tissue that is my mind?”
Another sigh. “It was an idea.”
Barricade nodded. “Not a viable one.”
“No.”
Silence descended. Sam carefully sensed along the edges of Barricade’s
mind and
found no anger or darkness, just the spark and the echo of the bond.
Barricade
was rather calm about this development.
::Too much contact with you, human::
Sam flinched away, eyes wide, then stuttered an apology.
Barricade leaned down, grinning maliciously. “Our training worked both
ways. I
can feel you, Sam Witwicky. I know what your touch feels like.”
“No sneaking up on you?” Sam joked weakly, feeling a little rush of
adrenaline.
He wasn’t afraid of Barricade, just… respectful. Well, right now he
was. The
situation was different from all their confrontations or meetings
before.
“Affirmative.”
“Well, I wasn’t… Just, well, checking… Sorry.”
Barricade tilted his head a little, but he didn’t comment. Sam felt
blocks come
down and he respected the need for privacy. He got up and dusted his
pants off.
“So, we’re okay?” he asked carefully.
The shock-trooper looked at him. “I never said otherwise.”
“Okay.” Sam smiled.
His stomach rumbled, reminding him of missed breakfast, as well as the
fact
that he a) still had work to do and b) should really catch up on sleep
some
time today.
The former Decepticon transformed and opened the passenger door. Sam
didn’t
argue, just got in, and wasn’t surprised when the hologram appeared.
Barricade
had modified it a bit and it no longer looked like a robot puppet. Sam
had
never seen Ironhide’s hardlight holoform, but Will had told him that
his
partner usually kept it simple to conserve energy. Barricade had no
such
problems since he didn’t use hardlight, and his animation was… well,
animated.
What did surprise him was the fact that they swung by a fast food
drive-in.
“Your blood sugar level has dropped in the last hour. You need
nourishment.”
Sam just shrugged, got himself a large coffee and a burger, no fries.
Barricade
drove within the speed limit and didn’t complain about food or drink in
the
car. He was actually quiet on the ride home. Sam’s senses were never
completely
off and instinct had him check on those he cared about unconsciously,
so he did
the same with Barricade. Since he wasn’t scolded, it was an accepted
behavior.
The Mustang rolled softly to a stop. Sam was still working on his
coffee, his
mind reaching automatically for the mech’s.
::You do not need to apologize:: Barricade
told him
without prompting. ::You saved my spark. I
am
grateful::
::I couldn’t let someone I consider a friend
die::
It got him a dark smile. ::You trust too
easily, Sam
Witwicky::
He smiled back. ::You forget who you’re
talking to,
Barricade. I know your processor, your spark. I know your loyalties. I
trust
you::
With that he got out, taking the balled-up burger wrapper with him.
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The Mustang didn’t leave for a long, long time. With nightfall, after
Ron Witwicky
had come home and wondered what the mech was doing sitting across the
street,
he finally left.
It was time for patrol.
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“So what’s sharing with a human like?”
Barricade flashed his bonded a dark look. Jazz grinned irrepressibly,
leaning
closer. They were in the back of the base again, the storage area, and
Jazz was
leaning against one of the many metal containers. Barricade was
pretending to
be his prickly self. It wasn’t working
“Having fun with the memories?”
“No,” was the snarled answer.
“Oh, don’t break a circuit. And you are.”
The deep red glare was lethal.
“Does that mean we’re having threesomes now?” the specialist went on,
laughter
swinging in his voice.
“Why don’t you just shut up, Autobot?”
“Well, there’s us. There’s Sam with
Bumblebee. Sam’s
connected to you…”
Barricade could move very fast and his sharp-taloned fingers clamped
around
Jazz’s chest armor, pushing the silver mech firmly against the
container. No
skin was broken, not even scratched, though the claws were close to
delicate
circuitry as they curled down.
“There’s no one else allowed,” Barricade whispered harshly.
“No one?”
“No one.”
“Not even to see if this is more than just stray memory shadows?”
Barricade rumbled.
Jazz smiled, blue optics flashing. “Never
thought of
trying it out?”
“No.”
“Liar.”
There was hardly any room left between their bodies and Jazz felt the
twitters
of an imminent deep bonding. Barricade was feeling playful today.
His partner grinned darkly, then pushed
forward into
the bond. Jazz willingly went with him.
And if he felt little echoes going down a different connection, then it
wasn’t
his imagination. Part of him was laughing, enjoying a teasing
Barricade.
Another part simply enjoyed the closeness of the other spark.
Things would get interesting from now on; more than they already were.