Tony Stark (
in_extremis) wrote in
revivalproject2025-03-23 09:50 pm
Entry tags:
RATtrap
WHO: Tony and Cal
WHERE: The Agrii ship and the Mainframe
WHAT: ReBoot. You guys know ReBoot? 🍁
WHEN: March, after the AI message
WARNINGS: Extra fake violence?
Returning to the ship had not been part of the plan. The plan, however, had not factored in the sheer amount of activity back in the city, so keeping his distance had become more relative. It still made Tony anxious to pass by the Glitter Food, then disembark on the Agrii ship in a slow saunter that might have come across as a swagger as he took his time assessing who was in the hangar and how to best get by without being engaged. Compared to the hangar back in Temba, it was downright peaceful, without so many little bots learning their basic programming and plants chattering anxiously. Tony could push his sunglasses back up his nose and heft D.A.T.A. against his chest, patting the side of his shell restlessly. Maybe it wasn't so bad. The trip had given him a few more hours before he had to say goodbye to the little nuisance.
It was only when he was close to the engineering bay that he sent Cal the text, brief and to the point. I'm here. Going to try the astromech. The timing was meant to reduce how likely he was to be seen around anyone else, but it didn't account for the cluster of Agrii around Enide's casing, slowing Tony's approach cautiously. They did seem excited to see him when they noticed, but it was Enide who greeted him, causing the Agrii to scatter and leave Tony considering the tools left for him. While Enide explained that she intended to go into stasis and these gloves and helmets were to interface with her in that state, Tony set D.A.T.A. down on the console to extend his spidery legs and wander a familiar ginger, tapping rhythm along the metal, leaving Tony's hands free to examine the new interface curiously.
"I kind of brought what I hoped was a workaround..." he ultimately said to the AI, thought he hadn't put the strange headgear down yet. A workaround wasn't actually as effective as eliminating the problem. Even if it meant putting his trust in untested devices and dampening his senses. And connecting to her network via Extremis only had him bouncing off of those same bugs. D.A.T.A. came tip-tapping back toward him, peering up at him with that big, guileless camera eye that said the bot knew exactly who Tony was. He didn't need Tony to mutter, "See if you can find a place to plug in," to keep him busy while Tony brought the helmet up.
WHERE: The Agrii ship and the Mainframe
WHAT: ReBoot. You guys know ReBoot? 🍁
WHEN: March, after the AI message
WARNINGS: Extra fake violence?
Returning to the ship had not been part of the plan. The plan, however, had not factored in the sheer amount of activity back in the city, so keeping his distance had become more relative. It still made Tony anxious to pass by the Glitter Food, then disembark on the Agrii ship in a slow saunter that might have come across as a swagger as he took his time assessing who was in the hangar and how to best get by without being engaged. Compared to the hangar back in Temba, it was downright peaceful, without so many little bots learning their basic programming and plants chattering anxiously. Tony could push his sunglasses back up his nose and heft D.A.T.A. against his chest, patting the side of his shell restlessly. Maybe it wasn't so bad. The trip had given him a few more hours before he had to say goodbye to the little nuisance.
It was only when he was close to the engineering bay that he sent Cal the text, brief and to the point. I'm here. Going to try the astromech. The timing was meant to reduce how likely he was to be seen around anyone else, but it didn't account for the cluster of Agrii around Enide's casing, slowing Tony's approach cautiously. They did seem excited to see him when they noticed, but it was Enide who greeted him, causing the Agrii to scatter and leave Tony considering the tools left for him. While Enide explained that she intended to go into stasis and these gloves and helmets were to interface with her in that state, Tony set D.A.T.A. down on the console to extend his spidery legs and wander a familiar ginger, tapping rhythm along the metal, leaving Tony's hands free to examine the new interface curiously.
"I kind of brought what I hoped was a workaround..." he ultimately said to the AI, thought he hadn't put the strange headgear down yet. A workaround wasn't actually as effective as eliminating the problem. Even if it meant putting his trust in untested devices and dampening his senses. And connecting to her network via Extremis only had him bouncing off of those same bugs. D.A.T.A. came tip-tapping back toward him, peering up at him with that big, guileless camera eye that said the bot knew exactly who Tony was. He didn't need Tony to mutter, "See if you can find a place to plug in," to keep him busy while Tony brought the helmet up.

