《Fallout: Vault X》Chapter 10 “Is this what you normally eat?” (Part 1 of 2)
Advertisement
Chapter 10 “Is this what you normally eat?”
John knocked on the door to shouts of come in, and entered the warm, cosy home. Inside the machine cut logs were lighter, lacquered to a smooth finish. The floor felt like concrete, covered with different coloured rugs and sections of clean carpet. The wood wall merged to a red brick fireplace, flames roaring. Cushioned leather furniture arranged around it. Behind them a table with four chairs and behind that, Louisa. Half dancing, half cooking, in a reclaimed open kitchen, as soft music and rich smells filled the air.
To his right by the door there were four pegs, holstered guns hung of them. The boy’s small automatic. Robco’s ten mil and what he assumed to be the woman’s gun. A high capacity nine millimetre, next to an empty peg. The negative space of what was missing speaking louder than the things around it. John took his belt from his shoulder, laying it down beneath the pistols. Water cans and a multi tool didn’t seem like fitting companions.
“Well don’t you look handsome, pull up a chair, it’s almost ready.” John sat at the smooth wooden table alone as the woman cooked. Wallace appeared through a door off the living room, showered clean, wearing clothes that actually fit. With brightly colours canvas shoes. John could see just how slight the boy was. He felt better about his decision to give him the spare vault-suit. Despite not being ready to give up his own.
“Hey John!” He plonked himself down next to his new friend, dropping something on the table. John first took to be a broken terminal keyboard, but turned out to be a freshly modified working one with a four pin socket. “I made this.” The boy said proudly, “I should be able to control the pip…your pipboy with it. Can I try, please?” John remembered Rosie doing the same thing years ago, only with a fully functional terminal in her quarters. Wallace reminded him of her so much.
“Sure.” John extended his arm and flipped the screen so a hungry mind can rifle through its code, just like the old days.
“Wallace, you let the man eat.” Robco said as he entered through the back from his workshop. His coat off, pistol hung up, manner soothed by the Private Reserve on his breath.
“I will, I will.” Came the boy’s response over the clatter of keys. The older man sat as his daughter, by a marriage cut short, laid out plates, metal cutlery, separate knives and forks. Not the plastic sporks of the Vault.
John shifted around the unfamiliar proceedings, or fidgeted to keep a itchy collar from his neck. As he did Wallace would have to reposition the pipboy. Slightly, awkwardly, apologetically, at first. John knew the look of suppressed annoyance well from Rosie’s green eyes, now he saw it here again. It made him laugh and shake so much that Wallace politely excused himself. He returned seconds later making a loud ripping sound as he peeled back silver tape from a large roll. “Gimme that.” His mother said as she took the tape away. Used to correcting the behaviour of a bright mind getting ahead of common sense. John looked around the cosy home for a solution. He and Rosie would lie next to each other in the single bed, often waking to find Rosie still working on their ‘esc’ code. Her ‘esc’ code. His ‘esc’ code.
“Those things on the shelf, try a few of them.” John pointed to a series of vertical shapes he half remembered but couldn’t find the name of.
Advertisement
“Books? You didn’t have no books in there neither?!” Wallace’s shocked tone drew saddened looks from the only two real adults in the room.
“Alright let’s eat.” Louisa served dinner served early to avoid further talk of what was and wasn’t in the Vault. She ladled out bright shapes with crisp, blackened edges. Fragrant, tender meat dripping with juice, cut thickly from the bone with ease. “Oh, this is pork, pig meat, those are tatos roasted in herbs, and this is corn, and carrot mash.” She spoke in an unsure tone. Not used to having to identify her cooking as she piled John’s plate high with wondrous food, real food. “Is this what you normally eat?” She asked still unsure, trying to make conversation with a stranger who looked overwhelmed. Wallace snorted with derision so hard the older man laughed, remembering the protein bar.
“This looks, and smells, wonderful, thank you.” John managed to get a few words out, his voice breaking under the sensory overload.
