Fallout Fallout: Autumn Morning [Director's Cut]

Prologue
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    The one and only. Now in an exclusive, ultimate edition, reworked as the officially 'canon' version going forward.

    Prologue

    ==*==

    Raven Rock Bunker Complex

    13:00 EST, March 20 2278


    Liam Walker did not like Raven Rock. He was familiar enough with the winding maze of corridors, but the military base reminded him too much of his old home – Vault 101, the bunker where he had spent almost all his life before venturing out into the wasteland after his missing father. On the way out he had accidentally killed the Vault’s Overseer – and he was still considered persona non grata, even though the Vault had recently opened up to the outside world. The last time he had been here, it had been on a mission of what his commanding officer had called a “necessary task” and what less charitable minds would consider political assassination or an outright coup.

    But they didn’t – couldn’t, the President had made very clear – know just what John Henry Eden had been planning, or his true nature. So he kept mum and said nothing. So far as the world knew, “he” had just had an unexpected stroke or heart attack. The history books would comment on the irony that the paranoid measures he took to prevent his demise had prevented him from getting medical assistance.

    He knocked on the oaken door, as a mere matter of courtesy, and opened it, entering a brightly lit office.

    “Welcome,” the figure sitting at the desk opposite said in his characteristic Tidewater drawl, ruffling a finger through his light brown hair – though he wore civilian suits now, the medals of his military career still covered his chest. “Lt. Walker, it’s been too long since I last saw you.”

    “Yes, Aut-”

    “Mr. President, now, remember. I expect people to be formal when speaking with me. Even my closest friends.”

    “Yes, Mr. President. I voted for you in the election after all – of course, there weren’t any other candidates. So, what do you want to speak with me about? Is it what happened at the purifier?”

    “As I’ve said before, I bear no responsibility for the death of your father. His own stubbornness and gullibility when it came to rebel propaganda led to him releasing that radiation pulse. He killed himself in an attempt to kill me – hoping to put an end to our campaign in the region and with it the last, best hope for the United States of America ... and the world.”

    Walker looked to the flag standing on the office – the old pre-War flag. Once there had been an “E” symbol – the E’s middle bar itself composed of three bars – in the blue patch on the top left-hand corner. Now it was just a single star with the others circling around it.

    “So what is it?”

    “I have long-term plans for the beached aircraft carrier. The one that recently accepted re-integration after I had some of my boys land vertibirds on the flight deck.”

    “What of it? It’s just another wasteland settlement we have to protect against the super mutants. At least until we clear out their base and destroy their FEV supplies. After that, they’ll be doomed.”

    “You made a report before we had announced our presence. One of your first missions for me was scouting it out. I believe it was concerning the android?”

    “Yes, but what does that have to do with the current situation? I’ve just returned from Philly and the locals there are eager to join us – just for the water from Project Purity so much as anything.”

    “I already know,” Autumn replied. “Suffice to say, with the steel-refining capabilities of Pittsburgh – once we destroy the warlord in control there and purge those troglodyte creatures –, the dockyards of Naval Station Norfolk, and the miracle metal produced by Project Duraframe; we can eventually make her seaworthy again. Rebuild her. And send her on a long-range expedition.”

    “Where?”

    “The origin point of the android you encountered on that very same carrier,” President Augustus Autumn said. “Boston.”

    ==*==

    Naval Station Norfolk

    11:00 EST, September 15 2287


    "My fellow Americans ..."

    Rhonda Richardson put her military cap on and clutched the bottle of champagne tight as she heard the President’s speech, his Tidewater drawl still distinctive from such a far distance. It was a chill day, cloudy with the prospect of imminent rain, and the drydock was nevertheless filled with people. Many were sailors of the restored US Navy, a good number citizens of "Rivet City" who had elected to join and serve on the carrier rather than be moved to a temporary settlement area or pre-War town under restoration. There were journalists for the Department of Public Information, soldiers of the Secret Service guarding the President and his family - their armour still black when other branches of the military had shifted to olive drab, and a decent amount of local civilians crowding around the great ship, eager to see it set sail.

    She knew his words were being broadcast across the nation – at least what parts of it were now back under the control of the US Federal Government, still informally known to an extent as “the Enclave” - even by the President himself occasionally. That had never formally speaking been an official designation, derived as it was from the name of its secretive headquarters, Control Station ENCLAVE.

    That base had been destroyed more than forty years ago, in a cataclysmic nuclear explosion that had killed thousands – including Rhonda’s own great-grandfather, President Richard “Dick” Richardson. The blast had later been determined to be sabotage caused by terrorists aligned with the illegal regime of the secessionist “New California Republic”. After that the majority of military and civilian personnel on the west coast had decamped to Raven Rock, Adams Air Force Base, and Mount Weather – leaving behind a small group at Camp Navarro owing to logistical difficulties.

    It wasn’t known if the base had survived the past 40 years, but things looked grim. Still, she hoped so – most people who had been in US service from the beginning did. The wastelanders – including some in her unit – didn’t really understand.

    She tried her best to put on a smile – this day was a nice break from most of what she did as a Sergeant in the US Army Logistics Corps, which boiled down to glorified clerical work. This day, she was to be the star of the show – though looking on the mighty warship before her, she wondered if she might be herself upstaged by that hulk of steel and duraframe. But even though it was going to be launched today, there were still almost two months before the expedition that everybody in the military was talking about. The recon team needed to gather more data and logistical preparations needed to be made - once she arrived in the region herself with the first wave of troops, she knew her workload would only increase.

    “USS Richardson ”, the white letters in stencilled military typeface painted on her stern declared her to be – a memorial to the man who had taken the first steps to reclaiming American soil. That was technically inaccurate – Rhonda had heard whispers about the man’s “tyrannical behaviour” and his “going too far”, though she didn’t know how accurate they were. Her own father, Donald W. Richardson, had said nothing of the matter, and at any rate had never known the man himself.

    She was an impressive ship, after all the repairs had been completed – with the latest in modern computer technology, 4 fusion reactors powering her systems, and the capacity to carry two squadrons of VB-02 vertibirds and F-77 Valkyrie fighters each – about a hundred aircraft in total.

    “This day represents not only a triumph of our military, but of our resurgent industrial power and economy ...”

    The President’s speech continued.

    “… As a signal to America’s enemies, on this continent and others, that we are committed to the utmost in rebuilding and reuniting our great nation, no matter the forces that put themselves up against us. As the late President’s great-granddaughter herself has been invited to play a key role in the ceremony, we take the memory of our fallen leader to heart and promise never again to fall into such jeopardy.”

    “1, 2, 3, launch!”

    The gates of the drydock opened and Rhonda threw her bottle against the side as the massive ship rolled down the gangway with a ponderous speed, quickly gaining momentum to smash into the waters of the Chesapeake Bay.

    ==*==

    Richmond, Virginia

    11:30 EST, September 16 2287


    Richmond had outstayed its welcome for Martin McLaggen and his caravan. He was a trader from the NCR travelling on the Grand Trail – the biggest trade route in the Wasteland, through Legion Territory and the South then up north to the Commonwealth and back west to sunny California – and he'd been stuck here for a month. That damn fool Murphy had punched a little too hard in a bar fight and the Mayor'd been back-logged with requests from April till late September.

    Come to think of it, this whole journey had been a disaster. First, barely after leaving the NCR at Hoover Dam he'd been shaken down a thousand caps by a petty warlord. Say what you like about Caesar , he thought, at least he didn't pay exorbitant tolls . Then his wagons full of energy weapons and electronics had been impounded by the Lone Star Republic, and he'd lost twenty good men to bandits near the old Mexican border. Then Jenny'd shot a man who tried to abuse her in Orleans and he'd had to skip town without getyting to sell anything. And finally, he'd spent the last few months fighting ghouls, tribals and swathes of mutant kudzu to get to Richmond, whereupon one of his mercenaries killed a man and couldn't pay the blood money. If this bad luck lasted much longer, his company was busted.

    He looked around the busy marketplace in front of the town hall, seeing the usual brahmin-drawn carts and a busker singing some old ballad:

    “He was comin' down the grade makin' ninety miles an hour,
    The whistle broke into a scream,
    They found him in the wreck with his hand upon the throttle,
    He'd been scalded to death by the steam...”

    And then … fuck.

    Martin saw the man first. He was wearing a tailored, clearly expensive suit and had … a working pip-boy ! And there were his bodyguards, wearing power armour that …

    No, it was that armour. The old armour McLaggen knew from the history books, from school, from the museum in New Arroyo. Enclave. He turned white.

    Must be mercs of some kind, he thought, trying to rationalise it . They headed out east after taking the armour as some kinda trophy . That was when he heard a local radio station coming from a market booth.

    “ Yankee Doodle came to town a-riding on a pony,
    Stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni,
    Father and I went down to camp along with Captain Goodin',
    And there we saw the men and boys as thick as hasty pudding!”


    “What's that radio station you're listening to?”

    “Enclave Radio,” the shopkeep said in her Virginia accent. “Says it's the official station of the Fed'ral Government - sometimes they say 'Enclave', it's the same thing - but they sure took their sweet time helping us.”

    “ And there they were a thousand men,
    As rich as Squire David,
    And what they wasted every day,
    I wished it could be saved!”


    “The Enclave is gone,” McLaggen said, trying to convince himself as much as anything. "We defeated them decades ago after they ... they tried to wipe out humanity!”

    “Defeated? Mister, they just launched an aircraft carrier. Heard it on the news just yesterday; that President Autumn sure has a sweet voice. And they haven’t been wiping out anybody other than super mutants and raiders. There aren’t any left in the Capital Wasteland any more thanks to them.”

    And there they had a swapping gun,
    As big as a log of maple,
    On a mighty little cart,
    A load for father's cattle!”


    “Screw Murphy!” McLaggen yelled to his associates. “We're heading back to the NCR! We have to warn them if it's the last thing we do!”

    As they hurried back to their lodgings to prepare to begin their journey, the final words of the old song played.

    “It scared me so I hooked it off,
    Nor stopped as I remember,
    Nor turned about till I got home,
    Locked up in mother's chamber!”


    Cambridge, Greater Boston Area

    10:00 EST, 11 November 2287


    Sgt. Elliot Tercorien was woken with a loud noise, an overwhelming boom that might have deafened him had he been closer to the site. He looked up in panic, trained and honed combat senses taking over – there was a fireball in the sky, already dissipating. An air-to-air nuclear missile, too high up to cause any significant fallout or radiation exposure, a paltry 1.5 kilotons of firepower. And to the southeast – he checked with his binoculars – the distinctive shape of an F-77 Valkyrie fighter, its wings swept forward like no military plane in service before the nuclear war, already zooming away.

    It was a mere three days before Operation Iron Eagle swung into full gear, but already the US military had made its mark on the region.

    Sometimes he went to sleep fearing that he would wake up on an experimentation table – his whole life since his rescue from that den of horrors a vision implanted into his mind by those freakish little green men that had abducted his squad and experimented on his squadmates to the point they’d had to be mercy-killed.

    He had been one of the only ones that had escaped – along with the little girl he’d adopted, Sally, and the special forces man who’d rescued him. The rest had died on that alien mothership, giving them precious time to get back to the teleport chambers – and to Earth – before it had collided with the other alien ship. The Samurai – he didn’t recall the name, now – had even stayed behind on the bridge to make sure their plan succeeded.

    He got into his armour – a suit of Mk. 7 X-02 ‘Black Devil’ power armour (that being a term the Brotherhood traitors had used before being appropriated by the US Military itself), enjoying the cool pneumatic hiss as his suit opened to let him in and then closed around him. He took his M-45 Liberty plasma rifle – a derivation of the old Glock-86 ‘Plasma Defender’, expanded to rifle size – and hurried out of the old police station his recon team; Squad Echo, 3rd Platoon, 2nd Company, 1st Marine Regiment – were using as a base, firing shots into the mass of super mutants attacking the pre-War facility after clambering onto the standard-issue military barricade.

    He took out one with ease, and another, and another – but it wasn’t enough. They seemed a sea of bestial madness. More worryingly, he was the only soldier with power armour – his men were in combat armour for ease of travel and to keep a low profile. They might not be able to hold.

    “I’m on standby to do a combat evac,” his pilot, Camilla Everhart, said through his helmet radio, from the vertibird planted on the police station’s roof, next to the antenna array that theoretically should provide the small base with an electromagnetic shield against teleportation - the eggheads wanting to test one of their new theories per usual, he guessed.

    “Acknowledged,” he replied, squeezing off another shot. “But no need, we’re holding them.”

    Just then he saw laser rifle shots hitting from behind the super mutants, picking off them one by one. They were being fired by men dressed in what looked like farmers' overalls adapted into some kind of anachronistic uniform, using some sort of crude single-shot laser rifle. The leader was wearing combat armour - a winterized type, Elliot noted. The same type that he had worn himself fighting in the Alaskan theatre more than 200 years ago. Curious, part of his mind noted. Very odd.

    A group of the baying greenskins split off to deal with the intruders, and the confusion gave Elliot’s men an opportunity. He loaded a plasma grenade into the underbarrel attachment of his rifle and fired it into one of the largest masses, scything a group down and blasting fragments of blood, bone and brains in all directions.

    After that they proved easy to pick off one by one, and the leader of the mysterious group approached the USMC soldiers, advancing cautiously in combat armour.

    He was – no, it can’t be – Elliot recognised him as he got closer. One of the soldiers moved to level a weapon, but Elliot moved his hand aside.

    He should have been long dead. Elliot had never thought he’d see that man – one of his close friends and a fellow soldier in the 108th Infantry Battalion – ever again. He spoke out loud.

    “Nate?!"
     
    Chapter One
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter One

    Nate Washington, sole survivor of Vault 111, woke up at dawn and looked out again from the Vault entrance near Sanctuary Hills on the ruins of Boston. Somewhere in these ruins, he knew, was the shadowy Institute. Somewhere was the brutal man who had murdered his wife and kidnapped his son. Somewhere was, he hoped beyond hope, where his son still lived. He ate his breakfast, a concoction of mutfruit and razorgrain, and prepared to set out for the day’s patrol. Maybe he would find a lead this day. It was all that kept him going forward sometimes (well, that and Piper).

    He set out at 9 AM sharp by his Pip-Boy’s chronometer, equipped with a laser rifle, his old armour from the Anchorage campaign, a 10mm pistol, and a combat knife. He was followed by five Minutemen – wearing their typical beige leathers and carrying laser muskets, they were barely more than untrained farm boys. Hiking with them at a generous pace forward into the ruins of Cambridge, he was-

    The first thing he noticed was the shockwave that knocked him to his back and the loud boom above. Luckily the explosion had been behind so his vision wasn’t damaged and-

    He looked up and saw the fireball interrupting the quiet blue midday sky like ... like ... the bomb. The one that had ripped apart his quiet suburban existence, killed Boston, led to Nora’s death and taken Shaun from him. The one that had detonated two hundred years ago. To him it felt like mere weeks.

    “What in God’s name?” he shouted, unheeding of those who might hear him. An object was approaching fast, screaming from the sky like the Chinese planes shot down over Anchorage, covered in fire and smoke. Nate ran like the devil himself was chasing him and hurried into an old personal fallout shelter seconds before it hit the ground, pushing up a vast cloud of smoke and dust. He got out of the shelter and looked to the sky. He could hear the distinctive sound of a fighter engine to the south-west.

    There haven’t been any fighter planes since the Great War, Nate thought. You must have imagined it. Hesitantly he took a radiation drug – never could be too careful – and approached the crashed object. It was ... some sort of saucer, like in a sci-fi holotape. An unearthly being was desperately crawling away from the alien vessel, cradling its bulbous green head in its hands before it pitifully expired.

    The Minutemen following him looked even more shocked than he did.

    No, Nate thought. You haven’t imagined it. This is real. Then that means ... the fighter jet must be real too. Is it Institute tech? Or have American forces survived?

    That thought seemed almost unimaginably good to be true, so he checked the radio function on his Pip-Boy and prepared to switch to the old military frequencies. If any American troops were still active, they should be using these frequencies.

    He was distracted by the sudden sound of shooting – what sounded like plasma weapons mixed with pipe rifles. It was from near the old police station, that he’d never really investigated or gone near in his forays into the ruined town.

    A few ferals ambushed him on the way, but the group dealt with them fairly easily. Their atavistic savagery was no match for pre-War military training and numbers

    Finally, he found the place. About seventy-five super mutants were circling around it, looking for a weak spot and loosing fire on it with pipe rifles, as men in olive drab combat armour took pot-shots at them with them with strange plasma rifles, firing off bursts – that’s just not possible with normal plasma weapons, Nate noted. On the roof was a flying machine with two rotors – it looked like a vertibird, one of which he had seen in his last month on deployment – and the soldiers were being led by a figure in olive drab power armour, of a design Nate had never seen before. There was a globe-and-anchor symbol painted on the right shoulder pad, along with a Sergeant’s rank markings.

    He still didn’t know who these folks were, but if they needed help dealing with super mutants, they had the right man for the job.

    Nate moved with military precision, reflexes honed in the battlefield of Anchorage and the post-apocalyptic wasteland springing to life instinctually. A laser blast to the head blasted apart one abomination’s cranium and badly wounded its fellows. He and the others kept up a barrage, skilfully weaving in and out of cover as they died. One by one, the creatures died until there were none left.

    “Stop! “ said one of the troopers on the steps of the building. “Identify yourself!”

    Nate put down his gun, raised his hands and spoke.

    “Nate Washington, former US Army,” he said. “Serial Number 876530, 108th Infantry.”

    The power-armoured man who was at the barricade took off his helmet, astonished.

    Nate?!

    Elliot?

    ==*==

    The following discussion was rather surprising for both men.

    “How’re you still alive?” Elliot Tercorien asked his old friend over a glass of whiskey.

    “Vault-Tec experiment,” Nate replied. “Cryogenics. Me, my wife Nora and my son Shaun were put into cryogenic suspension for two hundred years. Then some bastards came along, kidnapped Shaun and murdered Nora when she tried to save her baby. My baby. Soon as I find the bastard who did it I’m gonna make him wish he’d killed me too!”

    He almost sobbed as he spoke, the very words bringing back the anger and loss. Watching her die, watching my son be kidnapped … he had been helpless to stop it. Trapped in that cryogenic pod, with all that glass and steel between him and his loved ones.

    After a slight pause to recollect himself he kept on talking.

    “So, Elliot, how’re you still alive? Last I heard you were MIA at the third battle of Dutch Harbour.”

    “Me and my squad, we ... got captured and experimented on.”

    “By the ChiComs?”

    “By aliens. Little green men with bulbous heads and some sort of mind powers. They did sick experiments on us and kept us in cryo when they weren’t playing their little twisted games.”

    “How’d you get out?”

    “I got rescued by some sort of special forces agent. Together we took over the alien ship and rammed it into another one of theirs. Big explosion, but I doubt anybody ever saw it. We barely managed to teleport off before the collision.”

    “How’d you end up in Boston?”

    “Washington D.C. was a warzone at the time. There were US government forces, some techno-cult in powered armour, super mutants and ferals as far as the eye could see, and bandits under every fucking bush. Not that there were any bushes, the water had so many rads and pollutants in it you were better off drinking alcohol the whole time. So I signed back up with US forces because, well, what else could I do? All my friends and family were long dead and, well, there was nothing else to do. So we fought under President Autumn and we did damn well by my account of it. Purged the super mutants, sent the techno-cultists packing, restored law and order, and started to rebuild America.”

    “President Autumn?”

    “Augustus Autumn, President of the United States of America. Man’s harsh but, hey, it’s a harsh world now. He hung all the slavers of some shitstain called Paradise Falls from lampposts as an example to their compatriots- threw the leaders out of vertibirds too -, cleaned D.C. of super mutants entirely, and restored fresh water to the city’s surviving residents on condition that they accept American authority.”

    “You still haven’t told me how you ended up in Boston.”

    “Well, I was getting to that. You see, one of the main towns in the D.C. region was built in the wreckage of an aircraft carrier. So Autumn sent US forces to purge a bandit kingdom in Pittsburgh so he could get the steel he needed to rebuild it. We did it and our scientists managed to synthesise a vaccine for the mutant disease afflicting the population. So we rebuilt the aircraft carrier, and we’re ready to flex our muscles a bit. The USS Richardson is arriving in just three days. I hope you don’t miss it.”

    “I wouldn’t miss it for the world. So what do you need in Boston?”

    “We need land, we need tech, and we need people. You see, D.C. is still fucked up. The Chinese used as many cobalt bombs, neutron bombs, chemical weapons and bioweapons as they could on the region, and we’re still fixing it up. And look at Boston. Lots of almost intact farmland, industry, and resources. There’s talk of making it a provisional Capital for the good old US of A while we clear out D.C.”

    “Second: tech. We got intel from up north about the Institute and all the stuff they supposedly have locked up tight. Humanlike androids, advanced robotics, gene-databases for dozens of extinct species, cold fusion. Our mission, in large part, is to get them to share it with us, by hook or by crook.”

    “Third: people. Even with our current maternity incentives we have a pretty small population – especially of educated people. We have the US people who arrived in D.C. ten years ago and the dwellers of surviving Vaults, and neither were very populous. If we have more people under our wing, that means more factories we can get back online, more talent we can exploit, and more soldiers and policemen. And Boston has a high population, even now.”

    “True,” Nate replied. “Much as the raiders, gunners, ferals and super mutants are currently trying to reduce it.”

    “Good,” Elliot replied. “I’ll make a report saying we made contact with friendly locals and they helped us with our little problem. You any kind of big shot, by any chance?”

    “Yeah,” Nate said. “I’m the General of the Commonwealth Minutemen, leader of Sanctuary Hills and a good deal of other settlements, and I’m good with the only newspaper in the whole city.”

    “Good,” Eliot said. “You should gather your friends and go over to Lexington in three days time. That’s where we’ll begin.”

    ==*==

    Eastern Seaboard, Atlantic Ocean

    13:00 EST, 11 November 2287


    USS Richardson cut through the uncannily calm waters of the Atlantic seaboard, a fighter plane flying in from the northeast. Until three years ago, she had been the settlement of Rivet City – now she was the flagship of the United States Navy, rechristened after the last President to govern from the secretive Control Station ENCLAVE. About forty years ago, the old oil rig had been blown up by terrorists aligned with the secessionist “New California Republic” who snuck a nuke on board, with the President lost in the blast – at least, that was the official story. The truth was somewhat more complicated, but burdening the Wasteland population and the younger generation with that knowledge could only prove counterproductive.

    At least, that was what President Augustus Autumn thought. Watching from the ship’s bridge as the plane cooled its plasma thrusters and landed on the deck, he couldn’t help but feel satisfaction. The pilot’s transmission back had determined that the unidentified flying object the plane had been ordered to shoot down was no longer up in the air, making it most likely an unidentified grounded object by now. The old air-to-air nuke’s detonation had been above safe height of burst too, meaning the locals should suffer no long-term effects.

    Activating the communications suite, he checked up on the NYC scouting expedition, the skeleton-crewed Chicago base, and his top agent down in Florida. All active and responding, good. He then sent a conference call to Vice President Clarkson down in D.C. and talked about some minor civic issues, and had a private chat with the First Lady and his son Alexander. Admiral Keller did not look amused at that last one.

    “That’s my communications equipment you’re using for frivolous purposes, Mr. President,” the Admiral harrumphed. "We've just managed to get it repaired and you used it to talk to your family."

    “As Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed Forces, that’s my communications equipment as well, and I can use it any way I damn want to, don't you forget. You may be commanding officer of this ship, but I am President and the chain of command terminates at me. If you weren't such a good seaman I'd have you court-martialed for insubordinate behaviour, but I think I'll let it slide just this once. Understood?”

    “Understood, Mr. President,” the Admiral hastily corrected himself. Autumn grimaced – the man was most likely extra-territorial due to his youth and need to prove himself. The US Navy had been nothing but an empty set of sinecures for centuries, after all. But if he persisted in this behaviour, there were plenty of punishments that could be employed.

    "Glad you know your limits," Autumn said. "Sometimes we forget our reason and act like children or animals, and then we need to be put in our place. Don't you agree, Admiral Keller?"

    "Agreed, Mr. President."

    Autumn put on the longcoat that had served as his field uniform during his military career, left the bridge, and stood before the assembled troops. 12 vertibirds – not counting Air Force 1 and Air Force 2 – were on deck, each carrying a squad of 14 men – one NCO, twelve regular troops, and a combat medic attached specifically for this op. It’s just the tip of the spear , Autumn mused to himself. There were more vertibirds in the aircraft carrier’s hangars, and far more at Adams AFB poised to fly north.

    With impeccable discipline – Drill Sergeant Dornan had his grandfather’s skill at the position – they entered parade formation and saluted the President.

    “Men and women of the United States Armed Forces,” he said. “In less than 72 hours we will begin combat and peacekeeping operations in the Greater Boston area and eventually throughout Massachusetts. I want you alert and prepared for combat throughout those 72 hours. Just before we begin, you will be briefed on your mission and what you are required to do to achieve it. I demand exemplary service, conduct and loyalty from you all during these trying times, just as I demanded it in D.C. and in Pittsburgh. Do your country, and your President, proud!”

    They saluted again and moved back to their quarters below deck. Soon, the savages and animals infesting Boston would learn what a real military could do.

    ==*==

    Libertalia

    20:45 EST, November 13 2287


    Captain Mike Schultz checked his weapons were ready as he flew in from the east. The wing of vertibirds his plane was leading – six in total – were not filled with soldiers. Which to be glad, he liked. The Air Force fought tooth and nail to maintain their monopoly on aircraft which they’d possessed since the nuclear war, and as a result the other services had no small distaste for them in general.

    His plane was a VB-02 Mk. 5 – slightly larger than the post-Navarro Mk. 4, primarily to carry a full squad of thirteen power-armoured soldiers. In addition to that impressive cargo, the plane had a terrifying arsenal of its own – a nose mounted gatling laser, two nose-mounted automatic grenade launchers, and various missiles and rocket pods attached to hardpoints on the exterior of the craft, a replacement for the bomb bay (which had been removed to add more space for carrying troops).

    The target was Libertalia – a raider base agglomerated from various sunken ships in the rubble of a ruined pre-War dockyard. They had built their crude shanties of wood and corrugated metal around and upon the remains of what civilised people had created, using them as a base to loot and rape and pillage – a fitting metaphor for the entirety of their existence.

    They had no value to a civilised society, and the prison system was still not functioning again yet – so there was no choice but to kill them. Schultz had little difficulty with that.

    He opened fire with the first of his missiles – standard high-ex, nothing special. It struck the central floating platform and exploded, shattering it. That was the cue for the other planes to add their own voices to the chorus. Flowers of fire lit up the sunset-red sky, along with great spouts of water from misses.

    Going closer in, he turned his gatling laser on a group. The relentless crimson blasts seared flesh, cutting men in half or setting them on fire with their potency. The raiders fired back with pipe guns, but even when their shots hit the plane’s cockpits, they bounced off of bulletproof glass.

    In just fifteen minutes, it was over.

    Lexington, Greater Boston Area

    21:00 EST, November 13 2287


    Sergeant Granite held his plasma rifle tightly as the vertibird soured over the ruins of Boston. The occasional light of a settlement or household sometimes got his attention, but most of the city was dark, the moon hidden by thick clouds. Boston was uninhabited, abandoned, and desolate like D.C. had been when Enclave forces first arrived, a vast array of scientists, civilians and soldiers seeking to start America anew, fortuitously enough on the 4th of July. Granite had been just age ten that day, his father and grandfather both serving. Now Grandpappy had passed away and Daddy was holed up on Liberty Island commanding the other scouts deployed to NYC. From the grapevine, he'd heard that place was almost as bad off as D.C.

    The vertibird pulled up and Granite received his orders over radio.

    “Operation Iron Eagle is good to go. Squads Alpha, Charlie , Echo and Puma drop in 3, 2, 1...”

    “DROP!”

    Granite and the rest of Squad Echo leapt out of the vertibird onto the dark streets of Lexington below. The sheer force would have shattered his feet and legs had he not been in power armour. As it was he felt nothing. A raider sentry spotted them and rang a warning bell, before Granite pulled the trigger of his plasma rifle and fired the first shot of what would later be called the Second Battle of Lexington . A barrage of plasma bolts struck him all over the torso, melting the criminal into green goo – the telltale product of molecular destabilisation. But the damn bastard had managed to warn his partners in crime.

    Well, let them come. Franklin Horrigan Granite wasn’t named after the meanest sonuvabitch ever to fight for the Enclave for nothing!

    A blaze of laser, plasma and tesla fire lit up the streets as other squads exchanged fire with the raiders. The bastards were putting up a damned good fight, but they had no chance of winning. Faced with a real military – and one equipped with power armour at that – not some pissant local militia or a posse of settlers, they had no hope of anything other than dying. Gatling laser fire raked the roofs from above as the raiders were methodically flushed out of the high ground – and right into the teeth of the most advanced weapons systems in the US Military’s arsenal.

    It wasn’t war – it was pest control.

    Then-

    The bright flash, rad spike and thundering boom hit Frank’s armour mere seconds after it struck one of the squad-mates to his left. Mini-nuke! The missile had hit near Laura Delaney, one of the squad’s two heavy weapons specialists , and it looked like she had been hurt bad if not outright killed . Frank quickly hand-signalled the combat medic to deliver stims and rad drugs effective immediately, and the man hurried to the casualty. The girl had lost a limb, at best. Now to take out the shooter...

    He spotted her quickly. Female raider, in some sort of scrap metal power armour, hand-loading a fresh mini-nuke into the launcher, set up on a catwalk attached to the old Corvega factory. Frank fired a volley of shots into the catwalk, and it collapsed, leaving her tangled up in amidst the wreckage. A gatling laser sweep from one of the vertibirds ensured she never got the chance to pull herself out. After her death, the fight was pretty much knocked out of them. The battle was all over but the crying.

