Part II: The Fire Down Below
Chapter 2.1: The Away Team
The primary scans of Eukaris made it clear that the colony planet was positivelygorgeous by organic standards. Which Rodimus felt he had a decent position for assessing considering how many various organic planets he had found himself on before captaining the Lost Light.
“Anything in particular you’re looking for, Captain?” the crew member asked, a little too timid to have been one of the original Lost Lighters.
“Just the coordinates I gave you, I’d like to get a good idea of what we’re walking into before taking ships down,” Rodimus replied.
He watched the screen carefully, optics narrowing their gaze as he noticed that there were some trails worn down – something he might not have known to look for if he hadn’t seen for himself how Earth’s organic plants and malleable ground hadn’t proven to bend and move in such ways.
“Rodimus,” Megatron’s voice carried from the other side of the bridge as the door opened. There was the vocal annoyance Rodimus had come to expect, still rather strong. It was a relief, really, since lately Megatron’s voice had taken a tenor of more being mystified with Rodimus than annoyed.
Annoyed was so much more fun.
“Hold up, Megs, I’m trying to figure out who’s been around the landing sight,” Rodimus said, waving him off without a moment’s hesitation. “If there’s locals nearby – colonist or not – there’s probably a chance they’ll take a whole bunch of transports landing as not so peacefully. Plus they apparently have had issues with Cybertronians in the past. Did you hear about the whole Combiner thing we missed while… huh. Hard to tell what we were doing at the time. Probably something epic–”
“Rodimus,” Megatron hissed, continuing the trend of annoyance.
The red and yellow speedster turned enough to tilt his helm at Megatron. “What?”
“I need to speak with you about this mission you are commanding,” Megatron snapped. “The one you are commanding mostly without input from the rest of this ship’s command structure.”
“I’ve talked to Magnus,” Rodimus shrugged only to be poked in the chest by the other captain.
“You have discussed nothing with me since we left Cybertron,” Megatron snapped. “That stops here and now. As captain of this ship–”
“Co-captain,” Rodimus grouched right back. “You always forget that it’s a co-captaincy when you’re pissed or trying to make a point. Something you happen to always be when you’re not taking a turn moping.”
The other mech’s red optics narrowed. “Rodimus.”
“Sorry, taking stock,” he backtracked with a cycle of his optics. “Anyway, I need to go brief the away team I’ve got together for this thing. If you want, for old time’s sake, you can run mission control with Ultra Magnus up here. I mean, odds are I won’t listen since it’s not exactly like we’re running any serious plays while we’re down thee, but–”
“Stop running your vocalizer for ten seconds!” Megatron snapped in aggravation. “You’re overdoing your usual nonsense and I can see when you aren’t as committed to playing the fool as you think you are.”
“Shows what you know,” Rodimus snorted, crossing his arms over his chest. “I’m way more dedicated to playing the fool than the average bot.”
Snapping his jaws shut, Megatron resorted to leering at Rodimus in complete irritation rather than continuing their verbal sparring.
Running out of material to distract with, Rodimus dropped his spoilers and leaned his head back with an aggravated noise from his throat. “Okay, fine.What are you trying to say? Just make it quick. I’m serious about needing to brief everybot before we get down there.”
“That,” Megatron said pointedly. “You are making large, sweeping decisions about crew management without consulting me whatsoever. That is not how the command structure works. I know for a fact that you spent the past four million years understanding how command structure was supposed to work.”
Unable to help himself, Rodimus let out a strained laugh. “Yeesh, Megs, how little do you know about me still? Knowing how it was supposed to work and actually obeying command structure are radically different things. And I definitely did one more than the other. Just ask Magnus how we met on Earth, it was a hoot.”
“Do not make a mockery of my concerns as captain, you infuriating little mech,” Megatron warned.
“There you go, doing it again,” Rodimus trailed off with a shake of his head.
