[Escape Pods] We're Definitely Not In Kansas Anymore, Toto [Open]
Someone, Lincoln managed to think hazily, should have designed those fucking escape pods to watch out for asteroids.
All he could see was black and blue, blurs of color that he couldn't quite figure out. The blue seemed to be sky, but what was the black? Something waving in the corner of his vision, one big blob. The grass he seemed to be lying on was solid, at least, even if his head was still whirling.
His escape pod had gotten clipped by an asteroid in the belt, tearing out a chunk of the side of the pod and sending it spinning. The force of metal crumpling inward had taken out a piece of his chest armor, but it had mostly protected him from any serious injury. But whatever GPS system the pod was equipped with had gotten damaged, and even though his helmet had still been secure enough to keep feeding him oxygen, Lincoln had known he was in trouble.
He'd kept a calm head as best he could. Waiting, trying to time everything perfectly. And as impact had been seconds away, he'd activated his armor enhancement. His vision had lit up with red as the energy surrounded him, temporary invulnerability shielding from the worst of the impact. But then he'd gotten thrown from the pod, the shield faltering as it absorbed too much damage.
He'd bounced down the side of a small hill, into a tree, and then rolled the rest of the way down, coming to a final stop on the grass.
It hadn't been fucking pleasant.
Lincoln took a breath, grimacing as pain jolted through his side. He carefully picked his way to his feet, looking down. A goddamn tree branch, maybe an inch around, had lodged itself between his bottom two ribs. His blood looked dark against the t-shirt he'd worn under the armor, but the branch didn't feel like it had gone in too deep.
What limited medical knowledge he had advised him that he shouldn't pull it out, not until he had a medic nearby. So Lincoln took a deep breath, and closed his eyes. All Agents trained for stealth and infiltration were also trained in torture resistance, just on the off chance they got captured--and Lincoln had had plenty of experience. So he took the pain, and he filed it away. Mind over matter. Couldn't use it too much, of course, because pain was a useful mechanism, but it looked like he had something of a walk in front of him.
He took his helmet off, tucked it under his arm, and took one step after another, making his way toward the wreck of the ship he could see. Panic threatened to make itself known, but he filed that away too.
Pegasus. Was Pegasus alive?
Focus, Dhatri. Just keep walking.
So he walked, and a mile later he spied the sight of an escape pod. A few of the Agents seemed to be gathered. Not nearly as many as there should be.
"Someone," he announced, his voice tight, "needs to tell me how many survivors we have accounted for right now, and what rescue resources we have."