[ti]Ep 3.5[/ti]"The Catharsis of Efficiency" [Nokta/Windshield]
Jul 19, 2023 22:10:41 GMT -5
Post by Nokta on Jul 19, 2023 22:10:41 GMT -5
Episode 3.5 | Week 1 | Day 7
HELHEIM GLACIER REGION, GREENLAND, NORTH AMERICA - 10:00PM LOCAL TIME
THE WRECK OF THE AD INFINITUM
It had been nearly fourteen rotations of this planet’s day and night cycle since he’d awoken there. Cold, lost, starved, confused. Wondering about a flagship that had been lost before he’d even woken up. About a cause that wouldn’t be far behind without a steady hand to guide it.
Many more nights, weeks, and years– perhaps even centuries would have gone on, had one mech not been fortunate enough to catch the faint signal this ship had sent out through an old Nemesis frequency on the day it broke free from the ice.
That mech would be called back to this ship tonight for a different reason. But one no less as important than the first time he’d come here.
Nokta sat alone in the newly accessed captain’s quarters of the Ad Infinitum, two red orbs piercing through the dark like daggers. To anyone else he would have looked like a predator waiting to strike, sitting there in the icy void with an aura of calm violence about him. His digit tapped against the frozen console– not impatiently. He was thinking. Deep in thought.
He’d been doing a lot of this lately.
Atop the captain’s table in front of him, there sat a long, cylindrical object consisting of many sections designed to bend and conform to a mech’s frame. His frame. The beacon had frequently been the object of his ruminations in the past week, though not chief amongst them.
There had been other things. Both past and present. Ruminating in desperate search of something– he knew not what yet. It was too early, but still, he combed his processor for a range of topics– himself, his duties, his captain, his new charge over Windshield, Megatron. Always, Megatron, a looming shadow that never faded.
For so long that thought had been comforting-- Megatron's forever presence had been something to fall back on. But now it just felt like a crutch that could no longer be relied upon in the same way it once was. His conversation with the warlord had weighed heavily on him in the days following it, and so too had the aching confessions he’d had to make, not having had the strength to keep them to himself any longer. Painful, but necessary.
He could no longer avoid the truth: that even in death, his captain’s influence had been holding him back. There was no way of knowing just how far back, but acknowledgment was the first step in finding out just how deep that poison had rooted itself.
The next resided in the very ship that had tried to kill him.
A sudden buzz came over the room, icy particulate slipping from the walls and he ceiling like dust as the ship seemed to come alive with energy. Nokta’s optics fluttered upwards as he remained seated in the captain’s chair. A moment later, the ship surged with another buzz, and the emergency lights filled the room with their dull red lighting. In front of him, a computer console aboard the table shimmered to life with fuzzy blue fluorescents. It seemed the salvage crew had finally restored the ship’s backup power as he’d requested.
With a wave of his servo over the screen, the ship’s long distance communications array was accessed. He wasted no time seeking out the one he desired.
"Windshield."
He allowed a short pause after speaking his subordinate’s name, letting the line pop and crackle, as if torturing this ghost ship’s frayed communications array out of mere spite. Windshield would be able to see that the line he was being hailed on was not in fact Nokta’s own, but one originating from the highest priority line of a dead ship. There would be no elaboration needed as to the lieutenant's location, the coordinates in the margins spoke volumes.
"I’m in need of your services. Join me." And just like that, the line fizzled out. Succinct as ever.
He left no room for the hacker to argue or deny him his request. Megatron had placed Windshield under his direct command. To deny him would be to deny Megatron.
Whatever Windshield had been doing prior to Nokta’s call, that was over now.
Outside, the Ad Infinitum’s half-dissolved carcass jutted out of the ice no less the imposing monstrosity it had been two weeks ago. It rested atop a rocky plateau, where it had been meticulously dragged by industrial cables hundreds of meters away from the frigid shores it had been in danger of plunging into when Nokta had been found. Within a few days of being moved, snowfall had already accumulated, drifting up the sides of its base as if to pull the ghost ship back into the ice where it had come from.
A small camp had been carved out of the ice and snow at the base of a nearby cliffside. Scattered around were containers stacked to the brim with material– leftover tools, electrical parts, and the like. But the breadth of the salvage yard had been filled with raw metals extracted from the hull, their containers ferried in and out on a daily basis, some going to Blackridge, others to mines where the tools would be recycled.
Many panels had been removed from its exterior already, taken for the abundance of rare metals hidden within that did not naturally occur on this planet, exposing the skeletal innards of the cargo ship’s frame to the naked eye of any standing down below.
Nokta stood just below the bow of the Infinitum, most of the stern already missing since deconstruction had begun. He awaited his compatriot in front of a small maintenance door where they would enter the ship, watching as the small team of Vehicon miners moved to and fro about the deconstruction site, like ants feasting on a meal a thousand times their own size.
