It was a good plan! Grab some weapons, let the weird, unbranded loner distract the slaver creeps while Deadlock made a break for the ship. Not that said unbranded loner knew about the last part, but his grossly shiny-white and red deco sort of screamed use me as a distraction! Deadlock sure found him distracting.
It would have been a great plan, except Deadlock miscalculated the strength of the slaver forces and the changing of guard shift on that ship.
He groans audibly, optics coming online to a small, darkened, space. Well, one optic anyway. Spiderweb cracks mar the other and his HUD flickers with static, a rash of red warnings reporting damage filling his view. He minimizes them with a flick of his head - rather wishing he hadn't as it sets his head swimming again - and his hands reach out to steady himself, easily meeting both sides of the tiny room he's in.
Deadlock ex-vents a frustrated growl. His joints feel stiff, like he's been in here a while, and his fuel is pinging low. His rations are gone as are his weapons. The damage to his frame is not extensive somehow, and he wonders just how the frag he ended up captured? All he remembers is pain an blacking out. He can hear muffled voices, the barking of orders and the sound of cargo being loaded.
"This one goes to base Red249 for parting out, load it last!"
Oh, slag. Deadlock tries to stand in a rush, getting his feet under him, but promptly slams his head into the ceiling of the room - no, the crate he's in - and curses vividly.
"Lemme ooout, fragggerszz!!!" His vocalizer breaks into static, obscuring half the words, and in the next moment his earlier question is answered. A hard jolt of energy courses though him then, and he howls in pain before passing out again.
Drift wasn't really sure what he was expecting to find or even accomplish by going back to Theophany. It was eons ago now that he'd met Wing here, that his entire life had changed. Crystal City has long since relocated and emptied again, but...for some reason it had felt important to come back here, in the wake of his exile. It seemed right somehow, to visit the place where his life had been irrevocably changed, where he'd sworn to do good with the second chance he'd been granted.
Except it hasn't felt like he's been doing much good lately. He'd let Prowl put Overlord on the ship -- he'd gone along the plan, even if he hadn't liked it, because Rodimus wanted to do it, and somehow, Drift is sure, that makes it even more his responsibility. He could have stopped Rodimus, maybe. He could have prevented the loss of life, the terror of Overlord's rampage. He could have saved everyone a lot of suffering. He knows he's changed his ways, joined the Autobots, tried his best to embrace Spectralism, but standing here alone, his chest bare, he wonders how much he's really changed. How much that change matters when the end result is still death.
The Circle of Light is gone, but there's still more activity on Theophany than Drift was expecting -- or hoping for. He grimaces when he recognizes the slavers from a distance, their operation apparently rebuilt to be just as robust as ever. Well, if he's going to try and make anything right, he might as well start here. It feels oddly like starting from square one all over again. Drift embraces that feeling and privately hopes that it means something.
Once he gets near enough to see that a fight's already broken up, he's shocked to recognize the instigators as Cybertronians -- he doesn't recognize them, not at this distance, but it'd be hard to mistake them for any other race. Drift shifts into his alt mode immediately, tires squealing as he races over the terrain to join the fight. But he's too far, and not fast enough -- he sees one Cybertronian run the length of his luck and wind up a captive of the slavers. The sudden sense memory of those last few moments before he'd blacked out and nearly been crushed to death his first time around on Theophany rises in his mind, and it distracts him long enough that he doesn't see what happened to the other Cybertronian. Doesn't matter. The slavers have at least one of them, and Drift can't let them just cart him off.
Drift's a lot better at stealth than he used to be, and he manages to get into the slavers' base undetected, tracking the crate they'd loaded the Cybertronian into to the loading docks. He's on his own, and even with his swords and his improved skills since he was here last, he's badly outnumbered. Maybe he can convince the other mech to help him free the rest of these slaves.
