Drift Compatible
Eric Coulter x Reader (Pacific Rim AU) Fandom: Divergent / Pacific Rim Words: 1.269
*Trigger Warnings* major character death (past), grief, survivor’s guilt , anger issues, war setting, kaiju violence, city destruction, trauma bonding, intense emotional distress, implied fatal injuries
The Shatterdome felt different without them.
Quieter.
Not because there was less noise—if anything, there were more drills, more alarms, more frantic briefings.
But something essential was missing.
The laughter in the locker room. The familiar neural hum of a partner brushing the edges of your mind. The grounding presence of someone who knew you better than you knew yourself.
Three weeks.
Three weeks since your Jaeger hit the ocean in pieces. Three weeks since you felt your partner’s mind flicker—panic, apology, then nothing.
You stopped showing up to training after the funeral.
You stopped answering calls. Stopped wearing the pilot suit. Stopped pretending you were fine.
You lived in your quarters or in the far end of Hangar Five where your Jaeger’s broken pieces sat like a gravestone.
People gave you space.
Out of pity.
Or fear.
Eric did not stop training.
He trained harder.
Hard enough that his knuckles split open on the strike pads. Hard enough that he dislocated his shoulder in simulation and reset it himself.
He barked at mechanics. Shoved technicians aside. Snapped at command staff.
Rage was easier than grief.
It was hard enough for Eric to trust one person enough to let them into his head.
The Drift wasn’t just compatibility—it was vulnerability.
Exposure.
And he had chosen someone.
Let them see the parts of him no one else ever did.
Now that person was gone.
And the silence inside his mind was unbearable.
So he filled it with fury.
You hadn’t spoken since the memorial.
Not to each other.
Not really to anyone.
Until the sirens screamed again.
KAIJU BREACH – CATEGORY IV
The alarm vibrated through your bones before the announcement even finished.
You were in Hangar Five.
Of course you were.
You always were.
You watched the remaining Jaegers launch through the massive bay doors, one after another, their silhouettes cutting through rain and ocean spray.
You didn’t move.
You weren’t on the roster anymore.
Officially “indefinite leave.”
Unofficially broken.
The comms crackled overhead.
“Contact confirmed. Category IV. Heavy armor. Approaching outer wall.”
You forced yourself not to listen.
Then—
“Wall breach!”
The entire dome shuddered.
Not outer defense.
Not secondary line.
The wall.
A Kaiju roar echoed through the city beyond.
Your heart stuttered.
That wasn’t supposed to happen.
The Jaegers were supposed to stop it before that.
“Striker Athena down!” “Gypsy Valkyrie holding but critical!” “We need reinforcements—”
You stood slowly.
There was only one Jaeger left in the dome.
Fastest in the fleet. Built for rapid deployment. Close-quarters combat.
Eric’s.
Crimson Tempest.
And it required two pilots.
You heard him before you saw him.
Boots striking metal. Breathing sharp and fast. Controlled—but barely.
Eric stormed into the hangar, helmet under his arm.
His eyes found you immediately.
Of course they did.
“You’re the only one here that can do this.” he said.
Not accusation.
Not plea.
Statement.
You shook your head instinctively.
“No.”
“The city’s exposed.”
“Find someone else.”
“There is no one else.”
Another tremor shook the dome.
Dust rained from the ceiling.
The Kaiju was inside the perimeter now.
You could hear buildings collapsing.
You wrapped your arms around yourself like you could physically hold the grief inside.
“I can’t do it again.”
Eric’s jaw flexed.
“You think I can?”
That snapped your eyes to his.
There it was.
Not rage.
Not this time.
Something rawer.
“It took me years,” he said, voice tight, “to let someone into my head.”
His partner had been the only one who ever saw past the armor.
The only one who survived the intensity of him.
“And now it’s empty,” he continued. “It’s just… quiet.”
The quiet was worse than the screaming.
You knew that.
You felt it too.
“I won’t survive losing someone else in there.” you whispered.
His eyes softened—but only barely.