“Don’t fuss now woman, let the man eat.” Robco came to his aid with a mildly strong tone, and a very strong drink. “Junior, Junior…” The boy didn’t answer, already lost in green code.
“It’s fine, really, Rosie would use my pipboy like this all the time.” John wasn’t lying but he really wanted to taste the crisp skin on the back of the thick cut meat. He only needed one arm for that.
“There had to be a girl right, nobody does anything this stupid unless they’re in love.” The younger woman’s words and tone matched the older man’s from earlier. Warm, sympathetic, but deeply amused by the predictability of fools in love. They both began eating finally letting John feel like he could too. He stabbed at the meat with his free arm, tearing chunks away with the slightest twist. It practically melted in his mouth, even the slightest chew released waves of contrasting rich, sharp, flavours. He couldn’t remember what the rest of the piled high food on his plate was called. Each different colour brought new textures, tastes, and satisfying crunches. Just as the man who vividly recalled the taste of an apple, half an apple, from nearly a decade ago, thought it couldn’t get any better, viscous, hot, dark, liquid was poured over everything. Coating it all, changing, amplifying, the flavours further still. Gravy, the woman called it, he wouldn't forget that anytime soon.
Even with one hand almost literally tied behind his back, John still cleared his plate twice as fast as anyone else. Wallace had barely touched his. At his mother’s frequent insistence he would blindly bring a forkful of food to his mouth, then stop. Needing his hand to type or take notes, in pencil, on a big yellow pad. Writing anything down was forbidden in the Vault, everything had to be sent digitally so it could be monitored. Aside from scratching juvenile graffiti into metal walls John never wrote anything. It never occurred to him it might be needed. The boy disproving that vividly as he scratched and flipped pages back and forth quicker than John could switch screens.
“Your girl, Rosie, what’s she like?” Louisa asked now the newcomer had stopped shovelling of food into his face. John didn’t feel pressured to answer the woman’s soft question. She was making conversation, making him feel at ease by talking about something they could all understand. Besides he’d never had to describe her to anyone before.
“Smart. A lot like this one.” He looked at the boy to his side, typing rapidly on his homemade keyboard. “Except taller and prettier.” And angrier, he thought, leaving that out, they wouldn’t understand. Louisa smiled.
Advertisement
“Don’t you listen to him baby, you’re plenty pretty!” She joked, Wallace peered round the stacked books to glare at her for treating like the child he was in every way apart from his intellect. “Is she…” Louisa trailed off, unsure of how to phrase her question.
“Still in the Vault.” John looked down, away from the people around him, ashamed, but gathered himself, “For now.” He surprised himself with the resolute tone his words struck. Robco raised his tin cup in support, pleased to hear determination in the man’s voice. Thoughts of Rosie weakened the cracked mental dam further, but in the churn of questions his perspective had begun to shift.
“Pops says you’re out here looking for parts, a ventilation system right?” Louisa asked, trying to sound upbeat about his prospects.
“Yeah I’ve got specs here.” He went to retrieve the data from his pipboy but stopped, seeing the small face further lost in green code. “I’ll show you later.”
“This vent system, it’s not going to fail tomorrow or anything right?” John heard genuine concern in the woman’s voice. Here she sat, safe, warm, belly full of real food. And still the thought of people in danger bothered her. Despite the fact most of those people wouldn’t even entertain the idea of her existence.
“It will be at least a year. They made us ‘build for the future’. Digging into the caves, lining them with concrete and metal walls to make more space. Even though there’s empty rooms everywhere. When they bring level seven on to the main air circ it’s going to put too much strain on the system and it’s going to break.” It felt good to say out loud, spoken freely in clear voices. Not hushed whispers hidden away from spying ears. Which would jump at the chance to report a rule violation to get an hour on the Rec deck. “If it does I, we, are scared that they will just cut off the lower levels, and hundreds will die gasping for breath.” A hush fell over the table, even the radio seemed to stop. This table had heard its share of bad news over the years but nothing quite like this. “Fucking Overseer.” The words slipped from his mouth, finally said for someone other than Rosie.