He leaps from the shadows and neatly flips over the dock workers to land on the hull of the small craft they're loading the Cybertronian onto. "I'll be taking this delivery, thanks," he says brightly, jumping into the open cockpit as the slavers start to sputter and fire on him. The craft is unfamiliar, but pitch, yaw and roll are universal, and Drift manages to fire up the engines and blast away from the dock at terrifying speed. If he can just lose the slavers and land this thing out of sight, he can free the captive Cybertronian and maybe get back to Drift's ship to regroup, make some kind of a plan. He just has to get that far first.
Deadlock misses most of the action; whatever device the slavers are using for compliance packs a brutal shock that even a Cybertronian system can't withstand. When he begins to come to, he's disoriented, thoughts disjointed and uncertain where he is or what's happened. Did it feel like he was in the air? What happened to those voices? Why are his limbs at such uncomfortable angles and why can't he rouse enough to move them?
He groans, softly at first and then more loudly, as he tries to fight for true consciousnesses.
It takes some maneuvering, but Drift manages to pilot the little cargo craft free of the slavers' pursuit and land -- if a little ungracefully -- in a small valley surrounded by hills. They'd be harder to spot from the air if they keep to the shadows.
Drift kills the engine and leaps out of the cockpit, his feet touching the hull briefly before he nimbly jumps to the ground at the rear end of the craft. It seems like the Cybertronian is the only live cargo they'd loaded -- somehow, Drift is a little disappointed that he'd only manage to save one life.
But it's still a life, and one of a fellow Cybertronian. Drift pops open the hatch and sees the crate shoved inside, some kind of security interface on the front to prevent tampering. "Just hold on," Drift says to the prisoner inside, though he's not sure the other mech is even conscious. "I'm a friend -- I'm getting you out of here."
He drags the crate out of the cargo craft with some effort, stares at the security panel until he's deduced that it's not going to explode if he pokes it the wrong way, then draws one sword to slice the front of crate clean off. It's faster this way.
With a clean slice through its hinges the crate's door falls away...and with it a very prone body that slums onto the ground, face down.
There's another groan, the mech's fingers twitching, shoulder paldrons sagged but shuddering as Deadlock's systems clearly try to compensate for so many jolts of energy in addition to the wounds he already had. The red glass of his cockpit is smashed and much of the kibble on his back is crumpled, old energon dried where someone clearly tried to stop energon loss by cauterizing fuel lines instead of patching them. The restraining bolt on his forearm looks a little worse for the wear as well, a little blackened around the edge.
Oh, hell. This mech looks in a really bad way. Drift could tell at a distance that the fight hadn't gone well, but this mech, he's probably going to need some kind of medical treatment. Drift's own skills in that area are limited. But at least he seems conscious...
"You're safe," Drift assures him, one hand going to his shoulder. He doesn't want to aggravate the other mech's wounds, so Drift does his best to turn him over without jostling him too much. "Don't worry, I made sure they didn't fol-- "
And his vocalizer abruptly sputters out as soon as he sees the other mech's face. Even as smashed up and damaged as it is, Drift would recognize that face anywhere in an instant. His own face, so many years removed. How is this possible? Drift's mind races, leaving him dizzy. In that moment, he is utterly speechless.
His HUD flickers, a field of static, but noises and a voice filter in through his audio. Survival instincts have him struggling towards consciousness now, knowing he's not alone.
For the last few moments his expression had been open, lax in his unconscious state and unmarred by the scowl that seems to hold him together these days, though the lines of suffering and anger are there, mapped to his face from centuries of use. Those features come to life as he groans again, that tiny bit of peace leaving them as he grimaces from his current pains. Red optics slowly come to life, the cracked one flickering fitfully, and the moment the static from his HUD clears and resolves the individual in front of him, he lurches backwards, reaching for his weapons.
Which are very definitely not there.
It all comes back to Deadlock a little too quickly, leaving him dazed all over again, but one thing is clear: he's got no clue who this new guy is.
"--the frag are you!?" He demands, voice harsh with static, mouth and teeth flecked with dried energon as he looks wildly about, trying to access this new situation.
