â¨I am only (slightly) obsessed with robots, I swearâ¨
Hello! Call me Fox. I am an artist and a writer who enjoys robots and paranormal stuff.
Feel free to ask me anything. I love to ramble! I might be slow to respond, but I try to respond to everyone!
I am very okay with fan art or any fan creations! I would love to see whatever anyone makes! If you do make something, just @ me or submit it as an ask so I can see it :]
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Paranormal Encounters AU: JazzProwl Ghost hunting AU - Paranormal investigators Jazz and Prowl run into strange robotic creatures in the woods. After this encounter, everything they know about themselves comes into question.
Paranormal Encounters AU Masterpost
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Cryptids and Consequences AU: JazzProwl Cryptid AU - Jazz was a human killed by an invading group of aliens calling themselves the Decepticons. The creatures and cryptids who call Earth their home rally to strike back. Earth has already been claimed, and the Decepticons are not welcome.
Cryptids and Consequences AU Masterpost
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Project Simpatico | TF Project Hail Mary AU:
Human Brainstrom and Cybertronian Perceptor work together to figure out what makes Tau Ceti immune to Astrophage.
Project Simpatico | TF Project Hail Mary AU Masterpost
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Natural Habitats AU đ: Two very different documentary crews, a group of Mer and a group of Cybertronians, filming each other for different reasons.
Natural Habitats AU Masterpost
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Answers to Asks: Responses to asks I get
Writing: All writing I have tagged on my blog
Fanart Tag: Any and all fan-related works I've gotten. I love all of it dearly <333
I just read chapter 6 of Natural Habitats and it is so good!!! This has been so much fun to read thank you!
Question for you? Donât know if this is spoilers. But in chapter 6 Jazz mentioned seeing the hate of organics from the Senate first hand with Orion. Does this mean OP/Orion pax is organic???
Orion isnât organic. But he loves all forms of life. Jazz might have picked up his love of animals from him.
After the Senate was âdisbandedâ Orion and Jazz had to go through alot of the more shady operations the Senate had running. The Senate had deleted/purged a lot of information to cover their tracks when they knew their days were numbered, but there were some remaining files. Those files highlighted some of the experiments the Senate had done to organics.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
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Jazz knew how he came off. Casual, carefree, and not particularly aware of dangers around him. It was an image he had carefully crafted when functionalism was still dictating what he could and couldnât do. He had found it to be an incredible way to avoid detection and get the drop on his enemies. It was a double positive.
It was easier to strike back if your attacker thought you weren't paying attention. He hadn't known Chromedome for long, and he wasnât planning on lowering that guard. His friends might have called him paranoid, but it kept him functioning. He didnât know what Chromedome did when he was with the enforcers, but he had the distinct feeling it wasnât anything good.Â
Chromedome seemed off. It wasnât in any way he could put into words yet. But something seemed wrong with him. Jazz liked Chromedome so far, but he didnât trust him. Jazz only trusted a few mechs, and all of them were either offline or on Cybertron.Â
He had misplaced his trust one too many times for him to trust anyone. Mechs betrayed each other all the time, and over the smallest things. He didnât trust easily.Â
Wildlife, and animals on the other side, were a different matter entirely. They didnât have the capacity to maliciously lie and strike out. If they struck out, it was always the fault of something a mech had done. Maybe they were scared or threatened, and they would lash out in defense; they wouldn't attack without reason. It was something Jazz appreciated.Â
He could trust animals not to attack him for no reason.
Jazz wasnât an idiot. He knew he could still, and would, attack him for other reasons. But never to betray him maliciously. He was on guard with every creature he encountered.
Being on guard constantly was starting to get draining. Sneaking off on his own was beginning to look more appealing. Jazz could play the part of a sociable mech well enough. Spending all this time alone with one other mech was starting to put him on edge.Â
They were between shoots. Jazz was sitting down in the small corner of the abandoned building they were calling home. He was looking through the rapidly building pile of footage. Every few clicks, he would flick his optics up at Chromedome. The other mech hardly moved. He sat perfectly still, reading the data pad Jazz had prepared for this trip.Â
Jazz was in a loop of looking down and working only to catch a glimpse upward. He was just keeping an optic on Chromedome. The lack of motion from him was putting Jazz on edge. Jazz needed some time to himself. Where he didnât need to watch his back plates as closely.Â
Jazz loudly stretched his joints. He let his frame make enough noise so Chromedome would look over.
âI need to stretch for a bit, Iâm just gonna go on a short walk,â Jazz said. âIâm getting a bit stiff.â
âDo you want me to come with you?â Chromedome titled his helm.
