Sorry i took so long getting this next chapter out, guys. I am a busy man, and this was a long 'un. Also, bonus points to whoever identifies the song.
Chapter 2: Viper's VenomI step outside, and the sun bores down on me like an angry wasp, its intense heat and brightness blinding my eyes momentarily. Trudging on, I stride into the Motel’s parking lot. The Motel was an old building, built in the pre-war era roughly two-hundred years ago. Like most pre-war motels, the rooms were built in a simple U shape, with the main office located somewhere on the end or middle of said U. I already picked around inside the office, and found little of value. The pack I had relieved from the dead regulator, however, rewarded me with two cans of food, and some sparse .357 and .556 ammunition, which I would sell when I got to the next town. If I got to the next town.
I left the parking lot, and walked onto a weathered concrete highway that a nearby sign told me was called Highway 95. I truly wasn’t familiar with all of the Mojave Wasteland, even though I have been surviving there for several years, but I knew that Highway 95 traveled north, through the desert, and into Boulder City, and then finally into New Vegas. That meant that I was in the southern area of the Mojave, near Cottonwood Cove, a pre-war vacation spot turned military base by Caesar’s Legion.
I considered heading south towards the cove, since I have friends in the Legion, but the Regulators were probably coming from south, so my best bet was to obviously head north. So north I went! On the distant horizon, I could just make out a tall, gleaming spire on the horizon- The Lucky Thirty-Eight Casino. The Lucky Thirty Eight was a massive structure, and one of the most exclusive casinos on the New Vegas Strip.
The sight of the spire gave me an idea. If I were to shelter in New Vegas, the Regulators probably wouldn’t be allowed to enter, and if they would be able to find a way in, they couldn’t make a move without being torn to pieces by security. I immediately quickened my pace, hope driving me forward. My mouth begins to move, quietly singing an old song my mother used to sing me.
Holding hands,
Skipping like a stone,
On our way,
To see what we have done.
The first to speak,
Is the first to lie.
The children cross,
Their hearts and hope to die. I traveled for about two hours when I began to feel the troublesome pangs on hunger in my stomach, and the parched dryness of thirst creeping into my throat. Unshouldering my backpack, I sit down on a nearby rock and drink a bit of my water before consuming my packaged meal quickly. I don’t throw the trash on the ground, for that would be a sure sign to the Regulators that I have been here.
After another sip of water, I am on my way once again. The thought of the Regulators breathing down my neck once again infiltrates my mind, and I get a bit nervous. The nervousness soon mutates to anxiety, and my psyche keeps whispering things such as “they could be right behind you, not even a mile away from your tail”, or “Maybe they’re just up ahead, right around this bend?”.
I am eventually able to force the thoughts out of my head by throwing up a wall- yes, a wall. I throw up walls when I am hurt, sad, or afraid. Walls that don’t allow emotion in or out. They help a lot when I’m in tight places. Sometimes, when I throw up these walls, they don’t come down for a while. I guess that’s not such a bad thing in this world, right?
The landscape begins to turn from sparsely urbanized badlands to a shallow, craggy canyon. I see a sign on the side of the road, its paint nearly chipped away from the abrasive sands of the Mojave. Regardless of its condition, I can read “Novac, ten miles”. If Novac was still an inhabited place, I could sell off my loot, rest, and resupply on water. The sign, even in its weathered condition, gave me hope. Enough hope to gently break down the wall I had set up, enough hope to quicken my pace.
Too bad the hope didn’t allow him to see that trap I had walked into. If anything, the hope caused me to walk into it, for I’m usually more perceptive. A blur of motion caught my eye- a person leaping out from behind a pile of rocks. It took my mind a moment to catch up, but when it did, I had the whole scene taken in.
To my right, there is a main- gruff dirty, haggard, barreling towards be with a knife. In my peripheries, I see another man to my left, holding a rifle. From here, I could see what kind it was, but I knew I needed to get to cover, while nullifying the threat from the man with the knife. I leapt towards the blade-wielding Raider, a maneuver that the gunman wouldn’t be expecting. The Raider slashed at me, releasing a savage giggle as he did so. I feinted from the attack ever so slightly, as to avoid the actual blade from striking me, but I remained close enough to wrap my hand around his wrist, and pull him off balance.