“Then don’t.”
The words landed heavy.
“We’re not replacing them,” he said. “We’re surviving.”
Another explosion. Closer.
Emergency lights flickered red.
Crimson Tempest was already powering up behind him, systems primed.
The fastest Jaeger in the fleet.
The only one that could reach the city center in time.
He stepped closer.
“If we don’t go,” he said quietly, “more people die.”
Your lungs burned.
You had sworn you were done.
Sworn you wouldn’t risk feeling someone die in your mind ever again.
But the screams outside—
They were real.
You exhaled shakily.
“Fine.”
Strapping in felt wrong.
The space beside you wasn’t supposed to be his.
It wasn’t supposed to be anyone’s anymore.
Eric locked into his harness without looking at you.
“Once we start,” he said, voice steady, “don’t pull away.”
“I won’t.”
Technicians hesitated outside.
“Compatibility hasn’t been tested,” one warned.
Eric’s eyes flicked to you.
Neither of you moved.
“Initiate Drift,” he ordered.
The world detonated.
Memory wasn’t linear—it was collision.
You saw him as a child being taught that weakness gets you killed. You felt the moment he first drifted—how terrifying it was to let someone see his anger and not flinch. You felt the instant his partner died.
Metal screaming. Neural overload. A hand slipping from his grip.
His rage wasn’t random.
It was grief sharpened into a weapon.
He saw you laughing in the cockpit. He saw the impact. Felt the way your partner’s mind shattered against yours.
Your grief was heavy. Ocean-deep. Paralyzing.
His was fire. Violent. Refusing to sit still.
The neural pathways screamed under the strain.
For a second you thought you’d both hemorrhage.
Then—
Something aligned.
Not softness.
Not balance.
Understanding.
You both knew what it meant to lose the only person who understood your mind.
You weren’t replacing them.
You were carrying them.
Together.
The screaming stopped.
DRIFT STABLE.
You both exhaled at the same time.
Eric’s voice steadied inside the shared space.
“Let’s move.”
The Kaiju towered between burning buildings, armored plates glistening in rain.
It had already torn through two city blocks.
The other Jaegers were too far out. Too damaged.
Crimson Tempest dropped from its launch platform like a falling god.
Impact cracked the street beneath you.
The Kaiju turned.
Roared.
You felt Eric’s instinct to charge head-on.
You layered strategy over it. Angles. Weak points. Timing.
The synchronization felt… natural.
Fast.
Crimson Tempest moved like it had been waiting for this pairing.
You ducked under a claw strike. Eric drove a powered fist into the Kaiju’s rib plating.
It countered.
Slammed into you.
Pain rippled through your nervous systems—but you absorbed it together.
No panic.
No spiraling.
Just focus.
“Left flank compromised,” you warned.
“Redirecting power,” he replied instantly.
The Kaiju lunged toward a cluster of trapped civilians.
That did it.
Your grief turned to fury. His fury sharpened into precision.
Together you activated the twin plasma blades.
You stepped forward in perfect synchronization.
One blade severed its forelimb. The second drove straight through its throat.
Blue blood exploded across the street.
The Kaiju collapsed.
Silence followed.
Rain hissed against metal armor.
Inside the conn-pod, your breathing slowly synced.
No one died in your head.
No mind went dark.
Just two heartbeats. Two pilots. Alive.
The Drift lingered softly.
Eric’s voice, quieter now.
“We didn’t break.”
You swallowed.
“No.”
Outside, command confirmed:
CATEGORY IV NEUTRALIZED.
Back at the shatterdome hen the neural link disengaged, the absence wasn’t suffocating.
It wasn’t empty.
It was… steady.
You looked at him.
For the first time in three weeks, the rage in his eyes had dulled.
Not gone.
But tempered.
“We’re not replacing them,” you said quietly.
“No,” he agreed.
A pause.
“But we’re not alone either.”
And for the first time since the ocean swallowed everything—
You believed that might be true.