“Why are you refusing to have so much as a conversation with me?” Megatron demanded. “We were past this. And we were past you exploiting my… historyto win arguments. Since Cybertron, though–”
Finally losing his patience for his feigned cool and collective attitude, Rodimus scowled at Megatron and stepped closer to him. “Since before Cybertron, Megs. Primus, are you paying attention at all?” he growled. When the larger mech only tilted his head, Rodimus threw up both arms. “We had a mutiny,Mister Co-Captain. The majority of our crew stood by the decision to oust our command. They didn’t trust us. Yeah, a lot of it was mechs being unhappy with you and my attitude toward being downgraded from captain to co-captaindidn’t help that, but… the plans were in motion before the final roster of the ship. And even with the evidence shoved in my face – in an alphabetized list, no less – I didn’t once see it coming. So no, right now, making decisions for this crew I’m not letting you have a word in edgewise because…” He deflated, spoilers and shoulders dropping. “This ship needs at least one captain not blamed for every stupid, scrap decision made. For taking the risks and going on the side quests that might seem distracting, but every now and then can stop Tyrest from committing genocide on ever Constructed Cold mech in the cosmos.” He looked seriously toward the stunned silent Megatron. “I need you to be the responsible one, alright? And if this mission doesn’t go well, if I come back from that stupid rock without anything to show for it, you need to make your disappointment loud and your punishment of using up resources real.Because that’s the only way things are going to work out any different on this redo.”
For a moment, Megatron was utterly perplexed, his optics wide and his helm tilted back.
When his vocalizer seemed to crackle back online, he shook his head. “You can’t honestly be doing something so–”
“Responsible? Noble?” Rodimus asked, putting a servo to his chin.
“Ridiculous and poorly executed,” Megatron corrected, though his tones were far from harsh or condemning. “And you truly could not have thought you could do it without telling anyone. Without informing me that that’s what you were trying to do here.”
“What? Of course I had to keep it secret,” Rodimus said with a simple wave of his servo. “Ultra Magnus would’ve objected with everything in him. Plus his acting abilities? Not the greatest.”
“You don’t think I would object?” Megatron asked, sound truly curious.
Cycling his optics, Rodimus rolled his head back. “Of course not. You love long plays. And this has you coming out on top. The only thing you wouldn’t like about this plan is that you weren’t the one who came up with it. Which you’re probably kicking yourself for.”
Megatron glared at him. “Don’t pretend to have me figured out, Rodimus. You’ll always find yourself gravely misled.”
“Fine, whatever,” he replied with a shrug as he started back toward the bridge door. Then, a little louder in case any of the crew was listening, he returned to his usual tenor. “I’m still going to Eukaris with the away team, Megs. If you wanna be useful, you could always go to the captain’s office. I think all my multicolored highlighters are unused.”
He didn’t look back to see that perplexed and annoyed look his co-captain was no doubt giving him, but a part of Rodimus still wanted to.
His new approach to co-captaincy was a lot more work on his processor, and even more than that thanks to the effort of acting as if it wasn’t new at all.
But it had to be worth it. It had to be because, for perhaps the first time since the Lost Light first took off under his command, Rodimus felt he had a true vision of what was to come for him and his crew.
There was no explosion taking them off course from the start. There was no petty feud with Thunderclash so long as he was among their numbers (and out of Rodimus’ sights, in all honesty).
Rodimus had this.
And to further ensure he was starting things off on the right pede, he had used Magnus’ write ups on their new crewmates to pick out an away team of several different cliques with only Brainstorm from Rodimus’ own ‘Rod Squad.’
After all, cliques were a bit of a problem on the ship.
Without any co-captains to continue distracting him, Rodimus made his way through the front of the Lost Light with ease after switching to his alt mode. He only somewhat caused a hazard as he dashed along, nearly knocking over a few unexpecting crew along the way.
If they weren’t used to such things on the Lost Light, odds were they were among the new recruits which just meant they’d have to get used to it and Rodimus, performing his co-captainly duty, was aiding in that process.
He reached the ship bay in what was nowhere near record time, but he assured himself there was nothing wrong with respectable tardiness considering just how busy one could get commanding a ship. He was certain that his assembled away team would understand.
What he wasn’t sure of was if Drift and Ratchet would understand. Considering they weren’t on his list.
Cycling his optics a few times to make sure he was seeing things correctly, Rodimus transformed and moved easily before the assembled and eager crew… and Drift and Ratchet, who had Brainstorm hovering near them with whatever gadgetry he had invented in the past twenty seconds.
“Here to see us off?” Rodimus asked hopefully.