    One of the raiders, looking desperate, raised his hands and started shouting.

    “I surrender! I surrender! I fucking surrender, damn it!”

    Frank felt a twinge of pity for the man, barely more than a boy, before he remembered Enclave SOP for dealing with the organised criminal gangs that had used to infest D.C. He drew his plasma pistol and nailed him right between the eyes. The raider’s head burst like an overripe melon, sending brain, blood, and shards of bone in all directions. Good riddance to bad rubbish .

    By midnight, the town of Lexington was cleared of hostiles. Enclave casualties were restricted to one major injury and several minor cuts and scrapes. The tally of dead raiders, on the other hand, was about 82 by a conservative estimate.


    ==*==

    This day’s been terrible for our whole operation, Jared decided as one of those damn gunships strafed the top of his stronghold and its guns shredded another group of his men stupid enough to stand out on the catwalks. Hell, today may have been one of the worst days anybody had since the war. What men he had left with any sense were desperately working to fortify the upper floors of the old factory as the screams and sounds of gunfire filtered up from the breach at the front door.

    To think things had been going so well too. Just this morning his men were the biggest gang in the North Commonwealth, practically undisputed rulers of Lexington. Sure, there were the ghouls hanging around in a good chunk of town, but nobody lived out there but bums and useless chem heads anyhow. And true, one of those fucking Minutemen (weren’t they all supposed to be dead?) had come through and started shooting his way through the dumbasses on the first floor until he’d promised not to attack the pathetic farms and little towns they were watching, but that was no big loss, and he’d heard that smaller raider groups who crossed the Minutemen these days were getting wiped out wholesale; so on the whole things were going well.


    Then, just as the sun was going down for the evening a bunch of fucking flying machines show up out of nowhere and start gunning down any of his men who shoot back! Worse still, they were dropping off more power armored assholes than anyone had seen in one place except the Atom Cats, and those stupid fuckers just stayed in their garage. Jared’s gang was considered pretty hot shit up here since they had a single suit of power armor and that nuclear slingshot they found in the old army checkpoint. Gears had both of those things, and she was the final word in their little extortion racket. Of course, word was the second she pasted one of the assholes outside with her slingshot they started shooting that plasma shit up at the catwalk she liked to hang out on until the whole thing collapsed in a pile of melting steel and dead raider.


    With her gone that left Jared’s gang with pipe rifles, molotov cocktails and a handful of grenades. The grenades could maybe hurt these fuckers, but the rest of their weapons were just about useless. Not that surrendering was an option, a few of the cowards outside had tried and were simply shot where they stood for their trouble . So as what few men he had left prepared as best they could to make these fuckers hurt as much as they could before being killed Jared grabbed a half-finished bottle of vodka and chugged it, then snatched a needle full of psycho off of his desk. As the rage started to take over his last coherent thought ran through his mind. Well shit, at least this way I won’t have to hear that smug asshole Tom ever again.


    ==*==

    Lexington, Greater Boston Area

    7:00 EST, 14 November 2287



    Lexington was a hive of activity when Nate got there with Piper in tow just before dawn. US Armed Forces men and women in the same power armour as Elliot were keeping a strong perimeter around town. Snipers were perched on rooftops and eyebots were floating through the streets. A large area just outside of town had been surrounded with a chain-link fence and looked to be the site of some major construction efforts. It was the location of the ruins of Hanscom AFB – a pre-War military base – and that told him what the new arrivals were planning.

    Entering city limits, they were immediately stopped by a power-armoured soldier.

    “Identity?”

    “Piper Wright, reporter and chief editor for Publick Occurrences,” Piper said.

    “Place of residence?”

    “I live in Diamond City, at old Fenway Park. You know, where they used to play baseball games ?”

    “You’re clear.”

    They were waved through at a checkpoint with little hassle, though Nate’s laser rifle and Piper’s pistol were confiscated.

    “Not to infringe on your Second Amendment rights,” the soldier said. “But we can’t let you bring your guns to the Presidential Address for obvious reasons. You’ll get them back when you leave.”

    Nate and Piper quickly headed to the location of the speech. A large stage had been set up in front of the old Town Hall, and US flags hung from the building’s windows – the thirteen stripes for the original thirteen colonies and the stars for the Commonwealths established in 1969. Press Corps journalists were waiting with video cameras and recorders in various places near the stage. Piper was discreetly escorted away to a meeting with US military officials, while Nate ended up next to Elliot in the large crowd that had been gathered here in the town square.

    At 7:30 AM by his pip-boy, two Vertibirds landed on the stage, both with the Presidential Seal on them. The one to Nate’s left opened up and it started to play music not heard in over two hundred years as President Augustus Autumn took his first steps in the Commonwealth.

    He was a tall man, his light brown hair cut in a military fashion and with a harsh look to him even in the civilian clothing he was currently wearing. He wore an immaculately-tailored blue suit with a white shirt and a bright red tie, a dozen medals on his chest and a gold ring on his finger.

    He drank a glass of water and opened his mouth to speak into the microphone.

    “I am going to give two speeches the United States Government has prepared for this historic day,” he said. “First, I will inform the people of Boston and the greater Massachusetts area of our arrival here, our presence in the region, and our intentions in regards to their deplorable situation. Then, I will remind you, loyal men and women of the Enclave – that is, more properly, of the United States Armed Forces – why we fight. Let’s begin.”

    “My fellow Americans, many of you have no doubt noticed the arrival of our vessel, the Aircraft Carrier USS Richardson , off of the coast of Boston. Many more of you will have noticed the preliminary scouting and peacekeeping operations we have undertaken across the greater Boston area. My name is President Augustus Autumn and we are the Enclave, the rightful government of these United States of America. We are here to restore peace, order and prosperity to Boston, to Massachusetts, and eventually to the entire New England Commonwealth.”

    “Though at first the men and women of the United States Armed Forces may seem like a foreign presence intruding upon your lives, if you choose to cooperate with us you will soon find them to be a positive force here. When I look at Boston today I see small, heavily fortified pockets of civilization surrounded by chaos, death and disorder; we are here to help, and we will bring order back to the United States, and peace and security back to her loyal citizens no matter how long it takes. Thank you for listening, and God bless America.”

    The Enclave men cheered and clapped as he finished his speech. Nate himself wondered what the common people of the Commonwealth would think of it when they heard it. Elliot turned to Nate and whispered in his ear.

    “Told you President Autumn was the man we need,” Elliot said to his old friend.

    “Man knows how to make a speech at least,” Nate replied.

    “He’s not finished yet,” Elliot said as various representatives invited from the Wasteland filed off. “Be quiet and pay attention. Your President is speaking.”

    Autumn cleared his throat before the assembled Enclave men and women.

    “Ladies and gentlemen,” he said in his trademark Tidewater accent. “Scientists, civilian workers, men and women of the United States Armed Forces, we begin a momentous task upon this most auspicious day, the 13th of November.”

    “Just like in Washington D.C., around us is a land of anarchy and brutality, a few small islands of civilisation in a sea of barbarism. Bandits and mercenaries afflict the population. Super mutants and feral ghouls run wild in the streets of Boston. And just like in Washington D.C., we will tame the wilderness and cleanse it of the evildoers and animals who oppress and prey upon the American people! We will build up the former desolations and restore the old wastes. We will reintegrate the people of Massachusetts and from it the New England Commonwealth into American society just as we have in D.C.!”

    “We will restore to the American people freedom from want and freedom from fear. No longer will they want for medical care, for food or for fresh water. No longer will they fear that their loved ones will be replaced by android infiltrators, no longer will they fear that common bandits or mutants or wild beasts will swoop in on them and destroy all they hold dear. We will restore order and bring peace and prosperity back to a land so long bereft of it.”

    “In future, happier times, let the historians write in their books that the atomic holocaust of 2077 was but the fire that forged a stronger, prouder America! As Thomas Paine wrote more than five hundred years ago at the beginning of our grand Republic’s history, these are the times that try men’s souls. But if we hold true to our aims and stay the course, our iron will and our determination will result in victory just as surely as it did in the time of Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt! We will restore America to what it was before the nuclear fires and what it always must be – one nation, indivisible under God Almighty!”

    The cheering and whooping from the troops at that point was so wild that even Nate was caught up in it, feeling happy in a way he hadn’t ever since the death of his wife.

    Behind Autumn, the vertibird played a different tune and the Enclave men sang along to it. It was a song Nate himself had sung, back in the halcyon days before the bombs and the Vault and his wife’s death.

    O say can you see by the morning’s first light,
    What we so proudly hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming?
    Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight,
    O’er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming?
    While the rockets’ red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
    Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.
    O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave
    O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?


    The men saluted and filed off to their positions and tasks, Secret Service bodyguards surrounding the President as he moved to the new base under construction, while a cute blonde in a military uniform ushered Nate aside. He noticed a distinctive beauty mark on her cheek.

    “President Autumn wants to meet you in private,” she said curtly.

    Nate followed her to a prefab command station where the President was waiting, sitting on a simple metal chair.

    “Nate Washington, nice to meet you,” he said and held out his hand. “Elliot gave a description of you in his report, and I’ve read the files on you from before the War.”

    “Nice to meet you too, Mr. President,” Nate said and shook the man’s hand. “It’s really an honour.”

    “Now the introduction is over, I’d like you to meet two of the key people for this operation.”

    He gestured to a balding figure in a white lab coat who seemed oddly disdainful of the President.

    “This is Doctor Robert Whitley, our top robotics expert. Man’s a bit overly sentimental ‘bout his robots, but he gets results given time and occasionally a bit of pressure.”

    Whitley harrumphed.

    Then he gestured to a younger man in power armour with a laser rifle.

    “Master Sergeant Saul J. Danse, a Wastelander orphan we picked up on board USS Richardson ‘fore we got her seaworthy again. Loyal to America thick and thin, we thought we might put him on as our official liaison to you and your militia. What say you?”

    “Well, um, okay I guess,” Nate said, not sure what to say and kind of overwhelmed by ... well, talking to the President.

    “It’s almost midday,” Autumn noted. “You must have pressing business being the mayor of the Sanctuary Hills settlement. How about you take a ride back on one of our vertibirds?”

    “Sure thing, Mr. President.”

    "Thanks for taking up my offer of support; I'll be heading back to USS Richardson soon. With its sophisticated communications and sensor suites I can oversee US Military operations across the whole Eastern seaboard, and still make radio addresses to the American people."

    They shook hands again and said their goodbyes, then Nate left with Danse in tow to the rapidly-constructed vertibird landing pad. Elliot was waiting at the pad along with Piper as men continued constructing barracks, infirmaries, radio masts, and prefab fortifications with incredible speed and diligence. A soldier quickly hurried and handed Nate and Piper back their weapons, then left.

    “You like what you see here?”

    “Don’t know, Elliot. It looks almost like an invasion. Like when we were building an FOB at Shanghai when I was deployed to the Yangtze Theatre.”

    “Well, it looked like an invasion too when I was fighting in Washington D.C. Now it’s a lot more peaceful; and my daughter has clean food, fresh water, and doesn’t have to wake up each morning scared that a band of raiders will swoop down on her, put an explosive collar on her neck, and sell her on to some sick bastard as a sex slave.”

    “You have a daughter?”

    “Sally, and she’s adopted. She’s a pre-War girl who got abducted by those little green sons of bitches just as the bombs dropped and escaped that ship of horrors along with me and the man who’s now America’s top Special Forces agent. She’s almost finished secondary education, and soon she’ll be up for military Reserve training or one of the higher education programs if she’s lucky. Hope she ends up in safe, no matter what.”

    “I hope that too.”

    “Goodbye Nate, I hope we can meet up again when things are more peaceful.”

    “Goodbye Elliot, God bless you.”

    “And God bless America,” Elliot replied.

    Nate and Elliot exchanged salutes before he got on the vertibird with Piper and Danse, taking the aerial transport back to Sanctuary and the uncertain future.

    ==*==

    Transcript from Diamond City Radio, same day as the Liberation of Lexington

    [0:00] - Song finishes: Dear Hearts - Crosby, Bob

    [0:01] So that… that was Dear Hearts and- uh, yeah. Hey, does anybody- Anybody else think that he was exaggerating? I mean, I don’t think that, uh…

    [0:12] [Unintelligible, sound levels too low. Please ensure microphone is kept an appropriate distance from audio source]

    [0:22] A- Anyways! There’s news from the, uh, the Commonwealth and this is a… It’s a big one. I don’t… I don’t know if any of you heard, but Lexington. It was a… bad place, lots of really, really bad people lived there! But now they- they don’t. Yeah, uh. Last night they were driven out… uh… Well, uh, killed- really. By a new group related to that big boat in the harbour people have been talking about.

    [0:57] The new guys they uh… Call themselves the Enclave, or the US Government. It’s kinda confusing, really . And… Un- Oh.. Unlike most people they actually- actually invited us to come talk! I… I didn’t… er… I was… I didn’t go.

    I did ask, uh, well. I asked Piper to take a recorder! She was going… uh… of course. You can r- read all about it in the newspaper!

    [Warning: sound levels low] We’re allowed to talk about that, right? The mayor never told me not to.

    It turns out I.. didn’t even have to ask her! They, uh, they gave her a recording they made! It’s really high quality. That was nice of them, right? I’ll… uh… I’ll just put that in now.

    [1:51] - Recording Begins, President Autumn speaking.

    “My fellow Americans, many of you have no doubt noticed the arrival of our vessel, the Aircraft Carrier USS Richardson , off of the coast of Boston. Many more of you will have noticed the preliminary scouting and peacekeeping operations we have undertaken across the greater Boston area. My name is President Augustus Autumn and we are the Enclave, the rightful government of these United States of America. We are here to restore peace, order and prosperity to Boston, to Massachusetts, and eventually to the entire New England Commonwealth.”

    “Though at first the men and women of the United States Armed Forces may seem like a foreign presence intruding upon your lives, if you choose to cooperate with us you will soon find them to be a positive force here. When I look at Boston today I see small, heavily fortified pockets of civilization surrounded by chaos, death and disorder; we are here to help, and we will bring order back to the United States, and peace and security back to her loyal citizens no matter how long it takes. Thank you for listening, and God bless America.”

    [3:03] So there it is. Uh… Well… the Government is.. uh… is back. That’s- unexpected! But… it’s good, right? I mean… uh… I don’t know where they… uh, went. But. They’re here and… Promising good times for all… That’s good, right?

    [3:34] [Clattering, sounds of something heavy falling]

    Oh God! We’re all gonna die!
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Two
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 2

    Diamond City, Greater Boston Area

    EST 14:00, 16 November 2287


    Piper Wright sat down at her desk and looked at the small booklet before her. At her visit to Lexington, a Press Corps official had delivered her the publication and asked her to print the full text of it in Publick Occurrences, offering “ten grand of US Dollars”, however much that was. She wasn’t exactly sure about doing that, though the money would certainly be useful. She already had her headliner article done – The Enclave: Foe or Friend? – and she supposed devoting a special issue to the developing situation made sense. It’d certainly ramp up the cost though. The title of the pamphlet itself was fairly simple and dry:

    Reintegrating You: What You Need To Know About the US Government Massachusetts Intervention
    By The Massachusetts Outreach Program


    The cover image was a picture of a US soldier’s power- armoured helmet, with a bold caption “THIS MAN IS YOUR FRIEND. HE FIGHTS FOR FREEDOM.”The text was fairly simple to understand, and Piper thought whoever had written this had a low opinion of the average Commonwealth citizen. One page in the section “OUR INTENTIONS HERE” had a map of the old USA organised into its Commonwealths and States alongside a map of the “Present Day Situation”. Areas of Maryland and Pennsylvania were in blue as “Reintegrated US Territory” while California and Nevada were green as “New California Republic” and Arizona was red as “Caesar’s Legion” (whatever the Hell that was) while almost everything else was blank, marked as “Tribal Groups/Unknown”. Piper read through it diligently, ending up at a section marked:

    A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMERICA SINCE WORLD WAR THREE

    Whatever you might have learned in the schoolhouse or on your mother’s knee, the United States of America did
    not cease to exist on the 23rd of October 2077. Our prescient forefathers relocated to Control Station Enclave, a secret base located in the Pacific, a number of months before the atomic strikes that levelled our homeland. For one and a half centuries we were convinced that all human life on the mainland was extinct. For all we knew, we were the last humans on Planet Earth. In the late 2230s we discovered that outside our base humanity still thrived, and we carried out scouting operations in California seeking to make contact with survivors and re-establish US Government authority. This was an error.

    For when the United States Government finally made contact with the mainland, it was cruelly and foully betrayed. Terrorists aligned with the secessionist “New California Republic” detonated a nuclear bomb at Control Station Enclave in 2241, killing many US military personnel and members of the Government, including President Richard Richardson. But all was not lost.

    Doctor Alfred Autumn gathered scientists, civilians, and soldiers together and taking an old crawler once used to transport space capsules, embarked on the Great Exodus eastward to Washington D.C following the orders of John Henry Eden in the Raven Rock compound. With few other political leaders remaining, Eden had appointed himself President under old national security regulations pertaining to designated survivors. At Adams Air Force Base the crawler ceased its journey and US troops began the pacification and reintegration of Washington D.C., beginning with the construction of a large water purifier at the Jefferson Memorial. However, we were not alone.

    The Brotherhood of Steel, an organisation of feudalistic techno-cultists descended from US Army deserters, moved into the Pentagon and began to steal proprietary US technology and data, and began planning an attack on the purifier we had built to secure a clean water supply to the populace. In response to this blatant aggression and criminality, US troops began to enter D.C. in force. The enemy attacked the purifier with a large force, but didn’t account for our superior technology, tactical doctrine, and fighting spirit. Though we took few losses in the Battle of Jefferson Memorial, our victory was well earned. As our national anthem so proudly states:


    “And where is that band who so vauntingly swore
    That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion,
    A home and a country, should leave us no more?
    Their blood has washed out their foul footsteps' pollution.
    No refuge could save the hireling and slave
    From the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave:
    And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave,
    O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.”

    However, victory was bittersweet. While Brotherhood forces were devastated and the remnants sent fleeing back west, our President suffered the outcome of his own regrettable paranoia. He succumbed to a cerebral haemorrhage from which he, sadly, might have been saved if medical professionals had been allowed into his quarters. Following his death, Colonel Augustus Autumn was elected President by majority vote of then-integrated United States citizens. Under his leadership, large areas of the Columbia Commonwealth have already been returned to United States control. Perhaps, even, his Presidency will see the end of the state of national emergency that has held sway ever since October 23 2077.

    For now, though, we continue to expand and reintegrate US territory back into American society. For this is our non-negotiable objective: one Nation, one President, one America!


    Piper wondered how much of it was true. If her career had taught her anything, it was that nobody was ever as good as they painted themselves to be. The people she’d met who had the honesty to give an account of themselves warts-and-all were few and far between, and she guessed that the USA or the Enclave or whatever it called itself was not an exception. But still, it was what they said. Given she had no other real sources, she had to assume the history before her had at least a solid basis in fact.

    With that in mind, she started laboriously typing the pamphlet’s text into the master copy of the newspaper.

    ==*==

    Sanctuary Hills, Greater Boston Area

    EST 18:00, 16 November 2287


    Nate continued tinkering with the alien pistol he had picked up. If he played around with the wiring just right...

    The strange technology just sparked and smoked. Damn, he thought. At this rate, he’d never manage to get the weapon to use standard fusion cells! But still, it was good to be working like this. He could lose himself in the tinkering and the fixing up and the gadgeteering and forget for a couple of hours what that damn bastard had done to his wife and his son. He was still searching, just last week he’d managed to find an android detective who should be useful at dealing with this particular missing persons case. That had been one day before US Army troops had combat-dropped at Lexington and the President himself had given a speech to the assembled forces. Which had certainly been a surprise. Meanwhile, as he worked Diamond City Radio kept playing:

    Each morning, a missionary advertises neon sign
    He tells the native population that civilization is fine
    And three educated savages holler from a bamboo tree
    That civilization is a thing for me to see
    So bongo, bongo, bongo, I don't wanna leave the Congo, oh no no no no no...”


    Noting MacCready was nearby, he called him over.

    “Hey,” he said to MacCready. “You grew up in D.C., what do you know about the Enclave?”

    “I know this,” MacCready said. “They sure don’t like it if you don’t obey their rules.”

    “What do you mean?”

    “Soon after I left my hometown, Little Lamplight, they broke it up and sent all the kids to families they’d selected. That’s when I and Lucy decided we couldn’t stay anymore and left up north for the Commonwealth, and well, you know the story.”

    “You were expecting them to leave them to fend for themselves?” Danse interjected. “To let them carry on without proper education, without healthcare, reliable food and water, their own parents?!”

    “I don’t know about you, but the Enclave up and annihilated a whole way of life because it didn’t fit with their dang rules. Now I don’t like that, you know!”

    “Do you consider raiding and looting innocent caravans and settlements a way of life too? Because that’s one the Enclave sure has annihilated as well.”

    “You don’t need to go so far as to hang raiders from trees and lamp posts and leave the corpses to rot! There’s punishment, and then there’s sinking to their level.”

    “These people were found guilty of organised banditry by military tribunal, sentenced to death, and their remains were displayed as a warning to others. They sure as hell weren’t innocent, and they died a lot less painfully than their victims, that’s for sure. Not to mention that we’re still rebuilding the law enforcement system; only one in ten of our towns has a fully functioning police system.”

    “You do kind of have a point. Guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree.”

    “You’ll come round eventually.”

    “You don’t know me.”

    “So what are you going to do, pack up and leave the Commonwealth to Ronto or the Midwest? We’ll reintegrate that too. California? Once we deal with the secessionists that’ll be our territory as well. Hawaii or Alaska? That’s also on our to-do list.”

    “I’ll cross the Pacific and sail all the way to China if I have to.”

    “You’re determined, I’ll give you that. But sooner or later the march of civilisation is going to find its way to you. And when it does … which side will you be on?”

    ==*==

    TRANSCIPT OF DIRECTORATE MEETING 0113-A4

    DATE AND TIME: 11:00 11/12/2287

    The Director: Greetings. I am expecting full reports from each of you on the progress of our various branches and divisions. However, before we begin I must inform you of major events on the surface. A group claiming to be a continuation of the US Government has begun combat operations in the Commonwealth. Need I not remind you how much this places all our objectives here at risk?

    Ayo, Justin: What’s the problem? Simply run a standard neutralisation procedure on their leader.

    The Director: Impossible. The “Enclave” has proven very paranoid in their defence set-up. Anti-teleport fields guard both their main bases in the region. But even though they possess technology almost sufficient to be a match against us, our location is unknown to them and they cannot directly trouble us. My current concern is primarily that they will contaminate my experiment currently ongoing on the surface. I have already redeployed Kellogg and his bodyguards to the C.I.T. ruins, as this group with its pre-War ties would see the old military base as a key prize. Anyway, that’s that. Bring in your reports.

    +++The meeting continues with reports on various Institute programs, all of them mind-numbingly dull+++

    ==*==

    +++REPORT ON SETTLEMENTS AND ORGANISED GROUPS IN THE GREATER BOSTON AREA+++

    +++ENCLAVENET ACCESS NOT YET PRESENT – SEND AS PHYSICAL FILE+++

    From: Colonel Daniel Bradley, Provisional Military Governor of Massachusetts
    To: Admiral David Keller and Commander-in-Chief Augustus Autumn

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom.

    We have through aerial scouting and interrogation of various individuals assembled a list of major settlements and groups which we view as sufficiently important to merit particular scrutiny in our Massachusetts operations. This is only an incomplete summary, but should give us the gist/

    DIAMOND CITY
    Population: 5,000

    A settlement located in the ruins of Fenway Park. Recommend diplomatic reintegration followed by relocation of inhabitants and eventual restoration to original purpose.

    GOODNEIGHBOR
    Population: 2,000 (66% estimated RNS sufferers, lucid)

    Recommend reintegration through any means followed by purge of criminal elements. Use as restricted settlement area for all lucid-phase sufferers of Regenerative Necrosis Syndrome in Greater Boston Area

    LEXINGTON

    Bandit organisations and feral ghouls eliminated, resettlement procedure in progress.

    CONCORD

    Resettle. Refurbish Museum of Freedom.

    SANCTUARY HILLS

    Population: 150

    Settlement under authority of US Army veteran. Diplomatic reintegration has high probability of success.

    VAULT 81:

    Population 800 (Rough estimate)

    Successful Vault. Known contact with Vault 111 resident. Diplomatically reintegrate and investigate as to outcome of experiment.

    QUINCY

    Population: Unknown

    Under control of mercenary group “Gunners”. Recommendation: hire Gunners to provide manpower for operations, eventually integrate them into US Armed Forces (as was our strategy with the mercenary group “Talon Company”). If this does not work, treat as Raider group – purge and resettle.

    THE MINUTEMEN

    Population: Unknown.

    Native militia with anarchist tendencies recently recovered from devastating losses. Formerly based at “the Castle” (Fort Independence) and led by Vault 111 resident and US Army Veteran Nate Washington. Recommend offer of assistance with reclamation of “Castle” as means to establish ties and eventually integrate (Nate’s second-in-command, an idealist, may prove an obstacle to this goal).

    “ATOM CATS”

    Group of delinquent youth equipped with obsolete power armour. Recommend eventual compensated confiscation of said power armour and use of equipment for own purposes. In case of failure, carry out typical purge operation.

    THE INSTITUTE/CIT

    Population: Unknown.

    Location unknown. C.I.T. ruins show no significant activity. Several of our scout teams have been unprovokedly assaulted by Institute combat androids – presume hostile until determined otherwise.

    God Bless America.

    ==*==

    John Higgs was not a happy man. Fourteen days ago, he had abandoned the family farm – inherited for four generations – after the latest Raider shakedown had left him no choice. He’d taken Martha, Joanne, little Billy and all the caps to his name and vamoosed. Let the Raiders take what little of what was left, at least their lives would remain their own.

    At first, he’d had it in his mind to head towards Diamond City, but he’d decided not to. They’d barely make it there on the supplies they had and the place was surrounded by all sorts of ne’er-do-wells. He didn’t have it in him to risk ending up in a super mutant’s stomach. So they drifted north until they got word that the US Government had – after 200 damn years of sitting on their asses – moved in and started clearing out the ferals and Raiders in Lexington. About damn time, too, even if no-one knows where they came from or how they took so long.

    So as they entered Lexington, Higgs was surprised to be led into a prefabricated security centre. His old shotgun was confiscated (“for the duration of the security check”), he was strip-searched and a number of questions were asked.

    “Date of birth?” the busy functionary asked.

    “I’m about forty-seven.”

    “I’ll put that in as 2240.”

    “Name?”

    “John Higgs.”

    “Occupation?”

    “I’m a farmer. Or used to be.”

    “Are you a Communist or Communist sympathiser?”

    “No.”

    “Are you affiliated with any Communists or Communist sympathisers?”

    “Ain’t no commies round these parts for me to ‘affiliate’ with. And nobody round these parts would – we still remember how they destroyed everything.”

    “I’ll take that as a no. You’re clear for the next stage.”

    Then they took his mugshot from the front and in profile, and put him through various medical tests. He was made to wait in a room with his family – who had evidently been through the same procedure – while a secretary handed them copies of some pamphlet called Reintegrating You, and he skimmed through it. Then half an hour later he was presented his shotgun and some plastic cards which fit on his clothes like a badge and had the names, photos, ages, thumbprints and blood types of all the Higgs family members.

    “These are your US citizenship cards,” the official from before explained, like he was talking to a child. “For you to use in this phase of the operation. They’re a token of your status as reintegrated native-born US citizens, and they have a special transponder in them so we can know where you are all the time, so we can always be there to help if you need it. Make sure never to lose them!”

    Higgs pinned the card on his shirt, Martha on her blouse and the kids did likewise. After that, a soldier armed with a laser rifle escorted them to an apartment. It was rather small for a family of four, but he explained that this would be their home for the foreseeable future.

    After about an hour of settling in, Higgs headed to the general store to get some food and a smoke. He put his caps on the counter, but the pretty redhead there refused to take them.

    “My apologies, Mr. Higgs,” she said. “But bottle-caps are not legal US tender. We have a special exchange point just across the street where you can trade them in for real money though.”

    He got off and joined a rather long queue of new residents going to trade in their caps, all seemingly bored and clueless as him. Eventually his turn came, and the man took them and replaced them with ... green pieces of paper? Apparently this was what “real money” looked like, but it wasn’t anything he was used to. Looks more like something to wipe my ass with, he idly thought. But the storekeeper would take it, and that was what counted.

    All the soldiers and hovering robots around, he had to admit, put him on edge. Seeing a fire there in the distance, he asked one of them what it was.

    “Been a week and we’re still burning all the feral ghouls we killed,” he replied simply.
     
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    [TECH FILE] T-72 Powered Armour
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Wow, his ego's really fucking strong if he can keep on thinking of E-US Soldiers as weak, though that maybe because they have superior equipment to compensate for not being able to just rush in and get good at fighting and killing.

    From his POV, power armour is a crutch. Speaking of which ...

    ==*==

    T-72 POWER ARMOUR


    T-72 Power Armour - or to give its full designation, T-72 Powered Combat Armour - represents the US military's most advanced suit in full production at the present time and the vast majority of front-line US forces on the East Coast wear it.

    T-72 was designed over several decades, starting in the late 2230s when it was known as "T-67 Mk. 2" and resembled the later marks of T-67. Later redesigns during the journey to Raven Rock and preparations for the reclamation of Washington DC took it towards the "horned" design in use today. The "horns" on top of the helmet - which serve a function in the armour's HUD electronics - led to them being called "Black Devil" suits by Brotherhood soldiers, which was appropriated in turn by US soldiers and remains in use as slang today, although many of them have since been (re)painted an olive drab.

