1.5 AR - Knaves and Rogues. (Closed)
Sept 6, 2014 22:04:05 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2014 22:04:05 GMT -5
Wheeljack's Lab, Week 2 - Day 2
It was the smell.
Rook had snapped out of the shallow thing he called recharge, and for a long moment he couldn't figure out why. None of his senses could detect anything untoward, the light scan he immediately ran over his vicinity revealed no threats.
He kept perfectly still in the dark, dim blue optics narrowed and darting about as he marked the shadows in the small closet he'd taken over as a room. Work table. Shelves full of scrap (the literal kind). Makeshift centrifuge. Pile of soon-to-be something. All was as he'd left it when exhaustion had finally taken him to task. Lately it was about the only way he got any recharge at all. His internal chronometer told him it wasn't even unduly late, as planetary night-time went.
He shuttered his optics. Something had woken him up. It tickled not his senses, but his memory, and just as suddenly as he'd snapped awake he recognized it. It was metal, metal heated sun-red and star-white. It was the smell of better days, happier, simpler. Who would even --
Oh, of course. The new resident Wrecker. And engineer. Chagrined, Rook had to admit he'd sort of stopped listening when he'd heard 'Wrecker'. Apparently, he shouldn't have.
The scent was probably being pulled out of Wheeljack's workshop and getting caught into the main base's vents, and now it had all of Rook's attention, simply because it had been so very long since anything even resembling it had crossed Rook's path. Spooks did not socialize, not really. But he hadn't always been a spook.
Without really knowing what he was doing Rook found himself out of his room and winding his way around cameras and sensors. He had to wonder if eventually Red Alert would stop putting the spooks on the security monitor roster; he had to know what it was doing to hallway security. But he hadn't, yet, and so Rook ghosted through the hallways until he found himself at a door he'd never been to, with half a dozen ideas sort of nebulously chasing one another through his processor.
He laid a hand against the door for a long moment, then knocked politely, pitching his voice to be heard. "Permission to come aboard, captain?"
It was the smell.
Rook had snapped out of the shallow thing he called recharge, and for a long moment he couldn't figure out why. None of his senses could detect anything untoward, the light scan he immediately ran over his vicinity revealed no threats.
He kept perfectly still in the dark, dim blue optics narrowed and darting about as he marked the shadows in the small closet he'd taken over as a room. Work table. Shelves full of scrap (the literal kind). Makeshift centrifuge. Pile of soon-to-be something. All was as he'd left it when exhaustion had finally taken him to task. Lately it was about the only way he got any recharge at all. His internal chronometer told him it wasn't even unduly late, as planetary night-time went.
He shuttered his optics. Something had woken him up. It tickled not his senses, but his memory, and just as suddenly as he'd snapped awake he recognized it. It was metal, metal heated sun-red and star-white. It was the smell of better days, happier, simpler. Who would even --
Oh, of course. The new resident Wrecker. And engineer. Chagrined, Rook had to admit he'd sort of stopped listening when he'd heard 'Wrecker'. Apparently, he shouldn't have.
The scent was probably being pulled out of Wheeljack's workshop and getting caught into the main base's vents, and now it had all of Rook's attention, simply because it had been so very long since anything even resembling it had crossed Rook's path. Spooks did not socialize, not really. But he hadn't always been a spook.
Without really knowing what he was doing Rook found himself out of his room and winding his way around cameras and sensors. He had to wonder if eventually Red Alert would stop putting the spooks on the security monitor roster; he had to know what it was doing to hallway security. But he hadn't, yet, and so Rook ghosted through the hallways until he found himself at a door he'd never been to, with half a dozen ideas sort of nebulously chasing one another through his processor.
He laid a hand against the door for a long moment, then knocked politely, pitching his voice to be heard. "Permission to come aboard, captain?"