Possibly the final chapter I post before I go on vacation. I've still got to red ink Chapter 9 and the Epilogue and Chapter 9 is (double spaced) a 17 page monster.

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Chapter 8
Orcunis, Engineering Section
Laurentian Abyss, North Atlantic
Scavendrill popped a panel off a bulkhead and peered inside, scowling at the tangled web of wiring and circuitry within. Setting the panel aside, he could hear the occasional dull thumping sound, like thunder in the distance. He knew that it wasn’t thunder at all, but explosions going off several fathoms above them, and yet still somewhat audible even at this depth.
‘Nothing like working under pressure,’ he thought glumly. Reaching into the opening, he called out, “Hook, have you brought that plasma transfer capacitor online yet?”
“Still working on it,” Hook answered from across the room.
“Work faster,” Scrapper ordered from under a large table in the center of the room.
“This is delicate work that requires precision and patience!” Hook protested. “You can’t rush perfection!”
“We don’t have time for ‘perfection!’” Scrapper shouted. “Just get it working! We can’t activate the antigravs without that device!”
Scrapper and Scavendrill had agreed to make the antigravity field generators their first priority, figuring if Orcunis couldn’t get off the ocean floor at all, there’d be no point in attempting to starting up the main engines. If that was the case, it was likely they would have to scuttle Orcunis in order to keep him away from the Autobots. That didn’t necessarily mean that they would lose him completely; Scrapper had mentioned that his submersible had a spark extractor stored in its hold; if they had to abandon and destroy Orcunis, they could at least salvage his spark. It was an extreme measure that appealed to no one, least of all to Northclaw, and gave everyone an incentive to work as hard as possible on recovering Orcunis whole.
Scavendrill ripped out a handful of fiber optic wiring as another round of thunder rumbled softly through the hull. Nearby, Long Haul looked up at the ceiling and sighed. “Sounds like Sea Wolf’s having a grand old time up there.”
“Maybe,” Scavendrill growled. “But we’ve got work of our own to do. How are you coming on repairing that transmission router?”
“I’m almost done. I need some more optical cables, though.”
“Then get some.”
“And where do you suppose I obtain some?” Long Haul demanded.
“Tear it out of something we won’t regret loosing later,” Scavendrill huffed. “I’ve got a pile of it at my feet you can probably use, for Primus’s sake.”
“As do I,” Scrapper said, “so quit your griping and get to work!”
The intercom crackled to life. “Northclaw to Engineering; where the infernal Pit are those engines?”
‘Just what we need right now,’ Scavendrill thought grimly. ‘The boss breathing down our necks.’ Turning to the closest intercom, he turned it on and replied, “Don’t get your particle cannons in a twist, we’re working on it!”
“We need them online as soon as possible,” Northclaw stated. “We just received a message from Novacula; he’s just taken out one Autobot and is engaged with another at the surface. He’s blocked their communication channels, but its still possible they managed to call in reinforcements, so there’s no telling how much longer we can stay here.”
“We’re going as fast as we can,” Scavendrill said. “This entire compartment is a complete wreckage yard!”
“You have fifteen cycles,” Northclaw said blandly. “Control out.”
Scavendrill shut the intercom off with an irritable grunt. “Rebuild a fifty-thousand stellar cycle old engine practically from scratch in less than fifteen cycles,” he muttered angrily. “What in the smelter does he think we are, miracle workers?”
“We’ll have to be,” Scrapper said as switched circuit boards. “I’ve repaired the power circuits for the magnodrives. Hopefully they won’t explode when we switch everything on.”
Scavendrill said nothing, finished his own repairs and put the wall panel back in place before striding over to the central control station and gazed over a display screen. “Power levels are stable, for now,” he reported. “Hook, is that capacitor working yet?”
“Give me another nanoklik or two!” Hook retorted.
Scavendrill huffed and turned his attention to Long Haul, who said, “Before you ask, the router’s fixed and ready for activation.”
“Good,” Scavendrill said, observing Scrapper pull himself out from under the table. “All we need now is that capacitor…”
“Which is now complete,” Hook reported in an annoyed tone.
“About time,” Scrapper said. Turning to Scavendrill, he asked, “You want to run a test first before we turn this jury-rigged system on?”
“I’d prefer to,” Scavendrill said. “But with Northclaw roasting our skid plates, we’re going to have to skip it and hope nothing explodes in our faceplates.”
“Which could be prevented if we first run a test,” Hook protested. “Otherwise, we’d…”
“Shut it, Hook,” Scrapper ordered. “I’ll activate the system; Scavendrill, you keep an eye on the power levels.”
“Can do,” Scavendrill replied. Scrapper moved a hand slowly over the console, crossed his fingers, and activated the antigravity field generators. A low humming sound filled the compartment, but other than that, nothing happened.
“Power levels are stable,” Scavendrill said. “But no telling what will happen when we attempt to pull Orcunis from the muck. We better let Northclaw know that we’re ready.”
“I got it,” Scrapper said, turning on the intercom. “Engineering to Control; the antigravity generators are online; you may proceed with the attempt to raise Orcunis. We’ll start working on restoring engine power once we’re free of the sediment – if we get free.”
In the auxiliary control room, Dynabreaker sighed in relief. “It’s about time!” she said. “Navigation’s been up for the last ten cycles!”
Northclaw ignored her outburst. “Sustain, activate the antigravity field; let’s get Orcunis out of the mud. But do it slowly, I don’t want to rip out the keel completely.”
“Affirmative,” Sustain said. She moved to the helm control and pressed a key. “Antigravity field activated.”