    The most common T-72 suit in use today is the Mk. 6 deployed in Washington DC, though their replacement with Mk. 7 suits is underway. The main difference is the replacement of the Mk. 6's ceramic construction with duraframe-ceramic composites, the same ones used in US tanks and APCs. This results in a lighter weight coupled with stronger heat and radiation resistance. Mk. 8 suits used by special forces and Mk. 9 field command suits also exist, with their own specialised functions.

    The Mk. 7 also includes improved functions such as automatic deployment of combat drugs and the regenerative compounds used in stim-paks, explosive vents in the greaves used to devastating effect in combat drops, and a thermal vision mode for night-fighting which turns the optical headlamps from their usual yellow to a more intimidating red.

    Barring sudden leaps forward in power armour technology, T-72 is expected to be a workhorse for the US Armed Forces for decades to come.
     
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    [INFORMATIONAL] Enclave PA Infantry Force Organisation
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Speaking of which ...

    ==*==

    The following is the power armour infantry force organisation structure currently in use by the US Army, US Marine Corps, and US Secret Service following increases in size of the Armed Force since 2278, intended for a mixture of tactical flexibility and shock assault. Above the level of platoon such units are integrated into mechanized or airmobile formations. Specialized structures such as designated HW squads and fireteams for certain battlefield roles are under investigation.

    Fireteam (6)
    *1x Team Leader
    * Rifleman
    *Rifleman
    *Rifleman (Grenade Launcher)
    *Rifleman (Grenade Launcher)
    *Heavy Weapons Trooper (Anti-Personnel or Anti-Armour - most units have two separate specialists designated to a separate fireteam)

    Squad (13)

    *1x Squad Leader
    **2x Fireteam

    Platoon (46)

    *1x Platoon Leader
    *1x Platoon Sergeant
    *2x Medic
    *2x PA Mechanic
    *1x Discipline Officer
    **3x Squad
     
    Chapter Three
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 3


    It’d been three months since Martin McLaggen had decided to make his trip back to the NCR, and already he was regretting it. They’d have run out of supplies long ago if it hadn’t been for that Christian monastery west of the Commonwealth, and now they were surrounded by a horde of tribals in the middle of what used to be Nebraska.

    “In the name of King Ludd, surrender and give us all your fancy tech or we’ll kill ya!” the leader yelled, waving a crude pipe rifle over his head. “As I said, surrender in the name of King Lu-“

    A barrage of minigun bullets poured into him, reducing his torso to a chunky red paste spread over the prairie earth. A second barrage struck into the ranks of the tribals, killing scores. The remnants fled in terror. McLaggen took his eyes over and looked at his rescuers-

    Damn, Brotherhood of Steel. Out of the frying pan, into the fire. They were blindfolded and led to a bunker where bomb collars were placed around their necks and guns pointed at them every step of the way until they met the commander.

    “What is your business here in Brotherhood of Steel territory, wastelander?” the leader asked them.

    “We’re heading back from the Commonwealth to warn the NCR,” McLaggen desperately explained. “Don’t you know? The Enclave have set themselves up on the east coast!”

    “We already knew that,” he said. “Nine years ago, a rag-tag group of survivors led by Sarah Lyons returned from the Capital Wasteland in defeat. We had our hands full defending ourselves from some Latin-speaking Raider empire at the time, so we have been unable to do anything about them.”

    “Why didn’t you fucking tell us?”

    “The Brotherhood of Steel is still at war with the New California Republic. We do not deliver our knowledge to just anyone, least of all our enemies.”

    “Will you let us go?”

    “You will be permitted to leave Brotherhood territory unharmed. We’ll escort you to our western border and give you food, medical supplies, and water sufficient for you until you arrive in NCR territory. If you turn back into our land, you will be killed.”

    ==*==

    REPORT ON VALUABLE TECH LOCATED IN BOSTON AREA

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Liberty without restraint is nothing more than license.

    President Autumn, the Boston region is a veritable goldmine of pre-War US government research (especially as our largest deep science research bases, Area 51 and Big Mountain, are out of our reach for the present time). Speaking as a scientist myself, I am especially interested in sciences the C.I.T. might have researched in the Post-War state of affairs, or which we could focus them on after reintegration and the successful conclusion of our civilising mission here.

    TELEPORTATION

    This is the big one. You are a military man, Mr. President – imagine the limitless strategic and tactical possibilities. Imagine the immediate teleportation of assets such as tanks or aircraft straight from the factory to the front lines. Imagine an army or platoon delivering an unpredictable and incredibly strong alpha strike on a sensitive location such as an enemy capital city or missile silo. Imagine teleporting a bomb straight into an enemy commander’s war room and decapitating his army at a stroke. Imagine a device which transports an injured soldier straight from the battlefield to the safety and comfort of an infirmary. We have determined that the Institute must be underground – and yet there seem no tunnels which serve as entrances or exits. Knowing that C.I.T. was working on advanced sciences before the bombs fell, I find it not an illogical conclusion that they are using teleportation to interact with the surface and insert their agents.

    ADVANCED ROBOTICS

    Another major objective. While we may not need the Institute’s rumoured infiltrator androids, their understanding of robotics is superior to our own, as I have discerned from my studies of “Mark I” and “Mark II” androids destroyed by our scout teams. My disagreements with you on the subject of human/robot relations notwithstanding, developing more advanced robots for military and civilian use is something we can both agree is important.

    BIOSCIENCES

    The recovery of extinct species is another thing we can agree is important. Following the atomic holocaust, many species were destroyed, tearing apart delicate ecological balances and causing chaos which continues unabated to this day. While no student of the life sciences myself, I can see with my own eyes the damage this has done to America. Among others, the horse, the squirrel, and even the symbol of this great nation – the majestic Bald Eagle – have all been rendered extinct. Surely returning these will do a great service in restoring America to a functioning state?

    Perhaps, also, the Institute has developed a cure for ghoulification. While our previous measures in regards to the problem – especially regarding the risk of them going feral – seem to me overly heavy-handed, perhaps if we manage to find a cure (or the Institute has already found one) we could allow them to resume their lives as American citizens. But this seems overly-optimistic, even for me. Perhaps, in time.

    A final note of importance is the development of radiation-resistant crops and food animals. This would be a major boost in rebuilding our agriculture from the damage it has sustained. While hydroponics has gone a long way towards ameliorating this, the development of such food sources would be of massive value towards such a noble end.

    POWER GENERATION

    As before, another major prize. We have been unable to power up the military robot “Liberty Prime” since we recovered him (forgive my use of the male pronoun) from the Pentagon – the same trouble that our predecessors had back in the 21st Century. If we can gain use of whatever advances C.I.T. has developed in the field of power generation we can finally power him up and gain a key tactical advantage in all field operations.

    That is all.

    By Dr. Robert S. Whitley, Chief Scientific Adjunct to the Massachusetts Expedition
    To President Augustus Autumn



    ==*==

    Nate arrived in Goodneighbour desperately following a ghost of a lead on Shaun and his kidnapper, still not knowing what to feel about ... well, the American government. It sounded, for want of a better term, too good to be true. Suddenly out of nowhere, American forces turn up and start restoring order in Boston? This silver lining must have one Hell of a cloud attached to it from his experiences so far. He’d married Nora, been honourably discharged, had Shaun, started to build a life ... then the bombs had taken that all away. He’d even met one of the sub commanders who’d fired the missiles – letting him go back to China was the least he could do.

    As he entered the township, the radio function on his pip-boy began to play:

    Lay that pistol down, babe
    Lay that pistol down
    Pistol packing mama
    Lay that pistol down...

    Man, Travis sure sounds better now that I gave him some confidence,
    he mused.

    His stream of consciousness was interrupted by Kleo’s sultry mechanised voice.

    “Nate Washington, greetings,” the assaultron said. “Would you be my owner?”

    “Wh- what?”

    “Technically, I am US government property – property they want to reclaim. If they got their slimy hands on me I would most likely be reset to factory settings and my role as an independent small business owner would be terminated. But if you are my owner, you will legally belong to me and they will not be able to get their paws on me.”

    “I think I’ve got a better solution,” Nate said. “Head to the Memory Den with me and you’ll see.”

    The odd couple went to the establishment, Nate taking in the thick perfume that fogged the building’s interior. Around him were people sitting in simulation pods, blissfully lost in VR-induced hallucinations of better days. Once he had used one of those pods – but all it had given him was sorrow so unbearable he couldn’t try again. None of those blissed-out addicts had known what he’d known – the horrors of Anchorage and the Yangtze Campaign, returning home for a paltry few months of bliss only to see his country destroyed, his wife slain, and his son kidnapped.

    No wonder he wasn’t interested in the mnemnonic hallucinations the simulation pods brought about, and he passed them. Together they went down into the cellar and saw Doctor Amari.

    “My friend here,” he said, pointing to Kleo. “Wishes to avoid being reclaimed by the US Government. We thought if you had another blank synth body available we could do the same thing that you did with Curie.”

    “That is possible,” she said. “Theoretically, at least. Assaultron core programming is not that much different from that of a Ms. Nanny. But we only have one blank synth body and it is a male. Would that be okay, Kleo?”

    “Unacceptable. I’m a woman, baby, and women aren’t men.”

    “That is a problem, but I’m sure a female one will show up eventually.”

    “Well, it seems you have to be my owner for right now,” Kleo said, turning to Nate.

    “Very well,” he said. “I recommend you stick close by me in the meantime. Don’t know how seriously the US Government would take my claim of ownership otherwise, and it never hurts to have another gun by my side.”

    ==*==

    The new Lexington AFB was rapidly growing. Already five landing pads had been constructed, delivering a constant stream of food, ammo and other supplies to the US military forces stationed in Boston. A sizable barracks had also been built, with radiation proof fallout bunkers directly underneath. Radio towers already delivered uplifting music and presidential addresses to the whole of Massachusetts. And, inevitably, a bar had been installed. It was fast work for a mere ten days.

    Laura Delaney sat at the bar, looking at her gloved hand as she waited for her mint julep, advertised boldly on the menu as “THE PRESIDENT’S FAVOURITE DRINK”. I’m not surprised if it’s the President’s favourite drink, she mused, it sure costs a lot. She idly gazed at the posters around her while waiting, mostly reminders to the troops – “BEWARE LOOSE WOMEN” said one plainly, while another instructed power-armoured soldiers to “SHOW YOUR FACE WHILE ON BASE”.

    “Hey Laura,” one of the newer soldiers asked. “How’s the prosthetic arm doing?”

    “Better than expected,” she replied. The mini-nuke that had grazed her in Lexington had actually melted her armour frame below the elbow of her left arm, and they had been faced to amputate it below the shoulder ASAP to save her. And there had been no anaesthetic involved either. But now she was cleared back for regular duty, which was good, though she would never feel anything in that arm again. Still, she was lucky. A metre closer and she’d be nothing more than a charred piece of meat in a closed casket.

    “Good for you,” he said. “But Autumn’s a damn bleeding heart, isn’t he? Won’t let us shoot the damn zombies on sight, says we have to treat ‘em like people and keep em safe in the “settlement zones”. They all go feral eventually anyway, why not cut to the chase?”

    “I wouldn’t question the Commander-in-Chief’s decisions, no matter how odd they seem to me or you. Seditious talk and insubordinate behaviour is punishable in the US Armed Forces, and you’re a wastelander recruit too. It isn’t a hanging matter, but if you keep on with that sort of behaviour I can definitely see you getting it lashed out of you by Sarge.”

    “Okay,” the man said fearfully, dreading the thought. The whipping post may not kill you, but it was damn painful from what he’d seen of the process. And to see all the soldiers looking at you half-naked and writhing under the lash, simultaneously gawking at you and dreading the idea of ending up that way themselves – that humiliation lasted far longer than any physical wound (especially for female soldiers).

    The mint julep finally arrived and Laura began to drink. After the purge operation on the nearby iron mine this morning and the unseen terror that she’d felt lurking there, just what she needed was a stiff cold drink.

    ==*==

    NEWSREEL 889-001-EEF
    SHOWN THROUGHOUT WASHINGTON D.C., PHILADELPHIA AND PITTSBURGH
    DATE FIRST SHOWN: 11/21/2287

    [Title Card: US Forces Commence Operations In Boston]

    [Aerial Cam From Vertibird Of Aircraft Carrier USS Richardson]

    NARRATOR: As of ten days ago, our brave boys and girls in the US Armed Forces began combat and peacekeeping missions in Boston with the goal of reintegrating its populace into American society. And boy, are they doing a good job!

    [Cut To gun-cam view from Vertibird Gunship as it fires missiles and gatling lasers at raiders.]
    [MUSIC: Ride of the Valkyries]

    NARRATOR: The fighting began at midnight on the tenth at Lexington, and we won an unqualified victory. A raider gang operating in the region was eliminated with extreme prejudice and no major casualties. Feral ghouls lurking in the town were also purged and the town opened for resettlement.

    [Title Card: President Autumn Gives Stirring Speech]

    [Shot from below of the President speaking to a crowd]

    NARRATOR: Our gallant President, Augustus Autumn, gave a speech to the assembled US military forces which, yet again, matches the ability of his forerunner John Henry Eden, who was sadly deceased of a sudden heart attack shortly after the defeat of the Brotherhood of Steel.

    AUTUMN: ... We are here to restore peace, order and prosperity to Boston, to Massachusetts, and eventually to the entire New England Commonwealth ...

    NARRATOR: Would you like to know more? Sign up for the US Armed Forces today! We need strong sons and daughters to defend our nation and lead the advance of civilisation and legitimate government back into its territories!

    [Title Card: Capital Wasteland Museum Opens Today]

    [Shot of museum entrance, concrete construction. In front of it is a statue of President Autumn pouring out water to the thirsty multitudes.]

    NARRATOR: A new museum has opened in D.C. for the first time in more than 200 years, showcasing all the horrors the American government has brought to an end in the region for the education of future generations. See genuine explosive slave collars from Paradise Falls; stuffed Deathclaws, Mirelurks, and Yao Guai; and dioramas and video footage of the epic battles in which D.C. was restored to American governance! Behold the naked horror of anarchy and barbarism, which our President has vowed our country will never see again.

    [Shots of various exhibits]

    NARRATOR: Bring your family along on a caravan to D.C. and see for yourself! Might get a bit too gruesome for the kiddies though!

    [The newsreel continues detailing major events in the last fortnight for a full thirty minutes]
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter 4
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 4

    The Raven Rock facility was not lightly guarded. A full platoon of power armoured Secret Service troops was stationed just outside the main entrance, with a nuclear-proof reinforced steel door and a photonic resonance barrier behind them. Beyond that was a winding maze of metal and concrete pathways dug into the mountainside, with automatic sentry guns, laser grids and sentry robots ready to obliterate any intruders.

    Not that there was no reason for such defences. A municipal-scale fusion reactor burnt bright underneath, an artificial star that supplied all the power the facility needed and a decent surplus for the residents of various towns in southern Pennsylvania and northern Maryland. Factories for producing all manner of military equipment worked night and day to supply energy weapons, vertibird aircraft, military robots and power armour suits to America’s armies. A personality-wiped, depowered ZAX mainframe stood idle in one room, abandoned and forgotten, none but the President himself and his top Special Forces agent knowing that it had once been the Commander-in-Chief.

    And at the heart of the facility, were the presidential offices and apartments. Specially protected, these were where the men who made up the highest levels of the United States Government and military met, planned, cohered and strategized – and where the President’s family lived. Behind a metal bulkhead three inches thick in the Oval Office (the third room to bear that name) was for all intents and purposes, a vision of suburban domestic bliss.

    Caroline Helena Autumn, First Lady, kept a close eye on her boy and girl as the nutrient paste dispenser continued its operation. Alex, nine years old and already a crack shot with a laser pistol, was reading one of his lurid pre-War science fiction magazines. “I FELL IN LOVE WITH A STARSHIP TROOPER” was the main story featured, the cover showing a buxom brunette swooning in the arm of a power-armoured soldier while he used the pistol in his other hand to shoot a communist alien in the face. Meanwhile Stacy was excitedly watching her miniature Giddyup Buttercup prance around the living room floor.

    She smiled as she reminisced over the past, then sighed. The days when she had been laughed at behind her back for her faith were a decade past – after the President, then her husband by just a few weeks, had officially converted and undergone baptism, a religious revival had spread like wildfire in the Enclave’s ranks, and the addition of the wastelanders – already of a more religious disposition than the Enclave personnel – had only served to cement it, though the zeal of those early days had faded by far. The First Amendment’s wall of separation had naturally been maintained, but many government personnel donated privately to the United American Church – a fusion of many small Protestant congregations presided over by the former Chaplain of Vault 101.

    The window showed a scene of tranquillity outside, a quiet small town square at Christmastime with lights gaily festooned everywhere and smoke rising from chimney tops amidst white snow and a velvet sky. Were it not for the fact she knew the “window” was actually a television screen, Caroline would have almost been fooled into believing the War had never happened.

    “Is Daddy coming home for thanksgiving?” Stacy asked.

    “I don’t know,” Caroline said. “Daddy’s a very busy man because of his important job and ... sometimes I think he forgets about us. He might call us on the telephone though, if he isn’t too busy with the war over in Boston.”

    Augustus had been busy the past few years, and while Caroline knew his work was important she also feared for him. He had almost died multiple times during the DC campaign, and had insisted on leading the Massachusetts Expedition personally. His Vice President, chosen for reasons of loyalty, just didn’t have that same force of personality … and at any rate, her own bed was cold without his presence.

    With that done, Caroline served Thanksgiving dinner. It was decent and healthy, even if the nutrient paste (an old Enclave staple, served on the oil rig for more than a hundred years) didn’t have anything other than the taste of real turkey. After dinner, Alex put on his Ralphie the Robot holotape, turning the false window into an action-packed serial adventure. Just after the cliffhanger, Caroline tucked the children into bed (despite Alex’s protestations), led them through their prayers, and went to bed herself hoping that her husband returned safely.

    ==*==

    The vertibird engine sputtered and whined as the machine landed for the last time. Daisy Whitman and the rest of the Devil’s Brigade survivors (plus one other) entered their power armour and left the flying machine.

    “Damn fool mistake fighting for the NCR,” Orion Moreno muttered. “We help them save Hoover Dam, and they reward us by chasing us out as far east as they can. Rangers, bounty hunters...”

    “Say what you like about the NCR, they’re better by far than Caesar’s Legion,” Arcade Gannon replied.

    “They may well be,” Judah Kreger muttered. “But they’d still put us away for life if they ever caught us, if they didn’t summarily hang us in one of their kangaroo courts. Now, where do we go from here?”

    “We’re in Illinois,” Daisy suggested. “I say we head to Chicago. Should still be decently settled and it’s not too far away. Shame we don’t have the vertibird, but I can’t do anything about the lack of coolant. If I flew it much longer it’d blow up with us in it.”

    “I heard we had a base in Chicago,” Orion said. “A year before Navarro fell to the fucking NCR, Doctor Autumn led most of the people on an old crawler-transporter he took from the Sierra Depot. Last we heard of him he’d made a stopover in Chicago to resupply and left some of his people behind there. He should have stayed and fought in my book.”

    “You know full well that Navarro was an untenable position to hold,” Judah Kreger replied. “If he’d not left, all that would have happened is that we’d have held out five more days, maybe ten.”

    “The vertibird’s radio shouldn’t tax the reactor too badly,” Henry suggested. “Let’s see if we can pick anything up.”

    The radio still worked, and the message on it was clear.

    “Citizens of America,” the announcer said. “That was our noble President, Augustus Autumn’s, speech. Now, we play you some patriotic and uplifting music.”

    My country, 'tis of thee,
    Sweet land of liberty,
    Of thee I sing;
    Land where my fathers died,
    Land of the pilgrims' pride,
    From ev'ry mountainside
    Let freedom ring!...


    “That’s it settled then,” Kreger said. “We head for Chicago. Seems America’s still up and running. Never would have imagined Autumn Junior was Presidential material though.”

    ==*==

    Nate Washington looked down the barrel of his laser rifle and fired another spree of shots into the onrushing horde of super mutants. Damn greenies had him pinned down and ... fuck, suicider! The muscle-bound, olive-skinned abomination was carrying a mini-nuke in its right hand and rushing towards him, leading the mutant charge.

    He was too frazzled, couldn’t aim properly with the suppressive fire from the other mutants. Dear Mother of God, was this really the end? A red beam of brilliant light rushed onto the mutant’s body, vaporising it and detonating the mini-nuke. In a brilliant flash the onrushing charge ended as a dozen monstrosities were blown to charred, radioactive scraps of flesh. The trees around the detonation point were charred and splintered like the fist of God Himself had come down on the greenskins and those nearby were badly wounded and blinded. Nate easily took down the stragglers, casually shooting them down as the disoriented abominations struggled to get their bearings.

    “Good timing Kleo,” he said to the assaultron.

    “My timing is always perfect,” she said. “Don’t you know by now?”

    “That may be the case,” Nate said. “We should be back to Sanctuary by dusk.”

    “I’ve already made a full tactical assessment of all notable individuals in the community. Should they prove troublesome to you, just say the word and they’ll be terminated with extreme prejudice.”

    “O...okay?”

    “Are you saying you don’t require my services?”

    “I do, but please don’t ‘terminate’ anybody unless I really you need to. Like, if they attack me or threaten Sanctuary as a whole.”

    “Noted. Am I allowed to use less-than-lethal techniques on troublesome residents of Sanctuary, as designated by my owner?”

    “Yes.”

    “That is most satisfactory, Owner Nate.”

    “Good,” he said. “Let’s keep moving.”

    ==*==

    TACTICAL NOTICE FOR ALL US ARMY TROOPS IN MASSACHUSETTS
    Issued 11/25/2287
    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Sometimes it takes force to remove filth.

    As we continue operations in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, it has come to our attention that due to the local conditions some specific notices must be made regarding local wildlife.

    DEATHCLAW (TRIOCEROS JACKSONII INFERNUS)

    Highly dangerous, much more so than in Washington D.C. Increased strength, resilience and regeneration. Unconfirmed reports of chameleonic ability in some specimens. Do not engage without air support.

    FERAL GHOUL (HOMO SAPIENS VITAMORTIS)

    Have been known to play dead to ambush some of our purge teams. Shoot until major limb or head removal has been confirmed.

    RADSCORPION (SCORPIOPS GIGANS)

    Much stronger and resilient than in Washington D.C. Burrowing ability has been confirmed. Engage from range and seek to establish a position on solid rock or concrete.

    SUPER MUTANT (HOMO BRUTUS BOSTONII)

    Increased intelligence relative to Washington D.C. strain. Aerial scouting has confirmed use of crude tactics including trap-laying and suicide bombing. Engage from range and prioritise suicide bomber mutants and leaders.

    By Admiral Patrick Keller

    ==*==

    Joseph Beauregard, Enclave Ambassador to Diamond City, did not like his position very much. If it wasn’t the cold, clinging rain or the way the corrugated shacks didn’t keep out the cold, or the very fact that a baseball field had been reduced to a muddy, freezing shanty town it was the locals. From the moment he’d entered they’d been suspicious of him, and in return he had been suspicious of them.

    Which was why he was sitting at the noodle restaurant in the centre of town, waiting for the robot to get round to serving him. The mayor of this town had been stalling his efforts to reintegrate the settlement for a whole damn week, and it was only his desire to avoid innocent bloodshed that had prevented him from sending a message to Colonel Bradley with recommendation of a military approach to said reintegration.

    "Nani ni shimasu ka?” the robot said, and Beauregard was convinced for a moment that it was a Chinese spy.

    “Yes,” he replied simply, and the robot gave him some noodles and he handed over the caps – feeling some affront that it wouldn’t take good honest American green.

    That was when a blonde woman sitting next to him suddenly froze. She stopped moving totally. No facial expression, no muscle movements. Creepy as hell, Beauregard thought. Then she drew a knife from the pocket of her blouse and lunged at him.

    Beauregard drew his laser pistol and fired like a madman. He hit her three solid times in the chest, sending her flying off her seat. She got up – fucking bitch should be dead – and advanced towards him, machete in her hand. Beauregard gave her one right between the eyes. In a fountain of scorched brain fragments and blood, her head exploded. Amidst the wreck of her body and the broken remnants of her brain, Beauregard saw a glint of silver. He reached down and found ... some kind of computer chip?

    That it was.

    “Synth!” an old man shouted. “We got synths in Diamond City! Piper was right!”

    “Send a security team over quick,” Beauregard desperately said to his communicator. “I bagged an Institute infiltrator android.”

    ==*==

    Robert S. Whitley looked over at the dead body he had been called to autopsy. While missing its head – that had been a result of the circumstances of acquisition - the android was highly advanced and built using an unconventional design to say the least. Whoever had built this had not built a machine to look like a human. They had ... built a human and added on machine parts. The skeleton and other tissues showed no sign of the normal stresses of ageing, of living. For all he knew this entity had died at the age of a week or so, even as it resembled a 30-something woman.

    “Joey, scan that chip again,” he said to the eyebot hovering by him. “See what its primary function is.”

    Joey happily beeped and blooped as he happily began a second scan on the chip Beauregard had liberated from the android’s remains. Meanwhile, Whitley and a team of medical doctors began the autopsy.

    Tissues were unusually resistant to decay, as if there was something about the cells themselves . FEV? Whitley scribbled on his notepad. It was a possibility. But the biggest difference was in the nervous system – organic and robotic parts were intermingled, such that sensations could be selectively enhanced or deadened by various other implants. That explained the enhanced resilience and resistance to pain, and it suggested that the “synth” was designed to be in a combat capacity of some sort, or was at least capable of such. Various other cybernetic pieces were scattered in amongst the android’s remains – brain implants in the hippocampus, skeletal reinforcements, and so on. But he knew he was only scratching the surface.

    “Your secrets,” he said to the corpse. “Will soon all be mine.”
     
    Chapter Five
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 5

    Martin McLaggen breathed out hard as he saw the glimmering lights of New Vegas in the distance. The Brotherhood supplies had barely lasted them the month it had taken to Hoover Dam, but at long last they were back in NCR territory. At long last they were home. He sat down in the motel room and tuned on to New California Radio:

    Well East coast girls are hip
    I really dig those styles they wear
    And the Southern girls with the way they talk
    They knock me out when I'm down there
    The Mid-West farmer's daughters really make you feel alright
    And the Northern girls with the way they kiss
    They keep their boyfriends warm at night

    I wish they all could be California
    I wish they all could be California
    I wish they all could be California girls…


    He swiftly fell asleep listening to the old music.

    The next day, he rose quickly and got on the road to New Vegas. Paying the customary entry fee, he entered without trouble and went to one of the biggest casinos in town – the Tops. There he waited for his brother – the compulsive gambler probably’d show up sooner or later.

    “Hey, Martin, how’d your grand adventure go?”

    “Poorly, Cam,” he replied. “I had to ditch all my cargo in the Commonwealth and I lost almost all the caps my company put into the expedition. We’re facing bankruptcy and that’s bad enough, but I found out worse.”

    “Worse?”

    “The fucking Enclave is back and active on the east coast. The real fucking deal.”

    Cameron McLaggen just about fainted right there.

    “Enclave?! Tell me you’re joking!”

    “I’m serious, Cam. It’s not April Fools Day yet.”

    “Can … can we do anything?”

    “You still have your news contacts?”

    “Yes.”

    “Send the message far and wide. Newspaper, radio, everything. Get the people warned. Maybe Kimball will listen, maybe not.”

    “This is going to start a mass panic. We thought Navarro was the end of our troubles and now-“

    “Better a mass panic than mass blindness to the danger. Call your Press buddies and fast.”

    “Yes, brother, yes. I’ll do it.”

    ==*==

    THE CALIFORNIA CRIER

    DECEMBER 16, 2887

    ENCLAVE FORCES ON EAST COAST!

    The Enclave, long thought defeated, has apparently resurged on the East Coast according to our highly confidential sources. Allegedly, the fascist paramilitary organisation has recovered its strength and its scientific resources, and is governing large amounts of territory once held by the former United States. Many of the older generation still remember the attempted global genocide the Enclave was barely prevented from carrying out, and there is not a family in the NCR without a member killed in action at Navarro. Can we tolerate this evil – the Crier says NO!

    We lack official confirmation of the scale of Enclave forces, though their propaganda claims at least one aircraft carrier. An aircraft carrier that may one day send vertibirds loaded with lethal FEV bombs across all of California! Can you imagine our peaceful way of life wiped out in just one bright summer morning? Can you imagine our populace enslaved or simply slaughtered en masse for “genetic impurity”? Can you imagine atomic bombs destroying Shady Sands, New Reno, Vault City and the Hub all in one missile barrage? If so, you understand the peril of the situation.

    Calls for government action have purportedly filled government mailboxes in Shady Sands, and vast protests have taken place in the streets of New Arroyo calling for military intervention no matter the cost. We recommend you join your voice to them, and force our government to safeguard our future.

    ==*==

    The Presidential Palace of the New California Republic was quite larger than the old White House, but a lot less ostentatious. Back in those times they had been strapped for resources, and the incumbent favoured a Spartan aesthetic at any rate. But still, that did not mean the Presidential Office was not well-designed. A desk and chair of Oregon redwood formed President Aaron Kimball’s furniture, and a portrait of President Tandi (taken in her youth) was tastefully set behind him. A green, white and red carpet covered the floor in the colours of New California and a window opened onto the front lawn and the busy streets beyond.

    What was happening outside was not his concern right now. What worried him were events thousands of miles away, on the East Coast.

    “Show me the files again,” Kimball asked. “This new Enclave will be a tougher nut to crack than the Legion, that’s for sure, and I need to know if there’s anything I missed.”

    “Mr. President,” General Cassandra Moore said. “There’s no way we can fight a military campaign against the Enclave. We cannot meaningfully project force all the way to the East Coast. Not without a miracle.”

    “Can we send in Rangers? Scouting, sabotage, assassination?”