That voice -- that's his voice. Different and the same all at once, still all too familiar. The deja vu is staggering -- but does it really count as deja vu when you're actually seeing yourself? Is this some kind of vision -- some test of his faith? But it seems far too real, from the way Drift's spark constricts in his chest to the heavy weight in his fuel tanks. He tenses automatically as Deadlock moves for weapons that aren't there, and it's still another moment before Drift finds his voice.
"I'm -- a friend," he says finally, holding up his empty hands, palm-out. There's a weird shiver in his circuits as that only intensifies the surreality of this moment. Hadn't those been Wing's words to him too, all those years ago? "Those slavers had you captive -- I hijacked one of their small cargo craft with you inside and hightailed it out of there. I've lost them, so don't worry -- just rest for now."
Deadlock doesn't look Cybertronian pancake-levels of injured, but his wounds are still pretty serious-looking. The last thing Drift needs is for Deadlock to aggravate them when they're out here alone. He hesitates, unsure if he really wants to ask -- but he has to know. He needs some confirmation that this isn't just some weird trick or coincidence.
The sudden movement cost him, the pain of his injuries coming to new life and at least one poorly clamped fuel line leaking anew. He takes a knee rather than rise, trying to stabilize and conserve energy, a hand pressing to his side where the fresh energon slips out a gap in his plating. It's deja vu all right, some other fancy white and red mech said the same thing to Deadlock just recently. When are they gonna get the picture? Deadlock has no friends.
"Tch. You sound like that other guy. He said he was alone. Fraggin' liar." Deadlock spits energon on the ground, his tone derisive. It's easier to focus on that contempt than the list of error reports or the the various pains in his body. His red optics narrow at the last question. He'd given his old name to the first mech - Wing? - because his current name certainly wouldn't gain him any favor if his reputation was known here. But it felt wrong, triggering old memories he'd long since wanted to forget, to put behind him. It was an ugly truth though: he was without a home again. It all felt so unfair, that after all his hard work and die hard loyalty these past millennia, to be shunted back to being that worthless loser and with no real progress to show for it.
"How's asking?" he growls bitterly after a long moment, reticent to accept that fate, hands clenching into fists as if he could fight it off with his bare hands.
"The mech who just saved your life," Drift says, his optic ridge furrowing. He's really hesitant to give his name to the other mech, not when this is all so...it's something. If he really is talking to his past self, or another version of him -- well, as much as he's tried to put Deadlock behind him, he still remembers what he was like back then. If Drift unnerves him too much, he might decide it's time to get the hell out of dodge and away from the badgeless Cybertronian who sounds too familiar and looks at him with recognition in his optics. Or fight him. If Deadlock's feeling cornered enough, he just might attack Drift.
Not that fight or flight is a serious concern right now with Deadlock's injuries. Drift drops to a knee in front of Deadlock, holding out a tentative hand -- those injuries need treating, or Deadlock's going to bleed out eventually. He frowns slightly, a twinge in his spark. That nagging feeling of deja vu persists.
"I'm not with him." There had been two mechs fighting. And if he's finding his past self here on Theophany... Drift feels that twinge again, except now it's more of an ache. "What was his name? What happened to him?"
"Didn't ask you to." Deadlock grumbles. It's ungrateful, but he hates owing strangers anything. Still, when was the last time someone cared enough to do anything positive for his well being? It's not a thought that settles well. This mech will probably want something for his trouble later, and who would have more to offer? An infamous gun toting Decepticon of command rank, or some loser loner nobody? It rankles, but that makes the decision for him it asked for his name again.
Deadlock draws back warily as that hand is extended, as if it carries some kind of goody-goody disease he might get infected by.
"Whatdya want?" he asks, skeptical, his paldrons creaking as they try to rise, making him look larger. Bleeding out is a very real possibility here, given his fuel tanks are near empty as it is. He relishes starving slightly less than going into stasis on some backwater desert planet surrounded by opportunist enemies and weird neutrals with unrealistic motives. Yeah, that's as good as dead really. He has zero supplies or fuel and though mugging this neutral - who keeps looking at him funny and sounds eerily familiar - for his stuff sounds like a great plan it diminishes in appeal when he considers his own injured state. And if this guy has fighting - no, dodging! - prowess like the last one then Deadlock's chances are slim.