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"It's alive. It exists in plants, it distills into the kyber crystals that we use to make our lightsabers." He wasn't sure if he should bring up that he didn't really sense anything from York, which made it more obvious for what he was. Cayde was a different story and Cal wasn't sure how that one worked, but different worlds brought different people.
"Not exactly finding our bug problem though," he had to prompt, still looking as he started again in the direction opposite where they'd started. They hadn't been so quiet for a time now, so maybe that was the other problem.
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He breathed a laugh. "It's...not a fun test. I went through it twice, the last time most recently because I had to rebuild my master's saber and really make it my own." Nearly froze to death too, if not for BD-1.
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"Couldn't you, you know, get a transfer credit, or...?" Tony muttered, without much context for what this test could entail. These rocks were high maintenance, too.
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He shook his head. "Seemed a lot harder the second time around. I was almost ready to give up. BeeDee saved me. I don't know where I'd be without him." A faint breeze filtered towards them, perhaps marking the threshold of the next chamber.
"He's my friend, after all."
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He said nothing by way of explanation, but that was because the breeze had seemed abruptly cut off the moment they'd taken the next few steps. The light from before seemed a far presence, hidden by more shadowed obstructions. The heat had returned, settling over them like a physical thing.
"What is that...?" he wondered, frowning into the darkness between them and the light before glancing up...and freezing.
"Uh. Tony? Above us."
At a glance, the cavern ceiling above was dotted in glowing red, which seemed far too numerous until one grouping and then another moved, suggesting that clusters belonged to singular entities.
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Cal had to wonder if that applied to the above, the attention unsettling enough even without being able to actively sense any intent. He stood still, hand tightening around his weapon, eyes flicking over in the direction of the sound once Tony brought it in contact with the rocky surface. He looked up again just as the forms above them shifted almost in unison along with an echoing clatter, the red glowing brighter, enough to start faintly making out the individual shapes that contained each cluster of eyes.
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They crashed into each other, becoming a tight knot of chaos that was suddenly a pulsing, lurid glow with all of them trying to press into the same edge of the doorway. This close, in the intensity of the light, those eyes looked like they oozed, rubbery and distorting in the crush of the bodies. "Do you think they can come through the wall...?," Tony wondered, not well enough convinced of the security of that layer between them to lower his defensive hands. He only realized then that they seemed so perceptively wet because his skin was immediately slick with sweat in the crush of heat that rolled off of them.
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"Is it weird to think that they weren't actively hostile until now?" He paused. "...or is this not hostile yet?"
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Cal wasn't so sure, but the weight of the atmosphere was incredibly stifling then, making him gasp.
"...wh-what if...the blue light is encrypted data, and it gets pushed back whenever an external source attempts to access it. By these things...
"But continuous poking in an attempt to get to that data eventually triggers a harsher response. Like when it zapped BeeDee when he tried to scomp in and track the changes..."
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The red-eyed things exploded into a frenzy, breaking whatever semblance of formation they had as they converged towards the rupture and the two intruders, some dropping down from the ceiling. The floor beneath their feet suddenly started rippling with seemingly abstract patterns, circuitry-like lines radiating briefly in the dimness.
"Was that part of the plan?" Cal not quite shouted as he contended with the growing noise that filled the space.
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So instead he swung his blade at the skittering things that came closer, practically scraping the floor with its tip as he tried to clear them away from their feet.
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There was no recoil. It felt no different than a toy at an arcade cabinet, the trigger sliding back into place with the flaccid smoothness of plastic when Tony released it again along with his bracing breath, which sounded like it whistled in his ears, the bugs clawing up his knees a distant echo while he stared at the hole in betrayal. He had just enough time to flick his gaze toward Cal, and had barely considered the guilty dismay at this display of ineptitude before those darting lights running through the floor were suddenly surging. The mass where the bugs were still crawling remained a void, but it was still bright enough where it managed to peek through to make Tony squint, then flinch at the sound of crunching that hadn't come from under his boots. It came from the wall, where the hole at been and was now perfectly sealed, cleaving the bugs that hadn't quite made it through with surgical precision. When they fell on their backs and exposed their bellies full of slippery eyes, the red glow of them slowly dimmed.
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Smashing the things underfoot seemed to be slightly more productive, and yet not. The scrabbling against his armored legs was terribly distracting, so he missed the subtler sound that Tony had started to track then.
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"The problem's here, where else should I be going?"
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"Somewhere else then? Preferably with more lighting and elbow room."
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