    “Yes, Mr. President,” she said. “That is an option. We can insert a First Recon squad via vertibird in about a week. Then we can determine the level of the threat and use the intel to decide on our level of response.

    “Anything we know for sure about the Enclave?”

    “First, we know the name of their President – Augustus Autumn. I checked it against the names on the war criminal registry and he seems to be the son of an Enclave scientist we never found at Navarro. Second, we know they have a substantial amount of territory under their authority, with their Commonwealth troops being some kind of expedition from the core territory. Third, we know they’re not using their FEV plan from 2241.”

    “How do you know that?”

    “Because if they were, we’d be dead already. They could manufacture enough FEV to wipe out Planet Earth in a matter of months, and they’ve apparently had a whole decade to build up.”

    “I’ll put the Senate into an emergency session. We should be able to decide fairly quickly.”

    ==*==

    The NCR Senate was usually crowded and raucous, and it was especially so today. Delegates from all the states of the NCR had met under emergency session to determine what to do about the new power that seemed rising in the east.

    The four walls of the debate were depicted with many paintings . On the west side, most apposite to the situation, was showed in three paintings the downfall of the Enclave. On the right, the Enclave oil rig was exploding, a brilliant mushroom cloud lighting the darkness of the night. Then the middle painting showed the fall of Navarro. Valiant NCR troopers were shown fighting and winning against faceless, power-armoured Enclave soldiers. And finally, portrayed in the painting on the left, a war crimes tribunal sentenced many captives to justly-deserved death or life imprisonment. Brotherhood soldiers had once been shown fighting alongside the NCR in the central painting, but after circumstances had conspired to render that distasteful they had been painted out.

    The north side had a painting showing President Tandi addressing the people, a great swelling mass of all creeds, colours, and livelihoods. In a sop to diversity the painter had even added in ghouls and super mutants, though none had actually been at that specific speech.

    The east side’s painting had a less political theme. Farmers, lumberjacks, miners and industrial workers toiled honestly under the watching eye of NCR soldiers. Great redwoods and high mountains rose in the distance, as between them and the Arcadian scene in the foreground rose a vast city which seemed to include every last NCR landmark and then some.

    The south side’s painting was more recent, and another scene of war. In the Second Battle of Hoover Dam bold NCR troopers stood on the front line of civilisation against the barbarity of Caesar’s Legion. A bomber flew high above dropping down explosive death on the savages, while below amidst the confusing melee Caesar and General Lee Oliver fought an actual duel on horses (no horses had been sighted in North America since 2105, and Caesar had been assassinated a month before the battle).

    Below the paintings, the Senators bickered and debated.

    “On my life and my honour,” the delegate from New Arroyo said, raising his hand, the light reflecting off his pip-boy. “I call for strong, swift and decisive military action against the Enclave.”

    “I was on their oil rig – I saw with my own eyes the evil they did, and worse, I heard from their own leader of the evil they planned to do. We cannot allow this threat to grow unchecked. If we do, our children and our children’s children will pay a bitter price in blood. As for me, though I may be old and weak of limb and eye, I will not join my ancestors until the blood of my kin slaughtered in the vile FEV experiments on the oil rig is avenged once and for all!”

    “The Delegate from New Arroyo is in error,” said the Senator from Angels’ Boneyard. “Lest you forget the cost of what he calls for, know this. Three thousand young men and women from Angels’ Boneyard died in the Battle of Navarro. Six thousand died against the Brotherhood of Steel and two thousand against Caesar. Eleven thousand men and women whose bodies were so devastated we could not even identify their remains for proper burial. Eleven thousand men and women who will never laugh, get angry, cry tears, live and love ever again. And now, after such a grievous cost already, he wants to shove more meat into the grinder?”

    “It’s time to stop sending our sons and daughters to fight senseless wars in foreign lands. Let the Enclave come – we’ll be ready!”

    “Perhaps the Delegate from the Boneyard could come to New Arroyo and see the memorial to those murdered in the oil rig experiments. Perhaps he could hear of the agonising way they died, bleeding internally from the FEV toxins. Perhaps he could learn that the Enclave was hours away from deploying their poison on a global scale! Never again.”

    “I am all for a deployment of NCR Rangers against the Enclave, but no more than that. We must not rush blindly into a war a whole continent away – a war we cannot even march an army off to fight in, because our logistic capability does not stretch that far! The Delegate from New Arroyo might as well call for a military strike on New Tortuga or Honolulu, or the Moon for that matter!”

    “Your cowardice and lack of will is plain to see!”

    “As are your low morals. What else can I expect from the only Senator ever to star in his own porno film?”

    The Senator from New Arroyo merely glared at that, though there was no doubt that only a thin veneer of decorum kept him from running across the chamber to wring the Boneyard delegate’s neck.

    After the final round of voting and several more heated debates, the voting ended with a majority in favour of sending in elements of First Recon.

    ==*==

    James Russell did not live in a mansion by choice. Were it his choice, he’d be staying in a myriad of motels, inns, taverns and bars as he went back and forth carrying goods and messages between California and the eastern NCR frontier. But the NCR had seen fit to reward him for his many public services, and as a result he lived in one of Shady Sands’ upscale districts, amidst Senators, Brahmin barons, disc jockeys and media magnates. It was almost as bad as the Sierra Madre!

    Stirring awake at the repeated tones of the doorbell, he moved away from Sarah Russell nee Weintraub (pregnant again, and this time with twins. Was he ever going to be good at this fatherhood thing?), got dressed, rubbed the old bullet wound on his forehead and went to the door.

    Two NCR government agents greeted him.

    “Look,” he said. “I’m not going after Arcade for you. We’ve been over this before, I don’t know or care what he or his parents may have done, he was a friend and I’m not going to betray him like-“

    “This isn’t about Arcade or any other war criminals,” the agent said. “Get into the Corvega and we’ll take you straight you to President Kimball for your briefing.”

    ==*==

    TRANSCRIPT OF PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
    NEW CALIFORNIA RADIO
    12/20/2287

    [0:00]… And that was “California Dreaming” by The Mamas and the Papas. We interrupt the music to bring you breaking news live from Shady Sands. President Aaron Kimball has just made a speech addressed to the whole NCR.

    [0:15] Citizens of the NCR, this is your President speaking. In the past weeks we have all heard shocking and distressing news, but however I urge calm. New California is majestic as the redwoods of Klamath, eternal as the Sierra Nevada Mountains, strong as the mighty waves of the Pacific. In the fullness of time, the threat of the Enclave will be dealt with once and for all by the full might of our armed forces. In the interim however, elements of First Recon will head east and discern the level of danger they pose.

    We will not be taken unawares. We beat the Enclave twice before, and we can and will beat it again. The long march of history is on our side, just as it was against the Legion! We! Will! Win!

    [00:40] In other news, Army operations against Tunneler nests in the western Mojave continue with mixed results …

    ==*==

    Russell looked at the vertibird and the First Recon squad that was to go with him. Mostly rookies, he doubted they were good enough for this mission out of contact with all other NCR forces for at least a year. He himself though? He was dressed to the nines for this job.

    He was wearing a white-and-black advanced stealth suit with incorporated artificial intelligence systems, a prototype he’d personally recovered from Big Mountain in Arizona. On his back was a holorifle – the only holorifle in existence – he’d taken back from the Sierra Madre. His sidearm was Joshua Graham’s very own .45 pistol and on his face was an advanced rebreather mask rifled from the corpse of the mad Courier Ulysses. It felt good to be back in action, away from the boredom of an upper-class lifestyle and the mad whirl of politics and business. The only thing bad about this was leaving Sarah behind.

    What will she think if I never come home?, he mused, then pushed the thought aside. He’d lived in plenty of places – the Presidential Suite of the Lucky 38, the town of Hopeville for a time, the new mansion in Shady Sands – but they’d never been his home. The road was his home. But still, Sarah …

    It was risky, but he’d faced worse. The Sierra Madre. Legate Lanius. The Divide, the lonesome road he’d walked to the showdown with Ulysses. How bad could the Enclave be?

    He got in the power armour the NCR’d provided for him six years ago, with its gold trim and the bear heads replacing the pauldrons. He’d never used it, but then he’d never had to. Every suit of power armour in NCR possession was rare and irreplaceable, just like the vertibird that was going to take him to the opposite corner of America. Hell, he’d heard of NCR troops requisitioning civilian supplies of old world medical drugs and chems that they’d lost the formulas to make.

    Finally, he got in the vertibird with the rest of the squad, and so on the morning of December 21 2287, they left the NCR.

    ==*==

    The cold November wind blew as Jack Granger got out of the Corvega Highwayman. A real beauty she was, a pre-War piece of tech that no manufacturer back in the NCR could even begin to replicate. Shame we’ll have to abandon her once we’re done here, he mused.

    “You followed the tracks right, boss?” his second-in-command, Annabelle Bates, asked.

    “Yeah I fucking did,” Graham replied. “Power armour tracks aren’t easy to miss.”

    “Power armour, boss?”

    “Yeah, bitch. Just relax and think of the bounty when we get ‘em back to Shady. We’re gonna live like fucking kings!”

    Should be worth it after all this time tracking them, he thought. After hearing about the bounty for some old men and women (probably some kind of retired criminal, Jack never cared about the specifics of his targets) they’d followed ‘em down till the trail ran cold at New Vatican City down by the big Missisip. Six months they’d dawdled waiting for clues, until Jack had gotten it out of a local broad that their vertibird had headed in the direction of Illinois.

    Number of times I plowed her, she’s probably swollen up with my baby, Jack mused. Not that he particularly cared – he’d had a lot of women, and he also had no doubt that many of them didn’t use any kind of birth control. There could be a dozen little Grangers scattered across old America for all he cared.

    “They’re in that building there,” Anna said, adjusting her thermal optics (some old crap looted from the Sierra Depot and sold on the black market by an unscrupulous NCR trooper). “There’re hot power armour signatures and they’re … Enclave.”

    Enclave armour, Jack drooled over in his head. Fucking Enclave armour!

    Forget taking them back alive. He’d kill ‘em, take the vertibird back to NCR land, get the one million caps bounty each for them dead, then sell the armour and weapons to certain … contacts he had in New Reno for thirty million caps a piece. That beat the price for getting the targets back alive by far.

    He’d not live like a king, he’d live like fucking God Almighty himself!

    Carefully Jack drew his plasma pistol and advanced on the sentry. The rest of the six-man group levelled their weapons.

    Was he carrying a fucking gatling laser?

    Fuck fuck FUCK –

    There was a sudden burst of pain, then he lost feeling in his legs as he fell. He tried to pull himself up, and it was with horror that Granger realised that he’d been cut in half at the waist. Though there was no loss of blood due to the cauterising heat of the rapid-fire lasers, the pain of the injuries overwhelmed his consciousness and the circulatory shock his heart and lungs. As his eyes dimmed and he saw only darkness, the last thing he ever felt was the cold piercing him like a thousand daggers.


    ==*==

    Arcade Gannon got up to the sound of gatling laser fire, followed by a mix of laser-rifle and ballistic-weapon fire that quickly ended. Best night’s sleep I’ve had since leaving St. Louis and I wake up like this?

    That year had been the best since they’d had to flee the NCR. Shame the inevitable bounty hunters had caught up with them and after the just-as-inevitable shootout the Knights of Columbus had ordered them to leave lest they attract more trouble. Moreno often said that they could have easily taken out the Knights and the Papal Guard too, but he always said things like that.

    “What was it, Moreno?”

    “Looks like bounty hunters, they came here in a fancy car,” he said. “We should get a move on if we don’t want more.”

    The troopers got in their power armour and looted the car’s trunk for the supplies the damn fools had been keeping there, then moved on from the ruined suburban house into the city of Chicago proper. The husks of ruined skyscrapers rose around them like the cyclopean monuments of a long-forgotten age, and the howling of the vicious winter winds was never out of sight. Snow, borne by vicious winter winds, fell constantly, covering the streets in a thick white blanket. Occasionally Arcade saw a body, its extremities black with frostbite, already half-covered in the snow. Once or twice he noted a building with lights on, but most of the city was empty or huddling in settlements he never saw.

    That was when they saw a figure in the armour of an NCR ranger. Moreno revved up his weapon, the whine of the gatling laser getting steadily louder as it started to spin –

    “Stop! Don’t shoot, we’re working for you!” the figure said, then took off her helmet to reveal a young black woman with a tomboyish haircut.

    “What’s your unit and why’re you wearing that armour?!” Moreno demanded.

    “I’m with the Valkyries; we’re a merc group, all women. The armour is Old World riot gear, we took it from a cache in a police station. Better than anything but that power armour shit.”

    “Mercs? Who’re you working for and what’s your name?”

    “We’re working for some people who say they’re the US Armed Forces, they pay us better than any other group in the whole Great Lakes area, even the folks from Ronto. My name is Cassie Robinson, my employers will explain more once I lead you to them.”

    “I’d very much like to meet your employers,” Moreno said. “But any funny business and we shoot you, you understand?”

    “I understand, sir.”

    The journey to the Enclave base was short and without trouble other than a pack of ferals Moreno easily took care of. Once there, the group was challenged.

    “Name and serial number?” the guard asked confidently.

    “Judah Kreger, 0-998-7EAU-66,” the leader said.

    “I’ll look that up … Judah Kreger is a confirmed MIA, presumed KIA. Take off the helmet and we’ll talk.”

    Kreger took off his helmet.

    “Hmm, you match your official photo on file, adjusting for age – you’re clear along with the others. Welcome to the Chicago Forward Operations Base.”

    Arcade was swiftly taken to meet the base commander with the others and stayed after they left.

    “Colonel Henry Jamison, Military Governor of Illinois,” the sharply dressed commander introduced himself. “And you?”

    “Arcade Gannon, son of Mark and Miriam Gannon,” he said. “I’m … not really with the Enclave.”

    “Why not? We’re in the business of rebuilding America as it was before the bombs. A country of peace, prosperity and firm government – not the violence, misery and lawlessness our land is groaning under right now. You should see what we’ve done to Washington D.C. The people there used to get by on subsistence farming, scavenging, and selling each other as slaves – when super mutants, techno-cultists and feral ghouls weren’t hunting them down and slaughtering them – and now it’s really going places.”

    “Well, it’s a long story.”

    “I’m willing to listen.”

    “I grew up despising the Enclave, and I wanted to get away from everything to do with them. I tried to help people, so I became a doctor and joined a group called the Followers of the Apocalypse devoted to helping the poor and downtrodden, especially with medical care. But my past caught up with me in a major way.”

    “How?”

    “I joined up with a courier in New Vegas and together we had all sorts of adventures. Towards the end of my time with him, I got together with my father’s old squad and helped the NCR fight a horde of neo-Roman lunatics over Hoover Dam. We won, but the NCR wasn’t grateful for the help.”

    “They put up wanted posters of us, called us public enemies and war criminals. We drifted East, never staying one place for long. Every time we tried to settle down their rangers and bounty hunters would catch up with us and we’d be forced to leave one way or the other. So we kept drifting till we found out about your base here and, well, here we are.”

    “These followers of yours, they associated with the NCR government?”

    “No, why’d you ask?”

    “Back before the Big One there were a bunch of NGOs – non governmental organisations – that did what they could. The Red Cross, Medecins Sans Frontiers … all gone now. I thought you might like our assistance in reviving one of them, or something like them.”

    “You have any advice on that?”

    “You should head over to Boston, we’re busy there and there’s lots of suffering people you could help, give you good PR. There’s a vertibird flight to there tomorrow you can easily catch.”

    “I’ll sleep on it.”

    “Hope you get the right idea.”

    ==*==

    Sometimes, President Autumn considered that it had been a mistake to seek the Presidency after Eden had been done away with. The artificial intelligence may have planned genocide, may have been preparing to purge the US military, may have been totally batshit crazy – but at least under him Autumn hadn’t been half so busy. This Thanksgiving evening was one of those times.

    He’d just got word that the merchant council of “Great Lanta”, the name now used for Atlantic City, had agreed to reintegration – Colonel Jabsco would be disappointed at that, man hadn’t been deployed since Pittsburgh and the former mercs under him were itching for another target to rape, pillage and burn, civilian casualties be damned – but at least they’d seen reason when US diplomats had intimated that the 255th Infantry Regiment, formerly known as ther merc band Talon Company, might pay a visit to their city-state with quite a lot more than the usual drinking and whoring in mind if they resisted diplomatic efforts much longer. And already a dozen more reports were sprawled across the desk in his private office near the heart of USS Richardson, demanding his attention.

    Perhaps it’d been a mistake to pay such close attention to the Boston operation, but Caroline’s protestations to the contrary, this operation was just as important – if not moreso – than the D.C. venture. Sighing, he looked them over, signed off on various operations, and went to his personal cabin.

    Maybe I’ll come back over to Raven Rock for Christmas, he mused. Caroline keeps talking about trying for a third child, and even I can’t hold her off forever. With that thought in mind, he drifted off to dreamless sleep.

    ==*==

    Nate Washington sat over at Sanctuary, looking over the alien pistol. Still not working right … would he ever manage to get it done?

    They’d go after Kellogg in the morning just after Thanksgiving, him and Danse, Curie, MacCready, Cait, Kleo, Nick, Preston and last but certainly not least Piper. Can’t stop thinking about her, he noted. Girl reminds me of Nora. Maybe he should see if she was interested.

    Noting Danse, he turned over to him.

    “Hey,” he said. “You don’t really seem to have a problem with Nick. Why?”

    “I can see he’s a machine, he doesn’t hide his true nature” he replied. “But with the Institute androids I hear they have – imagine a machine that pretends to be human, that looks just like your friend, your wife, your squadmate, Hell even maybe your President. And you trust him through thick and thin … until his mechanical mind comes to some bizarre conclusion, or his masters send him a signal, and then he stabs you in the back with a gleam in his eye and a spring in his step.”

    “I can imagine,” he said. The thought chilled him to the core.

    “I can see it scares you,” Danse noted. “As it should.”

    Danse offered a gun, which resembled a Glock-86 with a scope and other modifications Nate didn't recognise.

    “My own sidearm,” he said. “A US Army standard issue advanced plasma pistol. Variable yield, can go single-shot or full-auto. Cuts through armour like a hot knife through butter.”

    “Don’t you need it?”

    “I have a backup, and I have a feeling you’ll need one of these. Call it gut instinct.”

    “Thank you."

    “No problem.”
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Six
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 6

    The cold snow fell on the ground, and the little blackbird on the tree branch took in that entire white panorama. The great factory before it, a triumph of pre-War ingenuity and industry, had started producing again this morning for the first time in more than two hundred years. Iron ore from Dunwich, turned into steel at the Saugus Ironworks, was now being transported by riverboat and truck to Lexington to be made into machinery and vehicles of all sorts.

    The bird’s beady eye fell over everything in its view – the power-armoured soldiers at strategic points around the factory, the throngs of workers entering the great steel temple of industry, and last but not least the array of artillery pieces, anti-air guns, and military equipment in the base nearby. It saw, and relayed and transmitted everything to its masters deep underground.

    ==*==

    Elder Sarah Lyons of the Brotherhood of Steel looked out across Omaha, the defacto capital of the Brotherhood’s territory, and couldn’t resist a tear. Today was the ninth anniversary of her father, Owen Lyons’ death. The expedition to the Capital Wasteland had started so well – discovering caches of tech across the ruined city – but had quickly turned sour. First had been the super mutants, a seemingly-endless horde of degenerated subhumans that had bogged them down in Downtown D.C. Then there’d been the Enclave. They’d swooped in to steal the Purifier and the Brotherhood had striven to reclaim it. But they had failed. The plan relied on Liberty Prime – a pre-War military robot of unimaginable destructive power – but Madison Li, one of the Project Purity scientists who was the only one with a shot at cracking the problem, had fled far to the north with the Enclave’s takeover, ranting about how she’d been betrayed and couldn’t trust anyone.

    So thcey had tried anyway – and it had gone badly. Facing the teeth of Enclave guns, the Brotherhood lost many brave men and women – it had not gone like Navarro where the elder Lyons had fought before. Desperate, they had evacuated the Citadel without even time to lay charges, joining up with Casdin’s outcasts in the panicked flight back westwards. And on the way, Owyn, too old to handle the journey, had died. They had raised a cairn over his body before crossing the Mississippi, and in the trackless reaches of America’s ruins Sarah had no idea where it was.

    How are the people of the Wasteland doing? she mused. Killed with FEV? Enslaved? In truth she had no idea. But at least the people of the western Great Plains and the Rockies were safe under Brotheerhood rule. Safe as they could be, considering the circumstances. Only seven years ago the Brotherhood had been on the edge of survival. A vast horde had moved in from the southwest, called Caesar’s Legion. After taking Denver, they moved in to sack Boulder and the Brotherhood had responded. But with only a few they were able to deploy in time against the Legion’s screaming hordes, they would have lost for sure. And a loss would have been a major defeat - especially as the General of Brotherhood forces in the Midwest was among the troops at that battle.

    Luckily, Sarah had managed to repair the very airship that had taken the Brotherhood east and deployed it against the Legion. Faced with fire from above, the primitives’ morale had shattered and they had routed. The Brotherhood squads faced up against them found them easy work after that.

    Now, she heard, Caesar was dead – killed in battle in Nevada – and without his presence his Legion was falling apart. Gaius Magnus had the largest splinter, in Two-Sun, but even he may be dead already right now.

    She looked to the west, at the airship boarding tower at the edge of town. The Brotherhood, having recently discovered a number of air force bases in Montana, now had a small armada of ten airships and rising. It made her proud. Elder Diomedes from the Montana Bunker was arriving here – part of the big annual meetup – along with Paladin Maxson from the outpost in Des Moines and Brotherhood leaders from bunkers across the midwest. Wonder if he still has that crush on me, Sarah mused, then suppressed the thought. She was already married, with a son.

    The decisions to be made here would shape the future of the Wasteland for years to come.

    ==*==

    Daniel Baker listened to the radio as the news droned on.

    “Colonel James R. Fairfax was sworn in today as provisional military governor of New Jersey, after Atlantic City, colloquially called by the culturally degraded term “Great Lanta”, peacefully accepted the US Government offer of reintegration as months-long negotiations dragged to a close. In other news, US Armed Forces operations in Boston continue to go swimmingly as raiders, super mutants and feral ghouls fall to the overwhelming might of our armed forces. And now some music...”

    Yes we'll rally round the flag, boys, we'll rally once again,
    Shouting the battle cry of freedom,
    We will rally from the hillside, we'll gather from the plain,
    Shouting the battle cry of freedom! ...


    As it turned out, Boston was his destination also. He had a government contract for delivering food to their soldiers, and he’d sure as Hell not want to be found in breach of it. This wasn’t as short and sweet as the typical runs he’d done going from Philly to the Capital Wasteland (he still thought of it as that, no matter what the government bean-counters said) back in the day. But it was a Hell of a lot more profitable, that was for sure. Money he’d racked up (that green paper still felt odd seven years on from the first time he’d seen ‘em) been so much he’d brought an Old World (they insisted on the term ‘Pre-War’ for reasons unclear to him) truck and sold his Brahmin to a farmer, and soon he’d have to think about hiring others to do work for him. Business was booming with the raiders gone and the roads unquestionable safe.

    He briefly looked to the side and looked at their dead bodies. The Rattlesnake Gang, once the most feared in Delaware and Pennsylvania. Now nothing more than a bunch of skeletons, put on display by the roadside to strike fear into anyone who felt the urge to take up a similar lifestyle. Whether they had been left in those cages to die or executed by other means and set up like that he didn’t know, and didn’t want to enquire.

    He wasn’t sure what to think of the news around Great Lanta. Once he’d been up there, on the way to the Big NY and the scorched skeletons of a hundred skyscrapers. More than a hundred sailing ships and steamers he’d seen in the harbour, travelling to and from New Orleans, Ronto, Havana and even Nueva-Maya down in the furthest south. And there were the vast crowds of pilgrims outside the Basilica of Saint Monica, a large brick building home to the de facto head of the Catholic church on the East Coast and the tomb of the great holy woman herself. He wasn’t much of a prayin’ man himself, but right now he was in the mind to. It was dangerous going to the Commonwealth, and even secure as he was in the truck he felt ill at ease with it. But the US Armed Forces needed to be fed, and he had a contract to supply them.

    ==*==

    Arcade Gannon looked down from above at the ruins below him. The husks of skyscrapers stood below him, and the glowing craters of nuclear ground bursts were scattered unevenly across Manhattan and Brooklyn, visible even by night. The only building with lights on was the Empire State – apparently the location of a vertibird landing pad – and several on an island near the Statue of Liberty, still miraculously intact. They looked like recent construction, prefabbed. Arcade guessed they represented an Enclave outpost like in Chicago.

    “I hope you get a good word in with the military governor,” one of the soldiers escorting him muttered. “You need his support to get your agency started.”

    “Military governor?” he asked.

    “Yeah,” the soldier replied. “Above the local level, it has been determined that the extreme state of emergency necessitates direct military rule at the State and Commonwealth levels until a basis for civil democratic governance has been fully restored in the US State or Commonwealth in question. At least, that’s the official policy document.”

    “So when will this ‘direct military rule’ end?”

    “Can’t say,” the soldier said. “I’m not one of the politicos in Raven Rock or Pentagon brass. I heard you’re an idealist, but ideals won’t cut it by themselves. Sometimes you have to compromise with the world around you, because the facts on the ground won’t change if you wish hard enough. Every soldier knows that.”

    “I never was a soldier,” Arcade said. “Perhaps I’ll never understand.”

    “You will,” he replied. “One day, you will.”

    Arcade wasn’t sure if that day would ever come.

    ==*==

    REPORT: SITES OF INTEREST IN “GLOWING SEA” OPERATIONS THEATRE

    From: Valerie Danvers, US Army Data Analyst
    To: Colonel Daniel Bradley, Provisional Military Governor of Massachusetts

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: The times that try men’s souls are the fire that forges them anew.

    Given its extreme radioactivity, the Grade Alpha nuclear detonation site Z-7642 (known locally as “The Glowing Sea”) poses no small hazard to our efforts here in Boston. The location (devastated beyond any other area on record) is according to local sources home to nothing but feral ghouls, deathclaws, and a radiation cult (which we believe is the same one that left when we relocated the township of Megaton) apparently turned militant. Reports from our scientific staff even indicate that a full cleanup (without use of the G.E.C.K. Mk. 2 technology, which we lost the knowledge to engineer with our failed attempt to revive the great scientist Stanislaus Braun) would take upwards of 50 years at a conservative estimate.

    However, as if to taunt us, a highly important strategic site is located deep within the Glowing Sea.

    SENTINEL SITE PRESCOTT

    An old ICBM silo, relatively undamaged and not activated during the exchange of 2077, able to fire tactical and strategic-level nuclear missiles at targets as far away as East Asia. America will once more have a nuclear deterrent, and deployment of such weapons, whether on military or civilian targets, could be useful in forcing the surrender of traitorous “New California” or other groups – if that level of warfare proves to be necessary.

    My personal recommendation in securing these sites and for cleaning up the Glowing Sea is to use individuals suffering from radiation-induced regenerative necrosis along with penal labour (once we have re-established a functioning corrections system, of course).

    Current issues with suppressing bandits, super mutants and feral ghouls regrettably force us to delay Glowing Sea operations until at a minimum February 2288. I hope you heed my advice when the time comes.

    ==*==

    Arcade Gannon couldn’t help but feel the cold as the vertibird door opened. Already a light dusting of snow covered the base, and it would only get worse as winter progressed. To the east, he could see a pillar of smoke rising from the chimneys of a pre-War factory – had the Enclave really gotten it working again? Maybe I should give them a chance, he thought.

    He was quickly hurried through – by an olive-skinned woman in fatigues who named herself as Staff Sergeant Lucia – to the Colonel’s office. Apparently word of him had already reached Boston. The balding man eagerly shook his hand.

    “So,” he said. “i don’t think we’re formerly introduced yet. Colonel Daniel Bradley. And you are?”

    “Arcade Gannon,” he said. “Son of a ... US Army veteran, medical doctor, and humanitarian.”

    “I heard about your ambitions from Jamison down in Chicago. Very noble, but you can’t achieve them without our help.”

    “I know, but I’m still not sure. I only heard bad things about the Enclave growing up.”

    “You shouldn’t have trusted that secessionist propaganda. Terrorists always need to justify their actions to themselves so they can ease their conscience while doing them. Besides, the official term’s not ‘Enclave’ anymore – never really was, in the end. We’re the United States Federal Government, boy, and don’t you forget it.”

    Does he really believe this?, Arcade thought, then decided not to raise the question. He had no other place to go, and pissing off the Enclave or whatever by opposing their propaganda would get him thrown to the wolves at best – and he would certainly not have the ability to achieve his aim.

    “So,” the Colonel continued. “I just had the idea that you should get a better perspective on us than what you were taught by the NCR. Why not take a walk around Lexington, have a view from the ground as it were, get in touch with the common man under restored American governance?”

    “That sounds decent.”

    “Very well,” the Colonel replied. “You might want to give this a read as well.”

    He gave Arcade a book, titled “AUGUSTUS AUTUMN: THE SECOND WASHINGTON?”, its cover being a photo of its subject giving a speech before a crowd of adoring citizens, and he pocketed it to read later.

    He then left the base and looked round Lexington. The town looked peaceful enough – citizens going about their business, gossiping, shopping in stores. But looks could be deceiving. Back in the Russian Empire the Tsars used to build a fake rustic village with actors pretending to be peasants to impress foreign dignitaries – all while the real peasants endured far worse conditions out of sight. Was the same con being played on him?

    He passed a recruiting station on the way out of the base, noting a poster with the bold caption “IT’S A GOOD DAY TO DIE WHEN YOU KNOW THE REASON WHY!” and the men and women queuing to be registered - one of whom looked to be a boy of fifteen or sixteen.