“Here to check your processor,” Ratchet harumphed, crossing his arms and shaking his helm a few times.
Drift neared Rodimus, concern written all over his faceplate. “We heard you were going with these mechs onto Eukaris… with no one from the usual crew.”
“Hey,” Rodimus said defensively before throwing his servos in Brainstorm’s direction. “Brainstorm is, like, right there, guys. Don’t be rude.”
“Honestly, I wasn’t going to mention the offense, but now that it’s been brought up to everyone’s attention…” Brainstorm said cheekily, waving his new invention around in what Rodimus was certain was an unsafe way.
“You’re making a disaster for yourself to stumble into,” Ratchet warned snappishly.
“Demonstrable and fiendish lie,” Rodimus defended in a huff. “I am building myself some bridges. Obviously you wouldn’t recognize it. It’s part of a very secretive strategy I have.”
Taking a more casual approach, Drift stepped up and placed a firm hand on Rodimus’ shoulder. It worked in almost immediately making the defensive speedster relax under the hold. “I’m sure what you’re doing is something you have felt guided to do,” Drift said gently. “And I’m certain, like always, that it’ll end up being exactly what is needed of you. But I am not comfortable with learning – secondhand – that you’re taking an entire away team off ship without anyone familiar as backup.”
“Again,” Brainstorm perked up, “Offense.”
Rodimus looked slyly between the main two objectors before venting heavily and beginning to use his fingers to count down the points in his logic. “Eukaris is a colony planet that is not wild about native Cybertronians and it might be seen as an uh-oh if an entire fleet of former Cybertronian warriors landed on a holy site and started acting up, not that this crew has a habit of acting up and causing chaos or anything. There are mostly beastformers on this planet, and a lot of our additional recruits are beastformers or colonists from other planets which would make this more easy to navigate if the natives get restless. We also need to keep the away team small so it’s not imposing. Also, considering we’ve already gone through one, arguably two, mutinies in the past cycle I think it’s a good idea for me to start showing a friendly face to people outside thequote-unquote usual crew.”
Drift looked at him curiously for a moment, as if attempting to assess the validity of the remarks. Which, considering how not so long ago Rodimus could have been completely invalid without a pause from his best friend still managed to sting quite a bit.
Ratchet was absolved of such subtleties. “And what exactly does Brainstormfactor into any of that?”
“Beyond my incomparable genius?” Brainstorm asked loftily.
“And his unique position to get to tell me a bunch of dirt on Perceptor since they’re hold up in the lab together at all times?” Rodimus added.
“Yes, well, that, too,” Brainstorm waved off without hesitation.
For a moment, Drift and Ratchet seemed without further objection, but Rodimus’ fellow speedster brashly stepped forward all the same. “Take Ratchet and me with your away team,” Drift demanded. “I trust you, Rodimus. I believe this is all well intentioned and will no doubt work out excellently–”
“Have you completely forgotten how the Lost Light works? Don’t say poetically ironic things,” Brainstorm moaned, hitting the palm of his servo against his helm. “Now I’m sure we’re all doomed.”
“But you need more people who will be at your side,” Drift continued.
Rodimus stared at him then back to Ratchet who was giving the back of Drift’s head a similar glare.
“And me?” Ratchet gruffed.
Without looking away from Rodimus, Drift amended, “You need more people who will be at your side and Ratchet.”
Squinting, Rodimus hummed, unconvinced. “Can I trade him out for Velocity?”
“I’d be for that,” Brainstorm spoke up cheerily.
“Rodimus,” Drift said, squeezing Rodimus’ shoulder slightly, trying to convey the sort of seriousness that Rodimus had spent the majority of his life avoiding.
“Look,” Rodimus sighed, caving, “I’m about to brief everybody on what we’re doing down there. I’ve got two sites I’m interested in looking at and was going to split them up anyway. If you and Ratchet can be the leaders of Team B, I’d appreciate it.”
“Consider it done,” Drift said with a nod while Ratchet sighed, resigned to being pulled along on another adventure by Drift.
“I would’ve preferred being the Team B-for-Brainstorm leader,” Brainstorm sighed.