Deadlock shrugs and looks away at the last question. "Dunno. Wing maybe? Lost him in the fighting." Intentionally. But Deadlock is not going to admit that unless he has to. "You sure look like him though. Could be his spark twin or conjunx or something." GROSS.
"A good friend of mine once told me that helping others is the highest cause you can aspire to." Has Deadlock already heard those words by now? Is it just going to make him more wary? No more than his name would, surely.
When Deadlock says Wing's name, Drift goes utterly still. This isn't how things had gone before -- does it mean something that they're different now? Drift pulls his hand back when Deadlock shies away, hackles raising, but his optics sharpen into a new kind of intensity.
"I'm not -- any of those things. What do you mean you lost him? Did you see him get captured?"
Okay, now things are getting surreal, too surreal, for Deadlock's taste. Did he get his helm bashed in? One too many angry headbutts? It's like things are happening all over again but with the details different. Deadlock presses a palm to his shattered optic, helm aching, as he wobbles a little. The catacylin had been pumping when he first woke, but it's starting to fade and the weariness is setting in. Energon seeps from between his fingers at his side, not as warm as it should be.
"Yeah, yeah whatever. Just go on your merry, aspiring way, I got nothing you want." He's got nothing anyone wants, as far as he knows. Deadlock shoves that thought brutally to the side though along with the very intense emotions that well up along with it. This mech has something he wants though. A ship. Maybe it has supplies? His survivalist instincts are trying to work a plan while his lesser self slowly churns with emotional turmoil.
"I don't know! He probably bailed when I--GUH.' Deadlock shakes his head, teeth gritted, trying to marshal together some composure, a story to take advantage of this mech, to get access to that ship, but he loses out to the storm of emotion. "Why don't you go find him instead, if you fraggin' care that much!"
The drive back to Ratchet's shuttle after the battle had been a long one. Drift wasn't sure where Ratchet had originally set down, but it sure wasn't close to the stone fortress, and by the time they arrive, he's glad to finally stop for a little while. A little (okay, a lot) fighting shouldn't take this much out of him, but then again, it isn't really all about the fighting. Plenty else had happened today with far greater weight.
"I don't see why we have to leave the Leading Light here," Drift says as he transforms back to root mood, dusting sand off his finish. "I mean, all it needs is a few repairs, right?"
"'A few repairs'? What is your definition of 'a few', exactly? If we tried to get it even up and properly limping enough for it to be able to guide us home we'd be here for weeks. Just because I quit being CMO doesn't mean that First Aid can run the medibay all by himself indefinitely, nobody can. I'd like to be back before something else catastrophic happens, thanks."
Ratchet stands at the ramp to his own shuttle and gestures impatiently.
"C'mon, kid, let's just get out of here, all right?"
Drift holds up his hands in a defensive wave, glancing over his shoulder at the planet around them one last time. It's been a long stretch of time since he left the Lost Light, and it somehow seemed like a slow crawl until the last day or so. Then again, change always comes swiftly. With a vented sigh to mask the creaking in his neck -- he's reluctant to admit it, but Ratchet was right, it has been a while since he'd stopped for any repairs -- Drift ducks his head to climb up into the shuttle, but then he pauses, glancing back at Ratchet.
"Wait -- you stepped down as CMO? As in, actually stepped down?"
"Thank you," Ratchet says, but an odd sort of tension bleeds from him once Drift is safely aboard and the doors are clamped shut. At least until Drift speaks again. Ratchet looks back at him, his optics pale and unreadable.
"Well, I didn't know how long I was going to be gone, and I couldn't leave the ship without one. He's ready anyway--he's been ready. It was time."
Drift had never really let himself fantasize much about being returned to the Lost Light. He'd told Rodimus that it was he who had to leave, that Rodimus had to stay the course and fulfill what Drift was sure was prophecy. But even so, he wouldn't have expected Ratchet of all people to jump ship and come looking for him.
