Transformers: Retribution (40 page)

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Authors: David J. Williams,Mark Williams

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Movie Tie-Ins, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Fantasy, #TV; Movie; Video Game Adaptations

BOOK: Transformers: Retribution
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“Go slag yourself,” Rack n’ Ruin retorted eloquently.

“Funny you should say that,” said Tyrannicon. “Because that’s what I’ve been turning your planet into. Now are you going to surrender, or would you rather go down in a blaze of glory?”

“I think you know the answer to that,” Ultra Magnus said. The Wreckers brought their guns up—

But as they did so, the Sharkticons around Tyrannicon suddenly went haywire.

Two of them leaped at Tyrannicon, who easily countered their blows before finishing them off with his fists. Some of the others started attacking one another. Others just ran in all directions. As the Wreckers shot down the ones dashing forward into the Hall of Records, Tyrannicon and Ratbat took to their heels, sprinting back up the stairs. Strategic retreats were an option of last resort, but having one’s forces lose it so completely certainly qualified. The Wreckers got off a couple rounds in Tyrannicon’s direction, but he was gone too fast for anything to strike home decisively.

Then the Hall of Records was silent once more.

“Will someone tell me what just happened?” Springer asked.

“I’m not exactly sure,” Wheeljack replied.

“Well,” said Rack n’ Ruin, “whatever it is, it’s still going on upstairs.”

He was right. The combat in the city above them had started back up, but the only audible weapons were Sharkticon ones. It sounded like a total free-for-all.

“Primus has intervened to save us,” Alpha Trion said slowly.

Wheeljack looked skeptical. “What, you mean he’s risen up out of the core?”

“Nothing so direct. We can’t pretend to understand how he works, save that it is as mysterious as it is miraculous. But I sense long chains of events that stretch across this galaxy and back.”

“So in other words, you have no idea,” Rack n’ Ruin said.

“You don’t talk like that to a Prime,” Ultra Magnus warned.

“He can say whatever he wants to,” said Alpha Trion. “He’s earned that right.”

“Hey,” Springer said, “where’s Shockwave?”

They looked around. There was no sign of him.

Maccadam sighed. “He must have fled deeper into the archives.”

“Well, what are we waiting for?” Wheeljack asked. “Let’s go after him.”

They did just that, fanning out as they went, but Alpha Trion already knew they were just going through the motions. They weren’t going to find Shockwave. This place was riddled with secret passages, and Shockwave probably knew at least half of them. No, the scientist had gotten away again, had once more managed to salvage the thing that mattered most to him: his own hide. But as to whether he was going to salvage the overall situation on Cybertron, not if the Wreckers had anything to say about it. Fittingly, it was Ultra Magnus who called the search off.

“Let’s get back up to the surface,” he said. “No sense in staying here.”

*   *   *

T
HE SURFACE WAS THE LAST PLACE
T
YRANNICON WANTED
to be.

“Take me to Shockwave’s tower,” he told Ratbat.

“I think we might stand a better chance of survival in the undercity,” that bot replied.

“There is no
we
,” Tyrannicon said. “But
you’ll
stand a better chance of survival if you do exactly what I say. Now, where’s the best route to the tower?”

Ratbat showed him. It wasn’t that far, particularly since Ratbat had the necessary security clearances to take shortcuts and avoid setting off the automatic defenses. He led Tyrannicon through some maintenance ducts that once had serviced the Energon pools and then headed beneath the vaults whose contents—or lack thereof—had caused Shockwave so much anguish. In short order they were in the basements below the tower. All the guards had fled. The Sharkticons hadn’t reached the place yet. Tyrannicon was trying to raise his officers on the com-link, but he hadn’t had any success. His mind was working overtime trying to figure out what was going on.

“Shockwave’s elevator,” he said. “Where is it?”

“Right here,” said Ratbat. Tyrannicon stepped in and then stopped Ratbat from following him.

“I’ll take it from here,” he said.

“Are you going to kill Shockwave?” Ratbat asked.

Tyrannicon looked puzzled for a moment but then started to laugh. “I’m not interested in him. Wherever he’s gone, he’s nowhere near his tower. He’ll have made himself scarce. And I suggest you do the same.”