“C’mon,” Rodimus waved the jet over. “Let them have Team B fun. We’re going to the more interesting site as Team A anyway. Show them for crashing one of my away team parties. And also get us away from those two – the smell of fresh paint’s still in this room and I don’t know how much of a reminder that they got new upgrades I can stand!”
That cheered Brainstorm up and, in all honesty, having Drift and Ratchet along had cheered Rodimus some up as well. Though, of course, he’d be loathed to admit it to them.
Things were finally working out smoothly.
At one time, had he been asked what made him certain of the convictions in his beliefs – certain enough to persist and to fight in millions of year of conflict – Optimus Prime would have stood firm and proclaimed it was the strength he drew from the support of friends standing by him and his decisions.
With Cybertron’s unsteady peace so fresh, so new still, Optimus could have never imagined a day where it felt as though that support was so meager as to not exist at all.
It had been long since he lost whatever feeble argument there had been between himself and Rodimus about the decision of leaving with the Lost Light and yet it was still heavy on Optimus’ mind.
The wonder and awe of the mech who had willingly handed back the mech had left Rodimus’ spark seemingly some time ago and yet Optimus truly could not imagine when it had been.
He had told Ratchet that he surrounded himself not with believers but with friends, the bots and mechs who believed and followed Optimus or Orion Pax,not the Primacy. The sorts of bots who would have fought for their convictions if it had meant standing against a Prime. And Rodimus had never truly been an exception to that rule, but he had been different.
It was not the Primacy that Rodimus had followed maybe, but it was stillOptimus Prime who he seemed beholden to above any other. And it was Rodimus at Nyon and his ability to both stand against the enforcer Orion Pax and show Optimus Prime the truth of the Matrix that had started a new era in fighting their war.
And it was Rodimus who made the Matrix tug at Optimus’ spark like it trulymeant something.
On reflection, Optimus found what Rodimus had said about the Matrix to be very profound, the sort of profundity he had not shared with many others outside of his closest of confidantes.
You know how, one time in every million, your transformation cog just sings and changing shape feels as natural as… as putting one foot in front of the other?That’s how it felt.
Remembering Rodimus’ words and the joyous excitement he took in them as he told Optimus of his bonding with the Matrix made the Prime reach subconsciously toward his own spark chamber.
It wasn’t merely the difference in their experiences with bonding to the Matrix that was off putting anymore. It was that Optimus had a difficult time remembering any time in the past millennia that he had been able to speak ofanything with such joy.
But even still, Optimus recognized passion. It was passion and not joy that Rodimus had spoken against him with in their heated transmission.
And likewise it was passion that Optimus still felt when holding to what he knew he must do.
Gathering himself once more, Optimus reached for his ship’s communicator to activate its long range signal and redirect it toward his unit on Earth.
The calibrations took longer without Jetfire’s expertise, but he had left to speak with Wheeljack and others in the science division and Optimus did not feel right dragging his ally from whatever his plans were in order to do such a menial task. And even without him, soon enough Optimus was transmitting to his Autobots lightyears away.
While it took some patience, eventually Arcee’s hologram appeared before him.
“Sir,” she said firmly.
“Arcee, I trust Earth is well,” Optimus wasted no time.
She took a moment to tilt her head at him but answered expectantly. “Tensions are about the same as they were when you left, Prime, but we have kept well to the mission. Specifically Jazz, Kup, and Aileron have been working nonstop on the goodwill portions. Sideswipe, Sky Lynx, and I have been dealing with remaining Decepticon and Earth Defense Command when they become an issue. Cosmos has been in constant surveillance. Thundercracker, for whatever it’s worse, has maintained some sort of liason status with his former human handlers. Whether or not that becomes useful in the future is more in the air.”
"Friends,” he corrected lightly.
Arcee did the tilt of her head once more. “Excuse me?”
“I believe Thundercracker thought of the humans as allies and friends, and from their reactions to him compared to the rest of us, I believe there may be mutuality to the sentiment,” Optimus explained.
“Sure,” she responded slowly, still not impressed with sentimentality it seemed. “The point being, we’re holding here until you get back, Prime, but with everything that’s happened both on Cybertron and here on Earth, I suppose we’re hoping to hear good news on at least one front soon.”