Jazz stood up. âNah, you can stay here, Iâll be back soon.â
Chromedome nodded, âIf youâre sure.â
Jazz backed out of their small space slowly. The door was getting easier to open each time they moved it. More ice became dislodged, making the mechanism easier to operate manually.Â
Jazz told himself he was just going to leave for a little bit. Just to clear his processor. He was relieved at the silence as soon as he shut the door behind himself. It was still light out. But the clouds were so thick he couldnât make out where the systems star was in the sky. It was probably still low on the horizon; the night cycle had only ended a little while ago.
Jazz started walking. He wanted to get away from Chromedome for a bit. He also wanted to figure out if there was anything he wanted to say in front of the camera. Most documentaries on this planet had always focused on the grizzly fate of the settlers. If they mentioned the technorganics, it was always in a bad light.Â
Vicious creatures that attacked their creators when they had the first opportunity to.Â
It didnât matter to anyone else that there was no evidence of the settlers being killed off by the Mer. Jazz personally thought most of the settlement had fallen into the ocean after some sort of seismic event. It was a more interesting story if the creations killed their creators. There were no documentaries just featuring the Mer as anything other than cold, hardened killers.Â
There were research articles. But those never got shared around much. Jazz had to use some of his old contacts to get access to them. He even found those to be lacking. Some of them read like they had chunks missing. But according to his contacts, those were the only versions of those files in the archives.Â
Jazz was almost starting to believe the Senate just wanted Mechs to assume the wildlife here would kill the first mech it saw to scare them away. Gelu was already dangerous with all the water. The Senate probably didnât want to send out more rescue crews when the next colony fell into the ocean.Â
Jazz walked down the cliffside shore slowly. Enjoying the view of the ocean below.
He could already tell the Mer weren't inherently violent. They didnât react defensively when they were close to them yesterday. They didnât display any signs of defensive or defensive behavior. They seemed more curious about whatever creatures had come to what must have been seen as their territory.Â
Jazz tread carefully over the ice and snow. He made his way over to their little point they had been using to access the beach. He wasnât going to go close to the water. But as long as he was there, he might as well check on the cameras.Â
He started to climb down onto the first outcropping. He heard something move in the distance. He looked down toward the sound. The larger Mer was perched on a rock near the beach. It looked toward him for a second before turning away. Itâs optics where focused further out into the ocean.
Jazz wondered if any of the Mer even remembered Cybertronians. No one knew how long Mer lived. There had never been a living one placed in long-term captivity; a few had been observed for short periods, but the records of any specific observations were long gone. If there were any surviving Mer, they would be older than most living Cybertronians.Â
If the Mer were old enough to remember their creators, he would have expected more defensive or skittish behavior. The two they had encountered so far seemed calm around them so far. Jazz wasnât going to push any boundaries with the Mer. He was planning on keeping a safe distance.
Jazz slowly climbed down the cliffside. The large grey Mer didnât look over at him. Jazz leaned more into his mindset as a spy and inched forward carefully. He kept his motions short and quiet. He didnât want to spook it.
When his pedes touched the gravel on the beach, the Mer twitched. It turned on its perch and narrowed its optics toward Jazz. It didnât bear its teeth, and it didnât show any sign of what he thought would be defensive behavior.Â
Jazz stilled. The Mer stilled. It examined Jazz for several seconds before deciding he wasnât worth the attention. The Mer rolled onto its side. It lay its head down on the rock and kept its optics focused on Jazz.Â
Jazz took a careful step. The Mer didnât move. He took another step, more confident. The Mer huffed and rolled over. Itâs back-faced Jazz. Its fins are more visible. Twitching and moving as the wind howled against it. Streaks of blue, and the odd hints of red littered its mostly grey body.
It was a magnificent creature. He couldnât deny the inherent horror of the Merâs creation. But he admired their beauty.
The Mer didnât seem as bothered by the cold as he was. It was amazing to see. He was wounded by what was done to them to allow them to survive in such a harsh environment so casually.
Jazz found a place to sit. He pulled out his data pad and swore at himself for not bringing a camera down with him. After this, he was going to make it a habit to bring the device with him in his subspace every time he left their shelter.Â
He spent his alone time observing the Mer and writing about anything he observed that he thought was interesting.Â
Their behavior, their biology, everything about these guys was poorly documented. Jazz thought it was a shame. They were such a beautiful and majestic species of life. One that was created by Cybertronians, only to be abandoned by its creators after the settlement fell. It seemed cruel in a way, but Jazz knew if the Senate were more involved in their care, the outcomes for them would have been negative.
One of the many things Jazz hated about the Senate was their disdain for organic life. He had seen the first servo with Orion, what type of treatment organic species had gotten under the Senateâs care.