“Overseer?!” At first John thought Louisa had reacted with annoyance to the cursing, but that wasn’t the word she repeated. “They make you work, they keep you trapped, they’re no better than slavers.” She pushed away the remains of her delicious food, too disgusted by the thought to eat.
“Worse.” The older man said between small sips of his whiskey, “At least slaves know they should be free.” He looked John in the eye, worried he may have said too much, may have pushed to John to reveal more, he had. The more John talked, hearing the words aloud, the more the waters of his mind churned. Slamming against the failing mental dam holding back question after question without answer. “Tell her what they taught you…if you want.” Robco sounded regretful, and not just for the minor verbal slip. John understood why, he’d seen the look on the older man’s face at the lying billboard that told John the truth. He saw the sympathy, but also pity for a man who’d been lied to all his life.
“They told us, all day, every day, at every opportunity, that we were the only people left alive. That because of greed and laziness, men had burned the surface in a Great War.” He could see the cartoon slideshow in his head as he spoke. “And that nothing could live outside so it was up to us. ‘Our noble duty to build for the future’. So that when we had enough space the work would stop and we’d all live in a huge underground city.” Shame and tears filled his eyes. “It was all a lie, and I believed it. We all believed it, for years. We worked twelve hour shifts breaking rocks every day, gladly, proudly, to build space we didn’t need for a future we wouldn’t see.” John wanted to stop. He wanted to hold back things that were clearly upsetting the good people that took him in, he couldn’t.
“A few years after we got pipboys, Rosie figured out they didn’t just look different. They could do things the standard model couldn’t, things they shouldn’t have been able to do. She hacked the loudspeaker network, level by level, using mapping pulses to scan the whole Vault.” For a moment John was fifteen again, staring at Rosie sitting at her stolen terminal, her face bathed in green light. “Like I said, she’s smart. When we compared them to the map we had installed, there were new sections on our map that they tried to hide behind false walls. One led to the door. We weren’t supposed to be anywhere near it, not even on that level. But one day we snuck up there. Rosie being Rosie she started hacking away and found a radio signal playing music. It sounded beautiful.” John could hear it now, even over the music playing in the warm home. “We knew, right there and then, it meant people were alive, that there had to be someone out there.” Fearing he may soon have to leave the warm glow of the fire and the even warmer glow of company, he pressed on, unable to keep from talking.
“We, I, decided we should leave…whatever was out there had to be better, even if it wasn’t, we’d be together. It took a long time, years, but Rosie didn’t give up, she wrote a hack to open the giant door. Once that was finished we started planning, like really planning. Begging, borrowing, stealing anything we could to help, which wasn’t easy. We used to sneak through the air vents. The more we did, the more we saw how bad it looked. Worn fans, blades missing. The main unit was even worse, spluttering, leaking coolant. And even in a stockroom so big you could barely see one end from the other, there were no spares. We tried everything to get them to listen. Rosie even generated fake work orders, but all they did was punish us….and Rosie, it…it made her angry. The plan was she would go. Sneak out, while I spoofed signals and faked logins, covering her tracks for as long as I could. We figured we could do it for three days, then I’d get caught and sent to organic recyc for three months.”
“She worked out that the radio signal had to be coming from something tall enough to see. With the mapping tech wired in to a big enough radio tower we could send a pulse for miles. That was Rosie’s theory anyway and that was good enough for me. Even if she didn’t find the parts we’d have the mapping data to show people. Prove that they were being lied to, change things for the better. So we got our hands on three days of rations, just enough to keep going for a day west, a day back, and a day just in case. If there was nothing out there, like they told us, she would come back no one would know. And we would have to take more direct action. If she wasn’t back in three days I would do what I could to slow things down. Break stuff, lose things, trigger false rad spikes. Whatever I could to give her more time, and she would be back in three months regardless.”