“It is my intention to return once everything has settled here,” Optimus assured her. “And should things become dire or the situation to change drastically, I am a spacebridge away.”
“More like a Starscream’s Whim away, Sir,” she reminded him. “But regardless, I’m going to keep watch here as much as possible.”
“And you have my gratitude for that, Arcee, more than I could ever repay,” he replied. “Over and out.”
“Over and out,” she repeated just as the transmission ended.
Venting, Optimus brought a servo to his chin and thought long and hard about the next move he had to make when he felt something seemingly shift within his own spark.
Perplexed, he glanced toward his chassis before turning toward the door of his ship and finding the familiar form of Windblade standing nearby.
It was assuring to see a friend rather than a foe, but not that much more assuring. She should not have been able to get so far in their ship without either Jetfire escorting her in or somehow else alerting Optimus to her presence.
“Windblade,” Optimus said, turning completely and taking steps toward her. “How did you get here?”
She visibly hesitated before answering, still keeping the distance between them. “Sorry, Sir, I just came on board. I didn’t think anything of it.”
Optimus processed Windblade calling him Sir for a moment, somewhat confused about where the formality came from before ultimately deciding that it wasn’t the most important part of the conversation, even if it was odd.
“I find that unlikely,” he said simply. “I was aware that you have been attempting to covertly watch Starscream, but I am not so certain I enjoy being placed under the same scrutiny.”
“What?” she asked uneasily before snapping her fingers together. “Oh! Yes. Okay. Sorry, you’re right. You caught me. That’s what I’ve been doing.”
The conversation was beginning to feel so off putting, Optimus wasn’t even certain what to do with it anymore. He took another step forward and noticed the way Windblade withdrew, and how new ornamentation that Optimus had never seen her wearing before moved and clinked against her metal as she did so.
“Windblade?” he asked, questioningly. “What exactly is happening here?”
“A lot is happening, actually,” Windblade said, vocalizer seemingly rushing through her words. “A lot a lot. And most of it is difficult to really explain at thismoment. So I’m hoping that my word can account for something.”
Suspicious, Optimus narrowed his optics. “Of course it does, Windblade. But I can only deliver my answer once I understand the situation at hand.”
“I understand that,” Windblade sighed. “And I have… plenty of information. Jut that most of it I can’t share.” Her blue optics turned toward him, full of meaning. “So please trust me when I say that you must stay on Cybertron for the time being, Optimus Prime. We are going to need you.”
A beat of silence passed between them and Optimus felt the uncomfortable shift as he stood by.
There was so much more going on than he was able to conceive at that moment. But he didn’t now what.
"I know you can feel it, that something isn’t right here,” she continued, quickly as if the sooner her words were out the more impact they would have. “I know you can feel that, so I’m just asking you to trust your instinct, to trust the pull of the Matrix.”
Convinced something was wrong by that statement, Optimus straightened up further. “How do you know there is a pull to me or the Matrix, Windblade? What is going on here exactly?” he demanded darkly.
“Please, Optimus, trust me,” she said, turning and heading off the ship as quickly as she had came.
“That is not how trust works, Windblade, now answer me in any way you can,” he ordered, following her off the ship in a hurry. But what Optimus found outside was nothing – he was all but so clearly alone on the docking bay.
For good measure, Optimus looked to the skies in case Windblade had taken off in her altmode but found nothing.
Annoyed and deeply disturbed, Optimus brought a hand up to his audial and sought out Jetfire’s frequency.
“Optimus, Sir!” the scientist responded almost immediately. “I’m still with Wheeljack and the delegates at the moment, is there something you need?”
“Yes,” Optimus began, ready to question Jetfire about giving out security clearances, even to their allies and friends, when the jet’s words caught up with him. The Prime remained quiet a moment too long as he tried to make sense of the information.
“Sir?” Jetfire tried again.
“What delegates are with you right now, Jetfire?” Optimus demanded.
“The Camiens – Chromia and Windblade,” Jetfire answered.
Optimus scowled at the skies ahead. “Jetfire,” he said lowly, “tell Wheeljack and anyone else with authority at the capital that we need to begin an alarm. There is someone impersonating delegate Windblade and they somehow have gained access to security clearances even she does not have yet.”