It was interesting to see how well the Mer were adapted to the planet. Jazz shivered in the cold, but the Mer didnât seem the least bit bothered by it. It breathed in like an organic creature. Jazz was familiar with organic ocean life on other planets, and he saw some similarities. He saw gills, but the Mer didnât seem to struggle with breathing air, at least for short periods.Â
Jazz sat staring at the Mer.
He heard pedes touch down onto stone. He looked up. Chromedome was starting to climb down the cliff. Jazz bit back a groan. He looked at his chronometer. He did a mental double-take. He was gone for longer than he thought. It wasnât like him to lose so much time. Documenting the Mer had just taken up more of his attention than he thought it would have.
Chromedome must have gotten worried when he didnât come right back.Â
âThe mean-looking one is still here?â Chromedome said as he approached Jazz.
The Mer turned to face the two of them at the sound of Chromedomeâs voice. It stared unnervingly at the two of them. It made a call that graded against Jazzâs audials.Â
The other smaller Mer peaked out of the water. Chirping back at the larger one.Â
âMy bad, I mean the creepy-looking one,â Chromedome said.Â
Jazz made a mental note to mute the audio for this clip.
The smaller Mer chittered and barked. The larger one looked almost offended as it pushed off its rock and sank back below the water.Â
âI think you offended him,â Jazz joked.Â
The smaller Mer stiffened at his voice. It dipped deeper into the water, only just peaking its head out.Â
âIt is a creepy-looking one,â Chromedome insisted.
âI donât think it looks creepy,â Jazz said.
âWhat do you think it looks like then?â
âMysterious, maybe? Exotic? I donât want to call them creepy in the documentary; they get enough of that from everything else thatâs been made about them.â
Chromedome shrugged.Â
âIâm still going to call it creepy when the cameras aren't rolling. Itâs almost unsettling how Cybertronian they look. I donât know why they were built like that.â
âNot like there's anyone left to ask,â Jazz said. âWho knows?â
âI got some lines I want to record while the light is still good,â Jazz said. âDo you have the camera on you?â
Chromedome had the camera out and ready from his subspace before Jazz could even cycle his optics. Jazz waited for the indicator light to turn green before he started.Â
âWeâve been incredibly lucky so far in our encounters with the local wildlife,â He kneeled, and Chromedome followed his motion.Â
His audials could still hear the smaller mer in the water behind him. He was far enough away from the shore that he felt comfortable turning his back to the creature. He stayed alert and got ready to run if it made any sudden moves he didnât like.
âSo much remains unknown about the mysterious life on this planet. Merâs remain a mystery. No one is even sure how long they live. There could still be Mer on this planet that were created by the original colonists.â
The Mer chittered and called out. Shrill and high. A new sound. Jazz turned around. It dipped under the water before scrambling up onto the beach. Chromedome and Jazz both took steps back as it scratched at the stone.Â
Jazz wasnât sure why it was doing that. It didnât seem to be going after either of them. Its behavior almost seemed erratic.Â
He heard a loud call. Deep, booming. The ground underneath his pedes trembled. Familiar.
Jazz stayed calm. His optics narrowed.
âWhat was that?â Chromedome whispered.
âAnother creature local to the planet, get to the cliffside, be quiet,â Jazz whispered back.Â
The Mer dragged its way inshore. Jazz ran, and Chromedome followed after him. He heard another call. This one was louder. It was getting closer. They didnât have time to climb away.
Another booming noise shook the beach. The Mer scrambled behind a rock and curled into its tail. It pressed itself flat against the ground and didnât look back at the two Mechs as it looked out at the ocean.Â
In an explosion of water, a giant creature burst from the waves. Its head thrashed around violently. Its body was littered with scars. Its mouth split open. A tongue licked the air. It was a long creature that seemed to be all tail. It didnât have any servos or other limbs. Wires pulsed with a dim color under its scales. It turned its dead blue eyes onto the shore. The air rumbled with a growl. It snapped forward out of the water.
Chromedome pressed further against the stone wall.Â
The smaller Mer uncurled itself and let out a high screech. The creature started to move onto land. It jerked its massive head around and lunged. The large Mer leaped out of the water and grabbed the end of the creature. It let out a cry as it was dragged back down into the water.Â
The larger Mer wrestled the creature, it was several times longer than the Mer. The animal wrapped around the Mer, but the Mer dug its claws into the creature's side. Blood leaked into the water as the creature thrashed. Its long, slender form slipped from the Mers' grasp. As it moved, the Mers' claws dug into its scaled hide.Â
The creature disappeared beneath the waves.
