New Vegas: Sheason's Story

Chapter 67: Beer and Steak



Chapter 67: Beer and Steak

Good afternoon, Mojave Wasteland! It's me again, Mr. New Vegas, reminding you that you're nobody til somebody loves you, and that somebody is me. I love you. Word out of Camp Golf is that many NCR Rangers can expect re-deployment in the near future. One anonymous soldier said it was part of a new strategy. And now, ladies and gentlemen, this next song goes out from me to you. Have you ever been in love with a celebrity? Now, don't be shy... I feel it between us, too. Sometimes you just can't help being Mad About The Boy.

Getting back to Nellis was... pretty uneventful. Nobody shot at us, at any rate. For the first mile or so, things were abnormally quiet between the three of us. The Jeep trundled us along at a steady chug; the dull pounding of the diesel engine provided a heavy background noise to the uncomfortable silence.

"Hey, V?" I said, when the simultaneous noise and silence got too much to bear. "You alright?" Veronica didn't answer for a long while. She had her elbow propped on the edge of the door, and her chin was resting on the palm of her hand. She was watching the cracked and broken landscape roll past.

"I... I'll be... fine." She paused, then added: "Actually, no. No, I'm pretty far from alright."

"That makes sense," I heard Arcade say from behind me. "I mean... I can see how destroying ARCHIMEDES would be a big no-no as far as the Brotherhood was concerned."

"Uh..." Veronica quietly took her elbow away from the door, and she started leaning back in her seat, looking up at the sky. "Technically no. That's not the issue."

"What do you mean, technically no?" I asked. Veronica shrugged, and when she spoke up again, it was... she had the tone of voice of someone just parroting off something they had memorized by rote.

"One of the primary tenets of The Codex states that if a particularly valuable - or dangerous - piece of the Old World cannot be retrieved or properly defended, then it must be destroyed to prevent it from falling into the wrong hands," She sounded just so... emotionally drained. It was like she couldn't even put inflection in her words. "I don't think ARCHIMEDES was destroyed during the retreat because... well, frankly, I don't think Elijah told anyone what it was. Otherwise, Hardin or McNamara would have blown up the whole facility once the order to retreat had been given. Probably."

"Still..." Arcade paused, thinking on it. "I hate to say it, but that rule makes a lot of sense. I didn't know that about the Brotherhood." Veronica shifted in her seat, and gave Arcade a tired look.

"There's a lot you don't know about the Brotherhood, Arcade."

"Fair enough..." Arcade shifted uncomfortably in his seat.

"You said probably?" I asked, wondering if Arcade hadn't picked up on that, or intentionally let it go. Veronica shrugged again.

"It's been a very, very long time since any Chapter Elder has had to destroy something that dangerous. At least... as far as I know. Usually the Brotherhood thinks that, no matter what, anything can be reclaimed at some point in the future if it's lost."

"If it makes you feel any better, Veronica..." Arcade leaned forward in his seat, "...we did the right thing back there."

"I know we did," V started nodding.

"So, what's wrong?" I asked. I thought she was silent and down because we had to destroy ARCHIMEDES. She was silent for a long time.

"When I reintegrated with the... survivors, one of the first things I did was review the operational reports. I wanted to piece together what happened, and what went wrong for myself. And it... I always thought that we fought so hard, and so many people lost their lives, because Helios was sheltering something truly important. A game changer. This whole time, I thought that because... well, because of the one time I tried asking Elijah what ARCHIMEDES was. All he said was that activating it would be like the deployment of longbows at the Battle of Agincourt."

"The battle of what?" I asked. She was saying words, but they meant nothing.

"Look, nevermind!" Veronica sighed, and buried her head in one of her hands. "The point is... this wasn't what I thought it was at all! ARCHIMEDES was never a game changer - it was just a piece of glorified artillery! And not even reliable artillery at that!" Veronica sighed, and shook her head. "I saw some of the data before we wiped the files, and at its best, Poseidon Energy could only ever get it to work once every 24 hours."

"Still, it was an orbital superweapon. Seems like that's a small problem compared-" Veronica cut me off before I could finish.

"That wasn't the only problem. That mushroom cloud we saw in the recording? It may have looked impressive, but it only had a blast yield of about five tons of TNT. Not to mention that the rangefinder - the device needed to actually give that 'space laser' a target - only worked if you were outside, and if the skies were clear. It could be defeated by a cloudy day."

"Wait, I'm still confused," Arcade spoke up. "Why are you so upset about all of this?"

