One, I freaking /love/ ficprompts hell yes bring them on.
Two, I honestly have no earthly idea what you were expecting out of this particular prompt, but I highly suspect this wasn't it. well. whatever.
Three, I realized I have no idea whatsoever about the ages of anyone in your fic (and only vague guesses of them in actual canon; I know they're meant to be in middle school but come. on., neither Gokudera or Yamamoto, at the least, look thirteen-fourteen. try sixteen-seventeen. anyway.), but I imagined 'regular' aka tylSpanner for this. Soooo yeah. (I mean, from your notes thing, he'd probably have to be tyl-age to have done all the stuff he's done already. So I suppose I'm probably right.)
[ winning the red queen's race ]
He's got his headphones on, in the middle of fine-tuning the frequencies and rhythms on one of his many side-projects, but despite his state of oblivious concentration it's hard not to notice when his office door swings open and slams hard enough to rattle the books on the shelves.
"Hello, Hayato," he says around his sucker, without looking up from the laptop screen as he hears the boy throw himself roughly onto the couch behind him, without asking what's got him down today. He's encountered the boy in one of his 'moods' often enough (honestly, it's rarer to find him /not/ pissed off at whatever the world has seen fit to throw at him today) that he knows he'll talk when he's inclined to talk.
Right on schedule, "I'm leaving. I swear to god I am leaving this fucking hellhole today."
There's a refrain he's heard often enough. Though it's been more and more frequent within the past month. "What is it this time? Something blow up in your face?" He drops the headphones to his neck, patient enough to show polite interest in his troubles. The two had a semi-friendly rapport, at any rate, and Spanner didn't mind playing the part of oniisan when it came up.
"Tch." Amazing how the scornful half-syllable carried all the sarcastic tones to say 'don't insult me' without saying it. "It's these fucking grunts. They think if they suck up to me they can get in good with my father, or some shit like that, so they're tripping over themselves trying to 'help', breathing down my neck so I can't get any goddamn work done!" He can sense more than see the boy's arms thrown up in exasperation. "No help at /all/ on the porygon project; wouldn't know the difference between semtex and C4 if I shoved it up their asses and lit a match..." he grumbles more softly to himself, crossing his arms petulantly.
"I imagine that would make it difficult to discern between the two," he says blandly, dropping the beats per minute slightly and watching the visualisation adjust in kind. "Some people might be jealous of your ability to attract willing minions, Hayato." Nearly every time he uses the boy's given name, he has to resist the urge to tack on 'kun'. His first impression of the boy, however many months ago, came from hissed rumours through the robotics department's common room. He was a genius, he was a menace, he was absolutely terrifying, he was going to overthrow his father and conquer Silph and split it from Team Rocket and their division would be first against the wall when the revolution came.
Today Spanner could see how the first three were based in reality, but anyone who really knew the boy could never come to the conclusion of the fourth. 'Filial piety' was hardly the first (or second, or fortieth) phrase that came to mind to describe the father-son relationship there, to be sure, but Hayato didn't hold those sorts of ambitions.
(He wasn't sure what sort of ambitions the boy /did/ hold, and he didn't think Hayato knew either. Perhaps, on reflection, that was the cause behind his general restlessness.)
So when the boy had wandered in to the observation room one day as Spanner was knee-deep in trying to cut down on water resistance for a smokescreen torpedo, and offered a couple profanity-laden suggestions after looking at the problem for five minutes that solved what he had been pulling his hair out over for the past five days, he had known nothing about him besides that he was a part of Silph, intelligent, and liked giant robots. (Of course, the last one was no surprise. Who /didn't/ like giant robots.)
Two, I honestly have no earthly idea what you were expecting out of this particular prompt, but I highly suspect this wasn't it. well. whatever.
Three, I realized I have no idea whatsoever about the ages of anyone in your fic (and only vague guesses of them in actual canon; I know they're meant to be in middle school but come. on., neither Gokudera or Yamamoto, at the least, look thirteen-fourteen. try sixteen-seventeen. anyway.), but I imagined 'regular' aka tylSpanner for this. Soooo yeah. (I mean, from your notes thing, he'd probably have to be tyl-age to have done all the stuff he's done already. So I suppose I'm probably right.)
[ winning the red queen's race ]
He's got his headphones on, in the middle of fine-tuning the frequencies and rhythms on one of his many side-projects, but despite his state of oblivious concentration it's hard not to notice when his office door swings open and slams hard enough to rattle the books on the shelves.
"Hello, Hayato," he says around his sucker, without looking up from the laptop screen as he hears the boy throw himself roughly onto the couch behind him, without asking what's got him down today. He's encountered the boy in one of his 'moods' often enough (honestly, it's rarer to find him /not/ pissed off at whatever the world has seen fit to throw at him today) that he knows he'll talk when he's inclined to talk.
Right on schedule, "I'm leaving. I swear to god I am leaving this fucking hellhole today."
There's a refrain he's heard often enough. Though it's been more and more frequent within the past month. "What is it this time? Something blow up in your face?" He drops the headphones to his neck, patient enough to show polite interest in his troubles. The two had a semi-friendly rapport, at any rate, and Spanner didn't mind playing the part of oniisan when it came up.
"Tch." Amazing how the scornful half-syllable carried all the sarcastic tones to say 'don't insult me' without saying it. "It's these fucking grunts. They think if they suck up to me they can get in good with my father, or some shit like that, so they're tripping over themselves trying to 'help', breathing down my neck so I can't get any goddamn work done!" He can sense more than see the boy's arms thrown up in exasperation. "No help at /all/ on the porygon project; wouldn't know the difference between semtex and C4 if I shoved it up their asses and lit a match..." he grumbles more softly to himself, crossing his arms petulantly.
"I imagine that would make it difficult to discern between the two," he says blandly, dropping the beats per minute slightly and watching the visualisation adjust in kind. "Some people might be jealous of your ability to attract willing minions, Hayato." Nearly every time he uses the boy's given name, he has to resist the urge to tack on 'kun'. His first impression of the boy, however many months ago, came from hissed rumours through the robotics department's common room. He was a genius, he was a menace, he was absolutely terrifying, he was going to overthrow his father and conquer Silph and split it from Team Rocket and their division would be first against the wall when the revolution came.
Today Spanner could see how the first three were based in reality, but anyone who really knew the boy could never come to the conclusion of the fourth. 'Filial piety' was hardly the first (or second, or fortieth) phrase that came to mind to describe the father-son relationship there, to be sure, but Hayato didn't hold those sorts of ambitions.
(He wasn't sure what sort of ambitions the boy /did/ hold, and he didn't think Hayato knew either. Perhaps, on reflection, that was the cause behind his general restlessness.)
So when the boy had wandered in to the observation room one day as Spanner was knee-deep in trying to cut down on water resistance for a smokescreen torpedo, and offered a couple profanity-laden suggestions after looking at the problem for five minutes that solved what he had been pulling his hair out over for the past five days, he had known nothing about him besides that he was a part of Silph, intelligent, and liked giant robots. (Of course, the last one was no surprise. Who /didn't/ like giant robots.)