» Mon Sep 14, 2009 6:09 am
fifth
the tracer
"Follow me to Eden, child. The Garden awaits."
The tracer blinked herself from a daze and squinted up at a shriveled shape before her. The sun was burning a line around him and she had trouble distinguishing his features. He held out his hand in an earnest gesture. She turned away from the filth under his nails and the damp scent escaping his clothes. She tiredly shook her head and shooed him off as if a fly.
He acted astonished at her resistance, then moved on to land on the dozing workmen who paid him even less mind. A larger bearded man spit on the peddler's bare feet. The tattered man moved down the line raising his hand and offering salvation.
The tracer rubbed her eyes and made note not to loose herself again. Sympathizers were bad enough without the heat. The rail tunnel continued to hold its secrets and she sighed. In the station house, the rail guard leaned near an older man behind the counting booth. Neither spoke. She tightened her sleeves and adjusted her position.
The rail came within the hour. Thin streams of black began to curl up from out from the dark and a slow metallic groan echoed out from the depths like an iron giant being birthed from a furnace. The black began to billow as the groan became a deafening screech causing the tracer to cover her ears and grit her teeth. The wooden dock began to tremble as if the earth was shivering at the sound.
The rail emerged as a hulking rusted python. Atop the coils of the engine sat three brotherhood rail guards, guns out and armor blackened from the engine's furnaces. Behind them came segment after segment of riders, merchants and wares. Brahmin cars housed caravans cutting their travels short. Merchants and their guards began dimming their lanterns as they adjusted for the sun. Guns were slung and pack brahmin stood up.
On flatbed cars sat the riders. Mercs, hunters, slavers, even the occasional former pitt slave, freed by their ever-blessed Ashur. The tracer knew the brotherhood's stance on the riders. In exchange for the rail service, each had biometric registrations documenting their obligation to assist in the defense of the rail system. It was the only way the brotherhood had been able to bring down the number of attacks along the route up north. Though she felt they were about as trusted as a pack of hungry dogs.
Not many families traveled the line to Johnstown anymore. Settlers had gone out when the system first started, but their numbers slowed over the years. If anything, the promise of water was bringing them back. In droves. No doubt blending in with the mass migrations heading to the capital these days. The only wasters leaving now were left over ghouls and she figured they were safer for it.
The front end stopped near 80 meters from her. Under orders of the rail guards, the dozing workmen began unloading crates of ammo marked BOS. Gifts from the industrial north. Gifts from the ever-blessed. The workmen tottered the crates into steel door rooms and came back for more.
The tracer stepped back against the wall and watched the riders unload. They looked a plague of burnt men with their soot covered faces. They dusted their hair in plumes of black and coughed. All looking exactly alike in their filth. She began to wonder if she'd be able to distinguish one from the many, but her worry fell when they began taking their goggles off. From behind the unnatural black came pairs of eyes. Blue. Green. Brown. Grey. She scanned them all until she found, with a mixture of hesitance and anticipation, who she meant for.
He was near the back of the car unlocking his pack from the railing. Even under the soot, she could see the large vertical scars running down the back of his head and neck. He dusted his short hair, letting through small traces of white. She guessed he must be near 50 years now. The man disembarked with his pack and walked to a crowded water barrel and washed his head and face with a number of other men. He spat into it and started her way.
As he got closer she could see he was traveling with another man. Younger and from the Pitt by the looks of him. Both wore backpacks, rifles, and traveling armor. She followed them a ways. They clocked out at the rider registration and through the bags of meat and vegetables towards the town pathway.
With the arrival of new rail passengers, the path was alive. Vendors competed for attention shouting wares and crowding the way. Brotherhood caravans lumbered past with their crates. The men headed towards the nearest outdoor bar and began haggling with the barkeep. Eventually the scarred man let down his bag, locked it to his partner's and headed to the back wall to relieve himself. She waited until he was finished and stopped him in the alleyway.
"Jericho," she let out. The man turned and let out a chuckle.
"Well. Trace," he said.
"You're well."
"Well enough."
"And you're a rider now."
"Yeah. Near four years. Since day one. You?"
"Never been."
"And how'd you know about me? Been eating noodles or what?"
When he didn't get an answer he went on, " The [censored] you want, Trace. Ten years since I dealt with you. And last I saw, you sure as hell weren't Defender class," he nodded towards the markings escaping the glove on her right hand.
"You still for hire? I need a collection agent."
He hesitated, "Yeah? Need me to collect what?"
"3000 caps and 500 enclave cred. 500 now. 2500 and the enclave cred on my safe return to Fairfax."
"Where we going?"
"North."
"How far."
"Can't say."
"Rail?"
"No. Strictly above ground."
"I got a choice?"
"You'll find no greater fortune."
"Yeah, guess I don't, huh," he ran his hand over his chin and motioned towards the bar, "What about, Brian?"
"You trust him?"
"He's useful."
"You think we need him, it comes out of your pay. And he follows me. Not you." She gestured him to the bar, "as they say, the garden awaits."