Northclaw heard a low rumble and felt the deck under his feet shake slightly. Instinctively, he reached for the intercom. “Engineering, keep an eye on the structural integrity; I want to know immediately if the hull starts to tear itself apart.”
“Understood,” came the reply.
The rumbling grew louder and the shaking more pronounced, joined fairly quickly by the low creaking of metal. From the corner of his optic, Northclaw caught Sustain edging slowing towards the nearest exit. He didn’t blame her; if Orcunis’s superstructure was firmly stuck in the sediment and his bulkheads failed, the sea could flood the compartments faster than damage control could respond, if it could respond at all. Depending on where the breach occurred, they all might need to get out fast.
Northclaw remembered an old quote he had once read; ‘Can you draw out Leviathan with a hook, or snare his tongue with a line which you lower? Can you put a reed through his nose or pierce his jaw with a hook? Will he make many supplications to you? Will you take him as a servant forever?’
Then, without warning, the whole room lurched with a loud, crunching pop. Dynabreaker fell over backwards, Sustain was sent flying, and Northclaw instinctively grabbed a console as he lost his footing, nearly ripping it out of its fittings in the process. Once the shaking stopped and he regained his sense of balance, Northclaw turned to the others and shouted, “Everyone alright?”
Dynabreaker rose slowly, rubbing the back of her head. “Wouldn’t care to go through that again. Sustain, are you still functioning?”
Sustain had ended up on the other end of the room, lying against a wall upside-down, her head on the deck and limbs dangling in front of her face. She responded sardonically, “Just fine, never been better. Thanks for asking.”
Dynabreaker went to help Sustain while Northclaw moved to the intercom. “Engineering, what the slag just happened?”
“We’re free!” Scrapper shouted. “The lower hull just broke free of the sea floor! We are now rising to the surface!”
Northclaw could hear the pride in the Constructicon’s voice and decided to deflate it a little. From what he felt, they couldn’t have freed themselves without incurring some kind of damage, outside of a few bruised egos. “Damage report,” he ordered.
Scavendrill answered, “We have some minor hull breaches on the lower decks, but the emergency bulkheads seem to be in place; Mixmaster and Scavenger have been sent to double check.”
“How soon do you anticipate having engine power restored?”
“We’ll start working on that just as soon as we all finish scraping ourselves off the deck plating.”
“What’s our estimated time to the surface?”
“At our current speed; I’d say about half a megacycle, more if we’re cautious.”
“You have until then to repair the engines,” Northclaw said. “We haven’t come this far to be stopped now. Control out.” He switched channels. “Control to Datamatrix, come in.”
There was no answered. He tried again, “Northclaw to Datamatrix, come in, now.”
Still no answer. Dynabreaker approached, saying, “Datamatrix’s has a habit of listening to his music downloads when he’s bored. He can become so enraptured that he doesn’t pay attention to anything else.”
Northclaw growled, “You sure he’s not just ignoring me?”
“He does that too sometimes,” Dynabreaker said. “In fact, he’ll use his files as a cover.”
“You want me to check on him?” Sustain asked.
“Let me try something first,” Northclaw said. “Northclaw to Datamatrix; if Datamatrix doesn’t respond to me this time, I will personally hunt him down and delete all of his downloaded files off his hard drive. It should be noted that my knowledge of computers is somewhat limited, so there is a distinct possibility that I could ‘accidentally’ delete something important.”
“So what do you want?” Datamatrix responded in a irritated tone that poorly hid the anxiety in his voice.
Northclaw glanced back and Dynabreaker and Sustain, both of whom were chuckling with amusement. “I had a feeling that would wake him up,” he said. “Datamatrix, contact Sea Wolf; tell him to break off his attack and rendezvous with us as soon as possible. Tell Novacula to break off his fight with the Autobots on his end as well and have the others reinforce his position. We’ll need their air support once we’ve surfaced. Once you’ve done that, undock your submersible and bring her into the open shuttlebay; I’ll have Sea Wolf bring in the other one.”
“You want fries with that order?” Datamatrix inquired indignantly.
“That deletion option’s still open,” Northclaw countered. “Care to push your luck?”
“Alright, alright,” Datamatrix said. “Jeez, can’t take a joke…” The intercom went dead.
“Nicely handled,” Dynabreaker said, snickering softly.
“I don’t know how your creator deals with him,” Northclaw said, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “Especially since he doesn’t possess near the patience everyone seems to think I do.”
“Datamatrix fears him,” Dynabreaker said. “He knows that if he steps out of line, he’ll be scrap.”
Northclaw eyed her skeptically, thinking that there had to be more to it than simple fear. He was familiar with Dynabreaker’s long standing feud with Dynamax, enough to know that her “insight” would be skewered at best.
“Sustain,” he said, turning. “Monitor our course to the surface and keep an optic on our structural integrity. Orcunis’s skin just spent the last fifty millennia holding back several thousand meters of water and I suspect we’re going to pop more than a few seams on the way up. Make sure you notify Scavenger and Mixmaster as soon as you detect any hull breach, no matter how minor.”
“Affirmative,” Sustain said, moving to a nearby console.
“Dynabreaker, once we surface, you, myself and others will take up defensive positions along the upper hull. I doubt Sea Wolf and Novacula have taken out all the Autobots and the coastal stations will indubitably pick us up on their scanners. We’ll never get Orcunis’ defense systems operational in time and I have some reservations about how effective they would be even if we did get them working. If engine power haven’t been restored by the time we surface, we’ll need to hold off any enemy patrol in the area until Scavendrill and Scrapper can bring the thrusters online.”
Dynabreaker smiled broadly. “Good, I was hoping to see some action on this trip.”
“We’re probably about to get it,” Northclaw said quietly.