The Mer didnât dive after the creature as it went back underwater. The larger Mer called, and the smaller Mer called back. Jazz watched as the smaller Mer crawled back into her water. It swam around the layer one as the two of them called back and forth to each other.Â
âWhat was that?â Chromedome asked.
âA prototype, the colonists' first attempt at making life,â Jazz whispered, âTell me you were recording that.â He watched as the two Mer kept calling to each other. âTheyâre supposed to be extinct. The Senate said they were all infertile and too unstable to survive.â
Jazz swore at himself. He should have known better than to trust that information. It had seemed likely based on what he had read. Unlike Mer, the prototypes had been captured and brought off-planet. They all shortly died after leaving. But obviously the creatures were more stable than the Seante gave them credit for.
âThe camera was recording the whole time; I was too focused on getting away to get a good shot.â
Panic was already gone from Chromedomeâs voice. The mech was back to being unnaturally calm.
âWe can look over the footage during the night cycle,â Jazz said.
The smaller Mer ran its claws over the larger one. Jazz watched as it gently traced over wounds that were slowly leaking a bright purple fluid. The larger didnât attack the smaller as it poked and prodded.Â
The larger one barked sharply one last time before swimming back underneath the waves. The smaller looked back at Jazz and Chromedome before following.
âItâs amazing how intelligent they are,â Jazz said.
âTheyâre uncanny,â Chromedome flicked the camera off. âI could almost imagine them walking down the streets of Cybertron if you took away the tails,â Chromedome stored the camera away in his substance. âAnd you know minus all of the organic bits.â
âMakes me wonder why they were made to resemble Cybertronians so much. I just donât see a practical reason for it,â Chromedome said.
âSenate always said this planet was full of nut-jobs, and scientists who were a little loose in the moral department.â
âYouâve never really seemed like one to put a lot of weight into what the Senate said,â Chromedome responded.Â
âI canât really think of any other reason beyond crazy scientist," Jazz said honestly.Â
Jazz vented harshly. âCome on, I want to get some shots from other places besides this beach, might be good to take one of my drones out for a bit.â
Jazz expected a complaint. After their ordeal, he would have expected more complaints at the prospect of more work.
Chromedome started to walk back up the icy steps. âMight as well, never know when the weather is going to turn here.â
Jazz hid the surprise. He nodded to Chromedome.
âYeah, what I would give for a weather satellite, or for any satellite, not having long-range comms is a bit of an adjustment.â
This planet had originally had a few satellites orbiting it, but without a population, they were deemed unnecessary and removed. The only way to communicate off planet was with an emergency beacon, and that would only send out an SOS; it didnât allow them to communicate anything else.
The two of them made their way back to their shelter. Chromedome and Jazz searched through their equipment, searching for one of the two drones Jazz had brought with them to this planet and its remote control.Â
The two of them stood on the edge of the cliff. Jazz huddled into Chromedome and watched the feed as he flew the drone.Â
There were many things to hate about this planet. Even Jazz would admit that. The views were not one of them. The way the light caught the icy glaciers in the ocean was a sight to see. Even on camera, it was breathtaking.
Jazz was excited to share this when they got back home. He wanted to post something about this planet that wasnât just sensational conspiracy theories demonizing the animals here.Â
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
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Chromedome wasnât excited when he found out the only place to recharge in their make-shift shelter was on the floor. If there were ever berths in this building, they were long gone. The only good thing about their shelter was that it was marginally warmer than outside. He could still feel the chill in his protoform even after the heater ran during the night cycle. It burrowed deep into his frame.
Onlining in the morning was slow. His frame felt heavy and sore. He didnât feel rested. Recharging on the floor was not a great experience. He wasnât thrilled to be doing it again.
 Jazz groaned from his claimed spot on the floor as Chromedome stood up. Chromedome made his way over to their supplies and started to look for an Energon ration. He shakily sat down against the floor as he started to refuel.
âIâm going to check the footage from last night,â Jazz said.
Jazz pushed himself up from the floor, and he looked through their half-unpacked mess of supplies. After searching, he pulled out a data pad. Jazz grabbed his data pad and flicked it on. It whirred and clicked as it booted up. Jazz had a frown on his face as he looked through the footage.
âLooks like we lost one of the cameras last night,â Jazz said as he leaned down, huddling over the device.
Jazz scooted over next to Chromedome and showed him the camera feeds. Both of them were still there. Jazz tapped a button on the screen, and the footage started to play. Chromedome leaned in as the clip sped up. A flash of grey struck out at the camera before the video feed was lost. The audio feed continued for several more seconds.
A loud splash cracked through the speakers. Clicks and whistles trilled, then died out quickly as the audio feed was also lost.