Maybe he should have.
"Oh." Drift rubs his hands over his knees, feeling out cracks and dents in the plating he's never bothered to repair or scuff out. This is -- weird. He's had his own kind of epiphany, started to see what he really has to offer and that maybe, just maybe, he deserves to have his old home back, but it's still new and weird. "So...everyone knows about Overlord now, huh?"
They weren't supposed to know, that was the point -- but apparently it's all been blown wide open now. He wonders if Prowl ever got what was coming to him for his part in all this.
"Yeah, everybody knows. We were on Luna-1, uh--it's a long story, and one that you should hear, but to this particular point... a killswitch had been put together to murder everyone who'd ever been constructed cold. Rodimus and our half of the Matrix were rigged up to something to stop it, and it might have killed him, so he told Magnus and everybody else what had happened with Overlord in case he didn't make it."
Ratchet sees those dents and scrapes, his fingers itching to do something about them, but he stays quiet for now.
"He did, for the record, he's fine. But everybody still knew, after that."
Drift should probably be inured to the sheer inanity of the Lost Light's usual adventures, but somehow finding a dead Metrotitan doesn't really seem to rank. His mouth opens as soon as Ratchet says Luna-1 and it stays open for a good few moments after he's done talking.
"You found Luna-1?" Okay, a cold-constructed killswitch is equally crazy, but it isn't one of Cybertron's great mysteries. He's absurdly relieved to hear that Rodimus is alright -- if something had happened to him while Drift was gone... He rubs his forehelm, trying to process all that at once. It's not as though he doesn't understand a guilty conscience. "Right. Well -- that makes sense, I guess. So that's when you left to come find me?"
Ratchet's shoulders hunch in a little and the corners of his mouth tighten.
"...no. Not quite then. Some stuff happened in between. Shockwave almost ended the world, for a bit, some time travel happened, and--oh, yeah, Brainstorm's a Decepticon. Was a Decepticon. A really bad one, actually. It was... complicated." Ratchet shakes his helm a little. "It hasn't been that long since I set out looking for you. I should have come sooner."
If it were anyone else -- or if Ratchet had any other expression on his face -- Drift might suspect Ratchet was just trying to mess with him. But no, this is...entirely serious. Brainstorm's a Decepticon? Time travel? Shockwave trying to -- wait, no. That one doesn't sound quite as insane.
"Well, I was going to ask you what you guys have been up to in the last year, but I guess that pretty much answers my question." He shakes his head and waves Ratchet off. "You clearly had your hands full, Ratchet. I don't need should. Live in the moment, remember?"
Ratchet hesitates, watching Drift for a moment before he shakes his helm
"A lot happened. We have enough of a ride back to the ship to go over it all." He eyes Drift critically for a moment as he keys in the homing signal and sets the autopilot. "You, however, look like you haven't bothered with maintenance since you left. I'm not shocked, but are you all right?"
/slides this bad son in here
Deadlock sure found him distracting.It would have been a great plan, except Deadlock miscalculated the strength of the slaver forces and the changing of guard shift on that ship.
He groans audibly, optics coming online to a small, darkened, space. Well, one optic anyway. Spiderweb cracks mar the other and his HUD flickers with static, a rash of red warnings reporting damage filling his view. He minimizes them with a flick of his head - rather wishing he hadn't as it sets his head swimming again - and his hands reach out to steady himself, easily meeting both sides of the tiny room he's in.
Deadlock ex-vents a frustrated growl. His joints feel stiff, like he's been in here a while, and his fuel is pinging low. His rations are gone as are his weapons. The damage to his frame is not extensive somehow, and he wonders just how the frag he ended up captured? All he remembers is pain an blacking out. He can hear muffled voices, the barking of orders and the sound of cargo being loaded.
"This one goes to base Red249 for parting out, load it last!"
Oh, slag. Deadlock tries to stand in a rush, getting his feet under him, but promptly slams his head into the ceiling of the room - no, the crate he's in - and curses vividly.