“About a month ago Rosie changed the plan. She wanted to tell everyone about the broken systems to stir things up. When security came down they’d start cracking skulls and taking people away, like always. It would turn into a riot and in the chaos she’d slip away. We didn’t have to do that. If we had proof we could at least get some people onside. Maybe nobody had to get hurt, but she couldn’t see it, so we got in a big fight.” John worried he’d painted Rosie in a bad light, he couldn’t read the expressions. Louisa had turned away to hide her tears, Robco’s expression hadn’t changed at all. “She’s a good person, she got lost somehow down there, too focused on getting out at any cost.” John took a deep breath of warm air, another few bites of real food and finished his sweet intoxicating drink. His good hosts, who took such pride in the things they built, would not like the next part of his sad tale.
“To get the hack to work Rosie built a virtual door on one of our pipboys and hacked it with the other. Over and over again, for years, so I had the code…her code…and I used it to leave instead of her.” No one spoke. John wiped the tears from his face with his free arm, shifted his weight, ready to leave. And return to solitude of the fallen night he felt he deserved. When without turning her head Louisa took his hand and squeezed it tightly to let him know that he wasn’t alone. Pressure eased in John’s mind, the spilling of secrets over the dinner table allowed him clarity. “All that matters now is her. I’m going to find those parts, I’ll fit them myself if I have to, then she will be free. She’ll hate me, but she’ll be free, and neither of us will have to think about that fucking place ever again.”
“We’re gonna help right Momma? We’re going to help John on his quest aren’t we?” The boy had been listening for a while, John started to apologise for burdening them with his life story.
“I didn’t mean t—”
“You’re damn right we are baby.” Louisa let go of John’s hand and took her son's. “You’re damn right we are.”
Advertisement
- In Serial106 Chapters
Dungeon Core Chat Room.
This is a slower-paced "experiment and dungeon building" web novel that tries to use the idea of peer-to-peer communication with Dungeon Cores instead of Dungeon to slave monster communication to break up the detailed dungeon building. Rank 1 description: (minimum met for system initialization...detailed description as follows) Each race was given a system by the gods to make up for their shortcomings and balance their place in this world. Humans: Abysmally bad at understanding and using magic unable to use more than the lowest of magic were given the "Skill System" magic in the form of premade skills with use, study, and mastery tied to experience. Elves: Intuitively understand magic and have long lives leading to vast knowledge and skill in their chosen fields. However, as a species, they have nearly zero sex drive and less than low fertility, so they were gifted the "World Tree System" with experience gained through the care of natural areas – gifting the chance of children to increase their numbers without dirty copulation. All “natural” or “wild” monsters are given an "Evolution system" designed around killing and consuming as many creatures as possible, slowly increasing strength and, at thresholds, allowing mutations to alter them multiple times. Dungeon cores are different. Unlike humans, they can see, manipulate and live off mana. Unlike Elves, they naturally crystallize after extended periods of time in high mana level areas. However, they cannot easily move or communicate and typically go insane without companionship. As a species other than the odd eccentric they are unimaginative. Brute forcing solutions without the drive to truly innovate. Thus they have been gifted with the "Dungeon Connection System" a magical version of the internet accessible by their peers that allows them to barter and sell: bait, traps, monsters, and knowledge, as well as entertain each other with “adventure streams” using exciting recorded battles and humorous reels of arrogant chumps biting off more than they can chew to often fatal effects. This is the casual story of a dungeon unluckily spawned far from potential adventurers forced to innovate beyond its peers to find its place in this world. Rank 2 Description: Justification. I've been on a dungeon core kick for months and while I love the genre – it's sparse with entries. Often the forced conflict gets repetitive and frantic solving of threats "power levels" the protagonist to god levels to progress the plot – taking away the nice steady progression fantasy I'm looking for. (Progression in this story is linked to how strong of monsters/traps/whatever he can create not his "level"...this is demonstrated by