Ratbat nodded agreement as the elevator door slid shut. As the elevator carried Tyrannicon upward, he wondered why he hadn’t killed the slimy little bot. Was he starting to go soft? More likely, he had too many other things to
worry about. He needed more data. That his Sharkticons would mutiny … it was unthinkable. But then again, it
couldn’t
be mutiny. It was something far worse. They’d gone absolutely berserk. The elevator doors opened, and he emerged onto the roof of the tower, the city stretching below him. What he saw confirmed his worst suspicions. His once-great fleet was a complete shambles. Manta rays were on fire everywhere, and the ones that weren’t were busy turning their guns against one another, ramming one another, running down Sharkticon platoons as though they weren’t all on the same side. They were on no one’s side now. Someone had messed with their programming.

But there was no one on this planet capable of doing that.

That meant that someone had sent an override across the space bridge. Perhaps the Curator had been overthrown by Xeros. It seemed unlikely, but even if it was so, why would it have changed the basic strategy? An override transmitted over the space-time distortion of a space bridge was incredibly dangerous. Even if someone back on Aquatron was attempting to assert control over the Sharkticons here, he ought to have known better than to try it from halfway across the galaxy. It could lead to exactly the pandemonium that he was witnessing. As far as Tyrannicon could tell, he was the only member of his army who was not affected.

That didn’t surprise him, because the truth of the matter was that he
wasn’t
conditioned: his leading of military campaigns depended on his maintaining complete tactical initiative. He would have been useless to the Quintessons as a mindless slave. Instead, he was their finest creation. Whereas the Sharkticons had been a race forced into servitude, Tyrannicon was the product of Quintesson science, engineered to be the leader of a captive race. Xeros might have doubted his reliability, but that was his fear
talking, for the Curator never had. No, at least until now Tyrannicon had been utterly reliable, literally built to lead Sharkticon armies wherever the Quintessons might deem. That didn’t mean he
liked
the Quintessons, of course. He didn’t have to like them. He just recognized strength when he saw it.

But right now he saw chaos all around him.

Tyrannicon knew where his duty lay. Cybertron was no longer the priority. As he suspected, the roof of the tower contained Shockwave’s personal ship, loaded with enough fuel to reach anywhere on the planet. And Tyrannicon knew exactly where he needed to go.

U
LTRA
M
AGNUS AND HIS TEAM SAW
S
HOCKWAVE

S SHIP
roar overhead and speed off toward the south. They had a clear view of Tyrannicon at the controls.

“Maybe
he
killed Shockwave,” Wheeljack said.

“I doubt it,” said Ultra Magnus. “I suspect he’s got other things on his mind.”

The Wreckers had made it back to the surface of Iacon fairly easily. It was straightforward enough to keep a low profile while they snuck out, since everyone was more than a little preoccupied. Crazed Sharkticons continued to fight Decepticons and one another, but their numbers were thinning rapidly. Most of the city was burning. The only structure that didn’t seem to have sustained much damage was Shockwave’s tower. The Wreckers watched from the now-deserted southern wall as the stolen ship vanished over the horizon.

“Where do you think he’s going?” Springer asked. Wheeljack pulled a piece of a Sharkticon mace out of his armor while he mulled it over. Truth be told, he was just as confused as everybody else.

“It doesn’t make any sense. They had us all dead to rights.”

For the first time that day Alpha Trion actually smiled. “Their plan to make our world theirs failed. That’s all we need to know for now. The rest will surely reveal itself in due time.”

“Speaking of time,” Springer said, “right now we’ve got to get out of here before the Deceptigoons regroup and come looking for a fight.”

Ultra Magnus’s arms transformed into two laser cannons as he prepared to take point. “Exactly,” he said. “We can’t stay here much longer. Let’s roll.”

That was when Springer noticed something.

“Hey,” he asked, “has anybody seen Rack n’ Ruin?”

S
HOCKWAVE DIDN

T BELIEVE IN LUCK
,
BUT HE HAD TO
admit that he’d been more than a little fortunate to stay alive so far. He had no idea what had happened to the invasion, but it was obviously falling apart all over the place. Something had gone badly wrong with the Quintesson plan; his relief at that fact was mitigated only by the knowledge that they’d played him like a fiddle. He was too much a scientist to remain in denial about that; obviously, his attempt to plumb the secrets of Vector Sigma had been an overreach. The worst of it was that Vector Sigma was
mobile
 … He had spent long years tracking the computer down and finding a way to freeze it in place, but he was under no illusions that the catastrophe that had shaken Cybertron almost certainly would have allowed Vector Sigma to retreat farther into the depths of the planet.