"Lemme ooout, fragggerszz!!!" His vocalizer breaks into static, obscuring half the words, and in the next moment his earlier question is answered. A hard jolt of energy courses though him then, and he howls in pain before passing out again.
no subject
Except it hasn't felt like he's been doing much good lately. He'd let Prowl put Overlord on the ship -- he'd gone along the plan, even if he hadn't liked it, because Rodimus wanted to do it, and somehow, Drift is sure, that makes it even more his responsibility. He could have stopped Rodimus, maybe. He could have prevented the loss of life, the terror of Overlord's rampage. He could have saved everyone a lot of suffering. He knows he's changed his ways, joined the Autobots, tried his best to embrace Spectralism, but standing here alone, his chest bare, he wonders how much he's really changed. How much that change matters when the end result is still death.
The Circle of Light is gone, but there's still more activity on Theophany than Drift was expecting -- or hoping for. He grimaces when he recognizes the slavers from a distance, their operation apparently rebuilt to be just as robust as ever. Well, if he's going to try and make anything right, he might as well start here. It feels oddly like starting from square one all over again. Drift embraces that feeling and privately hopes that it means something.
Once he gets near enough to see that a fight's already broken up, he's shocked to recognize the instigators as Cybertronians -- he doesn't recognize them, not at this distance, but it'd be hard to mistake them for any other race. Drift shifts into his alt mode immediately, tires squealing as he races over the terrain to join the fight. But he's too far, and not fast enough -- he sees one Cybertronian run the length of his luck and wind up a captive of the slavers. The sudden sense memory of those last few moments before he'd blacked out and nearly been crushed to death his first time around on Theophany rises in his mind, and it distracts him long enough that he doesn't see what happened to the other Cybertronian. Doesn't matter. The slavers have at least one of them, and Drift can't let them just cart him off.
Drift's a lot better at stealth than he used to be, and he manages to get into the slavers' base undetected, tracking the crate they'd loaded the Cybertronian into to the loading docks. He's on his own, and even with his swords and his improved skills since he was here last, he's badly outnumbered. Maybe he can convince the other mech to help him free the rest of these slaves.
He leaps from the shadows and neatly flips over the dock workers to land on the hull of the small craft they're loading the Cybertronian onto. "I'll be taking this delivery, thanks," he says brightly, jumping into the open cockpit as the slavers start to sputter and fire on him. The craft is unfamiliar, but pitch, yaw and roll are universal, and Drift manages to fire up the engines and blast away from the dock at terrifying speed. If he can just lose the slavers and land this thing out of sight, he can free the captive Cybertronian and maybe get back to Drift's ship to regroup, make some kind of a plan. He just has to get that far first.
:3 :3 :3
He groans, softly at first and then more loudly, as he tries to fight for true consciousnesses.
uhuhuhu
Drift kills the engine and leaps out of the cockpit, his feet touching the hull briefly before he nimbly jumps to the ground at the rear end of the craft. It seems like the Cybertronian is the only live cargo they'd loaded -- somehow, Drift is a little disappointed that he'd only manage to save one life.
But it's still a life, and one of a fellow Cybertronian. Drift pops open the hatch and sees the crate shoved inside, some kind of security interface on the front to prevent tampering. "Just hold on," Drift says to the prisoner inside, though he's not sure the other mech is even conscious. "I'm a friend -- I'm getting you out of here."
He drags the crate out of the cargo craft with some effort, stares at the security panel until he's deduced that it's not going to explode if he pokes it the wrong way, then draws one sword to slice the front of crate clean off. It's faster this way.
drum roll please
There's another groan, the mech's fingers twitching, shoulder paldrons sagged but shuddering as Deadlock's systems clearly try to compensate for so many jolts of energy in addition to the wounds he already had. The red glass of his cockpit is smashed and much of the kibble on his back is crumpled, old energon dried where someone clearly tried to stop energon loss by cauterizing fuel lines instead of patching them. The restraining bolt on his forearm looks a little worse for the wear as well, a little blackened around the edge.