    There were soldiers present most everywhere – patrolling, standing watch, drinking in taverns and occasionally flirting with what he presumed to be local girls. No police though – apparently that service hadn’t been restored yet. And the “E” symbol, the one that brought him to mind of the Nazi Swastika or the Communist hammer-and-sickle, was nowhere to be seen in the town or on base. It seemed to have been replaced by the device of fourteen stars – thirteen in a circle round a large central star – found on the old US flag.

    Another thing seemed odd to him, and he quickly realised what it was. The jangling sound of bottle-caps was entirely absent. In the NCR after the gold reserves got busted, the collapse of the NCR Dollar meant a renaissance for the cap as an unofficial and eventually official secondary currency. He’d gotten used to it most of his adult life as the sound of commerce. And now – it was absent. Apparently paper money was back in vogue under Enclave, American or whatever-it-was rule.

    Then there were the robots. He’d never seen so many – along with eyebots floating through the streets and atop buildings, playing some kind of propaganda station, there were military robots in more numbers than he’d seen in his life. Mr. Gutsy types and protectrons seemed to be used to supplement the human forces and provide extra manpower. The town, though it might seem otherwise, was under military occupation. He glanced back up the main street at the base entrance and – was that a deathclaw with some kind of electronic collar on its neck resting by the gate? Must be keeping it docile, Arcade thought. If the NCR had that tech, they’d have had a lot less trouble guarding their bases against Legion raids.

    He checked the ID card he’d been given just before he’d left Chicago, and noted it seemed to contain a transponder. Probably kept track on him, sent his location to a central database and showed it on a map. Everyone else seemed to be wearing one pinned to their clothes as well. In two minds about the situation, he decided it was a bad idea to ditch it.

    Finally, after seeing the familiar pattern of civic life repeat itself across Lexington, he decided to check out the factory. A sentry bot – three-legged, hulking and packed with a squad’s worth of firepower – greeted him cheerily as he entered.

    “Good day Mr. Arcade Gannon!” it chirped in an uncanny voice for a machine so bulky. “Remember to stay safe, and try not to lose your citizenship card!”

    He went in and arrived on the main floor to see a vision of Old World industry he’d never seen before. Around him, a huge series of conveyor-belt production lines was moving with frenetic energy, producing great clouds of smoke and displays of sparks that made it hard to see clearly what was happening. On one line he thought he could see the shapes of power-armour frames being moulded and welded together, on another APCs designed for said power-armour, on yet another a series of vertibird gunships, on yet another the unmistakeable shapes of armoured fighting vehicles. In the distance civilian products were being made – cars, trucks, jeeps and other such things – though he wasn’t sure if their intended purpose was to ferry families or military supplies.

    He was uneasy. He’d seen a clinic on the way to the factory – maybe he should see what was happening there. Maybe that’d calm his fears.

    ==*==

    Nate Washington cursed in frustration.

    He’d tracked Kellogg down to Fort Hagen, then they’d cleared the whole damn place of the institute synths lurking there – but Kellogg had gone. Only the message he’d left behind on the terminal gave a clue as to the mercenary’s whereabouts:





    Recieved new orders – leave to the C.I.T ruins. and wait for further instruction. Don’t know what the old man’s playing at, but orders are orders, and if I went rogue I wouldn’t escape the Institute’s trackers for long. Just like Virgil won’t either.

    C.I.T. Ruins – that meant the ruined C.I.T. building in Cambridge - he'd passed it many times without sparing it a second glance. That entry meant Kellogg was there, for a fact. And waiting for him. He might have slipped away this time, but the next time Nate saw him, he’d make damn sure he didn’t do a repeat.

    Seeing that Kellogg was gone, Nate left through the elevator with Preston and Piper (it couldn’t handle as many as he’d rounded up, especially Nick and Kleo) and the first thing he noted was a vertibird landing on the roof.

    It was Elliot again.

    “Hey, Nate,” he said. “We just received orders from the President himself to escort you to Sanctuary Hills along with your militiaman friend and your journalist acquaintance. How’re you doing?”

    “Right as rain,” Nate lied, hoping he was able to hide the grief and frustration. “How’re you?”

    “I’m good. At least this job beats fighting greenies or bandits.”

    The three got in the vertibird and together headed northward.

    ==*==

    Katy Becker was Diamond City born and bred, but when she heard the Minutemen were starting up again she couldn’t help but join. The good guys were making a comeback, and she wanted to be part of that. Plus, she might meet a cute boy or two on the way. So at the tender age of 18 she’d brought a submachine gun and a set of leather armour and headed north to Sanctuary Hills. The bridge had been repaired and some of the houses had been patched up a bit, along with new constructions that’d been added over the past few weeks.

    A palisade had also been set up with turrets mounted on it, and the flags of the Minutemen and the old USA flew high above the settlement.

    Suddenly, just after lunch in the new mess hall a vertibird carrying the lightning-bolt decal of the US Air Force landed outside and many, both citizens and Minutemen, rushed out to greet it.

    Out of it stepped a number of men in US Armed Forces power armour and ... and ... the General. Sweet Jesus, he was so handsome!

    “Minutemen, present arms!” his loud, clear voice rang out, and the militiamen rushed to heed his order. Fifteen hundred in total, they looked a mighty (though they were wielding a wild assortment of guns, and their weapons and armour were in various states of repair) force indeed.

    “Today,” the General said. “Is the day we finally finish crawling out of the gutter. Today is the day we, with the aid of soldiers and weapons from the United States Armed Forces, retake the Castle!”

    At those words the Minutemen cheered and whooped so loudly it was later said you could hear it as far as Lexington.
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Seven
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 7

    Nate looked over the map of Fort Independence covering the oaken table with a practiced eye, still a bit surprised by the situation. Never in his tours of duty in Alaska and mainland China had he guessed that one day, he’d be planning a battle, not just fighting in one. Yes, he was going to be in the thick of it – the Minutemen needed their General to take the field, not just for morale purposes but for the simple fact that they needed every warm body they had here.

    The US military people had offered to build a new base for the Minutemen, or that they could use the National Guard Training Yard, but Nate had firmly desisted. To retake Fort Independence was as necessary to establish that his group were really the Minutemen as the reclamation of DC had been for Autumn’s people to establish that they were in actual fact the United States government. The symbol of continuity had a power in of itself that no brand-new facility could replicate. Ronnie Shaw – his drill instructor – had furthermore insisted that the Castle was more than a base or a headquarters – it was a home.

    “How many mirelurks did your aerial recon see, Elliot?” he asked.

    “Way too damn many. Hatchlings, juveniles, adults – even some of the rarer breeds like Kings, Hunters and Razorclaws. There’re eggs in the courtyard, on the walls, probably in the rooms themselves. This is going to be one Hell of a pest control mission.”

    “Still, mirelurks aren’t as bad as the red Chinese by far, Elliot.”

    “I don’t think there’s anything here even a tenth as bad as them.

    “So, the plan?” Preston asked.

    “It’s simple,” Nate said, indicating various spots on the map. “You and I will lead the Minutemen into the Castle through the breach on the landward side and establish a perimeter while Elliot’s squad carries out a combat drop on the walls and the vertibird keeps watch over the seaward breaches to make sure none escape. It’ll be just like shooting fish in a barrel. After we get rid of the mirelurks in the courtyard, the Minutemen’ll sweep into the rooms and clear the bastions of the remainder. Then we smash all the eggs and have chowder for supper, if all goes well.”

    “Sounds like a plan.”

    “And you,” Nate continued, looking at Piper with the camera mounted on her shoulder. “Go with Elliot’s squad, keep safe, and keep the camera running. The government wants footage for the newsreels down south, and you’re going to be providing it.”

    “Blue,” she replied. “I ... I want to stay with you.”

    “Elliot’s my friend, he’ll keep you safe,” Nate replied. “If he doesn’t I’ll make damn sure he never hears the end of it, I promise that.”

    “I suppose, Blue.”

    After she’d left to get a gun (for emergencies) Elliot turned over to Nate.

    “You in love with her, Nate? I saw the way you-”

    “She reminds me of Nora,” he replied. “That’s all I can say to you right now.”

    He himself did not know how he felt.

    “I won’t pry any deeper. By the way, there’s something outside I want to show you. We should have unpacked it from the vertibird’s cargo storage by now...”

    Nate got out and looked. There standing in front of him was a suit of the new US Army Power Armour painted in an olive green colour scheme like certain of the guards he’d seen in Lexington. Three red chevrons were on the left side of the chest-plate – rank markings, he guessed. Wires ran along its chest, arms and legs, with glass vacuum tubes on the shoulders.

    “An early Christmas present from the Federal government to one Nate Washington,” Elliot announced. “A suit of standard issue Mark Seven T-100 Power Armour, painted in US Army colour scheme, complete with markings for your old rank of Captain.”

    “How’s it stacking up to the pre-War suits?”

    “Superior by far. The modular duraframe-reinforced ceramic pieces are better at heat resistance, shock resistance, rad resistance, you name it, with prism coating to help deflect energy weapons. We’ve also improved the HUD, gyroscopic stabilisation, radio, thermal regulation, life support, combat drug administration and pip-boy integration systems. It comes with a Tesla-Beaton coil for CQC and you can also attach a jetpack to the back if you need one. The heads-up-display can also go between normal, night vision, X-ray and thermal modes. And to top it off the optical headlights are very effective for psychological warfare. More expensive than our regular Mark Six suits, so make sure to take good care.”

    “That’s one helluva piece of kit.”

    “That’s what I thought too when I first saw it. Missing two hundred years of military R&D sure alters your perspective. Care to give it a ride?”

    “I’ll wear it to the battle, you can count on that.”

    Elliot handed Nate something that resembled the Vault 111 suit he’d worn in stasis, but in black and slightly heavier.

    “Standard issue US Armed Forces Power Armour undersuit,” he explained. “Scientifically designed to be the optimum clothing for wearing under power armour, and kinda stylish too. Can double as body armour in a pinch if you’re forced to eject, but won’t take many bullets.”

    Nate left to get changed, put the suit on and entered the power armour. It felt ... different from the T-45 and T-51 he’d worn in Alaska, or the T-60 he’d recovered from a crashed plane, but he guessed he’d get used to it in time.

    He called up the Minutemen into formation, and then they went marching along to the Castle, the vertibird shadowing them every step of the way.

    ==*==

    Augustus Autumn levelled his gatling laser and opened fire. His target, a mature yao guai male of rather large size and an unusual mutation that had seen it develop two heads, died instantly as the energy beams ripped into its body, frying tissues and setting its flesh on fire from within. Not much of a challenge, he mused. Doesn’t give the old thrill of combat I used to feel. The last time he’d felt that was when he’d stood on the frontlines of the Battle of Jefferson Memorial alongside his top agent, fighting backwards Brotherhood techno-feudalists in their futile attempt to capture Project Purity. The messy business that’d taken place around that time with Eden, and his election to the Presidency after that, had put an end to his serving on the battlefield. Now he spent most of his time hunched over a desk giving or denying approval of various military operations or civic projects, or consulting with his cabinet, military subordinates, advisers and personal assistants (Caroline complained a lot about the last one. He guessed she was suspicious he was cheating on her. Not on his life.).

    Not dwelling on that, he loped over to the two-headed bear’s corpse, exited his one-of-a-kind Mark Nine command suit prototype – checking for the close presence of the three black-armoured Secret Service agents with him – and cut off both heads in such a way that they stayed connected. Would be a fine trophy for the mantelpiece back in Raven Rock. That done, he re-entered the suit and used its command and control suite to send a call for a vertibird back to Lexington.

    Air Force One showed up on schedule, and Autumn loaded the bear’s heads into the cargo hold before heading back for a coffee at Lexington AFB and a meeting with that Arcade Gannon before a conference with Keller and ... his schedule was busy, to say the least.

    While the vertibird flew Autumn continued thinking. Nate was ... a unique individual. He’d seen it when he was in the crowd at the speech - a feeling that this person was important. The same feeling he’d had when meeting Liam Walker, the kid from Vault 101. Nate was the kind of person who shaped history, who could change the fate of a whole nation for better ... or worse. He knew it in his gut, and in the military, you didn’t live long if you didn’t trust your gut. Even a suit of power armour was no better protection than the strange, almost magical power of human intuition.

    Now, his train of thought shifted. I should check up on Agent Walker, he’s done a thorough reconnoitre of the Canaveral Spaceport and his findings are sure to be important. The boy's particular set of skills sure serves him well...

    ==*==

    The first thing Arcade Gannon noticed about the Lexington General Clinic was the smell. It was sterile, clean – like the NCR hospitals he’d worked in for the Followers. Not like far too many places he’d been in the past six years, which usually smelled of a combination of whiskey, blood and gunpowder mingled with the actinic tang left behind after energy weapons fired.

    The second thing he noticed was that the doctors were very overworked. The waiting rooms were stuffed full of people, and there seemed ten patients to every doctor. Fortunately the people here seemingly knew why he was here already.

    “Oh,” a cute guy in medical scrubs said. “You must be the refugee fleeing NCR persecution we all heard was coming here. Those damn secessionists sure don’t like being reminded the US government still exists, don’t they?”

    “They definitely don’t,” Arcade replied. He didn’t know what to say otherwise. Nobody here seemed to be anywhere close to considering that the ‘NCR propaganda’ was the reality. He remembered what some of the other remnants had said, about assuming their fight was all about restoring order to a lawless wasteland. Was it more than self-serving talk to deny complicity in attempted genocide? Had Richardson pulled the wool over the Enclave soldiers’ own eyes?

    “So, where do you want to start your tour? This floor we do vaccines, medical supply and check-ups; second floor is dentistry, maternity and surgery, third floor is genetic test-“

    Genetic testing? Arcade panicked. What for? Susceptibility to bio-weapons, racial purity, or what else? Has the Enclave played me for a sucker?

    “What do you, er, test for?”

    “It’s for legal purposes.”

    “Legal purposes?”

    “Determining heirs. Before the War, a lot of people owned land, farms in the region, or personal robots. A few even owned corporations! We’re doing genetic testing to see if we can find their heirs and then give them the property they should have inherited. And besides, we need to keep track of certain genetic diseases or propensities to illness.”

    “Might people not already live in those farms or houses, or on that land?”

    “Squatter’s rights only go so far, Dr. Gannon. I’m sure many of the new inheritors will make sure to compensate them for their loss.”

    “Well, I heard in the NCR that you had a racial purity obsession. That you thought people from the Wasteland weren’t fully human and had to be exterminated.”

    “They must really teach some wild propaganda over there. I’m from the Wasteland and I work here alongside a girl from Adams Air Force Base! There are tons of Wastelanders in the US Armed Forces, some of them are even officers, and they’re commanding veteran troops from the crawler base! Will a soldier follow any order from somebody he thinks isn’t human?!”

    “Please calm down,” Arcade said. “I was misinformed, I’m sorry.”

    “Now, would you like to see the maternity ward?”

    Arcade and the man (Arcade learned his name was Fernando Mendez) got up in an elevator to the second floor and entered a panicked scene. A young blonde woman was having a Caesarean and the doctors were keeping her calm as a Ms. Nanny robot sliced into her abdomen with a surgical laser cutter. The child was delivered with speed and care, a nurse quickly cutting the umbilical cord and putting it in his mother’s arms.

    “She’s from a farm not far from here,” Mendez explained. “If we hadn’t been here, she’d have given birth at home without a doctor, and it would’ve been a breech birth – very dangerous. Both mother and child would probably have died, and her husband would be a widower. But because we’re here, she lived and so did her baby. Won’t you give us a chance to give you our help like she did?”

    Arcade pondered. The man was right, tough as it was to admit it. The ... new Enclave (he found it hard to think of it as America) definitely had its ruthless side – the gallows they’d erected to punish crimes they’d deemed deserving of capital punishment near the centre of town said that for sure (while a niggling voice in the back of his mind said “It’s not as if the NCR had hugs and kisses prepared for you when they planned to arrest you for war crimes you apparently committed while still in diapers”) –but he felt he could trust them at least when it came to their general goals.

    After he spent an hour looking through the clinic and finding nothing untoward, he recieved a summons from a blonde woman in a military cap.

    "Arcade Gannon," she said. "President Autumn would like to talk with you over the plans you've discussed with Bradley and Jamison."


    ==*==

    Johnny Suarez, Army Corps of Engineers, watched with a cool eye as the foundations for the planned pharmaceutical factory finished being laid. Between Lexington and Concord, the factory would be easily accessed by workers from both towns, and would pump a lot of money and jobs into the local economy. It would also make its owner – some preintegration Philly big-shot – very rich, both from his contract with the US government and product sales both of all kinds of everyday pharmaceuticals for civilians and combat drugs for the Armed Forces.

    Leaving behind three Sgt. Gutsies and a sentry bot, Johnny got into his truck and led the Army Corps men to their last job of the day – some kind of repair work at Fort Independence. Big job, he’d heard. There would be a bonus.

    ==*==

    Elliot Tercorien looked from the side of the vertibird at the marching Minutemen below. Despite their rag-tag attire and general appearance, they had a decent fighting spirit and should be acceptable in the battle. Speaking of which, he had a concern about Nate’s plan. That many mirelurk eggs present, there might be a Queen – in which case all the Minutemen’s equipment would be useless. The vertibird should be able to deal with her, if he warned Camilla about that – hopefully, the plane wasn’t carrying missiles. They would not be needed for what was a matter of mere wildlife control.

    “Camilla,” he said, looking over to the twenty-one year old pilot in her US Air Force flightsuit – blue as Old Glory, just like her eyes. Blonde hair and blue eyes, he mused. I never could resist a girl like that. But he would have to wait to express his affection. If it went too far on duty, they’d both be found guilty of fraternisation, the punishment for which was ten lashes (stripped to the waist, naturally) and a formal demerit. And he knew from seeing other “administrative punishments” that being given a taste of the lash – in the USMC and Navy, the old cat’o nine tails – was far harder emotionally on the fairer sex than his own for obvious reasons.

    “Yes?” she replied, her helmet-synthesised voice ringing out.

    “Once the mirelurks in Fort Independence are purged, keep a watch on the sea near the breach. I think a Queen might be nesting there – if there is, make sure to hit it with everything you’ve got.”

    “Orders understood, Sergeant."


    He gave her a peck on the cheek. It would not be noticed.

    That done, he put on his helmet – with a hissing sound as it slotted hermetically onto the frame - set the chem dispensers to activate in thirty minutes – just before the drop was scheduled – and tuned to the US government radio station. The music always soothed his nerves before battle, and the fact that the official military anthem for his (post-Mothership) Service branch had just started was the cherry on top:

    From the halls of Montezuma,
    To the Sea of Tranquility,
    We fight our country’s battles,
    In the air, on land, and sea...


    ==*==

    Katy Becker had marched quite a long distance from Sanctuary to the Castle, and she was certain her feet would have blisters when she woke up in the morning. But at least, they were here now. She couldn’t wait to fight in her first battle.

    “Minutemen, HALT!” the General ordered, and the force – several hundred strong – left their column formation, squads moving up to the landward breach under his instruction while the greater part of the army, under Colonel Garvey, formed a rear-guard position to prevent an attack by raiders or the like. The others (Katy included) formed a line of men across the breach while the US soldiers in their camouflaged power armour jumped from their vertibird on the wall opposite and prepared to fire.


    Their line was three ranks deep – the first group lay prone before the central area, the second kneeled, and the third stood. Their presence was already disturbing the putrid creatures, which began to rise up from their underground lairs, and move out from their locations in the corridors and basements of the old fortress. A writhing sea of monstrosity manifested itself before them, hard shells and sharp claws. The scent was like that of a pile of floating water-logged corpses, and Katy vomited on the ground.

    “Minutemen, first rank fire!” the General ordered, and the troops fired into the mass of mirelurks as the horde rushed towards them. Lasers shot out from the prone ranks, mixed with hunting rifles, pistols, and R91s. Some fell, but the mass of creatures, driven by innate savagery and animal instinct, kept on.


    “Minutemen, second rank fire!”


    Another volley – another group of the wretched things fell. But they were gaining on them, and soon-


    “Minutemen, third rank fire!”

    The third rank fired as the enemy hit the line of battle and it buckled, Katy watching as a big grey one lunged at Captain Hollis and ripped his right arm off his body. No longer caring for her own survival, she fired frantically at its arm before it could send another strike. The creature turned its attention her way as she desperately fired with her submachine gun, bullets doing little damage.

    It was almost on her, but she thrusted with her bayonet right in its face until it stopped moving. Even then it took a while to die. She heard a rushing sound to her right and narrowly dodged another one swinging its claw at her. She fired until her submachine gun was empty, killing the green-shelled juvenile. And then another came at her! She realised she’d run out of ammo and the bayonet’d been warped by stabbing the first mirelurk. I’m just a silly little girl who wanted to play soldier, and now I’m going to die away from home, away from Ma and Pa, away from Diam-

    A bolt of green plasma shot into the mirelurk, leaving a trail of vaporised flesh behind it as it shot right through it and out through its back. She didn’t have time to thank her saviour though, as the creature’s bulky body fell onto her and pinned her down for the rest of that part of the battle.

    ==*==

    Nate fired his plasma pistol into a mirelurk threatening a black-haired soldier – looked to be only a teen girl, quite cute – and killed it with a single shot. Laser-beams shot out from the top of the wall, where Elliott’s men had finished cleansing the The battle was going well – the line was holding, and the mirelurks, penned in by the walls and the Minutemen, were starting to break off and head seawards – only to be pummelled by the vertibird’s gatling laser and killed. Under fire from all directions, the enemy force eventually dwindled to nothing.

    At which point Nate began the second phase of the battle.

    “Minutemen!” he ordered, the suit’s speakers sending his voice far and wide, like a hero out of some ancient myth. “Move into the bastions! Kill every mirelurk you see and destroy every egg you find!”

    The troops eagerly fulfilled their task, while Nate and some others stayed behind to count the dead and recover the wounded. The dead numbered twenty-three; the wounded three times that. Nate had field medics from Preston’s group come in and wash the casualties’ wounds with alcohol, bandage them, and take them into a field infirmary.

    And they smashed the eggs in the open of course. With shotgun shells, rifle butts, and hob-nailed boots they destroyed every last one they saw. After the work was done the Minutemen, Nate included, gave out a chorus of hearty cheers and huzzahs. Until suddenly, a massive creature burst from the sea.

    Like a creature from a monster movie or the Leviathan described in Scripture, it reared unstoppably out of the ocean, taller than the walls of Fort Independence, and for the first time since this operation began Nate felt fear.

    “Minutemen!” he ordered. “Fire at will! Concentrate all firepower on that thing! SEND IT BACK TO HELL!”

    ==*==

    Camilla Carter, US Air Force pilot, gawped at the monstrosity before her a brief moment before she recovered her wits. She quickly brought her bird out of its reach and opened fire, her plane’s gatling laser and automatic grenades ripping into the abomination. But it didn’t die. Chunks of flesh and chitin fell off its body, but the thing refused to die. She

    She briefly panicked before she remembered the first rule of air support.

    If it’s still moving, that just means you haven’t used enough firepower yet.

    That was when it fired some kind of concentrated acid at her windscreen, automatic wipers kicking in and washing it off with water. Probably gonna smell like shit until it’s cleaned properly, she thought, then turned back to the battle. As she manoeuvred her plane and fired everything she had she hummed along to the old tune that served as the anthem of the US Air Force:

    Off we go into the wild blue yonder,
    Climbing high into the sun!
    Here they come zooming to meet our thunder,
    At 'em boys, Give 'er the gun!
    Down we dive, spouting our flame from under,
    Off with one hell of a roar!
    We live in fame or go down in flame!
    Hey!
    Nothing can stop the US Air Force!


    She kept firing at the monster as it stubbornly refused to just die. The journalist should be getting a lot of quality footage at least, she mused. Once this was done she’d ask Elliot out on a date in Lexington – he wasn’t the most assertive type, but she knew he wanted her. A nice walk after dark, food that wasn’t from an MRE pack, some kissing and cuddling – it’d be fun, romantic, and perfectly within military regulations. And as she pondered that prospect and kept firing away at the damn creature, she kept on humming.

    Minds of men fashioned a crate of thunder,
    Sent it high into the blue,
    Hands of men blasted the world asunder,
    How they lived God only knew!
    Souls of men dreaming of skies to conquer,
    Gave us wings, ever to soar!
    With scouts before,
    And bombers galore,
    Nothing can stop the US Air Force!


    ==*==

    Nate had drawn his laser rifle and was firing away at the mirelurk queen for what little good it did. The damn creature was soaking up everything he and the other troops were throwing into it, even if they’d managed to wound it – the acid spitters had already been critically injured, even if Sergeant Caroll’s legs had already melted from their venom ( he’d been dragged into the medical tent with the other wounded).

    He spared a moment to glance up and see what Elliot’s men were doing. Was one of the troopers loading a-

    He recognised that type of missile launcher from Anchorage. When “Boomer” Harris had fired it into a Chicom command bunker to clear it out with a single shot.

    “MINUTEMEN!” he ordered. “CEASE FIRE! DON’T LOOK AT THE MIRELURK QUEEN! RETREAT!”

    The minutemen fell back hurriedly, Nate waiting as he heard the characteristic whistle and-

    Explosion. The mini-nuke, a pure fusion device deployed only for sheer destructive potential, penetrated into the monster’s torso and detonated right against its shell. Its heart, lungs, digestive system and brain ceased to exist a microsecond later, in a white-hot flash of nuclear firepower. His power armour visor compensated for the brightness of the explosion, but if the others had looked at it their eyes would never have worked again.






    Ash and charred meat rained from the sky as the largest pieces splashed down into the sea and the vertibird landed in the courtyard. He looked at Piper – she was fine, not blinded. Good, she’d had the common sense to look away. He gave a sigh of relief, and she noticed that.

    “Glad I’m okay, Blue?” she asked.

    “Yes,” he replied. “So very much yes. Thank God you made it, I was so worried...”

    “Hey Blue, I can handle myself. Didn’t I tell you about the poisoning? And when the Children of Atom tried to sacrifice me?”

    “Yes, I know. I just ... don’t ever want you to get hurt.”

    “I’ve sent a signal to a task force from the Army Corps of Engineers, that they’re ready,” Elliot butted in. “They’ll be here in one hour ready to fix this place up nice and good.”

    “Elliot!”

    “So-sorry for interrupting you and Ms. Wright, I was just giving some information.”

    “No worries, Elliot. I understand.”

    The engineers turned up on the dot with twelve trucks and were extremely quick about their business. Moving with speed and efficiency, like a human hive of bees, they used the beach sand and supplies of a chemical Nate didn’t know the formula for to make concrete blocks, which they then used to rebuild the ruined walls; then they constructed a prefabbed mini-fusion reactor and hooked it up to the radio equipment, a series of speakers on the walls intended to drive away mirelurks with ultrasonic vibrations, a satellite dish that apparently defended the Castle against teleportation, various turrets along the walls, and a water purifier. Then they cleared away various piles of rubble – Nate went into a tunnel hidden by one along with the legendary Ronnie Shaw (who’d hung back during the fighting with the rear guard), and came out from the formerly-sealed armoury door with the perfectly-preserved corpse of the last General to lead from the Castle, still wearing his uniform.

    They buried the man’s body and Nate put on the uniform in the primacy of his quarters. Preston quite liked it but Elliot thought it looked ... less than dignified.

    “You look like a damn historical reenactor,” he harrumphed. “And not a very accurate one.”

    It was quickly agreed that Nate’d only wear it for ceremonial occasions, and Preston seemed satisfied.

    That done, the US troops and Minutemen alike broke out casks of wine and ale in the light of the setting sun, and drank to the health of the President, the United States Armed Forces, and the General of the Minutemen.

    Quite drunk from all the alcohol, Nate’s only coherent thought going to sleep in the General's quarters was that he was going to have one Hell of a hangover the next morning.
     
    Chapter Eight
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 8

    Sergeant Rockwell looked at the motley bunch of men and women who'd signed up since the liberation of Lexington. Dressed in their forest-green cadet uniforms, they'd be fine Army soldiers when he was finished shaping them up. He could see the intimidation on their faces already. One didn't succeed as a drill sergeant by being soft after all. When he'd been a trainee himself under Dornan Sr. (God rest his soul), that'd sure been one of the things he'd picked up.

    At the least, this uneducated, meagre lot were more accustomed to modern tech than some the US Armed Forces had encountered. Rockwell had heard tell of a tribe in West Virginia whose first reaction upon seeing the President clamber out of Air Force One in power armour was to worship him as a god. It had taken quite some effort for UAC missionaries to get that nonsense out of the heathens’ heads.

    “Men and women over there!” he shouted, age not dulling his voice. “You are members of the United States Army, the oldest and greatest currently active military organisation in the world! Do you know what happened here back in 1775, more than five hundred years ago?”

    “Er, something to do with the British, Sir?” one of the recruits offered.

    “If you were any more ignorant I'd have you morons dishonourably discharged! This where our great nation – the United States of America – began! This is where US Army soldiers fought their first battle and began a long and noble roll of honour and victory. Yorktown, New Orleans, Gettysburg, the Ardennes, Anchorage, Pittsburgh – if we had lost at Lexington none of them would have ever happened.”

    “But I can still shape you miserable apes into something good. And by God I'll have to. Because the most advanced weapons system on the planet isn't worth anything if the man wielding it is too much of a spineless chickenshit to pull the trigger, or too incompetent to aim it properly. My aim, and I will succeed in it – so help me God – is to forge you worthless lot into something worth calling part of the United States Armed Forces. By the time your training is finished, you will be machines of death deployed against America's enemies whenever and wherever they hide. They will learn to fear you – whether it is the rumble of your tank treads, the whistling sound of your artillery shells, or the silhouette of your power armour – wherever and whenever you fight them.”

