He remembered the first time he had piloted it, perched on his father's half-prosthetic knees. The neurohelmet, still calibrated for his father, was a painful, nearly unendurable whine at the back of his skull, but still he had worked all day felling trees and dragging them to the river to rebuild the small bridge connecting their town with the cities to the north, their lifeline, knocked out by the winter storms.
Five years later, a growing young man, raising the mainpost for a neighbor's new barn; then striding off to spend all day climbing the coastal hills, feeling the 'Mech - now properly calibrated to his own mind - like an extension of his body. He felt the great golem sway and balance, he was conscious of every footstep, the density, texture and traction of the terrain underfoot fed directly into his brain, and he was able to compensate accordingly.
Graaf was jerked out of his reverie by Susgurd's voice,
"She is in better shape than since before she arrived on Vekfaren, and it has been many years since she had a belly full of LRMs. I suspect she will want some blood to wash them down!" He patted Graaf forcefully on the back, "Come! Let's get you settled in."
Graaf climbed the gantry to the open cockpit and lowered himself onto the padded seat. He and Sisgurd ran through a quick systems check, then he flipped the switch for reactor start and entered the ignition hardcode, followed by the voice code.
"Aegishjalm I carry between my brows."
"Voice activation confirmed. Startup commencing."
Graaf watched with satisfaction as the Dragon's MFDs and analog readouts alike came to life. The HUD splashed across his field of view, and he ran a quick runthrough of the targeting and movement controls - second nature to him now - as the war machine warmed.
"Reactor... Online.
Sensors... Online.
Weapons... Online.
All Systems Nominal."
He gave Sisgurd a thumbs-up, and the old man grinned, proud of his work, then began disconnecting the feeds that connected his 'Mech to it's harness. Coolant hose. Diagnostic feed cables. Soon the 'Mech was free. Shouting over the throbbing hum of the fusion engine as it warmed, he addressed the party; "I will give you fifteen minutes to get in position behind the depot! Then I attack! Best of luck!"
Sisgurd descended the gantry, and Graaf flipped the final switch, lowering the canopy and sealing him away from the busy, dirty mechbay. Warm. Quiet. Safe.
Edited by Grafvitnir, 04 March 2012 - 09:55 AM.