тнe vaυlт dweller . ѕaraн мarĸѕ (
shortstraw) wrote in
abstracts2016-09-18 08:07 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
the tower.
It started in Novac, in that lovely Dino Dee-Lite Motel by the dilapidated gas station.
He had told her they could be found in the upper corner room, living the Post-War American dream. If not there, they had others: cabins, bunkers, safehouses, and the like. He gave her all the map points, confident in their future whereabouts. And above all, he was certain they would never be in the New Vegas, beneath the bright lights of the Strip.
The motel room had been empty. The Brotherhood safehouse and the cabin by Jacobstown also held no occupants. After traveling nearly the entire width of the Mojave Wasteland, moving from town to fucking town, she finally caught a whiff of him in Freeside.
The crier for Mick & Ralph's had seen a man matching Alex Seattle Geer's description lately, headed directly into the heavily guarded gates of the New Vegas Strip.
Judas, Sarah had thought. Blood betrayer. She then walked the road back to the Dino Dee-Lite Motel, to that cozy little upper room in the corner, and left Alex a very nice surprise.
Three days later, after finding the presidential suite of the Tops woefully empty, Sarah corners a man in the streets. Their exchange proves short, and with his pockets noticeably heavier, the guy walks the short distance to the center of the road. There, with the Vault Dweller looking on, he straightens to attention and produces a piece of paper from his pockets.
"Ladies and gentleman of New Vegas, may I have your attention please?" he reads, voice clear to the nearby bystanders and vigilant Securitrons. "It is my absolute pleasure to introduce to you a Very Important Person--" The man looks over his shoulder briefly, a quizzical look on his face. "Why is it capitalized?" he asks.
"Go on," she mouths, waving lazily at the gathering crowd.
He shrugs and continues as directed. "Someone who has traveled a great distance and sacrificed a good deal of time, bullets, and money to be here with you fine folks. She is the Champion of the Holy Thirteen, the Swan Song of the Master and His Most Unholy Unity, the Keeper of All Your Dogs, a Sometimes Friend to You and I... I present to you: The Vault Dweller!"
He had told her they could be found in the upper corner room, living the Post-War American dream. If not there, they had others: cabins, bunkers, safehouses, and the like. He gave her all the map points, confident in their future whereabouts. And above all, he was certain they would never be in the New Vegas, beneath the bright lights of the Strip.
The motel room had been empty. The Brotherhood safehouse and the cabin by Jacobstown also held no occupants. After traveling nearly the entire width of the Mojave Wasteland, moving from town to fucking town, she finally caught a whiff of him in Freeside.
The crier for Mick & Ralph's had seen a man matching Alex Seattle Geer's description lately, headed directly into the heavily guarded gates of the New Vegas Strip.
Judas, Sarah had thought. Blood betrayer. She then walked the road back to the Dino Dee-Lite Motel, to that cozy little upper room in the corner, and left Alex a very nice surprise.
Three days later, after finding the presidential suite of the Tops woefully empty, Sarah corners a man in the streets. Their exchange proves short, and with his pockets noticeably heavier, the guy walks the short distance to the center of the road. There, with the Vault Dweller looking on, he straightens to attention and produces a piece of paper from his pockets.
"Ladies and gentleman of New Vegas, may I have your attention please?" he reads, voice clear to the nearby bystanders and vigilant Securitrons. "It is my absolute pleasure to introduce to you a Very Important Person--" The man looks over his shoulder briefly, a quizzical look on his face. "Why is it capitalized?" he asks.
"Go on," she mouths, waving lazily at the gathering crowd.
He shrugs and continues as directed. "Someone who has traveled a great distance and sacrificed a good deal of time, bullets, and money to be here with you fine folks. She is the Champion of the Holy Thirteen, the Swan Song of the Master and His Most Unholy Unity, the Keeper of All Your Dogs, a Sometimes Friend to You and I... I present to you: The Vault Dweller!"
no subject
What he's always wanted, for the past four years.
They'll catch up soon enough, one way or the other. For the time being, Alex reaches up to pet through Neil's hair, kissing his forehead. Nothing further.
no subject
When Alex moves in quiet affection, Neil finds the words to speak. "Every time I caught the cemetery out of the corner of my eye, I wanted to puke," he mumbles. "So yeah, I really don't like it."
no subject
However.