Now, I’m a big guy. Tall big, about six-foot-two, but I’m not stocky or buff. I’m thin as a pole, and can be described as wiry. With my agile build, it was quite simple to grab this malnourished bandit, pull him off balance, disarm him, and throw him onto the ground. So, I did just that. He cursed violently as his body impacted with the ground, and I heard the crack of a rifle as I slid behind the pile of rocks that the Raider once hid behind, safe from the gunman’s attacks.
The man with the knife cursed once more, and grunted something uncomprehendible to the gunman. My sword was already in my hands as the outlaw, rounded my hiding place, and was prepared to lunge forward when I was struck on the back of the head. Hard. I didn’t even realize what had happened until I was on the ground, my head screaming in agony. Then, darkness.
---
When I finally came to, I found my hands bound, and leaning up against a concrete wall. By vision was blurry, but after a moment of adjustment, I was able to survey my surroundings. I was still outdoors, though the sun was much lower in the sky, painting the atmosphere with brilliant hues of lavender and orange. I was in a makeshift camp, on the edge of the canyon I was once traveling in. The camp had four of those dirty, ragged Raiders, who I quickly realized were members of the Viper Gang, savage cannibalistic ruffians who enjoyed indulging in Jet, and murdering travelers. I was yet to be murdered, but I didn’t yet know if that was a good thing, or a bad thing.
I spotted my gear- duster, laser rifle, sword, and everything else, setting at a small pile of supplies, just as one of the gang members noticed I was awake. I immediately recognized him as the man with the knife. He grinned maliciously and rose from his position from around the fire, and swaggered over to me. The other gang members quietly laughed among themselves before turning back to their conversation.
“Howdy” hissed the man as his approached. His face was covered in a layer of grime, and his teeth were a nasty yellow color.
“Salutations” I said sarcastically.
“The [censored]’s your name?”
“Daren” I replied truthfully. Might as well tell him my real name, I doubt he has heard of me.
“Eh?” he grunted. “What ya’ doin’ with all that good stuff with ya, out here in the desert?”
“Oh, you know” I said. “Just traveling to the Strip, looking for a new start.”
The man growled and spat on me. If my hands were not bound, I would have broken his neck. But there’s always a time for vengeance. “You know anyting’ about the Legion?” he asked, an evil smile taking control of his features.
“Oh, I know them quite well” I reply, and I find myself smiling back at him. Looks like they plan on selling me as a slave, which could be a blessing. Do you remember how I said I have friends in the Legion? That’s a bit of an exaggeration. I was once a member of the Legion, and fought many battles against the NCR, but those days are behind me. Long story short, I revaluated myself, and deserted the Legion. I’m still in good standing with a few high ranking officers. Regulators wont attack the Legion just to kill me, and there’s a small chance I’ll be freed, due to my connections. There’s also a small chance I’ll be burned on a pile of tires.
He looks at me suspiciously, not understanding my claim, before he strikes me. His blow catches me across the face, spreading pain throughout my skull, my cranium bellowing in pain. I fall backwards into the dirt, unable to support myself. “That’s fer’ earlier” he hisses.
“Ay! Don’t damage him too much!” shouts a gang member over by the fire. From my position on the ground, I can see that he is a tall, strong man, outfitted it some sort of reinforced leather and scrap metal armor, and a greasy Mohawk adorns his skull. “Put him in with the others, and get the [censored] back over here.”
I identify the man as their leader as the gang member simply grumbles, lifting me up, and dragging me into the concrete structure, which I discover is an abandoned metro tunnel. The gang member opens up a door, and throws me into the darkness beyond. I smash into the ground as the door slams shut, yelping in pain as my battered body receives even more pain.
Light filters in through the latticed grate that seals the metro tunnel from the outside world, and my eyes slowly adjust to the abstract lighting. It took a while for me to get off the floor- my body just wanted me to lay there and let some sort of death, sleep, or unconsciousness to take me. Robbed of all of these, I slowly rose from the floor after what seemed like several hours, picking the chunks of shattered stone and pieces of sharp refuse from my flesh. I checked my body, which seemed to be fine despite the several small cuts and bruises, and my increasingly irritating head ache. People need to stop hitting me in the [censored] head.