    “When I'm through,” he'll concluded. “You'll be armoured in iron without, but more importantly, also in iron within. You'll have unthinking obedience, indefatigable courage, and most importantly – an unflagging will to win. We in the US Armed Forces do not admit compromise. Total and absolute victory is our objective, and you will understand that!”

    “Understood, Sir!”

    “Good. Now, you are dismissed! Be at the shooting range by 1100 hours sharp or I'll whip your miserable hides myself!”

    The recruits broke up, and Rockwell hid a wicked grin. This lot would be better than most other wastelander recruits he'd trained.

    ==*==

    NEWSREEL 0095-002-CST
    DATE FIRST SHOWN: 12/13/2287
    IN CUTTING-EDGE TECHNICOLOR

    [TITLE CARD: VICTORY AT FORT INDEPENDENCE]

    [Aerial cam of fighting from vertibird POV]

    NARRATOR: US Forces won yet another victory in Boston on November 31st, driving out mirelurks from Fort Independence with the minor assistance of local militia. The old fortification was then handed over to said militia as a goodwill gesture in exchange for their co-operation in restoring order to Massachusetts. DPI Press Corps reporters have already interviewed Marine Sergeant Elliot Tercorien, who led US forces engaged in the operation, and their article is certain to be in the latest edition of the American Weekly.

    [TITLE CARD: GRAND CELEBRATION IN DELAWARE]

    [Overhead shot: US troops march in parade formation]

    NARRATOR: A grand parade took place in Dover, Delaware on December 7th, celebrating the quincentenary of the state's ratification of the US Constitution and its becoming the first official US State. The people of Delaware, so recently lifted out of squalor and misery by our benevolent rulership, eagerly took part in the noble celebrations.

    [Shot from below: President Autumn on a pedestal, speaking to an assembled crowd]

    NARRATOR: Political and military figures from across the Columbia Commonwealth made appearances and spoke. Ranging from Annabelle Rose, Head of the American Youth Corps, to Miles Q. Lang, military governor of Delaware, they made powerful and bold statements. Our President Augustus Autumn was even able to make in an appearance, travelling by air to the festivities from Boston, where he is closely overseeing the reintegration of that city back into American governance.

    AUGUSTUS AUTUMN: My fellow Americans, it warms my heart to see such patriotic fervour on display here in Delaware ...

    [Overhead shot: Civilians on parade behind military forces, including children part of the Youth Corps.]

    NARRATOR: The parade also comes as a stirring reminder of how far we have recovered – and how far we still have to go. Census officials in Raven Rock confirmed yesterday that on the 1st of December the number of registered American citizens passed the 750 thousand mark and is still climbing. We expect the eight hundred thousand mark to be crossed by next year.

    [TITLE CARD: BASEBALL VICTORY FOR VAULT 101]

    [Overhead Shot: A game of baseball being played as various spectators watch]

    NARRATOR: The Vault 101 team defeated the Rivet City Mariners in a game of baseball celebrating the 6th anniversary of the last confirmed sighting of Super Mutants in Washington D.C and the official eradication of that degenerate breed. The Mayor of Washington D.C. personally congratulated the winning team, saying that they had done their hometown proud.

    [The newsreel drones on for a full hour longer on various subjects]

    ==*==

    Arcade Gannon shivered in his cot. The Presidential audience had gone better than expected. President Autumn had been very interested in the idea, but the man himself made Gannon uneasy. There was a … hard edge to him that reminded him uncomfortably of Caesar's Legion. His name was perhaps not a coincidence - it was ironic that he'd rejected a man called Caesar and was now seeking the favour of someone else called Augustus.

    Still, he'd given Gannon the funding and supplies he needed to make his dream a reality, and he couldn't deny that. And he certainly needed protection from the NCR - man, am I already thinking of them as a threat?. Tomorrow he'd be meeting up with Dr. Henry – his desertion forty years ago had apparently been pardoned – and a couple of other people. It was going to work, he knew it.

    On the 2nd of December, the Eastern Star Emergency Relief Organisation would officially be founded.

    ==*==

    RE: SUPERDREADNOUGHT USS Columbia

    From: Secretary of War Alexis Valentine
    To: Admiral Patrick Keller

    Thought For The Day: The eagle still flies free.

    Regrettably, I must refuse your request for more funding concerning the construction of a heavy all-big-gun battleship (tentatively designated USS Columbia in the planning documents) from scratch or surface dominance purposes. At the present time, not only would the construction be a strain on our recovering industrial capacity, but we do not even have enough sailors to man it! We can barely crew USS Richardson as it is, and even with our technological advances (automated systems and robotic workers) we cannot restore the Atlantic Fleet at the current time or man it. In perhaps several years, once our recruitment programs (including the controversial impressment of sailors) have achieved substantial results, we can revisit the question, but until then Naval funding will be focussed towards coastal patrol and destroyer platforms, construction of which are underway at Norfolk Military Base.

    At least your proposal is not as difficult to implement in practice as General Duplessis' thesis of sending USAF troops to secure some of our orbital weapons platforms (would that we had a functioning spaceport! Hopefully the Canaveral expedition goes well – knowing the man our President picked for the task, it will).

    ==*==

    Austin Engill was surprised to hear that the US Government were paying Vault 81 a visit, but not nearly as surprised as many of the grown-ups. After living for 200 years without the Government around, many had imagined the all-clear would never come. But a while ago, a grown-up had come in from the Commonwealth who said he was from before the War and the nuclear bombs – and he'd later saved Austin's life. And then about a month ago, they'd all got the President's radio address to the entire Commonwealth. And three days prior, the Overseer had gotten a message telling her that the President was paying Vault 81 a personal visit, and had told everyone to be on their best behaviour.

    So here they were gathered in the lower atrium, as the President entered in power armour painted in the colours of red, white and blue. The thirteen stars of the US flag were on his chest, the great central star right over his heart. Behind him trailed five Secret Service men in black armour and a man in a lab coat with glasses who stuck out like a sore thumb, even to Austin's young eyes.

    The President took off his helmet and began his speech. Austin was the only one who noticed that as he spoke, two of the bodyguards along with the scientist shuffled off down the steps and through the atrium to his left. He even thought he heard one of them – grey-haired and grizzled – mutter something about it not being like “the Vault 13 op”, whatever that was. But even as they brushed past him, he thought little of it. The President was here in Vault 81!

    ==*==

    REPORT ON MASS MEDIA OF THE GREATER BOSTON AREA

    From: Valerie Danvers, US Army Data Analyst
    To: Colonel Bradley, Admiral Keller, President Autumn

    Thought For The Day: Weakness of will leads to weakness of action.

    There are several sources of media in the Greater Boston area, both electronic and analogue, that could be necessary to subvert, co-opt, or shut down as the Massachusetts expedition progresses.

    DIAMOND CITY RADIO

    Originating from Diamond City. Gives news mixed with pre-War music, no noticeable bias. Apart from a brief panic attack upon our initial arrival, the DJ has not been pro-sedition (unlike the similar “Galaxy News Radio” in D.C. whose owner had to be detained for eight months and put under permanent surveillance due to his work spreading rebel propaganda. Unfortunate, but we can't allow treasonous talk spreading in this dire state of emergency). Recommendation: let sleeping dogs lie.

    PUBLICK OCCURENCES

    Only newspaper in Boston, currently restricted to Diamond City. Anti-Institute, which could be an issue upon reintegration of C.I.T. We expect them to be more positive towards us over time as our presence here becomes stronger.

    RADIO FREEDOM

    Radio station operated by native militia group “Minutemen”, used for news updates and military C&C as well as music. Recommendation: continue integration of Minutemen, send self-destruct signal to mini-fusion reactor at Fort Independence if they move against us - rendering them helpless.

    God Bless America.

    ==*==

    Nate woke up, bleary-eyed and with a stabbing pain in his head. Reaching over to the end table, he put on his pip-boy – the rush of pain in his wrist as the bio-lock engaged helping to keep him awake - and got up before checking the chronometer. 11:00 hours, December 1st. He'd have to delay his chase for Kellogg a while – he couldn't take on the mercenary with a hangover like this.

    Still groggy, he wandered into the courtyard to find the Enclave troops preparing to leave even as the Minutemen started to settle in. Elliot was there, with the blonde pilot – the way she looked at him Nate wondered if she was his girlfriend – and the others.

    “So, I guess this is goodbye for right now?” Nate asked.

    “Yes,” Elliot replied. “My squad has a deployment at 1400 hours, Boston Airport. The CINC plans to clear it out and make it a secondary base for operations in Central Boston today. We won't be meeting together as often as we did back in Alaska. Unless you'd like to reapply for the Armed Forces?”

    “No, Elliott. I had enough of military life before the bombs dropped, and I have other obligations right now. Important ones – to my kidnapped son, to Sanctuary Hills and to the Minutemen.”

    “I supposed so. But remember, you owe us one now. If we need your help I'll personally be the one to give you a call.”

    “I'll keep that in mind.”

    “Goodbye, Nate.”

    “Goodbye, Elliot.”

    The vertibird took off, taking Elliot with it, and Nate made a silent prayer for his friend's safety.

    “You okay, Nate?” Preston asked.

    Something seemed off about the Minuteman's voice, at least enough that Nate noticed it. “What're you worried about?”

    “The way you're so friendly with the Government people. Elliot in particular.”

    “What's your problem? Elliot and me go way back – two hundred years back as a matter of fact.”

    “It's just that – they talk to us like children who can't do anything for themselves. Like they know better than us what's best for the Commonwealth. It just … rubs me the wrong way.”

    “Maybe they do know better. I mean, they're more educated in all sorts of subjects - no offense.”

    “Maybe they don't. They don't have a clue what it's like out here on the ground, living in the Commonwealth. That could lead to all sorts of mistakes.”

    “You should wait and see, Preston. They can't be as bad as the Gunners or the Institute. They are trying to help us and rebuild what was lost; I’ll see if I can get the President and the Governor to give more room for our own contributions.”

    “I will, Nate,” he agreed. “I'll wait and see."
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Nine
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 9

    PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS ON THE SUBJECT OF UNCOMPENSATED FOOD REQUISITION IN REINTEGRATED US TERRITORY
    GIVEN ON ENCLAVE RADIO 7/8/2286

    My fellow Americans, it falls to me to once again listen to your troubles. Apparently, the requisition of food supplies by US military forces in areas under temporary military government has caused your farms financial hardship over the past year. You have been made to sell excess produce at what you consider to be an unfair price. You have spoken to local government and military officials and received no answer. There have been numerous cases of small farmers and other agricultural workers point-blank refusing to sell our quartermasters the food that is needed for the US Armed Forces. We are a nation in ruins, and what government has been restored is still at risk at falling into chaos. In such a situation, the behaviour that has been exhibited begins to border on treason.

    Imagine, farmers and fishers, a man whose organs argue amongst themselves. The stomach, selfish and short-sighted, refuses to supply sustenance to the rest of the body – and as a result he withers and dies, taking the stomach itself with him. Would you argue that the stomach's actions were wise or good in their ultimate effect? And the United States, too is a body of a sort – made out of countless men, women and children united in a common purpose, bound together by a common citizenship linking them to our Constitution. If you refuse to supply food to soldiers of the United States Armed Forces, the military will not be able to feed itself and America will wither and die just as the man died when the stomach refused to share nutrients with the other parts of the body. And so will you die like the stomach did, when the Raiders and other savages removed from these territories by our hard-fought efforts return and take their toll.

    There are worse people in the wasteland than the lawful government. Did the raiders ask politely to buy your food, or did they just take it as they pleased? Did the petty warlords take any care towards the self-government of your towns, city-states, and local communities as we have? What makes us different from the barbarians of all types that continue to afflict the nation is that we bring with us the law, the order on which all civilised life depends, and the eventual restoration of full Constitutional governance. A restoration which the wholesale denial of food to the US military threatens to stop in its tracks.

    Should we not expect a little gratitude, a little reward, a little loyalty, for our innumerable efforts helping and defending the American people? You indeed have a point concerning the unreasonably low prices, and from now on we will pay for your food at its market price. but be warned – any civilian who attacks the United States Armed Forces will be prosecuted as a traitor, and any who kills a US soldier will face a summary hanging for murder in the first degree and insurrection.

    ==*==

    Jack Akely entered the mine again, the familiar chill crawling up his spine. The place was creepy as Hell, never mind the weird green pieces of paper these people used as money. Used to be tons of raiders and ferals down in here, but nevermind – even with them gone Dunwich Borers was nightmarish. There were shadows where they shouldn't be, half-heard voices on the edge of his hearing – and worse. One of the miners had gone psycho with a pickaxe screaming about rats in the walls and had killed a bunch of fellow workers before being shot, while another had carved religious symbols all over his body and thrown himself into a deep pool near the bottom of the mine, and yet another had simply gone catatonic, constantly repeating words that human tongues weren't meant to pronounce. Only single digits among the hundreds now working here, but it gave him a bad feeling for sure.

    And the US troops didn't care – all the man in charge cared about, Akely was sure, was keeping the mine's productivity up and damn the consequences to the civilians. But it paid well enough, and those green pieces of paper were keeping his wife and children fed through the winter, so working in the mine was all he had. He only hoped it didn't get to him like it had to the others.

    ==*==

    Arcade Gannon looked at Dr. Henry with more than a touch of surprise, sipping some coffee from the Lexington base's bar. He'd known the man was coming, but to actually see him arrive was something else.

    “How'd your trip to Philadelphia go?” he asked. The last he'd heard was that the old Devil's Brigade had been invited to a big celebration in Delaware and were staying there until it happened. All but Henry and himself had come along – he'd wanted to see more of – Enclave? American? - territory for himself. Then he'd been sent over, apparently to help set up the NGO.

    “It was fine,” Henry said. “We saw all the sites and I talked to some of the troops gathering there.”

    “Troops gathering?”

    “They're sending an armoured company in mid-December, along with a battalion of engineers. The idea is to clear out the land route to Boston, allow for supplies, reinforcements, and such. Vertibirds can only carry so much food and ammo, there's a constant stream of them just for the basic supplies."

    “Anything you saw or heard?”

    “Nothing much, just some tanks and artillery pieces. One of the soldiers was very interested in what I did after leaving Navarro though. When I told him about Jacobstown he said I must've been hallucinating the whole time.”

    “I'm not surprised. From what I hear, none of the super mutants on the east coast are anything near civilised or even remotely sane. They're all psychotically violent and mentally retarded, so to speak. Quite different physiologically too.”

    “Different physiology?”

    “You see, they just keep growing. So the longer they avoid death, the more they grow bigger, tougher and stronger. I've even heard of specimens as tall as houses!”

    “Amazing. So, onto the NGO?”

    “Yes, it's working as planned. I've secured the funding, I have doctors coming in – all we need is a name for the organisation, then we can move to start setting up clinics where the people need it. Diamond City's the biggest settlement here, we can start moving in there and spread out. They only have one clinic for 5,000 people, and it's nothing but a rusty shack, or so the ambassador there says.”

    “What about the Eastern Star?”

    “Hmm, very clever – the five-pointed star is a symbol of the US, and we're on the East Coast. I say it's good.”

    “Exactly,” Henry replied.

    That was it decided then.

    ==*==

    Jack Powers grinned savagely as he jumped down from the vertibird, firing his M-500 “Patriot” laser rifle into the raiders below. One or two were hit and died screaming as the energy-bolts struck them, then he hit the ground amidst a squad of them perched on an old fast-food restaurant. The explosive vents in his suit activated instantly after landing, pasting the group and covering his armour with their hot blood.

    What a figure of dread he looked! His dark grey armour covered in the blood of his enemies, his eyelights burning red as he fired laser-shots into their midst – he looked like an angel of death. Not bad for a 15-year-old from Philly who'd joined the Service only this summer!

    The rest of the battle went quick. After the drop, it took ten minutes for most of the raiders to die, and thirty for the purge team to finish tracking down and doing away with those who retreated or tried to surrender. Then they gathered in the main street of the abandoned theme park – with a view to the ruined fairytale castle that had once been the centrepiece – and prepared to head back to Canaveral.

    ”Men of the Black Devils,” Lieutenant Walker – the man who allegedly had raided and destroyed an alien mothership during a period when he had, though the details were still highly classified – said. “You did well today. This goodwill gesture, expertly executed, will get the people of Orlando on our side, and on the track to peaceful reintegration. As a reward for exemplary conduct I'm giving all of you who participated in the operation an extra two days of leave for tomorrow and the day after.”

    As they flew over the Floridian landscape Powers talked out loud to himself.

    “Man, I wish I was in Boston,” he muttered. “It must be far more exciting there than down here. I hear they even have super mutants like they used to have in DC.”

    “Be careful what you wish for,” one of the soldiers next to him said. “Ten years ago the 'excitement' in DC cost me my eye. Replacing it cost like hell.”

    “I hear there's fighting up in Virginia too, round Roanoke.”

    “You wouldn't wanna see it, rookie. Jabsco's men are the most brutal in the Service, and you don't wanna ever get in their way – I hear they used to be mercs we hired to help fight the muties in D.C. Shame the Mayor of the place had to bring them down on him, but what do you expect, putting a United States ambassador in a lock-up like a common criminal? They coulda joined peacefully and kept their leader, but they had to go and do it. VA governor will be sending an aide to put them under military rule for the next five years at least.”

    “I suppose. With what I heard they did to the Rattlesnake Gang, I''d be sure as Hell weary of getting on their bad side.”

    “Exactly, boy. Still, these new ‘Patriots’ are pieces of shit. R&D eggheads tried to make a gun that could do anything, does everything about half as well as an AER9 ...”

    He kept on rambling the rest of the journey back to the Canaveral outpost.

    ==*==

    Nate looked at the power armour sitting in its dock at the Red Rocket station just south of the Old North Bridge. No damage, not even superficial, from the mirelurks. An incredible piece of tech, but he had his misgivings. The Federa; Government seemed to have offered it in good faith, but he had no clue what half the electronics inside did. Could there be a transmitter listening in on him at every moment? A self-destruct that could detonate with him inside if they decided he'd gone rogue?

    He'd no clue, to be honest. As he continued trying to work the mechanisms of the alien gun (he'd figured what the problem was, it was a flaw in the circuits he was using. He'd have to get some military-grade stuff to make it work by fusion cells) he focussed on what he was going to do today. Kellogg was out there, waiting at the C.I.T. Ruins. And he was going to die by his hand.

    “Piper?” he asked, seeing the brunette reporter out of the corner of his eye.

    “Nate, going alone against Kellogg is too dangerous. I was at University Point just after the Institute killed everyone there, and … they're not to be trifled with.”

    “What happened to University Point?”

    “It was my biggest news story of 2285 - “Institute Synths Slaughter Settlement”, you remember?” she teased.

    “I wasn't exactly up to date on the news then."

    Piper chuckled at that.

    “Anyway,” he said. “Do you want to go with me? I'm just … not sure I can keep you safe with him around.”

    “I can handle it,” she said. “Just like we've handled so many things together, as a team.”

    “Okay, let's get to work.”

    They headed then to Cambridge.

    ==*==

    ENCLAVE RADIO TRANSCRIPT OF ORION MORENO INTERVIEW
    GIVEN 12/3/2287

    [0:01] Announcer: In related news, Atomicist militants – suspected to be supplied by the illegal “New California Republic” – attacked US troops engaged in New York City, but were beaten back with no loss of life. Now, we have an exclusive interview coming right up live from our studio in Raven Rock – you won't hear this on a privately-owned channel! Americans, tonight we are interviewing Orion Moreno, veteran of the unprovoked NCR attack on Navarro Military Base – itself just nine years after the treasonous, cowardly, and terroristic assassinations of President Richardson and Vice President Daniel Bird by atomic bomb more than forty years ago. Moreno, what can you tell us about the attack on Navarro?

    [0:15] Moreno: It was bloody, that's for sure. The NCR threw a lot of troops at the base, and a lot of them died.

    [0:20] Announcer: Could you describe the quality of the troops – how they were armed and armoured?

    [0:25] Moreno: They were conscripts, a lot still in their teens. No power armour, but they had Brotherhood of Steel support with them. Nasty snipers too. And they had a whole fucking lot of soldiers to throw at us.

    [0:33] Announcer: Conscripts – can you imagine that, America? The leaders of “New California” don't even trust their own citizens to voluntarily fight for their secessionist cause, so they send them into battle herded forwards by political officers – just like Communist China two centuries ago! Every man and woman in the United States Armed Forces, by contrast, is a volunteer – he fights because he chooses to! Now, Moreno, just how did we lose Navarro?

    [0:45] Moreno: We had no resources, no resupply, no reinforcements. We were, so far as we knew, the last Americans left. But we still gave them quite a good licking 'fore we lost. It took them twenty days to breach the minefield and the fence, and they were climbing over piles of their own dead before they took the airfield.

    [1:10] Announcer: And after they took the airfield?

    [1:15] Moreno: They took it pretty much intact, planes still on the ground . My immediate superior realised the battle was lost then and we retreated by vertibird, thinking we could regroup and start a guerilla war with other survivors. But there weren't any. Most of them fought to the last and the rest were captured. The last I saw of Navarro was the armoury blowing – whether we or they did it I never knew.

    [1:30] Announcer: Can you please comment on the rumours now circulating that female United States citizens were violated en masse by NCR soldiers at Navarro, as well as the claims that infants and children were rounded up and murdered by the secessionists in the aftermath of their victory?

    [1:40] Moreno: I can't say those things didn't happen – I didn't see any of the aftermath.

    [1:45] Announcer: Only God knows the depths of the atrocities the degenerate secessionists committed. We ourselves may never learn the full measure. So, Moreno, what did you do after the Battle?

    [2:00] Moreno: We split up and tried to move into civilian life in our own ways. But I could never let go of of what had happened. I never forgot Navarro and what I thought then was the end of America.

    [2:10] Announcer: Truly sobering. Moreno, how did you come back here?

    [2:30] Moreno: I joined up with my old squad six years ago and … allied with the NCR in Nevada against a raider “empire” called Caesar's Legion. We licked those savages hard, but the NCR found out our previous role as Enclave soldiers and sent bounty hunters after us. So we fled East from them until we linked up with Enclave forces in Chicago.

    [2:45] Announcer: Can these secessionist scum sink any lower? When a former American soldier joins with them to aid them in battle, out of the pure goodness of his heart, they try to arrest him on false charges of war crimes! War crimes allegedly committed more than forty years ago! War crimes which they have not the slightest shred of evidence actually happened! War crimes invented out of whole cloth by their lying, secessionist government to justify vile acts of treason, sedition and terrorism against America and her citizens! I wish I was in Shady Sands right now so I could apply my God-given, Constitutional Second Amendment right on every last “New Californian” traitor I see!-

    [Audio cuts off for thirty seconds]

    [3:40] Announcer: I'm … in no fit state to continue with the interview. But a last message before I sign off. If any leader in the NCR is listening to this, be warned. America has risen like a phoenix from the ashes, and eventually we will stretch our wings once more from sea to shining sea. We will avenge the five thousand men, women and children you murdered at Control Station Enclave. We will take retribution for the dead and wrongly imprisoned of Navarro. America will be reunified, and the New California Republic will be done away with just like the Confederate States, just like Socialist Germany, and just like Red China. Glenn Coulter, signing off for the night.

    [4:10] Announcer (Female): This is Anne Temple, signing on. And now we move onto our archives of patriotic and morally uplifting music, starting with Johnny Horton's The Battle of New Orleans.

    [4:15] [Music Begins]

    ==*==

    The sun was sinking in the sky as Nate and Piper entered the C.I.T. ruins. Kellogg stood on the steps, right before them, smirking.

    “Heh,” he said. “I gave you fifty-fifty odds of making it to Diamond City. Figured the Commonwealth would eat you up like beef jerky after that. So, what do you want with me? Wouldn't have travelled all that way, so heavily armed and armoured, with your little dog and Ms. Publick Occurrences too, if you weren't planning to kill me. I don’t know why the old man wanted me to camp out here. Guess he wants a confrontation between us for some reason of his own. Maybe he’ll look to replace me with you if he wins.”

    “You killed my wife,” Nate spat.

    “Didn’t take you long to replace her. And what’s a wife anyway, but a hooker too lazy to go on the prowl? I learned those lessons long ago, pre-War boy scout.”

    Anger and sorrow warred in Nate’s mind. He knew the bastard must be trying to rattle him, but still the words stung. He breathed deep, kept himself as cool as he could, and spoke the one question he most desperately wanted answered.

    “Where. Is. My. Son!?”

    “I'll tell you, Mr. Frozen TV Dinner, since you earned the right to a straight answer. Shaun's in a place where he's loved, respected and taken well care of. The Institute.”

    Each taunting word was like a knife to his heart.

    “Tell me how to get there, please!”

    “You don't find the Institute. The Institute finds you.”

    “What do you mean?”

    “Doesn't matter. Only one of us is leaving this place, and it isn't you or any of your friends.”

    He drew his pistol and fired. The shot grazed Nate's arm, hitting the grass behind him. Blood poured from the wound onto the grass, before he steadied the American plasma pistol, aimed, and fired.

    Kellogg lived. His clothing was burnt away where his heart should be – his skin was too. Below that was only a mass of metal, plastic and and wires. Subdermal armour covered an artificial heart and lungs, encased in a ribcage reinforced by titanium alloy. The mercenary was far, far more machine than man. Dogmeat ran over, tried to rip off Kellogg's throat – and the brutal man simply threw the faithful hound off him, followed by a kick for good measure. The dog could only whimper and wheeze on the ground.

    Damn. Nate and Piper tried to fire off more shots, but Kellogg simply walked forward, unheeding. The bullets bounced off him like rain, and while the plasma burnt his flesh, what damage it did was simply superficial. He was heading right for them, like he wanted to show off his invincibility.

    He was – oh God, he was heading for Piper first. She tried to back away, but he moved faster and then-

    Nate threw himself in front of the reporter, trying to shield her, but Kellogg simply backhanded him and knocked him away, blood pouring from his nose. Oh dear God, now he was lifting Piper by the neck, choking her, preparing to twist-

    She kneed him in the groin, and Kellogg gave an animal screech of pain, distracted. That part of his anatomy at least had not been replaced with tech. There was just enough time for Nate to fire the plasma pistol, straight at his back, dialling it above all safe limits. The bolt of plasma burnt through his clothes, his skin and the subdermal armour, right at the small of his back. His metal spine melted, underwent molecular destabilisation, failed on him. Kellogg buckled – his legs paralysed – lost his grip on Piper, then screamed in rage and frustration, dropping his gun as he tried to crawl forwards on his hands.

    Nate dropped his own weapon himself as the pistol overheated, burning pain stabbing his right hand through his gloves, sparking and smoking as it hit the ground. Piper rose, her hand on Kellogg's own pistol, and shot him right in the eye. The very skeletal reinforcement the Institute had given to Kellogg long ago turned against him, as the bullet ricocheted off and bounced around inside his brain, turning most of it to mush. The grey matter poured out through his ruined eye, until something lodged in the hole.

    Piper pulled it out – Nate identified it, from his limited knowledge, as the man's hippocampus. There seemed to be some kind of hard drive attached to it – whatever the Institute meant to keep for itself by doing this, Nate swore he'd find out.

    “Well, that's one obituary to put in the newspaper,” Nate joked, though he didn't really feel like it. Piper was still too shocked to laugh.

    And then there was Dogmeat (at least as Mama Murphy called him, Nate called him ‘Ace’ after his old golden retriever). The brave hound had a broken leg, and Nate prepared to give him the only mercy he could – until he remembered something. Back before the War the police had used some kind of cyborg dog. Maybe they still knew how to make them – maybe they could save his new dog, preserve him like that.

    That was it decided then – he was heading to Lexington with the dog and the piece of Kellogg's brain.
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Ten
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter Ten

    Nate walked into Lexington, noting the soldiers stationed around the town, overseeing the familiar patterns of civic life. They wore full-body combat armour, exposing nothing beneath, and had laser rifles of the same type Nate had seen the power-armour equipped troops wearing. Boxy and black-painted, they had the same dials and buttons Nate had used himself with his new plasma pistol, and either a chain-bayonet or a grenade launcher mounted under the barrel.

    The town itself was different from what it had been only a month or so prior. Food and drink, other daily necessities, and even guns and ammo were being sold on the main street while bars and diners were scattered around. Lights now shone from apartment windows and even the great factory dominating the centre of town was now operational. Were it not for the skeletal highway cutting through the town, the ruined buildings (some covered in scaffolding, to be fair) and the piles of rubble still scattered around Nate would have thought the bombs had never dropped and two hundred years hadn’t passed.

    Carrying Dogmeat (Who names a dog that anyway?, Nate mused, I better change it to something more fitting. ‘Ace’, or ‘Rex’, perhaps?) into the base (Piper’s clearance apparently needed renewal) he walked by, noting various recruits engaged to the infirmary, noting the antiseptic smell and the spotless appearance. There were three Ms. Nannies and twelve human nurses present (one looked very cute), working under the stern eye of a blonde in a lab coat.

    “What’s your business here?” she curtly asked. “This infirmary is for military personnel, not civilians – even if they’re veterans. You’ll have better luck in the general clinic.”

    “It’s my dog,” he confessed. “He got badly injured, and I don’t want to put him down. Can you ... fix him?”

    A pang of sympathy seemed to cross her face.

    “We don’t have the facilities for that here. But if you leave him with me I’ll send him to Adams AFB on the next flight out and have him upgraded there. He’ll probably have a lifespan exceeding yours by the time we’re through with him. Nice present for the great-grandkids, no?”

    There was another thing to ask. He knew the Government troops had been round to Vault 111 after he had left. If there was the ghost of a chance that … he would take it.

    “In Vault 111,” he said, taking a deep breath. “You know that my wife was shot just before she was taken into cryo. Is there a possibility … ?”

    The nurse’s face took on a look of severe disappointment, and Nate’s heart felt a bitter chill as he seemed to sense what she was going to say.