"Is it because you thought that represented me almost dying?" he wonders, quiet and low. "Because it's the opposite, Neil. This is where I took my first steps on starting to live."
no subject
"That might be," he says blandly. "Everything might have changed for you there, but I don't have to like what it represents." Loss. The possible end of it, all on someone else's dime.
Neil wonders if he should stop talking. If he should enjoy the silence and the proximity. But he's mourning holes that aren't the ones made in the ground, and with Alex, he doesn't believe he will be able to stop.
no subject
no subject
no subject
"That's why I came here, too. To be close to you."
no subject
"I'm glad you're here," he gives simply. The man snakes a hand around Alex's torso, holding there.
no subject
no subject
"Your backside's too pretty to be thrown out," he says, smiling. "I should have just kept you." Shouldn't have told Alex to go away.
no subject
He nuzzles again, to show the teasing.
no subject
Nuzzling has Neil pressing his face closer to the other, breathing in the man's scent. "He told me you were hiding inside yourself," he continues softly. "Thought you'd hurt me more."
no subject
A thought caught and trailed off, as it's revealed that not only is ED-E more protective of Neil, but that he's telling him things. Things Alex wouldn't even think he thought. "...He said that?"
no subject
The other man reacts in a way most couldn't tell. Neil tightens his hold, watching. "He did. Said my pain worries you."
no subject
But Neil is asking a question by saying this, and Alex will always answer. "Of course it does, kid. You're the main thing on my mind."
no subject
It is a sentiment he doesn't mean to give. He intended to say he would never commit any worrisome acts. This, however, is what Neil Park offers.
no subject
"I can worry about you," he says easily, despite the strain in the corners of his eyes. He smiles. "Just like you can hate my grave. I didn't think you would leave me, kid. I just didn't want you to be alone with this."
no subject
"I left Dogmeat alone." To die by himself. To not even say goodbye, no, not like Marie. Shit, he-- "When he was my only family, I wasn't even there for him."
no subject
"You're wrong on a little bit, though," he says after a moment. "He's not your only family. And you weren't his only family. Me and ED-E... We loved him, too, you know."
no subject
"You're right," he tells Alex. "We were his family. I wonder if we should have delayed going off for one more day." Even as wondering does not matter anymore.
no subject
And Alex reminds alcohol and something uncomfortable. "We're going to talk, because it will make Neil happy." And Alex vaguely remembers talking about Four Corners, and he remembers that man talking about dogs. A lot of dogs. A couple in particular. Ones that Alex knew of, because of a man named Cooper in the Capital Wasteland.
But that man had said a similar thing. If he had been there.... Except that was different, and something awful, and that man had made an exception. "Even if they had ended up dying naturally in their sleep, I wouldn't have been there for it. Because, dogs, they--"
"...Dogs that love you," Alex says, aware of echoing that man's words. "They don't want you to see them die. They want to spend every fucking moment with you that they can, and it's when you step off for a moment--" Be right back, boy, Neil had said, a quick hurried smile. "--That they can let go. He held on for you, Neil. And he died by himself because he didn't want you to be sad."
no subject
He held on for you, Alex continues, and in his arms, Neil starts sobbing. He presses the both palms against his eye sockets to stem the damn tears, but the thought that Dogmeat could let go has him overwhelmed. Has him thinking that perhaps he can let go of that sin still seeped in his bones, the one that started in radiated chambers of the Jefferson Memorial to the quiet campsite in the North.
"No wonder," he chokes out. "He was always such a good boy."
no subject
Neil speaks and Alex rubs his temple against Neil's hair. "Good like when he tore open our packs for food that one time. Or ran to attack enemies when we were trying for stealth. Or made me have to wash my clothes from his radioactive drool...." There's a smile in tone, given easily, and Alex continues. "But he waited. He always waited. And if he had wanted you to be there, he would have held on. He stood next to me on that beach, after all."
no subject
"Or missed the tree one time and got piss on one of our bedrolls," Neil adds. "He waited, yeah. He always waited. But why?" After all this time-- After knowing better-- "Why couldn't I have just returned the favor?"
Why couldn't he have at least tried?
no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)