I looked around the room, my vision swimming. The tunnel was not long, and truly couldn’t even be considered a tunnel anymore, for a pile of collapsed steel reinforcements and miscellaneous rubble barring any hope of escape. Memories slowly come back to me, and I recall the dirty gang leader mentioning “others”. I manage to choke out a weak “hello?”, my eyes searching the shadows for someone else.
At first, only silence. “Hello?” I ask once more, hoping to provoke a response from one of these others. Outside, I can just barely hear the Viper Gang laughing and shouting around their fire.
I sigh in exasperation and begin to rub my temples as a response echoes from the darkness. “Hi”.
I froze. “Who’s there?”
There was a shuffle of movement near a slab of fallen concrete, and small girl crawled into my field of view. She looked small and fragile, probably standing only at five foot four, and covered in a layer of dirt. Her shoulder length hair was tangled and messy, but I thought I saw a tint of red in its depths. She was young, probably in her early twenties, and gently toned with powerful muscles. “I’m here. Who are you?” she asked. Her voice was harsh, rough, angry, and afraid.
“I’m Daren” I said immediately, holding up my hands to show I meant no harm.
She stands up, and I notice she is holding a shard of sharpened metal in her hand. “Looks like they got you too.”
“Yea, they did.”
It was quiet once again, except for the jubilance from the Viper’s camp outside. She awkwardly pulled her eyes away from mine, and looked down at her feet, as if they were particularly interesting. “So” I said. “What’s your name?”
“Ryiah” she replied, not looking up from her feet.
“Well, pleased to meet you, I guess.”
She smirked, still staring at her feet. “Not the best circumstances though.”
“Aye” I agreed. I walked over to a nearby hunk of rubble, and sat down, the motion causing her to snap out of her trance, putting her on alert. It wasn’t a comfortable seat, but it worked.
Silence once again. I didn’t want to provoke the girl to attack me with her shard of metal, for she seemed to be in quite an unstable state of mind. Nor did I want to question her, because who the hell knows what those gang members have been doing to her? Outside, I watched the sun slowly sink down to the horizon from the holes inside the grate. It wasn’t until dusk’s zenith that she spoke up again.
“I used to watch the sun set every evening in Novac” she blurted out sadly.
I would have jumped at the sound of her voice, but I could tell that she had wanted to say something for quite a while. “Where is Novac?” I ask, trying my best to avoid a personal question.
“Just a bit north of here. I used to have a place in the motel there.”
Oh great, more motels. Pushing that thought aside, I looked out towards the setting sun, and saw that darkness was beginning to take the land. “How would you like to go back to Novac?”
She was silent for a moment. “I really wouldn’t, but it beats being stuck in here, or being sold into slavery…”
I could tell she was trying to keep her spirits up and inject humor into our conversation, but she couldn’t do it. I remained quiet for a moment, before creeping over towards the grate that separated us from the Viper’s camp. “What are you doing?!” she whispered harshly, before following, carrying a lot of noise in her wake. I was always known to be rather silent in my movements.
The gang members didn’t seem to hear the racket. One was already sleeping in a ragged bedroll, and one sitting by the fire drinking what looked like whiskey. The other two were off a little ways, acting as sentries. In the middle of it all, the pile of supplies gleamed in the firelight. My weapons were there, along with a crate of food, water, and explosives.
Explosives. I could blow the whole [censored] camp apart, or kill them all in their sleep, or even poison them. Or maybe I should just not do anything and wait until they went to remove us from our prison to make a move.
I turned back to Ryiah. “How would you like to get the hell out of here?” I whispered.
She looked stunned, unsure of what to say. I opened my mouth to say something else, but she began to speak. “I force open the lock on those doors with this” said Ryiah, indicating the shard of metal. “I would have done this earlier, but I was so afraid that…”
“You don’t need to be afraid anymore” I said, an angry fire creeping into my voice, my eyes locked onto the Viper’s small pile of supplies. “I have a plan.”