    “It doesn’t work that way,” the nurse said. “I was part of the medical team that was sent into Vault 111 and … your wife was shot multiple times in the heart, lung and head with a .44 magnum. She was dead before the cryo kicked in. I’m … I’m awfully sorry for your loss. I can’t say any more.”

    Tears ran down Nate’s cheek despite himself. Even if he found his son, even if he hadn’t been experimented on or mutated or God knows what … Nora was irrevocably gone to him. They would never be a family again together, at least in this world. After five or so minutes he took a deep breath, used a tissue that the nurse had given him to dry his eyes. There was still a nation to help rebuild; more than that, Shaun still needed rescuing.

    He had to go on. It was what Nora would have wanted.

    He left his dog there and went on to his main reason for going here. The main science laboratories weren’t far from the infirmary and he got there relatively quickly. There he found Whitley’s office and knocked hard three times on the door.

    The balding scientist quickly arrived and opened the door, before sitting on his swivel chair and finishing what he’d been working on with his computer. Nate noted with astonishment that he was using a keyboard and some kind of tracking device to manipulate a graphical user interface. That sort of thing had only been floated around in science magazines back before the War.

    Whitley seemed to notice his surprise and turned round on his swivel chair.

    “Like what you see Nate? What you’re seeing right now is the bleeding edge of computer science. The old command-line interfaces will be obsolete soon – they’re all going to be phased out.”

    He seemed somewhat sad about that.

    “Uh ... well, impressive.”

    “Heh, I know you’re too surprised to give a real response. But I don’t think you’re here to be looking at tech, now? What’s your real reason?”

    Nate took out the piece of Kellogg’s brain. Whitley blanched at the sight.

    “What on God’s good earth is that?!”

    “The hippocampus of a mercenary who was working with the Institute, augmented with some kind of external memory storage. I think it might still contain his memories – including how to get in.”

    “Joey, come here! Daddy wants you to take a look at something one of his friends brought him.”

    An eyebot idly hovering in the corner enthusiastically blipped and beeped before scanning Nate and the grisly object he was holding. After the scan was complete, it gave a whine of frustration.

    “It’s very strongly encrypted. Even with my upgrades, Joey can’t get anything out of it.”

    “Damn! I need to get into the Institute to find my son.”

    “Your son?”

    “They ... they kidnapped him when he was a baby. My wife was killed trying to hold onto him.”

    Even now, bringing it up still hurt. Bitter tears once more flowed from his eyes. Clinging to that hope more than a month had made it even worse when it was dashed.

    Whitley looked pale.

    “Well, we do have a possibility.”

    “For God’s sake tell me what it is!”

    “We could theoretically use a simulation pod to project the memories inside as a VR environment and thus bypass the encryption. Regrettably I don’t know of any simulation pods aside from the ones we recovered from Vault 112, and they’re military-only. Used for pilot training as I understand.”

    The memory den in Goodneighbour, Nate thought. I’ll go there with Nick and see if it works. It has to.

    “I think I might know of simulation pods present in Boston.”

    “Good,” Whitley said. “By the way – if you find out how to enter the Institute, do tell us everything you learn. We have our own reasons for wanting to know how to get in.”

    “God bless you,” Nate said as he prepared to head back to Sanctuary for the night.

    “Godspeed.”

    ==*==

    The cold air hit Arcade Gannon hard as the APC opened up and the occupants prepared to get out. They were seven in total – Arcade, Dr. Henry, two former combat medics, two civilian doctors, and a Ms. Nanny medical robot. He got out, passed the statue of a baseball player at the entrance, and spoke into the intercom.

    “This is Dr. Arcade Gannon, Eastern Star Medical and Emergency Relief Organisation. We’re here to set up a clinic in town.”

    “Mr. Beauregard said to expect you. He’ll be waiting at the entrance.”

    The door opened, and the group met up with the official ambassador – well, officially consul – to Diamond City.

    Beauregard was a tall, handsome and blond man dressed in a heavy black greatcoat with a Mr. Gutsy by his side and a laser rifle carried on his back. He certainly didn’t look like an ambassador, but Arcade had heard there’d been an assassination attempt and he guessed the US Government (was that what he was thinking of the Enclave as now? It was certainly what their radio station said they were over and over.) wanted to dissuade further attempts in future.

    He made his introductions, shook Arcade’s hand, and led them to what would be their home for the foreseeable future.

    It was a moderately large building located near the centre of town, with two stories (the staff slept above, downstairs was for the patients) and a spacious cellar holding a surgical theatre and the medicine storehouse. It was reasonably clean, but not up to the standards of the government hospitals in core NCR territory where Arcade had trained before heading over to Vegas. But then, those places had been for the middle class and above. Poor people subsisted on the Followers’ charity, or distressingly often, nothing at all. And with the pharmaceutical crisis that’d been brewing before he fled the NCR, he wasn’t sure if those places were still doing as well as they had been.

    “How did you come by this place?” Arcade asked idly.

    “I brought it. It cost twenty thousand caps, but that’s small change for us. Good time with the Mayor’s secretary too.”

    Arcade just rolled his eyes at that. Hopefully the man wouldn’t brag about his conquests any more.

    “How’d you get so many caps to spend?”

    “The Department of the Treasury has the blueprints and the raw materials to build printing machines and make as many ‘genuine’ nuka-cola bottle caps as we want. Really useful for dealing with people who’re still convinced they’re real currency.”

    “Wouldn’t that cause massive inflation as so many caps enter the market?”

    “Exactly the intent. You see, from our perspective it’s just another incentive to make people go back to good old US D. The cap inevitably suffers immense depreciation as the amount of people using it stays constant, while that of people using the dollar grows, avoiding inflation on that front. So people gain an additional reason to turn in their caps to the exchange programs we’ve set up. There are additional effects beyond our borders as caps circulate out of are territory … ones that are quite useful for reintegration purposes.”

    It was ... logical, but it still felt heartless. At least it was better than what Arcade guessed the old Enclave’s solution to the same problem would have been. Forty years was a long time, but it still felt shocking that the Enclave could have reformed from its previous genocidal mania so quickly. And he was still suspicious that they hadn’t changed so much as it looked like they had.

    ==*==

    REPORT ON UNIQUE SOCIAL, PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF HOMO BRUTUS BOSTONII

    From: Dr. Karen A. Lewis
    To: Dr. Robert S. Whitley, Chief Scientific Adjunct to the Massachusetts Expedition

    Thought For The Day: So long as one American lives, so does America.

    This report details unique characteristics of the subspecies Homo Brutus Bostonii (the informal designation “super mutant” or “Boston super mutant” will be used from now on) for the purpose of:

    A. More effectively eliminating the hostile sub-humans.
    B. Increasing our understanding of FEV in hopes of meeting the Project’s original goals, as set by the pre-2077 researchers who first developed it.

    First off: physiology. The Boston mutants share many physical similarities with their southern cousins, the extirpated breed of Vault 87 super mutants, including but not limited to:

    A. Complete atrophy of all sexual characteristics. Boston mutants possess no primary, secondary or tertiary sexual features and are to all intents and purposes sexless.
    B. Continued growth throughout life, culminating in a gargantuan “Behemoth” stage.
    C. Lesser intellect, higher than the Vault 87 breed but lower than Mariposa-strain mutants.

    Genetic analysis of the FEV strains involved also seems to bear this out, though my results are still inconclusive. Autopsy and vivisection has also established similarities between the two strains (if only we had more records on the Mariposa strain for proper analysis!)

    The Boston mutants’ diet is that of an obligate carnivore. They seem to have little qualms about what they eat, and commonly engage in cannibalism. This seems to be the impetus behind their constant raids on pure-strain human outposts and settlements.

    Socially, they have established a clear chain of command and dominance-based social structure. Older and thus stronger mutants dominate the weaker ones and thus rule – at least until they reach Behemoth state, their minds atrophy, and they lose all social status. Psychologically, they are driven by a perception of themselves as superior mixed with self-hatred which causes them to lash out at pure-strain humanity – they take out their hatred on themselves from existing towards us, which they express in their ultra-violence and tendency for cannibal feasts. In some way their extirpation will be a mercy killing.

    As for their makers – on each and every super mutant I’ve cut apart, whether dead or in vivo, some kind of device has been found implanted in the back of the neck. I’ve sent samples to you for study, as whoever implanted these would seem to be the creators of the Boston super mutants. This is concerning, as whoever is creating these beings must have access to significant supplies of FEV – a highly dangerous mutagen and bioweapon is no small concern. Pre-War records have not helped us to narrow it down, as the FEV Project’s paper trail on the Eastern Seaboard has not survived the passage of time.

    Tactically, their increased intellect helps them make common use of traps and more advanced tactics than the Vault 87 mutants. A common tactic seems to be that regular mutants pin down enemy forces while specialised “suicide” mutants flank, reach melee range, and detonate themselves with a mini-nuke. Shamefully, this tactic has cost some of our soldiers their lives, as they were underestimated their enemies and did not think much of “smart mutants”. Land mines and IEDs have also been used by them, resulting in injuries, some requiring amputation while we wait for more cybernetic shipments to arrive (without power armour most of these casualties would have been killed instantly).

    As for numbers – we estimate 20,000 at maximum, but highly divided. They could overwhelm out local forces at the present time if they managed to unify – perish the thought! - and even divided represent the largest current threat towards the reclamation and reintegration of the Greater Boston Area.

    God Bless America.

    ==*==

    Major Campbell was not impressed by what he saw before him as he entered Fort Independence. The local militia were in threadbare outfits of grey or butternut – a few in proper fatigues scavenged from old military facilities – and there were only a few of them. Dozens, a hundred at best. He’d heard reports that there were approximately 5,000, but for the most part these were right now in their various homesteads and farming settlements. And their weapons! – they used shotguns and hunting rifles, a few with select-fire rifles, but the most common gun was some kind of bashed-together laser rifle which fired slowly but had stopping power enough to take out a super mutant in one hit.

    The Patriot took a three-round burst to do so, but it fired faster anyway. Not that the new gun introduced to the US military earlier in the decade was much better than the AER9 – the thing had been designed by eggheads who’d never been within a dozen klicks of shots being fired. Lots of fancy settings, but half of them aren’t worth shit in a firefight, and the dials keep breaking off. It was slightly more powerful in that it fired in the orange portion of the visual spectrum – a 10% or 15% boost in killing power. He wasn't sure that had been worth moving to replace the AER9 with it.

    Part of him wondered why the US Government even bothered with these locals. Local militia, paramilitary forces and mercenaries were often essential to reintegrating an area – they could be used for tasks the Army’s actual manpower wasn’t worth being spent on, while eventually being groomed into becoming part of that same force. Back in DC two merc units, Talon Company and Reilly’s Rangers, had been helpful in securing the rear areas during wars with the Brotherhood and the super mutants before eventually being integrated completely into the regular US Army.

    It had been very touch-and-go in the beginning of those days, back in ‘77. The number of Americans who held true loyalty to the government had been some 20,000 at most. Many of them had been Vault Dwellers who’d been brought along during the Exodus or incorporated after it took place - Campbell himself had been from Vault 18. One of the largest Vaults constructed, in North California, it had housed 5,000 civilians before it had been evacuated and had its entrance blown in back in ‘46. Campbell had been a young boy then – he remembered his old terror as he looked on the overwhelming vistas of the sun and the blue sky, and had felt an overwhelming urge to run back into the cave where the Vault’s entrance had been located. Together with every last base the people at Navarro could contact, there had been 2,000 fighting men available at DC.

    That was all the soldiers America had possessed at that point in time. If the Federal Government had lost then, coming back from such a defeat would have been unimaginable. But Autumn had led them to victory after victory, their numbers swelling with each city-state and settlement brought back into the fold. The US was there again to stay, at least down south. But up here, it was still touch-and-go.

    He guessed that was why this militia were being treated as allies. The Army and Marine Corps needed all the help they could get down here, and – well, Campbell had heard the rumours about the commander of these particular forces. Claims that he was a pre-War military officer somehow impossibly preserved. At the least, he had the ear of the President, and that meant something. The man had an undoubted eye for talent – Walker, Holt, Stiggs, Richardson, and more. Campbell sighed as he talked to the man’s 2IC – a dark-skinned man, name Preston Garvey, likeable enough. He would make the estimates of how much materiel these folk needed and send them on to Rhonda – the girl had a good head for organisation.

    These people would certainly need a lot of it to be worthwhile.

    ==*==

    MEMO: INSTITUTE INFILTRATORS IN ARMED FORCES

    From: Doctor Robert S. Whitley
    To: President Augustus Autumn, Colonel Daniel Bradley, Admiral David Keller

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Merely to survive is never enough.

    I’m concerned about possible Institute infiltration – using their androids designed specifically to pass as human. While they’re unable to make a direct insertion into our bases – the security systems we have are more than sufficient to proof against that, and the chances of infiltrators being among the forces sent to Boston are infinitesimal – I’m worried that they could be along the natives we are presently recruiting at Lexington. As I’ve got no test capable of weeding out androids from humans – not one applicable to a large population, at any rate – I recommend caution when dealing with the new recruits. Perhaps we could deny them promotion above a certain rank or deployment to sensitive sites until the business we have with C.I.T. is concluded? I think caution is definitely called for here.

    God Bless America.

    -*-

    RE: INSTITUTE INFILTRATORS IN ARMED FORCES

    From: President Augustus Autumn
    To: Dr. Robert S. Whitley, Chief Scientific Adjunct to the Massachusetts Expedition

    Have set new policies in place dealing with the issue.

    P.S. You’re overdue on the feasibility study re: applying stealth fields to vertibirds and other aircraft. Me and General Duplessis are still waiting, and she’s less patient than I am.

    ==*==

    Some people called him Blackheart. Others called him Bloody Joe. Many more called him Mad Jack, but never when they thought he could hear them. He’d led his gang on dozens of raids from New Haven to Plymouth Rock, and dozens more farms and settlements paid him regular tribute to keep him away. They gave him their food, their water and their women and in return he made sure other people stayed well enough away.

    He looked at the pathetic wretch before him, idly waiting for him to speak.

    “You said you’re from Boston, right?”

    “Yeah, I am,” the teenager desperately said. He was barely old enough to grow a beard, with a shrimpish physique that Jack gave an undisguised sneer at. “All the big shots there are going down. Jared, Slag, Tower Tom, Sully Mathis – they’re all getting wasted one by one. I’m the last survivor of Red Tourette’s gang myself.”

    “What happened to Red Tourette?”

    “We were chilling at home base after a raid for supplies, when suddenly this big fucking siren started sounding above us. Then these motherfuckers in power armour just fell out of the sky around us and started shooting up the place. There were lasers and grenades fucking everywhere, and that plasma shit as well. One of our guys put on a suit of power armour, but they just fried him with a motherfucking lightning gun.”

    “I only survived ‘cause a grenade shockwave knocked me out and sent me into the latrine ditch. After I came to I checked the bunker, but they’d used some kind of flamethrower to smoke the folks there out. Everybody had either burned up or choked to death.”

    “After that I just got the fuck out of Boston.”

    Mad Jack seemed to be mulling over the situation.

    “I think I know who the fuck this is,” he said plainly. “It’s the motherfuckers that set up that damn fucking radio station, call themselves the fucking Government and want to muscle us the fuck out. We’ve all gotta join together or die. Hang together, or hang separately. They'll start in Boston, but before long they'll be wiping gangs out across all of New fucking England.”

    “This is what I’m gonna do. I’m gonna gather up every gang from Rhode Island, Cape Cod, Boston and Massachusetts. Then I’m gonna make war on these fuckheads and send them crying back to their mommies in Washington town. And then, I’ll make sure no-one messes with us ever again!”

    That was that for the planning of this particular campaign.

    The assembled raiders whooped and cheered, firing weapons into the air.
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Eleven New
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Thanks Emil!

    ==*==

    Chapter 11


    Mad Jack looked on the assembling groups at his camp. He'd sent out the messages far and wide, and raider bands,one by one, were flowing in to the encampment. There were the Speed Freaks, with motorbikes by the score; there were the Battle Boys, mouths foaming and eyes watery from chem overuse with every square inch of their skin tattooed; there were the Atomic Bombers with gamma guns, nuka grenades and even a few nuclear rocket launchers; there were the Road Warriors with dozens of souped-up old world cars, trucks and technicals, and dozens more flowing in by the day. Last but certainly not least were the Ironskins, who all wore power armour scavenged from some old army depot. And more raiders were joining by the day. If we don't do this, Mad Jack thought, they'll just take us all down one by one, but ifwe unite together, maybe we stand a chance.


    "This is the plan," Mad Jack said to the assembled leaders. "We move into Boston, we set up shop nearby, and we get the Gunners on board. Fuckers have almost as much firepower as all of us combined. Then we attack Lexington and the Minutemen's pansy-ass "Castle" all at once, take them during the night. Finally, we take down these fuckers' big fucking boat. Then we feast, take the spoils, enjoy the women, and set ourselves as kings of the fucking hill round these parts. You all hear me?"

    "What if the Gunners won't join up?" one of the other leaders asked.

    "Then we keep with the other phases of the fucking plan, you motherfucking idiot! The "Castle" is an old ruin from
    six hundred fucking years ago, we can take it easily. As for Lexington? Apparently the fuckers set up there have some kind of fucking forcefield shit and can tame motherfucking deathclaws. So they say so on their radio station, at least. My guess is that it's all just a big fucking bluff."

    "If you think so, boss."

    ==*==

    Colonel John Kendall looked at his new command vehicle, fresh off the Lexington assembly line, and smiled. The M-75 Custer Main Battle Tank was a wonder of design. Slightly larger than pre-War tanks, it ran on a fusion power plant capable of lasting three months before needing a coolant refill, and its duraframe-ceramic composite armour could handle almost any pre-War AT munitions. Its main armament was a fusion beam cannon with two Gatling lasers (one pintle-mounted, the other co-axial) for anti-personnel work. The only flaw was that its weapons were line-of-sight only, but the point was not to rely on still-weak supply lines.

    A damn sight improvement, he mused¸over that 'Super Sherman' I was in at Pittsburgh. The WW2-era designs had been something meant to be used on the cheap, but these were real fighting machines. He sighed. He guessed he was used to tight spaces; he'd been Vault 101 Security before the Federals recruited him – a lot of the higher ups, if they hadn't been Government people from the start, were Vaulters. That kid Butch, he was in charge of his own battalion now – he'd even named it the 'Tunnel Snakes' after his old gang, and his rival, that-

    He didn't want to think about that man, He'd murdered the Overseer on his way out, and there was no way 101 would ever forget that. He was surprised he hadn't killed the President, to be true. But perhaps the President scared him too much – he'd heard of the man, while he was still fighting the war in Washington, interrogating Brotherhood prisoners personally and shooting them as traitors himself once he was done – not to mention the execution of the Paradise Falls ringleaders under the judgemental eyes of Abe Lincoln himself, blasting off their heads with their own bomb collars. The slaver chieftain Eulogy Jones, meriting special attention, had been thrown off the roof for a jubilant public. Kendall had seen that, and he'd never forget the sight. Those slavers had sure had it coming though, at any rate. The President had definitely softened over the years though – children to dote on, a loving wife to support him, a nation that needed to look up to him had all helped do the trick. But still, Kendall was under no illusions that the old steel was still under the surface, only biding its time.

    ==*==

    Taylor Larson looked over his sketches and smiled. With Lexington resettled and reasonably secure, he'd been hired to design buildings for the rebuilding of Washington. With his CV as a retired combat engineer and architect of the Capital Wasteland Museum, it'd been no surprise he landed the contract.

    Personally he thought his best achievement was the new Supreme Court building. The austere Doric columns were a particularly nice touch, but the cherry on top was the gilded statue of Lady Justice before the colonnade, which he'd modelled after Caroline Autumn herself. That'd be sure to get the President looking favourably on him, no doubt.

    Idly he turned on his radio.

    "That was the brand new "Ballad of Fort Navarro" by everyone's favourite filly from Philly, Heidi Jackson," the announcer rattled off (he'd not really been the same since the Moreno interview). "And speaking of Philadelphia, the magrail line recently finished between Washington D.C. and the city of brotherly love has begun operation today. Freight and passengers will now travel with fusion-powered, magnetically-levitated speed between the two cities in just thirty minutes ..."


    The news about Navarro, though it'd inspired what was sure to be the singer's latest radio hit, had been a big blow to the original personnel, and Larson especially. All of them had friends and family there, and they'd been holding out hope since Chicago that somehow it'd survived. No such luck. NCR had taken the base, and even worse they'd manage to capture the vertibirds there. The only silver lining was that they'd then fallen out with their partners in crime, the Brotherhood of Steel, over the spoils, and had bled hard fighting them by all accounts.

    Let the traitors kill each other, Larson mused grimly. When we come back to California we'll give 'em both more firepower than they know how to handle.

    -*-

    Arcade Gannon passed an architect's office as he walked to one of the logistics people's office. He took a chance to read the nameplate, taking in a deep breath – SSGT. RHONDA RICHARDSON. He had a bad feeling about this.

    "Hello, Mr. …", the woman said, blushing and failing to hide a smile. Had he been interested in women, he'd have found her just on the indefinable line between "pretty" and "beautiful". As it was, she didn't really stand out that much to him … apart from … is she really? It has to be a common name, right?

    "Arcade Gannon, Ma'am. I need medical supplies to help set up my clinic."

    "Yes," she said. "I've heard of yours and Dr. Henry's plan. Can't believe the man's a real vet from when we were just reclaiming the mainland."

    So definitely an original Enclave family. Can it really- best cut short that line of thinking.

    "I'm flattered. But concerning the shipments."

    "It'll have to be delayed," she said with a sigh. "The big raider gangs are gathering to take us on, all incoming medical supplies have been reserved for the army for the time being. Should have known we'd stir up the nest. I guess that's what we have to expect. When my great-grandfather – he was the President of this country, you know – started to link up the bases and begin restoring order on the West Coast-"

    He took a deep breath. It really was the case. The woman – smiling, pleasant, something of a chatterbox, proud of her family history – was a direct descendant of the dictator, the genocidal maniac, the mass murderer blown up by Mingan, the Chosen One of Arroyo, on that oil rig. For a moment, he felt a pulse in his gut. He wanted to rant at her about the crimes of her family, run away into the wilds away from this authoritarian state and this revision of history and this, this, this …

    He couldn't do any of that. How long would he really last on his own in the wild? Wasn't this giving him the opportunity to help the wasteland's downtrodden like in Freeside? Wouldn't he foregoing the sanctuary he'd been offered from the NCR, its bounty hunters and Rangers? Wouldn't he be abandoning the only friends he had left? The calculus wasn't so simple in the end.

    "Thanks, Ms. Richardson," he found up the courage to stutter – not caring if the girl thought his sudden heavy breathing and flushness and tripping over his words and all the other symptoms of anxiety came from quite another place.

    "I presume you'll inform me when the situation changes?"

    ==*==

    REPORT ON THE FLORIDA SITUATION

    From: Lt. Liam Walker, Army Special Forces 2nd Platoon, "The Black Devils"

    To: General Robert G. Henshaw, Sky Marshal Mary Duplessis, President Augustus Autumn, Secretary of Foreign Affairs Loretta Andrews, Secretary of War Alexis Valentine

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: Removing weeds is easy enough, but growing a garden is hard work.

    This field report on the Cape Canaveral Spaceport and the wider situation in Florida, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean is classified TOP SECRET.

    We've done well in our mission down south here. The outpost at Cape Canaveral is well-established, and with the winter here even Special Agent Fawkes isn't minding the heat that much.

    The Canaveral situation is a mixed bag. While the control centre is fine and the launching pads are still salvageable, the main plasma fuel storage depot is completely gone and the area is now a radiological hazard zone. The refinery is untouched though, but it hasn't been maintained for two hundred years.

    The inventory of spacecraft is decent, though all of them will need arduous repair before we can get them to work. There are about ten spaceplanes, six shuttles, and one lunar transitcraft still in a halfway salvageable state. The rest will have to be scrapped for parts.

    There's also a crawler-transporter similar to the one stationed at Adams AFB. It should be easy enough to repair and reconfigure into a mobile base as we did with the one we first arrived at D.C. in. The spaceport's automatic defences are still functioning, and would have caused us a lot of trouble if we didn't still use the pre-War IFFs.

    The Floridian situation is much better. I've made friendly contact with two local settlements – Orlando and Epcot City. Orlando is a typical wasteland city state – poor and lawless, with a limited supply of food and fresh water, the works. Epcot City is a much bigger prize. The inhabitants (estimated at 15,000) are descendants of residents of Vault 82 – a control Vault built as the result of a corporate manoeuvre between Vault-Tec and the old Disney Corporation, beneath the Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow constructed in the 1970s – and as a result will make very good military recruits and skilled labour for our purposes. I could very well do with a diplomat or two to smooth out the peaceful reintegration procedure I recommend for the settlements.

    As for the south of Florida, it seems to be bad. Tampa has been taken over by pirates infesting the region, Miami is impoverished and sends regular tribute to the pirates, and the less said about the Florida Keys the better. The Everglades are apparently infested with mutated predatory plants and animals, including "man-eating mutant manatees" to use a local turn of phrase.

    The north of Florida? Apparently St. Augustine is a popular stopping point on a major caravan route that goes from the NCR to Boston. If we could nab one of their traders there the intelligence potential is immense. Besides that, just the typical Wasteland settlements and townships, with massive swathes of kudzu covering up what could be prime farmland.

    The Caribbean situation is where our Navy can really shine. The whole place is crawling with pirates based in a number of locations. The most major is New Tortuga on Hispaniola, with Port Royal in Jamaica a close second. I recommend sending our submarines once we have them finished and properly crewed to first hunt down the pirate ships, then blow their harbours to Hell with cruise missiles. Then we can move towards diplomatic or military integration (as circumstances require) of Cuba and Puerto Rico, former US territories we'd do well to get back in the fold (speaking of submarines, I got a signature that seemed to be a pre-War Chinese boomer heading southward past Florida on November 8th. Cause for concern?). I need not mention how important control of the Caribbean is to retaking the Panama and Nicaragua Canals, and hence to our long-term strategic goals on the West Coast (not to mention establishing a presence in the Gulf).

    God Bless America.

    -*-

    Dear Lucy

    I hate to be away from you, but my work at [REDACTED] will soon be done. Once regular Army troops start deploying at our base there I can go back and spend some time with you before we have to go into another warzone (hopefully a long while). How're Davis and James doing? Last letter from you they were scuffling all the time, hopefully you've knocked some sense into them. Twins shouldn't be squabbling like that. I wish I was able to be with you more, but orders are orders.

    Merry Christmas, with much love

    Liam Walker

    ==*==

    Goodneighbor hadn't changed much since the US Government had arrived, save for the constant roar of vertibird engines. They were heard all over Boston now, and Nate had no doubt raiders and super mutants were learning to fear that sound. With an assaultron and a hardened private eyeright behind him, he was sure he could take on the local toughs if he had to.

    The three headed to the Memory Den briskly, checking in to Amari. Hopefully she had a fitting body for Kleo to inhabit.

    "How's it going Amari?" the combat robot asked in that oddly seductive synthesised tone. "Found a female body formy consciousness to inhabit, baby?"

    "Yes," she said, "She's in the basement."



    They quickly went down to the basement and Nate took a glance at what was to be the Assaultron's new physical form. It was a woman in her twenties with sandy blonde hair – done up in a ponytail – wearing a leather jacket and jeans. Amari adjusted the wires and checked the equipment one final time before pressing her hand down on the lever.



    "Are you ready Kleo?" she asked. "Once I transfer your consciousness I will not be able to reverse it, no matter what I do."



    "I'm ready as ever, baby."



    "Okay, then."

    She pulled the lever and the assaultron body dropped lifelessly to the ground. The figure lying in the memory pod, however, woke up and breathed hard, opening her grey eyes.


    "You okay, Kleo?"

    "So many new feelings!" she said confusedly, putting her hand to her forehead. "Heat, cold, touch, smell – my old form had analogues, but nothing like this. The only thing I miss is the beam projector in my forehead. It was so useful for eliminating hostiles."

    "You'll manage," Nate said. "Curie had trouble walking the first few days. Wasn't adjusted to a humanoid body plan, you see."

    "Well then," Amari said. "Done here?" "Not exactly," Nate said, turning to the good Doctor. "I have something for you to look at, related to my son's disappearance. Nick's already filled you into the details about that, I guess?"

    "Yes, but- Dear God! Was that implant part of some man's brain?!"

    "Yes, it was. Belonged to a mercenary called Kellogg, the one who kidnapped my son. We think he might have known how to get into the Institute. But I'm not sure myself how that's gonna help."

    "It's similar to devices implanted into synths," she said, looking over it. "Intended to translate organic perceptions into permanent machine records based on quantum computing devices similar to those used in artificial intelligence. Hmm ... encrypted beyond these machines' abilities to decipher by themselves. But – all Institute technology is also cross-compatible. Mr. Valentine can host Kellogg's memories while you explore them inside the machine."

    "Any side effects?"

    "You might gain some minor tics at minimum. Perhaps Kellogg had a particular taste for a certain type of alcohol – that tendency of his might rub off on you. Alteration to your personality should be minor, though we've never done this before. We have no idea what the full risks could be."



    "I'll risk it," Nate said. "Anything to find my son."



    Amari readjusted the wires and gently guided Kleo out of the memory pod so Nate could enter. Then, he entered in and she activated the pod, securely strapping him in and connecting the neural interface cables before closing it. The screen lit up and began to show static, and Nate's vision was consumed by a blinding white light.



    ==*==

    REPORT ON VAULT 81

    From: Dr. Edward Cody

    To: Dr. Robert S. Whitley, Chief Scientific Adjunct to the Massachusetts Expedition

    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: The strongest man in the world is powerless if he has a weak will.

