Prowl was certain that his guest would not wake up. At first, he was wild and thrashing in his sleep. But once he administered healing nanites the thrashing calmed and his patient didn't wake up as frequently.

There was a calculated percentage that he would indeed wake and break free of his bonds but hopefully would realize that he was in good servos or want to at least meet his captor.

So far, everything was in workable perimeters. The risk was relatively low and he could still maintain his winter position in time for the early blooms. He'd be rid of the mech once moderately healed, drop him off in front of one of those places that fed you mercury and sent you home with boosters.

But he didn't have enough coolant, he could drop a few antifreeze tablets into the water but he would have to purify it. Which was the reason for his tiny reassurances to himself that the mech in his care would indeed not rouse himself from medically induced recharge.

Snow would be the purer form and luckily his world was filled with it. It would have to be untouched which meant trailed through the trees to the drifts of open air. He leaned down to inspect drifts of snow for disturbance, selecting careful handfuls using his chilling servos to scoop it into a bag.

Prowl's HUD picked them up before the shrill call of cold air within a jet engine turbine. A seeker trine, coming in for a landing on the opposite side of the field. They looked alike save for their gilded color differences, red, blue, and purple. He heard one splutter about the cold on impact, speaking out their harsh words and shouting. Prowl could catch the meaning, the cold did not treat turbines and elevators well at high altitudes. He knew many of his own aerial friends to speak volumes on why flying low was so frustrating.

The red one stalked forward first, followed by the blue with the purple trailing behind. His onboard systems warned of an energy flux and suddenly the purple was in front of him.

"Hello there."

Luckily the surprise of the warp made an easy cover for his knowledge of the language the seeker spoke. Prowl narrowed his optics and uttered a low insult, as customary.

"Skywarp!"

The violet seeker turned at the sound of his name and the red one snapped out, "Wait there, you don't know if he can hurt you."

"What's he going to do, stab me?"

Skywarp laughed and looked down at Prowl and the grounder turned to look back to snow as if his computer wasn't rapidly cycling through simulations at the appearance of the trine.

"Are they stupid, Thundercracker, or what?"

The blue one spoke at this, his onboard automatically assigning their designations, "Shut up."

The red one remained unnamed as they awkwardly stumbled through the snow. At least the condescending one known as Skywarp took mirth in their predicament as well. He snorted loudly at the sight of Thundercracker mistaking a bank for stable footing.

Out of breath, the blue one spoke in a broken accent . , talk?.:.

Prowl frowned, it was a language he knew luckily enough but why was the seeker trying to talk to him in the local dialect?

. ?.:.

Thundercracker at least knew he'd messed up the words so he began to mime alongside them . ...language?.:.

It was far too frustrating to listen to the seeker murder a language that wasn't even his, so Prowl vented out a sigh and met the red one's optics, "Yes, I speak your language."

Skywarp laughed shrilly before barking out, "He doesn't even mess up the words, listen to that."

Prowl would have to be patient. He was outnumbered and outgunned. As of yet, they posed

only a passive threat.

"Greetings," the red one finally spoke, his voice had a low elegance to it, as if he'd been trained to speak, "I am Starscream, this is Skywarp and Thundercracker."

Prowl nodded his helm, keeping a straight face as he replied, "I'm Backfire."

Thundercracker kicked Skywarp before he could laugh and glared.

Starscream gave a nod in return, "Backfire, we're looking for a friend of ours. His name is Jazz."

Prowl stood up, brushing the snow from his knees carefully. The red seeker watched him, narrowing his optics at the delay in their search. He huffed out as the grounder took his time.

"Don't know any mech by that name," he responded finally.

Thundercracker looked at Skywarp who shrugged before deferring to Starscream. They spoke lowly to each other over comm frequencies.

"Have you seen or heard anything unusual recently?" Starscream asked again.

Prowl nodded and noted the uptake in wing language. He learned to control those microexpressions long ago but apparently, these flyboys didn't know how.

"What's in it for me?"

It was the normal rules of trade, withhold what you could, keep whatever happened.

The two turned to the blue seeker who scrambled to find something in his subspace to offer. What he gave would be useless to Prowl, a grade of energon for flight frames, but it was a solid trade. He stored the cube in his subspace.

"There was some kind of scuffle," Prowl responded, "I stayed clear, no sign of any mech left behind. Where should I take him if I find him?"

Starscream narrowed his optics and turned his helm to the left, as if there was a pain in his neckcabling, "Thundercracker, give him your private comm line."

His trine member huffed in obvious distaste but nevertheless sent a proximity ping to Prowl with a private comm line memo.

"Can we get out of here? All this ice is making my thrusters crack." Skywarp complained loudly.

The leader didn't comment and his trine stayed poised with the tension. The two desperately wanting to leave and the one far too intelligent for Prowl's liking.

"Thank you, Backfire," Starscream sagely responded almost causing Prowl to double over in laughter, "You intelligence is invaluable to us."

As Prowl watched the trine take off the backburner processes in his helm finally took over full computation. His battle computer overwhelmed all of his processor function and he dropped to his pedes.