Prime Condition
Posted: 28 Feb 2016, 02:46
Diagnostics show green across the board.
The Dynamo test came back excellent.
The onboard computer didn’t report any problems whatsoever…
…so what the hell is wrong with you, baby? Talk to me, show me the problem. You know I can make you sing again, I just need to figure out this little hiccup. Just give me a little hint and a little time, and I’ll have you right as rain.
He sighed, passing his hands along the hood as he listened to the engine’s purr. The sound was wrong. The vibration was wrong. Something was very off, and he was having the hardest time pinpointing what was going on. The complex engineering of the Skyline had never given him so much issue. He had always been able to identify any kind of problem and fix it right away, so this quagmire had him lost, trudging through doubt and worry. He had to figure it out before he would race again, and the next circuit started that night.
He sighed, and popped the hood again, lifting the heavy slab of fiberglass and hooking it into the prop that kept it aloft. His sharp, expert eyes moved over the trembling engine, watching its powerful motions and taking everything in, looking for anything out of place or unusual; something that didn’t belong.
Nothing. I still can’t see anything wrong, but I just know it is… I can feel it.
He slammed his palms against the fender and pushed himself back in disgust. He shoved his hands through his blonde locks and twisted his fingers into the strands, pulling them taut. “****, why can’t I figure this out?” he snapped at himself, and pressed his palms against his skull, squeezing his head as he fought against the headache this worrying was bringing on. It was impossible. There was either something so wrong here that even he couldn’t figure it out, or there was nothing wrong at all, and he was imagining the whole thing. Either possibility was driving him absolutely mad.
He hefted the hood and replaced the prop to its latch, locking it in place as he dropped the hood with a lout bang that filled the garage. He exhaled, letting all of his air leave him in a long, powerful rush before he turned away from the car, unable to look at it again.
Maybe it was something he wasn’t seeing. Maybe it wasn’t something that could be seen. Maybe it was…
He turned, and looked at the car again, shaking his head. As he moved to step around the car, he paused, and saw a cable harness unhooked and hanging freely from the frame, beneath the door. He took a long moment, staring at the cable before he leaned down, kneeling into the floor and taking it in his hand, reaching beneath the car and clipping it back into place. Immediately, the off vibrations, the strange, alien trembles that had plagued the car all day vanished. He frowned sharply and lifted his head, looking around.
He was alone. Thank god he was alone.
No one would ever know about this. He slapped the heel of his palm into his brow, and shook his head with a laugh. “So stupid… of course…”
Now, he was ready.
The Dynamo test came back excellent.
The onboard computer didn’t report any problems whatsoever…
…so what the hell is wrong with you, baby? Talk to me, show me the problem. You know I can make you sing again, I just need to figure out this little hiccup. Just give me a little hint and a little time, and I’ll have you right as rain.
He sighed, passing his hands along the hood as he listened to the engine’s purr. The sound was wrong. The vibration was wrong. Something was very off, and he was having the hardest time pinpointing what was going on. The complex engineering of the Skyline had never given him so much issue. He had always been able to identify any kind of problem and fix it right away, so this quagmire had him lost, trudging through doubt and worry. He had to figure it out before he would race again, and the next circuit started that night.
He sighed, and popped the hood again, lifting the heavy slab of fiberglass and hooking it into the prop that kept it aloft. His sharp, expert eyes moved over the trembling engine, watching its powerful motions and taking everything in, looking for anything out of place or unusual; something that didn’t belong.
Nothing. I still can’t see anything wrong, but I just know it is… I can feel it.
He slammed his palms against the fender and pushed himself back in disgust. He shoved his hands through his blonde locks and twisted his fingers into the strands, pulling them taut. “****, why can’t I figure this out?” he snapped at himself, and pressed his palms against his skull, squeezing his head as he fought against the headache this worrying was bringing on. It was impossible. There was either something so wrong here that even he couldn’t figure it out, or there was nothing wrong at all, and he was imagining the whole thing. Either possibility was driving him absolutely mad.
He hefted the hood and replaced the prop to its latch, locking it in place as he dropped the hood with a lout bang that filled the garage. He exhaled, letting all of his air leave him in a long, powerful rush before he turned away from the car, unable to look at it again.
Maybe it was something he wasn’t seeing. Maybe it wasn’t something that could be seen. Maybe it was…
He turned, and looked at the car again, shaking his head. As he moved to step around the car, he paused, and saw a cable harness unhooked and hanging freely from the frame, beneath the door. He took a long moment, staring at the cable before he leaned down, kneeling into the floor and taking it in his hand, reaching beneath the car and clipping it back into place. Immediately, the off vibrations, the strange, alien trembles that had plagued the car all day vanished. He frowned sharply and lifted his head, looking around.
He was alone. Thank god he was alone.
No one would ever know about this. He slapped the heel of his palm into his brow, and shook his head with a laugh. “So stupid… of course…”
Now, he was ready.