Still, all wasn’t lost. The Sharkticons were beaten, and he hoped there were still enough Decepticons for him to pick up where he’d left off before the invasion: in control of the planet. As he approached his tower, he contemplated his next steps. First he’d order a search and
destroy mission on Ultra Magnus before he could get too far from the city. Maybe he could even recapture Alpha Trion and resume his experiments, albeit along more straightforward lines. This time he would focus purely on that Prime. He wouldn’t try to hook him up to anything. Nothing fancy; he’d just take him apart and find out what made him tick. As he rounded a corner and walked toward his tower, he saw that it was virtually undamaged. The shells had left scars on the walls, but undoubtedly all the laboratories inside were still intact. Shockwave practically rubbed his hands together with glee; as long as he had his research, life was going to be all right. He headed in toward his tower.

Which suddenly lit up like a flaring star.

R
ACK N
’ R
UIN HAD BEEN BUSY
. W
HILE HE AND THE
Wreckers had been searching the vaults for Shockwave, he’d taken the liberty of collecting the explosives with which they’d rigged the place. And then on the way out, while everybody had been preoccupied with rogue Sharkticons, he had managed to split off from the group and head someplace else entirely. After all, it would be a shame to let good bombs go to waste when there were still Decepticons that needed destroying.

One Decepticon in particular.

Of course he knew that the honorable Ultra Magnus would never have given him this chance at revenge if he had just come out and asked for it. Assassination just wasn’t the Autobot way. Sure, killing a Decepticon in a fair fight was smiled upon and even encouraged, but at their core they eschewed trickery and low blows. Funny how a little time in Shockwave’s lab could change a robot’s perspective on the world. He didn’t expect anyone else to understand. No doubt about it, this was one of
those cases where it was better to do it and ask forgiveness later. He hummed to himself as he thumbed the detonator’s safety off and hit the button.

F
OR A MOMENT
, S
HOCKWAVE

S TOWER SEEMED TO RISE
into the air like a giant rocket, only to crumple back and collapse in on itself, coming down like a huge house of cards. Debris blasted across Shockwave, smashing him to the ground. All he could hear was ringing and all he could see was dust, and when that cleared, there was no tower left, just a huge pile of rubble. Any other Decepticon in Shockwave’s position probably would have gone insane with rage at that point, but Shockwave was nothing if not dispassionate. This was a minor setback, no more. After all, another minute and he would have been inside the tower; he’d be dead under all those rocks.

But he was still alive. He still had time. Time to rebuild, time to plot. Time to devise new ways of making the Autobots suffer. And suffer they would.

O
N HIS REAR VIEWSCREENS
, T
YRANNICON CAUGHT A
glimpse of a tremendous explosion back at Iacon. Getting out of there had been a smart move. The place was probably total anarchy by now. He accelerated, flying at supersonic speed back toward the equator, trying not to look at the carnage unfolding beneath him: the plains littered with his Sharkticon dead and their burned-out war machines. He even wondered if the whole exercise had been a particularly elaborate Quintesson experiment; perhaps
he
was the one being experimented on. It certainly felt like he was being messed with. Or had the Quintessons decided he was no longer worthy? The
mere idea made him almost crazy with rage. He wondered what he would find when he went back through the space bridge and returned to Aquatron. Because whatever was happening there, one thing was certain.

Somebody was going to pay.

Chapter Forty-three

T
HE
C
URATOR

S WARTIME COMMAND POST HUNG UPSIDE
down like a bubble on the ceiling of the massive underwater cave that housed the space bridge. Through one window could be seen that enormous hoop, still operational and glowing. The energy needed to maintain the link was a mere fraction of that required to switch it on. And thus far that energy continued to flow.

That was basically the only thing going right at the moment. Not only had the Curator lost contact with Xeros, the Sharkticons were having what the computer euphemistically called mechanical difficulties. That could mean anything, but before the Curator could get more details, the Sharkticon interface had gone offline as well.

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