Sparring
partners.
Face-off. The two combatants eye each
other over the field of honour, both watching, waiting - for the right moment
to strike.
Starscream threw himself into a
blurring whirl of motion, lightening fast punches near-impossible to see as he
dove into the fray. For all his training being a few million years out of date
Dreadmoon reacted quickly; blocking most hits and returning a few of his own,
he kicked out at Starscream’s legs and backhanded the seeker hard enough to
send him sprawling.
Almost.
The
jet jumped and turned, spinning with the punch while hitting Dreadmoon in the
side and leaving a dent deep enough to hinder his movements. The monitor stumbled and reeled, giving
Starscream the split-second pause he needed to land and whip back around to
face his opponent. Dreadmoon flapped his wings, trying to regain his balance
before Starscream struck again, but left it a second too late - the seeker
hurled himself forward and mimicked the earlier move, cutting Dreadmoon’s legs
from under him. Unfortunately for Starscream, Dreadmoon had the presence of
mind to kick out as he fell, slamming into the seeker’s midsection and leaving
him shaking out the glitches in his vision from a cosy dent in the far wall.
Scowling himself out of the wall-induced
daze, Starscream quickly wriggled and squirmed his way out of the twisted
metal, landing back on the floor as balanced and ready as anyone could be while
seeing stars.
His commendable poise and grace under fire
was marred somewhat when he saw his bondmate’s predicament.
As he was built primarily as successor to a
monitor, with no more specific battlefield capabilities than a standard factory-built
Decepticon, Dreadmoon also had large, rather ornamental wings. They served
their purpose - mainly for steering while flying in robot mode, and formed his
hull as a spacecraft. Unfortunately, this fancy piece of ornamental engineering
meant his wings were, as I said, pretty large - and curved.
The sight that met an astonished
Starscream’s optics was...interesting to say the least. Dreadmoon, knocked on
his back, was desperately wriggling and kicking to try and get back on his
feet. He wasn’t too successful - in fact, he reminded Starscream of an irate
Insecticon.
The seeker struggled to
hide a snigger.
The monitor tried to kick and roll onto his side, but his wings
hindered him yet again as Dreadmoon couldn’t quite manage to lever himself up
and over the curve of his awkward appendage. Glaring up at his partner, he
froze as a laser barrel came gently down and rested delicately against his
forehead.
“Bang,” Starscream said
softly, a smile tugging at his mouth “you’re dead.”
****
“You said no weapons,”
Dreadmoon muttered, still struggling to sit up.
“True, but I also said to pretend it was real,” the seeker smirked, the
smile starting to run away with itself as the gun quivered with Starscream’s
suppressed laughter. “Your wings are too long, love.”
“Blame Seaquake if you
like” the monitor shrugged. “Primus knows, I do.”
“They’re not that bad, surely...”
The jet knelt next to Dreadmoon, the gun
barrel not moving a micron. The monitor shivered as Starscream accidentally brushed against the
traitorous wings, sensors prickling at the unexpected contact.
“They...have their
uses,” Dreadmoon admitted, “but not in fights.”
“Not when you get knocked over you mean!” the seeker laughed, removing
the gun and flopping haphazardly on the floor while Dreadmoon glowered. “I
haven’t seen anything so... so...” He trailed off, laughing too hard to speak.
The monitor sighed. It
was his own fault, he supposed, for suggesting Starscream sparred with him in
the first place - but the seeker had been edgy and in one of his inexplicable,
sudden crotchety moods, so Dreadmoon had needed a distraction as well as combat
practice. Who better to ask than the Decepticon Air Commander, after all?
Still...
He started when
Starscream suddenly leaned over and plonked himself solidly on the monitor’s
chest, feet on his wings. He hadn’t expected the jet’s mood to change so
abruptly - again - so Starscream still managed to catch him off guard. Leaning
forward on the heels of his hands the seeker looked down at his bondmate,
purring smugly, “Still, they do have their uses...”
Well and truly pinned,
Dreadmoon watched as Starscream’s optics softened. The seeker carefully folded
one wing back as he slipped down beside his bondmate, nestling close and
wrapping an arm round Dreadmoon’s waist as the monitor turned slightly to look
at him. Lying together on the floor, Starscream atop one indigo wing, they
settled into a companionable silence, listening to the soft hum of internal
systems starting repairs on the scrapes and dents from their unusual sparring
match.
Starscream chuckled to
himself. Dreadmoon cocked his head slightly, helmet striking a clear,
crystalline note on the floor. “What?”
The seeker grinned at
him, optics sparkling wickedly. “I was just thinking...how much more fun
training back at headquarters would’ve been, if I’d had company.”
Dreadmoon sighed again,
affectionately resigned, and snuggled back into his bondmate’s arms.
Again, Starscream’s © Hasbro (I know for definite now - I just bought
another TF graphic novel...) Dreadmoon’s © Wayward, but the story’s © me. But
how well it would work if everyone pulled out the copyrighted characters is
beyond me... ;)