“That’s…” Jetfire trailed off. “Nevermind. Of course, Optimus. We’ll be right on that – do you need someone to come to the shipyard and help you cover?”
“No, Jetfire, that will not be necessary,” he said, shifting to altmode. “I am coming to you.”
It was bizarre to Drift to have so many unfamiliar faces and auras surrounding him. There was still that noticeable difference between EM Fields of various Cybertronians and Cybertronian descendants which he had only just started to untangle and identify when they were back at Cybertron.
A part of him knew that it wasn’t that much different than if Rodimus haddevised the teams of former Lost Light crewmates. Not after the harsh departure Drift had received from the ship seemingly so long ago.
Traveling through the comparative wilderness of Eukaris, Drift tried to take comfort in at least two evident truths: that thick smell of fresh paint they had been overwhelmed by on the ship down had disappeared when Rodimus divided up their teams, and their captain had made the executive decision after making the division to put Drift in charge of the second team rather than Ratchet.
The second fact, in particular, seemed to have really done a number on Ratchet’s mood.
“You voluntarily step down as Chief Medical Officer and suddenly you’re last millennia’s model!” Ratchet snarled, to Drift’s eternal amusement.
“We’re very fortunate to have you on our team, Sir,” a younger bot spoke up – a beastformer moving a little too comfortably through the brush.
“Didn’t you just hear that I stepped down from CMO? I don’t have any power to suck up to,” Ratchet warned the newbie and shook his helm.
Looking over his shoulder toward Ratchet, Drift offered a somewhat smug smirk. “It wasn’t anything to do with confidence in you, Ratchet, it was just that I fit the part of expertise on this particular mission,” he assured the older mech.
“How so?” Ratchet pressed.
Putting a servo over his spark chamber, Drift smiled and kept his chin high. “Because Rodimus trusted that, of our team, I would be capable of recognizing the signs of Primus at this holy Primal site we are seeking out.”
As expected, when Drift cycled his optics and looked to Ratchet again, he found a disgusted scowl.
“Forget it,” Ratchet huffed. “I’ve lost my disappointment in being overlooked.”
“I thought you might,” Drift said. He then looked to the vocal beastformer who seemed to be some sort of animal form that was larger than a Turbofox. “You seem to be traveling the terrain rather confidently, I imagine you must be from this colony. Can you give us any insight about what we’re walking into? Or what to avoid to not disturb your fellow colonists.”
The beastformer’s nose curled in a snarl. “Maybe not grouping us all together? I sure as Pit am not like those feathery flyers or those submersible water breathers.”
Drift tilted his helm in surprise then turned to Ratchet who shared a similar expression.
“I’m taking it not everyone gets along on Eukaris then,” Ratchet deadpanned.
“There are alliances between tribes, and we all converge and listen to the wisdom of Blackarachnia and the webs,” he replied. “But there are tribes for a reason, of course.”
Somewhat disappointed to see such a familiar attitude on what seemed to be such a luscious and rich planet, Drift rested a hand on the hilt of his swords and looked in the distance. He supposed, given their Cybertronian origins, the colonies truly couldn’t have hoped to diverge to far from their source spark. Even when said source had spent the past four million years attempting to undo the rigid divisions and class structure that had nearly sent it into stagnant ruin.
“So what you’re telling me is that if this party happens to run into a tribe that takes issue with some member of a different tribe that’s in our group, we’re as good as scrap?” Ratchet snapped. “What sort of diplomacy was Rodimus thinking of when he set all of this up?”
The beastformer cycled his optics then tilted his head. “Wait… You think this whole group is made up of Eukaians? Not even close – the colors on these guys… they’d stick out like a sore thumb out here! Most of them have paintjobs.” He squinted his optics at them. “What? Do us Beastformers just look all the same to you or something?”
Taken aback, Drift raised his hands up apologetically. “That wasn’t what was meant, I assure you. As leaders of this search party, we just want to be aware of our assets. So thank you for all the insight you’ve provided for us. We’re mostgrateful for it.”
Unimpressed, the beastformer vented then dropped back to the rest of the group.
“This is not going well,” Drift sighed, dropping his hands in aggravation.