This ship had nearly taken his life. Even Megatron had told him that much– that he should have perished within its confines.
And now he was the architect of its demise.
HELHEIM GLACIER REGION, GREENLAND, NORTH AMERICA - 10:00PM LOCAL TIME
THE WRECK OF THE AD INFINITUM
It had been nearly fourteen rotations of this planet’s day and night cycle since he’d awoken there. Cold, lost, starved, confused. Wondering about a flagship that had been lost before he’d even woken up. About a cause that wouldn’t be far behind without a steady hand to guide it.
Many more nights, weeks, and years– perhaps even centuries would have gone on, had one mech not been fortunate enough to catch the faint signal this ship had sent out through an old Nemesis frequency on the day it broke free from the ice.
That mech would be called back to this ship tonight for a different reason. But one no less as important than the first time he’d come here.
Nokta sat alone in the newly accessed captain’s quarters of the Ad Infinitum, two red orbs piercing through the dark like daggers. To anyone else he would have looked like a predator waiting to strike, sitting there in the icy void with an aura of calm violence about him. His digit tapped against the frozen console– not impatiently. He was thinking. Deep in thought.
He’d been doing a lot of this lately.
Atop the captain’s table in front of him, there sat a long, cylindrical object consisting of many sections designed to bend and conform to a mech’s frame. His frame. The beacon had frequently been the object of his ruminations in the past week, though not chief amongst them.
There had been other things. Both past and present. Ruminating in desperate search of something– he knew not what yet. It was too early, but still, he combed his processor for a range of topics– himself, his duties, his captain, his new charge over Windshield, Megatron. Always, Megatron, a looming shadow that never faded.
For so long that thought had been comforting-- Megatron's forever presence had been something to fall back on. But now it just felt like a crutch that could no longer be relied upon in the same way it once was. His conversation with the warlord had weighed heavily on him in the days following it, and so too had the aching confessions he’d had to make, not having had the strength to keep them to himself any longer. Painful, but necessary.
He could no longer avoid the truth: that even in death, his captain’s influence had been holding him back. There was no way of knowing just how far back, but acknowledgment was the first step in finding out just how deep that poison had rooted itself.
The next resided in the very ship that had tried to kill him.
A sudden buzz came over the room, icy particulate slipping from the walls and he ceiling like dust as the ship seemed to come alive with energy. Nokta’s optics fluttered upwards as he remained seated in the captain’s chair. A moment later, the ship surged with another buzz, and the emergency lights filled the room with their dull red lighting. In front of him, a computer console aboard the table shimmered to life with fuzzy blue fluorescents. It seemed the salvage crew had finally restored the ship’s backup power as he’d requested.
With a wave of his servo over the screen, the ship’s long distance communications array was accessed. He wasted no time seeking out the one he desired.
"Windshield."
He allowed a short pause after speaking his subordinate’s name, letting the line pop and crackle, as if torturing this ghost ship’s frayed communications array out of mere spite. Windshield would be able to see that the line he was being hailed on was not in fact Nokta’s own, but one originating from the highest priority line of a dead ship. There would be no elaboration needed as to the lieutenant's location, the coordinates in the margins spoke volumes.
"I’m in need of your services. Join me." And just like that, the line fizzled out. Succinct as ever.
He left no room for the hacker to argue or deny him his request. Megatron had placed Windshield under his direct command. To deny him would be to deny Megatron.
Whatever Windshield had been doing prior to Nokta’s call, that was over now.
Outside, the Ad Infinitum’s half-dissolved carcass jutted out of the ice no less the imposing monstrosity it had been two weeks ago. It rested atop a rocky plateau, where it had been meticulously dragged by industrial cables hundreds of meters away from the frigid shores it had been in danger of plunging into when Nokta had been found. Within a few days of being moved, snowfall had already accumulated, drifting up the sides of its base as if to pull the ghost ship back into the ice where it had come from.
A small camp had been carved out of the ice and snow at the base of a nearby cliffside. Scattered around were containers stacked to the brim with material– leftover tools, electrical parts, and the like. But the breadth of the salvage yard had been filled with raw metals extracted from the hull, their containers ferried in and out on a daily basis, some going to Blackridge, others to mines where the tools would be recycled.
Many panels had been removed from its exterior already, taken for the abundance of rare metals hidden within that did not naturally occur on this planet, exposing the skeletal innards of the cargo ship’s frame to the naked eye of any standing down below.
Nokta stood just below the bow of the Infinitum, most of the stern already missing since deconstruction had begun. He awaited his compatriot in front of a small maintenance door where they would enter the ship, watching as the small team of Vehicon miners moved to and fro about the deconstruction site, like ants feasting on a meal a thousand times their own size.
This ship had nearly taken his life. Even Megatron had told him that much– that he should have perished within its confines.
And now he was the architect of its demise.