âAnother Mer?â Jazz asked eagerly. âThere must be more here than the council thought.â
âWell?â Jazz said.
âWell, what?â Chromedome asked.
âWe should go out there and replace that camera. Get an early start,â As he spoke, Jazz was already pulling another camera out of one of the crates. Â
Jazz let out a triumphant sound as he put the object in his subspace. He stood by the door eagerly. Chromedome made a show of standing up slowly and walking next to Jazz.
âGrab one of the cameras too, never know when weâll get the chance to film something,â Jazz said.
Chromedome grabbed the first camera he saw and placed it into his subspace. Jazz didnât comment on his choice. But the other mech kept a close optic on him as he put the device away.
The door was still a pain to open. But between the two of them, it was doable. The morning air was just as unpleasant as it was the previous cycle. Ice kicked up into his visor by harsh winds as soon as he stepped outside.
The sun wasnât visible in the sky. Thick white cloud cover greeted the two of them that morning. The two of them walked carefully toward the cliffside. The ocean crashed against the rocky shore. A mist was sitting thickly on top of the water. It was a haunting sight.
Jazz and Chromedome made their way back to the part of the cliff they had used as makeshift stairs. Jazz started climbing down without hesitation. Chromedome followed quickly after him. The climb down was still difficult. He had to carefully place his pedes firmly so he wouldnât slip down off of one of the large outcroppings they were using to make their way to the beach.
âLet's get some footage, maybe weâll get lucky and find some evidence of the Mer who grabbed the camera,â Jazz said.
Chromedome pulled the camera out of his subspace.
Jazz approached the location of their missing camera, with Chromedome walking behind him. Jazz looked back. He moved in front of Chromedome carefully.
âTry to keep me in the middle of the frame, or just off to the side,â Jazz said.
Jazz stood up straighter. His expression became looser.
âWeâre rapidly approaching the location where just last night we believe one of the local technorganic life forms damaged one of our time-lapse cameras,â Jazz said into the camera.
Jazz walked with a new confidence. His voice was open and friendly. Mainly, he just seemed excited in a contagious way. Chromedome was shocked by the sudden change in his demeanor.
Chromedome panned down at the location where they had left their camera set up. He was surprised to see the tripod was still there. The camera was nowhere to be found, but the tripod had been left undamaged.
âHuh,â Chromedome said.
He put the camera back in his subspace and leaned over to pick the tripod up.
âWhat?â Jazz asked.
âItâs not damaged,â Chromedome brought it up to his visor to examine it more closely. âThere isnât even a scratch on it.â
If an animal had grabbed it and pulled the camera off its mounting, there should have been more damage. He should have seen claw marks. He just saw an undamaged tripod.
âIâm surprised itâs even still here. I thought they pulled it under with the camera,â Jazz said. âIt must not have been secured very well.â
He heard a loud splash of water off the shore. Chromedome and Jazz both turned to the noise. A figure breached the water and came to a rest on a rock that jutted out of the water. The same white Mer from their first day pushed its way up into a resting position, flaring its fins out.
Chromedome pulled the camera back out of his subspace and kept his hands as steady as he could as he filmed it. He tried to keep the creature in the center of the image. Tried being key. His servos were struggling to hold the device as steadily as he would have liked.
Parts of the Mer looked eerily like a normal mech. It had a helm and even some odd plating on its arms. It even had something that looked like a battle mask and visor. The rest of the creature was organic tissue. Between plating, he could catch flashes of scales. It looked like an uncanny mirror of Cybertronian life.
Jazz slowly stepped in front of the camera again. Each step he took made Chromedome afraid that the Mer would duck back under the water.
âRight here, the same Mer we observed on our first morning has come back to get a better look at us,â Jazz said quietly.
Chromedome almost jerked the camera as he heard another splash of water. A second Mer joined the first on the rock. It was larger than the first. This one was mostly grey with flashes of blue on its fins. It had fewer of the plating-like structures than the first one. This one had a visible face. That looked almost angry. It definitely looked angry.
âA second one,â Chromedome said.
The second Mer almost looked like it was glaring over at the two of them. The white Mer chirped next to it, and the larger one seemingly lost interest in staring intently at the two of them.
âWonder what theyâre doing?â
âTheyâre supposed to be pretty smart, maybe theyâre just curious?â Jazz said. Jazz crossed his arms over his chest plate as he stared at the two mer. âReally sad, but not a lot of studies have been done on these guys. The Senate didnât want anyone coming out here after the last scientist went missing.â
âMight be good to leave that part out,â Chromedome said.
âNot like the Senate is around anymore,â Jazz said.
He heard a splash, and as they turned around, both of the Mer had dashed back under the waves.Â
âMust have spooked them,â Jazz said.