“What was your first clue?” Ratchet snorted. “This is typical Rodimus. Makes big, sweeping moves to assert his leadership, then doesn’t bother to follow all the way through and put the necessary thought behind it. Typical.”
Frowning, Drift turned on Ratchet. “I don’t think that’s remotely true, Ratchet,” he said gravely. “Especially not this time around. Rodimus has taken up the mantle of leadership very seriously, and even more than that I know he’s been reading over Ultra Magnus’ files backwards and forward since the mishap on Cybertron. He might not want it to seem like he’s trying because he mistakes comfort with leadership with an effortlessness in leadership, but he is. I’ve seen him with my own optics.”
"Right,” Ratchet replied dryly, sounding wholly unimpressed. “Where are these mysterious relics or artifacts or whatever nonsense supposed to be anyway? Or is sending us on a wild turbofox chase a part of Rodimus’ great plans, too?”
While some instinctive protectiveness raised itself from his spark, Drift suppressed it in order to check their coordinates for himself. They had been split up for quite a while with little to show for it.
But doing so proved to be only more confounding.
“My internal sensors must be acting up,” Drift uttered, looking around with a disquieted look. “They’re telling me we’re on the set path, but if that were the case than there should be some sort of ruins or monuments here.”
Ratchet seemed to wait on Drift to come to a different conclusion on his own, but ultimately sighed. “Okay, well, let’s think about this for what it is. The colonists and their Titan would have settled on this planet millennia before the War even started. We’re talking about artifacts and structures older than me here. And, given the organic makeup we’ve seen of most of this planet, they probably haven’t aged the best either. We’ll need to look harder if there’s even anything to find.”
Drift nodded, offering a small yet appreciative smile to his dear friend. “Thank you, good points,” he said before turning to face the small group of six following them. For good measure, Drift raised his arms and got the others’ attentions. “We should be coming up on a site of particular importance – one made by the ancestors of our colonist brothers and sisters. With such an ancient and holy task, we need to proceed with caution and respect. We can fan out – groups of two – and search the terrain for anything of interest and radio to each other on the common frequency once something’s found.”
When everyone seemed to nod in agreement, Drift lowered his hands. “Alright, pair up and move out.”
Looking to Ratchet, Drift caught the older mech shaking his helm. “And here you pretend to know nothing about leadership.”
“I know things,” Drift conceded. “But I know enough to be able to securely say that I’m best in an advisory position. Real leaders… they’re a rarer sort. I’ve been fortunate enough to see so many with so much to teach.”
The doctor cycled his optics. “Alright, ease up. There’s no one’s aft around to kiss.”
Drift nearly had his comeback ready for the remark when he noticed the ping of an incoming long distant transmission. And, given the way he perked up at the same time, Ratchet seemed to be on the receiving end of one, too.
Answering the ping, Drift shifted to a more reserved disposition. “This is Drift.”
“This is the Lost Light,” Ultra Magnus’ unmistakable voice said rapidly. “What is your current status? How quickly can you move to the coordinates we’re sending you now?”
Confused, Drift glanced to the coordinates available on his HUD before focusing on Magnus’ voice once more. “We’re currently progressing on our search for the Primal artifacts here on Eukaris–”
“They’re all functional,” Ultra Magnus said to someone not on the frequency. “How long will it take for you to reach the coordinates?”
“In altmode – given we just cleared a huge path – maybe fifteen minutes,” Drift answered. “Ultra Magnus, what’s going on? Why can’t you have Rodimus’ team check it out? They should be much closer–”
“Drift, those are Rodimus’ coordinates,” Magnus said. “They’ve been attacked and we lost contact.”
Without another word, Drift transformed and opened up the common frequency. “Everyone to me!” he ordered.
His spark, normally so controlled and centered, began to pulse erratically.
All Drift could think was that he should have known something would be wrong. He should have allowed himself to feel the warnings.
But he didn’t, and now it seemed Rodimus was in trouble for it.

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Isame on Chapter 1 Sun 17 Jul 2016 03:29PM UTC
Last Edited Sun 17 Jul 2016 05:02PM UTC
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Last Edited Wed 24 Aug 2016 11:18PM UTC
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Last Edited Sat 03 Sep 2016 11:35AM UTC
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Last Edited Sun 04 Sep 2016 06:50AM UTC
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