some of his newer monsters beating his older monsters not with discrete "this monster has 10 attack this one has 40") Additionally, the focus on 3rd parties with their drama takes away from the reason I’m reading dungeon core novels in the first place – I'm looking for magical crafting, experimentation and kingdom building – not defence from higher and higher levelled enemies looking to steal/destroy/control the MC. This novel is kind of just me writing the story I wish I could read. I like thinking about the experimentation that can be done in fantasy settings using 'mana' as an excuse to make up rules and try to keep them internally consistent. IE once I define how a rule works, I'm going to commit to keeping it – no breaking hard truths I've given when it's convenient, even if it backs me into a corner. Hopefully, that should make the story interesting to read even if it's SOL and less action-oriented. There will be problems to solve and a clear progression in strength (of created monsters and knowledge) however due to not wanting to force conflict for the sake of conflict the general theme will be closer to slice of life with few action sequences and no overarching goal so please keep that in mind when picking this up as the genre is not for everyone. Finally, I have a clear goal of what I want from this story (not an endless romp but a series of arcs and then a conclusion that's a couple of dozen medium-sized chapters long) I want to commit to finishing it or at least bringing it to a point of rest. I hate all the engaging stories that stop with a “hiatus” indefinitely so in the event I lose motivation I'll work to end this even if the ending becomes rushed/unsatisfying just to give a sense of closure. I’m planning on including several polls in terms of direction and taking feedback heavily into account if I get enough readers (but may choose to ignore it if it deviates too far from the direction I want to take this as in feedback like: “The MC needs a cartoonishly evil arch-enemy that wants to enslave him and force the mc to pump out magic items” or “the MC needs to make a body and learn teleportation then live with humans” will get shot down without consideration.)
8 270 - In Serial9 Chapters
I Was Sent to Another World to Protect an Unfriendly Princess
I was always held back, despite how talented I was, no one ever recognised me. On my way home, a tragic accident occurred. After, I was reincarnated in another world, except the goddess was beyond useless.This was my second chance. I was brought to the other world to protect Lucia, a mean, sharp-tongued princess, who was meant to be the next ruler of the land. She didn't accept anyone else, why did she accept me? Why is it that I have forgotten all about my past? Have I lost something truly important to me?
8 491 - In Serial46 Chapters
Orion
Superpowers based on Constellations. (Second Arc / Sequel COMING SOON!) Michael Stone’s life changes forever when he touches a glowing meteorite that gives him extraordinary powers derived from the constellation Orion. But he didn’t realize how hard it was to be a teenage superhero. Not as simple as the comic books make it out to be. Especially when his life-long rival and bully touches a meteorite as well, challenging him with the powers of Draco.
8 155 - In Serial55 Chapters
Hyde & Seek ||Action/Romance Novel||
Max Hyde always knew her past would catch up with her, she just didn't expect it to happen like this.Not with doomsday mere days away, not with her old boss, Queen, at the centre of it and certainly not with her ex getting her out of prison to help stop it. But alas, things don't always go as planned.But as she leaves prison to work for her MI6 agent ex, Esmond, she realises the true nature of the situation. He apparently doesn't know much, only that Queen plans to use New Year's Eve to kick off the end of the world. Essentially, they have ten days to work out what her old boss is planning, what it means and how to stop it.No pressure.||-||||Warnings: language, drug use, sexual content||
8 232 - In Serial39 Chapters
Mistake // Jonah Marais
in which Jonah Maraisaccidentally texts thewrong number and it turns into a spiralof cringe chapters𝐬𝐭𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐞𝐝 : 𝟎𝟐/𝟐𝟑/𝟏𝟗𝐞𝐧𝐝𝐞𝐝 : 𝟎𝟓/𝟎𝟗/𝟏𝟗
8 230 - In Serial11 Chapters
Letting Go | Masahiro Yanagida
"𝐼 𝑤𝑎𝑠 𝑠𝑜 𝑠𝑐𝑎𝑟𝑒𝑑 𝑜𝑓 ℎ𝑒𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑡𝑠 𝑏𝑒𝑓𝑜𝑟𝑒 𝐼 𝑓𝑒𝑙𝑙 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑦𝑜𝑢.""𝐋𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐆𝐨" is another fanfic story for the former captain of Ryujin Nippon Yanagida Masahairo. This story will show the point of view of Masa in the book 𝐅𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐭𝐞𝐞𝐧.𝐡𝐢𝐧𝐚 𝐡𝐢𝐫𝐚
8 184