âOr maybe they donât like political talk.â
Chromedome picked the tripod up off the ground. Jazz pulled out the spare camera he brought and started to set it up.
âIâm gonna place it a little far back, I really donât want them grabbing this one. I only have one other spare,â Jazz said.
Jazz took a few steps back from the shore and started to set the device up.
He set himself up on a large boulder and fiddled with the camera that he had been using. He wanted to get more familiar with the device. Especially as he was supposed to be using it to film whatever Jazz wanted him to film. It was a simple device on the surface, but he easily got lost in menus and submenus. He didnât know what most of the settings did.
A fog was starting to roll in towards them. It made the temperature of the planet even more unbearable. But he could at least admit that the views were nice. He was silently sitting, staring out at the ocean. Debating with himself about how long exactly he wanted to be out in the cold.Â
The clouds had not let up once during the whole cycle. If anything, they had gotten thicker and darker.Â
The waves lapped harshly against the sharp rocks of the coast. Each flare of water had him on alert, looking for any more signs of the planet's wildlife. His patience and observance were something he had honed in his old function. But he was feeling his processor start to drift off and wander.
It wasnât something he was familiar with. He was used to being able to focus on a task more easily. His processor almost felt muddled.
It felt familiar.
He couldn't remember ever feeling like this.Â
He looked over to Jazz. Â He was still messing with the camera and fiddling with the angle of the tripod.
Chromedome drew into himself. Being alone in his thoughts, in his memories, was something he was finding to be increasingly unpleasant. He knew there was a hole there. In his memories. Sitting and thinking about it only made him feel worse about himself.
It was harder to see; the fog was getting thicker. He steeled himself as he got ready to gather up his equipment and head back to camp. In the dark, he heard the water hit the shore, followed by a quiet thud. A trill rang out over the beach.Â
Chromedome locked his joints and looked down. He caught a flash of white and heard something drag across the stone of the shoreline. The sound was dampened by the fog, and he was having trouble figuring out where exactly the dragging sound was coming from.
The white Mer slowly crawled into view.
The Mer froze. He saw its mock visor glow back at him in the dark. Its fins flared, and it dropped lower to the ground as it stared back up at Chromedome. It was close to him. It was too close.
These creatures, at least according to the senate, were aggressive towards Cybertronians. Jazz said otherwise, but he wasnât sure about that. Considering everything the senate lied about, it wasnât something he was completely sure of. But he wasnât going to take a chance, considering how large the Mer was.Â
He got ready to do something before he froze. He didnât know what to do. Part of him was acknowledging that he should have called for Jazz. But he couldnât find it in himself.
The Mer was almost his size. Chromedome thought he might have been ever so slightly taller. It had sharp claws that scratched marks into the stone underneath it as it slowly dragged itself backward before stilling. It pressed itself against the ground.
It didnât look like it had a mouth or optics. He knew it had to. He wondered if what he thought was a visor was a large optic, or if its mouth was so well hidden that he couldnât see it. Or if this one was one that Cybertronians had experimented on. His processor was going wild with theories.Â
The two of them sat unmoving, staring at each other.Â
Chromedome slowly inched his way off the rock he was perched on top of. He stored his camera.Â
The Mer let out a frustrated-sounding huff and slowly and laboriously dragged itself back into the fog. Chromedome lost track of it. He heard it drag itself along the stony beach. After a while, he heard something fall into the water.
Chromedome finished climbing off the rock he had been sitting on. He started to walk away as he heard the Mer breach the water again. He barely had a chance to turn around before he heard a loud splash. He turned around just in time to get covered in ice-cold water.
The cold water was a shock. He flared his plating and shook it off to the best of his ability. He heard the Mer chittering in the water.
âI could almost swear you did that on purpose,â Chromedome said.
Chromedome walked slowly away from the shore. The water clung to his frame, and he wanted to get by the heater in their shelter and do his best to dry it off.
âJazz!â He shouted.
âYeah?â Jazz hollered off to his side.
Chromedome followed the sound of his voice.
Jazz slowly came into view as he carefully made his way through the thick fog cover.
âAre you ready to head back to camp?â He asked.
Iâm taking a bit of a vacation, I have some stuff scheduled to post for while Iâm gone, I got some cool stuff in the pipeline for next week so keep an eye out :]
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Jazz and Chromedome get some gear set up.
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Jazz was ecstatic. They had seen a Mer. Just for a click. But they had seen one.
Jazz had told himself not to get his hopes too high for this trip. The data he was able to find on Mer described them as skittish. He was hoping to see one, but he kept his expectations low. It was harder to be disappointed that way.