CYMBAL CLASH
"You're safe," Drift assures him, one hand going to his shoulder. He doesn't want to aggravate the other mech's wounds, so Drift does his best to turn him over without jostling him too much. "Don't worry, I made sure they didn't fol-- "
And his vocalizer abruptly sputters out as soon as he sees the other mech's face. Even as smashed up and damaged as it is, Drift would recognize that face anywhere in an instant. His own face, so many years removed. How is this possible? Drift's mind races, leaving him dizzy. In that moment, he is utterly speechless.
no subject
For the last few moments his expression had been open, lax in his unconscious state and unmarred by the scowl that seems to hold him together these days, though the lines of suffering and anger are there, mapped to his face from centuries of use. Those features come to life as he groans again, that tiny bit of peace leaving them as he grimaces from his current pains. Red optics slowly come to life, the cracked one flickering fitfully, and the moment the static from his HUD clears and resolves the individual in front of him, he lurches backwards, reaching for his weapons.
Which are very definitely not there.
It all comes back to Deadlock a little too quickly, leaving him dazed all over again, but one thing is clear: he's got no clue who this new guy is.
"--the frag are you!?" He demands, voice harsh with static, mouth and teeth flecked with dried energon as he looks wildly about, trying to access this new situation.
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"I'm -- a friend," he says finally, holding up his empty hands, palm-out. There's a weird shiver in his circuits as that only intensifies the surreality of this moment. Hadn't those been Wing's words to him too, all those years ago? "Those slavers had you captive -- I hijacked one of their small cargo craft with you inside and hightailed it out of there. I've lost them, so don't worry -- just rest for now."
Deadlock doesn't look Cybertronian pancake-levels of injured, but his wounds are still pretty serious-looking. The last thing Drift needs is for Deadlock to aggravate them when they're out here alone. He hesitates, unsure if he really wants to ask -- but he has to know. He needs some confirmation that this isn't just some weird trick or coincidence.
"What's your name?"
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"Tch. You sound like that other guy. He said he was alone. Fraggin' liar." Deadlock spits energon on the ground, his tone derisive. It's easier to focus on that contempt than the list of error reports or the the various pains in his body. His red optics narrow at the last question. He'd given his old name to the first mech - Wing? - because his current name certainly wouldn't gain him any favor if his reputation was known here. But it felt wrong, triggering old memories he'd long since wanted to forget, to put behind him. It was an ugly truth though: he was without a home again. It all felt so unfair, that after all his hard work and die hard loyalty these past millennia, to be shunted back to being that worthless loser and with no real progress to show for it.
"How's asking?" he growls bitterly after a long moment, reticent to accept that fate, hands clenching into fists as if he could fight it off with his bare hands.
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Not that fight or flight is a serious concern right now with Deadlock's injuries. Drift drops to a knee in front of Deadlock, holding out a tentative hand -- those injuries need treating, or Deadlock's going to bleed out eventually. He frowns slightly, a twinge in his spark. That nagging feeling of deja vu persists.
"I'm not with him." There had been two mechs fighting. And if he's finding his past self here on Theophany... Drift feels that twinge again, except now it's more of an ache. "What was his name? What happened to him?"
no subject
Deadlock draws back warily as that hand is extended, as if it carries some kind of goody-goody disease he might get infected by.
"Whatdya want?" he asks, skeptical, his paldrons creaking as they try to rise, making him look larger. Bleeding out is a very real possibility here, given his fuel tanks are near empty as it is. He relishes starving slightly less than going into stasis on some backwater desert planet surrounded by opportunist enemies and weird neutrals with unrealistic motives. Yeah, that's as good as dead really. He has zero supplies or fuel and though mugging this neutral - who keeps looking at him funny and sounds eerily familiar - for his stuff sounds like a great plan it diminishes in appeal when he considers his own injured state. And if this guy has fighting - no, dodging! - prowess like the last one then Deadlock's chances are slim.
Deadlock shrugs and looks away at the last question. "Dunno. Wing maybe? Lost him in the fighting." Intentionally. But Deadlock is not going to admit that unless he has to. "You sure look like him though. Could be his spark twin or conjunx or something." GROSS.