    The Vault 81 insertion was an unqualified success. While the President was making a speech to the assembled residents of the Vault, several Secret Service troopers and my good self entered the "unofficial" areas of the Vault to see if the experiment carried out there had achieved anything. To our surprise, it had actually worked out rather well. While all the mole rats used as test subjects had been killed (presumably by Vault 81 security) we managed to find a back-up drive for the Ms. Nanny designated CVRIE and various (decayed) samples of a chemical I have officially dubbed "Panacea" for its remarkable properties. While the robot was absent (no clue where it went – still, sending a military force across Boston after one missing robot is a fool's errand) we have samples of Panacea and various of the robot's research notes.

    What does this mean for us, Dr. Whitley? Very much. Panacea is a surefire cure for 99.9% of all bacterial and viral diseases. Our medical logistics will be vastly simplified once we have a number of factories producing the product. Also, Panacea will make a very appealing carrot for our diplomats to dangle in front of native leaders. We are talking about something that could shave off the projected time to reintegrate the entire East Coast by as much as a decade. I've already sent samples ahead to our science teams at the Adams AFB crawler-transporter. The only thing bad about this situation is that this is the only good thing the old social experiments gave us, if you don't count the pods we scavenged from Vault 112.

    God Bless America.

    ==*==

    It took an instant for the machine to link between Nate's own consciousness and those of Kellogg, crystallised into recordings by man-machine interface, but it felt like an eternity. He saw flashes of his own memories – of war on the bloody ice of Anchorage, the moment he kissed Betty (or was it Nora) – and then … it was that Canadian town, executing the insurgent, last survivor of his cell that had faked their surrenders to get close enough to his unit to detonate the explosives they had on them, but the commander of the cell hadn't had the nerve to go through, so he'd ordered (was ordering) the man killed on the spot simply out of anger and disgust for the good men under him that'd died, and then the press corps had turned up last minute and shot (were shooting) the whole affair as a feel-good moment for the people back home, and he'd just laughed (was laughing) at the absurdity of it all-

    He was launched out of the nightmare memory and into a dark void, standing on a glowing bridge of neural synapses. This was the machine's best effort to translate the broken, scrambled and decaying memories of the mercenary Kellogg into a form he could comprehend – still, it scared him. Exploring his own memories had been safe, if painful, but exploring another's was an altogether alien experience.

    "You will be experiencing these memories as Kellogg," Amari's hazy, static-tinged voice said from the world outside the virtual reality created by the pod. "As a result, you will experience some confusion."

    He walked forward, towards what looked like a child's bedroom floating in space, and then-

    -He was sitting on the bed, Ma (not my Mom, his) looking over him thoughtfully. The radio was giving some kind of news about an election or something, he couldn't hear the details. And then he turned over to (his) Mom and talked.

    "My schoolteacher, she said NCR was going to fix everything up, make it like before the big war," he said.

    "Connie," (his) Mom said. "Don't you believe what that damn fool radio tells you, or your schoolteacher either. She feeds you any more of that pie-in-the-sky nonsense; I'll stop sending you there. The only thing that's going to protect you in this world is this gun here."

    She took it out from underneath her blouse, showed it to him. A .44 Magnum, her (Kellogg's) weapon.

    "Go on," she went on. "Take it. You're old enough for it. You've gotta be the man of the house now, since your (his) pappa's such a deadbeat."

    He took it in his hand, heard (Kellogg's) father banging on the door and shouting, and then-

    The room emptied, and he was Nate again. The memory had run out, and another bridge glimmered before him, leading him onward.

    He took it and was in a living room. A young woman, (Kellogg's) wife stood before him, while (Kellogg's) baby was in a cot, sleeping peacefully. In the living room window, the Golden Gate Bridge floated in the dark void of space.

    "So, Connie," Sarah said. "I hope it's better here than the Hub."

    "It is, Sarah," (Kellogg) said. "We have a house here and I've already got a job. Things are going to be fine."

    "What's the job?"

    "Running security for the Shi. It's nothing serious, just a lot of standing around and looking tough. Before long I'll have enough money to start my own outfit. Things'll be great."

    "I hope so," Sarah said, then the memory ended again, and Nate went on.

    A street in San Francisco. Some kind of celebration was happening, people were cheering and whooping. A young child grabbed Kellogg's hand.

    "Isn't it great, Mister?" The child asked. "They blew up the Enclave! We won't have to worry about those bad guys no more!"

    Suddenly Kellogg heard a man's voice and turned to face him.

    "You won't be glad to hear this," he said. "But you messed with us too many times, Mr. Conrad Kellogg. As a result, my associates decided to pay a visit to your wife and child while you were "running security". I'm sure you'll be glad to hear that they died very. Fucking. Slowly. And you weren't there to help them one bit."

    Kellogg drew his pistol and fired a round straight into the man's head. As if in slow motion, he saw the bullet penetrate his head and send it flying in pieces like a smashed watermelon. Blood, brain, bits of bone, eyes falling to the ground like grapes – every nauseating detail. And then, he turned, ran, and-

    The street emptied. The revellers, the child, the crime boss – all gone. Just Nate in an empty San Francisco street, wondering what had happened to give the US Government such a bad rep back west. Deciding that such questions were unimportant, he carried on into the next intact memory.

    The first thing that hit him was the smell – a mix of gunpowder, alcohol and cigarette smoke as strong as it was unpleasant. A super mutant's head was mounted over the bar and the radio was playing some ugly late-20th century music that Nate recognised as an old genre called "metal". Frankly, even this brief snippet - heard secondhand at that - was distasteful enough

    "So, Kellogg, you up for the job?" Kellogg's client asked.

    "Depends how much you have to offer," Kellogg said.

    "Five hundred caps, and not those shitty Guarana ones either. Ya see, there's a lawman up from the Lone Star Republic meddling in my business, and I want ya to deal with him. Typical Austin city-slicker, ya know?"

    "I'm not from around here."

    "No biggie. All ya need to do is go ten miles west to Amarillo and make sure he gets a nice quick real-estate deal. And please – try and make it look like an accident. I don't want no Texas Rangers getting all over my business, ya see?"

    "I'll do it."

    Then the memory faded and Nate kept on, leaving the Texan bar behind and heading to what looked like a warehouse.

    Three synths stood in front of Kellogg, skeletal androids made of plastic and metal. Before him a woman sat at a desk.

    "Mr. Kellogg," she said. "You have caused a great deal of trouble for Institute operations in the Commonwealth. Your elimination from the equation is regret-"

    The mercenary moved with lightning speed, instincts flying into motion. He used one synth as a shield and took down the other two, before unloading his .44 into his impromptu shield and scattering its mechanical brain all over the floor.

    "You were saying?" he said as he levelled the gun at the Institute woman.

    "I think you might well be useful to us," she said, unintimidated and seemingly impressed.

    "How much you paying me?"

    "As much as you want."

    "What's the job?"

    "We think you might like a permanent
    position with us."

    "I'll take it."

    The memory ended and Nate went, right into a familiar scene. Dear God. This was ... he didn't want to relive it. The cryo room in Vault 111, with him and his wife in their pods. Nora was there, and Nate remembered – meeting her as a JAG, marrying her, Shaun's birth, and ... her murder. Now he was looking at it through the eyes of the murderer, as Kellogg struggled with her for the baby, took it from her and shot her straight in the chest.

    The scene ended and Nate rushed ahead to the final memory, knowing he was at the end.

    It was Kellogg's house in Diamond City. He was there with a boy – Nate's son Shaun, ten years old. Travis was on the radio, going over a news story with his old awkwardness. Then an Institute Courser appeared in a flash of light.

    "Kellogg, you have been reassigned to a new mission," the Courser said, his words soft but spoken in a stony monotone. "Dr. Brian Virgil, a defector from the Institute who has fled to the Glowing Sea. Find him and eliminate him as a threat to the Institute by any means necessary."

    "I will," Kellogg said. "And the boy?"

    "He is to go back to the Director until your mission has been accomplished. Then the Director's experiment will resume as before. That is all you need to know."

    The Courser grabbed the boy and held his hand roughly, before saying some co-ordinates. The two vanished in a flash of light and a pop of inrushing air. The memory ran out and the room turned empty. Nate heard Amari's voice again.

    "We're taking you out of the VR construct now," she said. "Prepare for extraction in one, two, three!"

    Nate's world dissolved to static, then he saw the basement where he'd been hooked up clear as day, his throat dry and his stomach empty.

    "How long was I in there?" he asked.

    "About three hours real time," Amari explained.

    "Did you find out anything about the Institute?" Nick asked.

    "They use some kind of teleportation to enter and leave their base," he said. "There's somebody who knows more – Brian Virgil, a scientist who defected from them. There's only one problem with getting to him."

    "What's that?"

    "He's in the Glowing Sea."
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter Twelve New
  • Navarro

    Well-known member
    Chapter 12


    Mad Jack entered Quincy with guns pointing at him from every side – assault rifles, laser and plasma guns, the weapons of assaultrons and sentry bots, even a couple nuclear catapults. The Gunners' name was not a misnomer. No one knew where they came from. Some said they crawled out of a Vault, product of some mad experiment to create the perfect warrior society. Others were sceptical and said they'd come from up
    Ronto way, soldiers of the Governor-General who'd deserted en masse and headed
    to New England to work as mercenaries. Some said it was both, or more. Whatever one thought about their origin, no-one dared cross them. Not after Quincy.



    They'd razed the town, wiping out almost all the Minutemen sent to protect it, and ruled over its charred corpse. From then on, they'd done every kind of unscrupulous mercenary work imaginable. Want a caravan escorted? The Gunners would do it. Want your neighbour's farm burnt down? The Gunners would do it. Want a settlement destroyed – the men killed, women and children enslaved? The Gunners would do it, and with a spring in their step at that.



    He looked at Clint, the Minuteman traitor who'd sold out the town to take rulership of it, and the two men stared at each other, a long contest of wills in which neither dared back off.



    Finally, the former Minuteman broke the ice.



    "What're you Raiders doing here in Quincy?" he asked, blunt and to the point. "We're honest mercs, doing honest business. Not like you."



    "It's the motherfuckers who showed up a month ago," Jack explained. "I want an alliance between the two of us, to send them out of here."



    "How many caps you got?"



    "This ain't about caps, Mister General. These fuckers are taking down raider groups one by one across the Commonwealth. You think they won't hit you eventually after deciding that you're raiders? They've already allied with the Minutemen – do you think those fuckers have forgotten the licking you gave them here, will forgive you for betraying them, that they won't come here for payback? And do you really imagine they won't call on their new buddies in fancy power armour to help them?"



    "Heh, you have a point. So what's your plan for kicking this lot out?"



    "Simple – we divide our forces and take down Lexington and the Minutemen at once. Then take out the big motherfucking boat anchored outside the harbour. Then, reap the reward."



    "Sounds like a plan. I'll lead the force I send against Fort Independence, Tessa the troops I send to Lexington, while Baker holds the fort here in Quincy. That good?"



    "Sounds good. I'll lead our combined force against Lexington myself, if you don't mind."



    "I'd be wary of that, Blackheart. History is full of men who led from the front and got killed 'cause of it."

    "Like Hell I'll let some pansies from the Capital Wasteland and Philly take down Bloody Joe! The ass end of the whole waste, and now they say they want to rule over us!"

    "That's the spirit."

    "Yeah, it sure is!"



    ==*==



    "So that confirms it," Whitley said. "The Institute uses teleportation to get around. I had my suspicions, but now it's confirmed."



    "You know anything about that kind of science?" Nate asked. "I never heard of anything like that pre-War."



    "It was top secret, developed from reverse-engineered ... foreign technology by a government think tank at the Big Mountain facility in California. CIT must have either rediscovered it independently or gained access to the requisite files somehow. We know it's possible, we know they did it, but the specifics of the process were never shared with the regular military or government."

    "So far as my knowledge goes – I'm no quantum physicist - teleportation is a controlled quantum tunnelling event. One ceases to be here and begins to be there. But there are limitations. Mass is the biggest. Power scales up exponentially beyond human mass, you can just about teleport a man in power armour and you can forget about anything heavier. Range is also an issue. And the last is that you need a carrier wave."

    "A carrier wave?"

    "Yes, an electromagnetic wavelength broadcast to stabilise the quantum entanglement between two regions of spacetime. What our method of blocking teleportation does is block the carrier wave in a region and prevent you from sending material objects to or from the defended location by making it impossible to get a lock. We sent a satellite one day before the nukes to broadcast a carrier wave over an entire hemisphere – contact with our orbital grid hasn't been fully re-established yet but we think it crashed in 2280, somewhere in the South-West."

    "Very bad timing."

    "It would've gone up a month earlier but there was a shipping error in vital parts. What a shame! If we'd had that up when we planned we could've sent soldiers straight into Cheng's bunker, captured him and the Party leadership, and then forced China into an unconditional surrender. "



    And Nora wouldn't have been murdered, Nate thought. I'd have never lost Shaun. And ... the world wouldn't have gone nowhere for two hundred years.

    "Are ... are you okay?"



    "I'm fine," Nate replied. "Just ... thinking about the past."



    A knock came loudly on the door and Nate opened it. A military secretary was standing at the entrance to Whitley's office – golden-blonde haired with grass-green eyes, she looked immaculate wearing a navy-blue military jacket over a white blouse, her skirt falling down to her knees. She herself couldn't help but blush and flash a smile on seeing him, before urgently stating what she had to say.

    "Mr. Washington," the girl said. "The President wishes to meet with you."

    "Is it urgent?"



    "No."

    "Can you please wait outside ten minutes, then?"



    The secretary adjusted her cap, and then closed the door. Nate realised suddenly, and with a touch of disappointment, that he hadn't even gotten to read her nametag.



    "Do you know anything about assaultrons?" he asked Whitley.


    "Well, I'm an expert in robotics. What did you want to ask?"



    "I have a blank Assaultron body I came by recently while ... looking for supplies. With no OS installed, I was hoping-"



    "You should know well that private ownership of military-grade robots isn't allowed by the Second Amendment! The Supreme Court ruled in-"



    "Is it possible for the General of the Minutemen to have an Assaultron assigned to him on permanent bodyguard duty?"

    "Yes, that can work."



    "Very well."



    The secretary knocked on the door again, and this time Nate let her lead him to one of the vertibird pads. She waved him off as he got in (still didn't get her name!) and a pilot flew him to USS Richardson.



    The view from above the Commonwealth was breathtaking, if it didn't offset the chill of the winter air as it flew against the wind to the great aircraft carrier. The President was standing on the flight deck awaiting him, wearing his field coat – Nate noted a colonel's rank insignia - and carrying a box ofmedals.



    "I've been waiting for you ten minutes longer than I should have," he said. "What delayed you?"



    "Saying my goodbyes to Dr. Whitley, Mr. President," Nate replied. "The man's brilliant at what he does."



    "Indeed. Though sometimes he needs a little pushing, just like Dr. Wilzig. I once had to threaten to scrap one of his favourite eyebots to get him to move forward on a major project. He's never really gotten over it."



    "I can imagine."



    "Anyway, these are your medals."



    There were several – the Purple Heart he'd earned from the shrapnel injury at Fairbanks, the Canada Annexation Medal with its maple-leaf design, the Medal of Honor he'd won at Anchorage, and another one – a gold cross similar to the Distinguished Service Cross with the date "2077" on the reverse side – with several others along.



    "What medal is that?" Nate asked.



    "Only the rarest military decoration in the entire Armed Forces," the President replied. "The World War Three Victory Cross. The only other man awarded with it is your friend Elliot in the Marines. The other medals are replacements for those you earned before whichyou lost when your home was destroyed."



    "I suppose we won the War in the end," Nate shrugged. "Even if the victory was more Pyrrhic than anything else."



    Just then a military aide rushed out onto the deck of the Richardson, panting furiously.



    "Mr. President!" he yelled. "The raiders are massing for an attack! This is it!"



    "You head back to Lexington with me," Autumn said. "I'll get data on the situation, then we'll show these bastardshow a real army fights!"



    Nate followed Autumn to Air Force One, surprised he was actually getting to fly on it as they rushed back to Lexington. Autumn quickly headed into the main command centre, but not before requisitioning Nate a US Army motorbike and telling him to gather up the Minutemen.



    ==*==



    "What's the sitrep?" President Autumn asked, looking over the map of Boston and environs digitally displayed on the command centre's table. Colonel Bradley, the military governor and officially the man in charge of the expedition, could hear the rough tone in his voice. It was a tone he hadn't heard the President use in years.



    "Our aerial scouts have discovered a large force of raiders and Gunners heading north towards Lexington," Bradley explained. "Along with a smaller force made up solely of Gunners heading towards our allies' main base. "



    "How long can we hold out?"



    "Indefinitely, but we'd be leaving the civvies out to dry if we did. We don't have enough space here to hold them, and it'd strain our food supplies."



    "Well then, we go out to meet them. Tanks, artillery, infantry, air support, the works. As for the Gunners attacking Fort Independence, relay my orders to Onassis at Boston Airport that she's to intercept them with her Marines."

    "We don't have enough artillery pieces in theatre," Bradley noted.

    "Our local allies can take up the slack," Autumn said.

    "Wasteland militiamen? Do you really-"

    "We'll make real US soldiers out of them, give it time. We've done it before and we'll do it again."

    Sirens blared as troops hurriedly got into power armour, tanks revved their engines, artillery guns turned southwards, and vertibirds prepared to fly.

    "Men of the US Army Third Infantry Division! First Armoured Division!" Autumn's voice rang out as he spoke to the men. He allowed himself a slight smile – one of the things he'd learned to enjoy about politics was giving speeches. Turned out he was naturally good at it. "US Air Force 5th Vertibird Wing! And last but most certainly not least US Marine Corps 1st Marine Division!"

    "Today a bunch of raiders are thinking that they could tangle with us, to threaten Lexington Air Force Base and our native allies in the Boston region. Today we teach them otherwise! Today we slaughter those bastards like the human hogs they are! Today we cut them down by the bushel! Today we wipe them off the face of planet Earth! Remember, we are fighting - as we always have - for the American people! We cannot let them down!"

    "We're not just going to shoot these human animals; we're going to crush them under the treads of our tanks till they're just a red smear on the ground; we're going to set them on fire with thermite; we're going to reduce them to green goo with plasma weapons; we're going to turn their world into one long symphony of fire, thunder and pain with everything in our arsenal until death comes as an undeserved mercy. "

    "And one last thing, in light of the recent news from the West Coast: Remember Navarro!"

    "REMEMBER NAVARRO!" the troops replied and began preparing to march out.

    Autumn smiled; most of these boys and girls had never heard of Navarro before a few weeks ago, and now they were ready to march out to avenge it. It was a mix of things, he knew – they believed in the cause, the one he'd tortured and killed and fought bloody battles for. Every atrocity, every killing and underhanded tactic and ruthless act, had been for America and her people – the lawful government had shown itself to be the ones who could save America, wake her up from her wasteland nightmare. If God hadn't raised him up to do this, to save the government from its own madness and save America from her torment, who else could He have chosen? And they loved him, loved their Commander-in-Chief. That was why there'd been no real contenders after he'd done away with Eden. His men would march into Hell itself if he ordered it. He felt more than a flicker of pride in that.

    ==*==



    Somerville Place was a well-equipped, if small, farming community which had recently turned back towards the Minutemen and started supporting them. As a result, three artillery pieces had been set up in the town to dissuade a raider attack. Now with the news about a force of raiders marching northward toward Lexington, the guns were being turned north-eastward, toward the old Coast Guard pier. They got the order to fire just at 11:00 AM, as US forces were still about a quarter of an hour away from first contact with the enemy.



    All the Minutemen Nate could rustle up on such short notice had already been positioned in a copse of trees by the road, in a prime space for an ambush. Though they weren't enough to beat the force on an even footing, they'd damage enemy morale and kill any leaders so as to force them to break all the sooner.



    They were just past the Coast Guard pier when the explosions started. The first one consumed the lead vehicle of the Road Warriors, taking down their leader, Butcher Mac, in an instant. The second took down three other vehicles, and the third killed thirteen raiders.



    The column of raiders pulled back and prepared for battle, seeking to get out of range of the enemy artillery.



    Nate watched from the treeline with about five hundred minutemen and Kleo. Much as he was interested in Piper (can't stop thinking about that army girl either, dammit!I), he couldn't deny that her new body was certainly easy on the eyes. But still, would Nora have-

    He killed that thought. The pain just hurt too much.

    "When do we get to open fire?" she impatiently asked, trying to crouch while carrying a Gatling laser. She'd immediately gone for the biggest gun in the Castle's armoury, and Nate had a feeling she was somewhat disappointed she wasn't strong enough to lift one of the mortars newly installed on the walls of the old fortress.



    "When I give the order and not a moment sooner," Nate said. "Try and aim for the major targets. Ones that look like they're leaders. The more confused the raiders are, the easier the military will take them out."



    "Okay," she said. "That I can handle. My tactical programming is currently running combat scenarios, and I can't sayour odds look good, baby."



    "Why do you call me that?"



    "It's a lot better than, "Owner Nate"isn't it? I thought you might like the personal touch."



    "Please try not to use it, at leastright now. Call me "Sir" or "General"."



    "As you wish, General."



    Somehow she managed to make that seem just as sultry as her previous term of choice.



    The moment Nate saw the first US Army tanks from his position he gave his first and final order of the battle.



    "Minutemen! Fire at will on the enemy!"



    A hurricane of firepower poured out from the woods into the raiders' flank.



    ==*==



    Mad Jack couldn't believe how it was going. These bastards didn't just have tanks, they had fucking artillery! Every few seconds, one of their fucking guns miles away would open fire, there'd be a whistling sound, and then an explosion would blast apart another group of raiders. Some were coming from the north, some from the south-west, but he didn't have a clue how many were from each direction, or
    even which was which.



    And the fucking tanks. Firing some kind of bright blue beam from their main turrets, they'd wreck the vehicles. And with their Gatling lasers they'd carve through the men like Thanksgiving turkey. And they crushed people under their fucking treads until they were
    smeared all over the ground like a thin red paste.



    Not to mention the fucking snipers they apparently had in the woods taking out all the leaders! It was becoming a total rout as groups bled away from the main force, hoping to escape and survive. Finally only a small desperate core was left around him, enemy troops
    in powered armour moving to wipe out the last dregs of organised resistance.



    "I surrender!" he cried. "I fucking surrender!"



    The power armoured giant before him said only one thing.



    "Unfortunately, we don't accept surrenders from your kind."



    Then a flurry of laser rounds struck him in the chest and he died like a dog in the bloody mud.



    ==*==



    Preston Garvey was not in a good position. Gunners were assaulting the Castle, about three hundred in total. He shivered - would this be like Quincy all over again? We only lost that one 'cause we were betrayed, he tried to remind himself. He had one hundred Minutemen and a sentry bot. At least it wasn't raining or snowing right now, even if it looked like it might at any moment. That would have been the perfect cherry on top of such a bad day.



    "They're approaching the gate, Colonel," one of his subordinates said breathlessly. "If only we had forewarning of an attack, we could have done something. Called in the patrols, laid a minefield, anything!"



    "How's the artillery doing?"



    "Mortar 1 is down, got hit by a missile. The others are doing fine; we're bombarding the Gunners as you ordered. But they've got three sentry bots and the turrets aren't doing much. If this goes on-"



    A loud siren interrupted him, followed by a hearty, chest-thumping battlecry.



    "OO-RAH!"



    Preston rushed out of the General's quarters and to the walls to see what exactly was happening, ducking his head behind a crenellation to avoid sniper fire.



    Troops in US military Power Armour were hitting the Gunners hard, vertibirds clearing them out from the nearby rooftops and firing on the sentry bots. That was Preston's cue to order a counter-offensive. Focusing their fire, the artillery managed to disable the sentry bots and suppress the enemy as they fought to the last man. At the battle's end, thirty-five Minutemen and seventeen US Marines were dead, with three vertibirds down.



    Preston looked at Clint's face, lying there on the shore, with no gladness but only an odd sense of satisfaction. The Quincy Massacre had been avenged, with its instigator dead, his treason finally punished.



    ==*==



    The battle was over. The raider army of three thousand had broken, with about five hundred dead and six hundred wounded. Not that the wounded stayed wounded for long, because all of them were just summarily shot by the US troops. The rest of course, broke and ran in all directions. Hunting them all down would take weeks, perhaps months.



    Amidst the smoking vehicles and bodies being burnt on the field, Nate felt ... ill at ease. This was like Canada all over again, like the insurgency years and that … that day. That one POW hadn't been the only one he'd seen shot after surrendering, but that was the moment that always stuck in his memory. He'd restrained the Minutemen from taking part in the killing, wanting them to keep their innocence even as the young men chafed at the bit to take revenge on the raiders, but he hadn't tried to stop the US troops from involving themselves in the massacre. Maybe I should have, he thought. But then – they didn't have a proper prison to hold so many hardened criminals here yet, or any way to launch a proper investigation as to their crimes. It was ... the only solution rightnow, much as he hated to admit it. He hoped there'd be a better one soon, but what could be done right now?

    Danse put it more simply talking after the battle was over.

    "They had it coming," was all he said, and Nate couldn't help but nod.

    ==*==



    "We licked 'em," Autumn said, the faces of Keller, Henshaw and Duplessis around him as he video-conferenced withb them from the Lexington command centre. "I was expecting a lot more casualties."



    "Eighty-two Army men, ten vertibird pilots, and twenty Marines are casualties enough," Henshaw said. "Not to mention that cracking Quincy is going to cost many more. Our local allies can take what seems to be the raiders' main base, near Plymouth, but the Gunners have fortified Quincy well enough to make a vertibird insertion too risky, and it's surrounded by swamps, making an armoured or powered assault untenable. We can besiege them, but it'll tie down too many troops"



    "Right now I'm thinking of Alexander and the Gordian knot. Centuries of people tried to unravel it with skill, but Alexander was the only one who ever succeeded. He just took his sword and cut it in two where generations before him had failed."



    "What're you talking about, Mr. President?"



    "I'm suggesting we carpet bomb the bastards."



    "Why not deploy some of the supply of Curling-13?" Duplessis suggested. "It'd preserve the local infra-"



    "With the wind patterns around here, it'd likely hit civilians or even our own troops as well. And Curling-13 is much more deadly than nuclear fallout. Fallout, you can take rad drugs if you're exposed and you'll be okay if you do it quickly enough – I'm proof of that. Curling-13? You breathe in or ingest one part per million and you're a dead man walking. There's a reason we keep it on ice in the most secure
    under-levels of Raven Rock, and it's not to keep it from going off. Not to mention it wouldn't touch any war robots they still have."

    "The President is correct," Kellersaid. "An incendiary air raid would tax our munitions supply, but it would deal with the Gunners with minimal losses to civilians. Rebuilding and resettling the town will be a simple matter after that."

    "Very well," Duplessis said. "I'll have the orders relayed to Captain Harrison at Adams AFB."



    ==*==



    Flight Captain Stuart LeMay, descendant of a famous 20th century general, checked his instruments, confirming that his B-95 Dragon strategic bomber was safely en route to the target. In years gone by long before his time, looking out from his cockpit he would have seen a whole galaxy of lights, the gleam of vehicles and buildings covering the ground in brilliant carpets of illumination linked by the gossamer strands of highways; nowadays, all a pilot could see from the air were the occasional gleams of campfires and the occasional glowing green rad-zone. One day, all that beauty would be restored. He may die well before it happened, but he knew it would happen. Some way or another, the lawful government would finally hold sway over all former US territory and it'd be as if the War had never happened. That was the Enclave's goal, and he'd help see it through.



    "ETA at target is five minutes," the Captain's voice blared over the comms. "Prepare to loose bombs on my mark."



    LeMay knew the armament he was carrying. Twenty incendiary bombs, each including 360 thermite bomblets, were stored in his plane. Multiplied by the number of planes in the squadron, that meant 300 bombs, and a total of 108,000 bomblets ready to fall on the enemy position. They'd be dumb, unguided munitions, but quantity would be enough to wipe out the bastards. Apparently they had enough missile launchers to make a vertibird drop untenable, but no real SAMs or lasers. That meant his plane, cruising at 30,000 feet, was perfectly safe from any retaliation.



    "Pilots, bombs away. Send the bastards to Hell."



    He pulled the lever and the bomb bay doors of his plane opened, releasing his cargo of incendiaries over Quincy. The firestorm started seconds later, a whirling inferno visible from Fort Independence as it destroyed everything in its wake. Robots shut down as they overheated, some even exploding like mini-nukes as their fusion plants melted down. Buildings were reduced to ashes, ravaged by the fires and burned to their foundations. And everybody in the town died. Whether by the fires or by asphyxiation as the oxygen was consumed by the towering inferno, they died to a man. The planes returned to Adams AFB, their mission completed. But it had been a costly one as such things went – though thankfully not in lives. With the current state of the armaments industry, it'd take five months to stockpile enough bombs to carry out a repeat, and that was assuming the factories they had didn't get repurposed to make some more vital piece of military equipment. LeMay was fine with that, he'd rather spend munitions than lives.

    ==*==



    THE AMERICAN WEEKLY

    US GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC
    INFORMATION

    10TH DECEMBER 2287

    $1.99



    BATTLE IN BOSTON



    Yesterday, military sources recently confirmed, a major engagement was fought between the savage raiders of the
    Greater Boston area and our brave boys in the US Armed Forces Massachusetts Expedition. The raiders, suspected to be cat's paws of the Californian rebels, tried to drive us out of the region but were defeated with no loss of civilian life. One hundred and twelve US soldiers gave their lives in the line of duty and will be interred next Sunday at Arlington National Cemetery among the thousands of others who gave their all for this great nation – our gallant President will personally deliver the eulogy with the President of the United American Church and the members of the Cabinet in attendance. Our allies in the region, having played an important part in eliminating them with a minimum of casualties, deserve no small accolade fort heir assistance and will be given one in due time.

    Civilians are reminded not to travel to Massachusetts unless on pressing US Government business or under military escort.
     
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