He never would have assumed they could have been so lucky. Seeing a Mer so soon after landing was incredible. On most of his other trips he had been on it took a few days at least to catch a glimpse of whatever creature he was after. It gave him high hopes for what the rest of the trip would be like. He was practically vibrating in his plating, mostly from the cold, partially from the excitement.
Jazz looked down over the cliff and out toward the ocean. He hoped to see another flash of scales in the water, but he didnât see the Mer poke back up out of the water. There was a chance it was still swimming below them, just under the surface. There could even have been more of them below. Hiding under the water just out of sight. Â
âDid you get it on camera?â Jazz asked Chromedome.
Chromedome clicked the camera off.
âI think so? Maybe? I saw it at least.â
Jazz was thankful to have Chromedome there. He just wished the other mech had known a little more about cameras. Or about filming. Or anything related to this job. To be fair to the other mech, Jazz hadnât really known anything about most of this stuff until he started to do it. Jazz was a learn-by-doing kind of mech. Hopefully, Chromedome was the same way.
Jazz reached for the camera, and Chromedome passed it over to him.
Jazz fidgeted with the device. There was a small display built into the camera. It wasnât the most high-quality, but it was nice to have. He had put a fresh data stick inside it right before he had taken off. There was only one file. Jazz angled the screen back toward Chromedome. The mech leaned down, and the two of them watched the footage back.
The flash of white was barely visible in the water, but the device captured it. A flash of white showed on the screen, and when Jazz focused his optics, he could even make out the Merâs small helm just poking out of the ocean.
âWe got it!â Jazz said.
Jazzâs excitement was feeding into his energy. He was eager to get more shots of Mer already. He wasnât planning to do much that day at first, but his plans could be easily changed.
âNow what?â Chromedome asked.
âIdeally, Iâd like to get some cameras set up to record closer to the water. If that Mer comes back, I want to catch some better footage of it,â Jazz said.
âThis isnât close enough?â
Jazz was surprised that Chromedome didnât sound nervous. His voice was laced with curiosity, but Jazz would have expected some fear from the prospect. Jazz wasnât afraid, but he was alert. One misstep would have been disastrous. He was expecting the mech to be at least wary.
Jazz didnât know Chromedome well. He knew the mech used to be an enforcer. He had probably been in all sorts of dangerous situations, Jazz reasoned, the mech was a little desensitized towards dangerous things.
Jazz took a few careful steps forward. They were already close to the cliff, but he couldnât see where the water was hitting it. Jazz carefully looked straight down the cliff. It was too steep to climb down safely, but Jazz could see a stony beach close to the rocks. Â
âThereâs a beach. I want to find some sort of way down there,â Jazz said.
Jazz peered back at the small building they had claimed as a base camp. If he could get down there, it would be a great location to set up some cameras.
âIâm going to grab some gear and look for a way down,â Jazz said.
Jazz went back inside and opened one of the storage crates. The cameras he was going to leave out werenât as high-quality, but they were more durable and would hold up better in the frigid conditions. He stashed the two cameras and their tripods in his subspace.
Jazz started walking along the cliffside. If he angled his helm just right, he could look toward some parts of the cliff.
Snow crunched behind Jazz. He turned his helm behind him. Chromedome dimmed his visor as he looked down at the shore below. He was still as he stared.
âAre you just hoping to find something to climb down? Or do you have a rope?â
Jazz shook his helm.
âClimbing down would probably be the best bet. If I have to use a rope to get down, itâs probably too steep. If something comes after me, climbing up with a  rope might take too long.â
The ground started to slope gradually downward. Jazz kept a closer eye on where he was walking. It got gradually steeper. The farther he walked, the more of the beach he could see. He stopped in his walk and peered over the edge. It was still a harsh decline. But it was definitely climbable. It wasnât a straight drop; each jutting edge was well placed and large enough that falling wouldnât be dangerous. One slip and he would just end up on the next stone down.
He was sure he wouldnât fall. Even with the buildup of ice and snow. He trusted in his own climbing abilities. He had been over and through some rough terrain during his functioning. Â
âYou can stay up here, Iâm not expecting to follow me down,â Jazz said.
The snow shifted under Chromedomeâs pedes as the mech moved. He seemed to hesitate for a second.
âI can follow you down,â Chromedome said confidently.
Jazz shrugged. He wasnât going to force Chromedome to stay behind. Chromedome was there to help him film, and if he wanted to help him down there, he wasnât going to stop him.
He looked down the cliff and slowly started to climb down. The water hit the beach below, and the wind was blowing at his back as he carefully stepped down. He carefully lowered himself down to the first extension of stone on the cliffside. He shuffled his pedes and started to make his way towards his next step down. The jutting-out portions were evenly spaced and almost could have been mistaken for stairs if they werenât so tall and strangely shaped. Some of them were taller than he was. Others were wide enough that he had to take several strides to cross them.