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When Deadlock says Wing's name, Drift goes utterly still. This isn't how things had gone before -- does it mean something that they're different now? Drift pulls his hand back when Deadlock shies away, hackles raising, but his optics sharpen into a new kind of intensity.
"I'm not -- any of those things. What do you mean you lost him? Did you see him get captured?"
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"Yeah, yeah whatever. Just go on your merry, aspiring way, I got nothing you want." He's got nothing anyone wants, as far as he knows. Deadlock shoves that thought brutally to the side though along with the very intense emotions that well up along with it. This mech has something he wants though. A ship. Maybe it has supplies? His survivalist instincts are trying to work a plan while his lesser self slowly churns with emotional turmoil.
"I don't know! He probably bailed when I--GUH.' Deadlock shakes his head, teeth gritted, trying to marshal together some composure, a story to take advantage of this mech, to get access to that ship, but he loses out to the storm of emotion. "Why don't you go find him instead, if you fraggin' care that much!"
Just abandon him like everyone else has.
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ratchet
"I don't see why we have to leave the Leading Light here," Drift says as he transforms back to root mood, dusting sand off his finish. "I mean, all it needs is a few repairs, right?"
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Ratchet stands at the ramp to his own shuttle and gestures impatiently.
"C'mon, kid, let's just get out of here, all right?"
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Drift holds up his hands in a defensive wave, glancing over his shoulder at the planet around them one last time. It's been a long stretch of time since he left the Lost Light, and it somehow seemed like a slow crawl until the last day or so. Then again, change always comes swiftly. With a vented sigh to mask the creaking in his neck -- he's reluctant to admit it, but Ratchet was right, it has been a while since he'd stopped for any repairs -- Drift ducks his head to climb up into the shuttle, but then he pauses, glancing back at Ratchet.
"Wait -- you stepped down as CMO? As in, actually stepped down?"
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"Well, I didn't know how long I was going to be gone, and I couldn't leave the ship without one. He's ready anyway--he's been ready. It was time."
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"Were you ready?"
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prep for launch.
"I was ready to come bring you home."
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Maybe he should have.
"Oh." Drift rubs his hands over his knees, feeling out cracks and dents in the plating he's never bothered to repair or scuff out. This is -- weird. He's had his own kind of epiphany, started to see what he really has to offer and that maybe, just maybe, he deserves to have his old home back, but it's still new and weird. "So...everyone knows about Overlord now, huh?"
They weren't supposed to know, that was the point -- but apparently it's all been blown wide open now. He wonders if Prowl ever got what was coming to him for his part in all this.
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Ratchet sees those dents and scrapes, his fingers itching to do something about them, but he stays quiet for now.
"He did, for the record, he's fine. But everybody still knew, after that."
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"You found Luna-1?" Okay, a cold-constructed killswitch is equally crazy, but it isn't one of Cybertron's great mysteries. He's absurdly relieved to hear that Rodimus is alright -- if something had happened to him while Drift was gone... He rubs his forehelm, trying to process all that at once. It's not as though he doesn't understand a guilty conscience. "Right. Well -- that makes sense, I guess. So that's when you left to come find me?"
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"...no. Not quite then. Some stuff happened in between. Shockwave almost ended the world, for a bit, some time travel happened, and--oh, yeah, Brainstorm's a Decepticon. Was a Decepticon. A really bad one, actually. It was... complicated." Ratchet shakes his helm a little. "It hasn't been that long since I set out looking for you. I should have come sooner."
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"Well, I was going to ask you what you guys have been up to in the last year, but I guess that pretty much answers my question." He shakes his head and waves Ratchet off. "You clearly had your hands full, Ratchet. I don't need should. Live in the moment, remember?"
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"A lot happened. We have enough of a ride back to the ship to go over it all." He eyes Drift critically for a moment as he keys in the homing signal and sets the autopilot. "You, however, look like you haven't bothered with maintenance since you left. I'm not shocked, but are you all right?"
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