It was a natural formation. But it almost seemed like it had grown there to be used as a path down. Nature was amazing sometimes. He heard Chromedome swear as he slowly followed his path down.
âItâs a little icy,â Jazz warned.
He heard a scraping noise. Chromedome swore.
âI can tell,â Chromedome said.
Jazz tuned his hearing. He carefully listened to Chromedome as he climbed down. Jazz split his attention. He focused on making his own way down and then on making sure Chromedome wasnât falling or slipping down the cliffside.Â
The climb down took a while. But neither of them fell. Jazz took the small victory.
Jazzâs pedes touched down on the beach. It was a generous thing to call the shoreline. It was entirely made out of stone and thick gravel. There was less snow on the beach, but there was more ice. From his new position, he could faintly make out floating forms of glaciers in the ocean.
The system's star was more firmly overhead now. The night cycle for the planet was still a ways away, but he wanted to get the cameras set up before dark. The sunrise was beautiful, and the night sky they had landed in was breathtaking. He was excited to watch Geluâs star dip under the horizon. He was hoping the night sky would be just as breathtaking every night they were on the planet. Catching that on the cameras would be amazing.
âI canât believe how old it is here, even in the light cycle,â Jazz said.
âHopefully it doesnât get much colder, I donât want my lines to freeze,â Chromedome said.
Jazz chuckled lightly to himself. âItâs probably not going to get any warmer.â
He was already imagining something to narrate over the footage with. He was going to make at least one mention of the weather. Definitely a few of the beautiful, if desolate, scenery. Jazz was already imagining a few good shots he wanted to get of the beach itself and of their little camp.
He turned back toward Chromedome. The mech had made it onto the beach. He was making his way over to Jazz. Jazz was already excited to pawn some work off on his new employee. He still would have rather come out there alone, but even an untrained set of extra servos was going to prove useful.
Jazz reached into his subspace and pulled out the cameras and the tripods he had grabbed from the camp.
âHey, can you give me a servo setting these up?â Jazz asked.
Chromedome silently looked at Jazz and nodded. âJust tell me what I need to do.â
Jazz offered out two tripods, âGet these into position, I want one looking out at more at the horizon, and then the other should be pointed down towards the water. Iâll get the cameras prepped when you get them set up.â
Jazz vaguely motioned to somewhere near the water.
âAre you hoping to get lucky again?â Chromedome asked as he grabbed the gear.
âIâm hoping to catch some more on film. Odds are in our favor, especially since we already saw one here.â
Chromedome placed the Tripod right where the two of them were standing. Jazz raised an optical ridge under his visor.
"Nah, Nah, closer to the water," Jazz said. âIf we put it here, the beach will be a little too in shot. I want the water to be mostly in frame.â
âHow close do you want it?â
Chromedome still didnât seem to be worried about being so close to certain death. Jazz was starting to think he might not have had all of his screws tightened right in the helm.
Chromedome didnât get right up next to the water, but he got pretty damn close.
âThat should be good!â Jazz exclaimed. âDonât get too close, the floatation devices are still in camp!â
Jazz swore to himself for not immediately putting them in his subspace. He was almost worried he was starting to get rusty. He didnât exactly think either of them would get so close to any of the water on the planet so soon after landing.
Jazz set the cameras up on both of the tripods and set them up to record.
âHow long are you going to leave these here?â Chromedome asked.
âProbably for most of the trip, itâll be a pain to review all of the footage, but hopefully weâll catch something interesting,â Jazz said. Â
âAnd we just leave them here? Wonât the batteries die?â
âWeâll have to come down to switch the batteries out and replace the data sticks a few times, but it shouldnât be that bad. Besides, itâs not like thereâs anyone here who can even steal them; theyâre built for harsher conditions. The cameras should be fine. â
âNow what?â
âNow we get to climb back up,â Jazz said with a smile. âWe got a lot of gear to unload in camp, and we still have a few crates we need to drive back from our landing zone. Then, if we have time, maybe get a few shots of the mountains.â
He heard a quiet groan from Chromedome. Jazz turned around and looked up at the cliff face. The next Deca-cycle would be a busy one.
For Natural Habits: whoâs more likely to bite the other in retaliation for a perceived attack-
Jazz, or Prowl?
Okay I wasnât able to resist this time.
Now for the ask:
Jazz is really good at acting friendly and innocent. Itâs saved his life more than once. If he needs to he will fight dirty, using anything around him as a weapon or even biting other bots.