"Because ARCHIMEDES wasn't worth it!" Veronica let out a single heavy sigh. "According to the reports I read, the NCR troops sent to assault Helios outnumbered us 50 to 1. The initial defense of the plant took place over fourteen hours once the NCR started sending in troops. After Elijah disappeared in the chaos and confusion of the fighting, and McNamara took operational control, he made sure the plant was held for three more hours before finally signaling the retreat. Over seventeen hours, my friends and family died trying to defend Helios. And in the end, it was lost, and we were forced to escape. All of that... all that death and loss, and for what? A piece of the Old World that was flashy and impressive... but completely impractical and useless."

The dull thrum of the engine hung heavy in the air, like a lead blanket, for a few minutes.

"It's not your fault, Veronica," Arcade finally spoke up. "You couldn't have done anything. There's no way you could have known. In fact..." Arcade gave a tiny little cough, like he was clearing his throat. "I want to apologize for, er... what I said earlier. I'm sorry I accused you of holding out on us. That was a shitty thing for me to do, and I apologize."

"... Thanks," Veronica gave him a small nod, and she went back to trying to sink into her seat.

When the three of us rolled back into Nellis, my first thought was to head to the solar array - with any luck, ED-E would have brought back all the parts to Raul and everything was now fixed. But I was a bit distracted along the way by a very odd sight on the main runway.

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"Uh... what are they doing?" Arcade asked, taking the words out of my mouth.

"Don't look at me, I have no idea," Veronica peered around the windshield, looking as confused as I felt.

I'd stopped the car just short of the airstrip, and stretching from one end of the pavement to the other was a whole bunch of Boomers, all shoulder to shoulder, and walking from one end to the other in about three lines. Men, women, children, old people... it almost looked like everyone living here was walking along the runway. They were all advancing very slowly, staring down at the pavement as they marched from one end to the other. Occasionally, one of them would bend down to pick something up off the tarmac - and as they did so, one of the Mr. Gutsy robots hovering along the perimeter would zip through the air to the Boomer with a bag hooked around one of their metal claws. Whatever that Boomer had picked up would go in the bag, and then they'd both be on their way again.

It was all very orderly and precise, but I couldn't for the life of me figure out what they were all doing, or why.

"Maybe we should ask Raquel?" Veronica spoke up, sitting back in her seat and pointing to a spot on the edge of one of the advancing lines, near a group of Mr. Gutsys. I nodded, driving the Jeep to a spot just shy of the Boomer's Master-At-Arms.

"Hey, uh, Raquel?" I asked, She paused at the noise. "What's going on?" She glanced over her shoulder at me.

"Oh, it's you, Outsider. Good, it looks like you brought the Jeep back in one piece. We're just -" As she spoke, she turned to face me fully, and then stopped mid-sentence when she got a good look at the vehicle. "What is that?" She asked, pointing behind me.

"Huh? Oh! what, you've never seen a bighorner before?" I pointed a thumb in the direction of the giant dead animal strapped to the back of the Jeep.

"I have, but..." She stared at it, blinking her one good eye. "Why has it got no head?"

"I needed to punch something," Veronica answered with a shrug.

"Why do you have a bighorner carcass strapped to the back of my jeep?" Raquel asked, her eye never straying from the giant wooly slab of meat.

"Well, what else am I going to use when I borrow that barbeque from Gregory? There weren't any wild brahmin between Helios One and here, and I'm not all that fond of giant ant meat."

"That's too bad, it's not like there's a shortage of ant meat," Arcade chimed in. "I mean, what with that colony you cleared out yesterday."

"Skin the sucker," I continued, trying to ignore Arcade, "carve it up, season it, put in on the fire... that's some good eatin' right there." I finally turned the engine off; I had a feeling that we were going to be here for a while, and one of the most annoying sounds in the world is a diesel idling. "Alright, so I explained my oddness. Your turn."

"Huh?" Raquel seemed to mimic my expression from a few seconds ago. I pointed behind her at the line of Boomers slowly advancing along the airstrip.

"All this walking along in a line, picking up stuff. Why are you guys doing housework on a stretch of concrete tarmac outside?" I asked.

"Oh! That, yeah. It's the FOD walk." Raquel said it like it was the most obvious thing in the world.

"The what now?" I looked back and forth between Veronica and Arcade. They both seemed to shrug.

"FOD walk. Eff-Oh-Dee, FOD. It's a tradition we do every Wednesday."

"Is it Wednesday?" Veronica asked under her breath, and started to count her fingers. "I can't remember... what day is it?" Honestly, I couldn't give her too much guff. Sometimes I forget what day it is when I'm under undue stress... and shes been through a lot today.

"But, what for?" I asked. "What's a FOD walk?"

"No idea," Raquel said with a shrug.

"Come again?" Arcade asked from behind me before I got a chance to say anything.

"When the first of us arrived on the Nellis Homeland decades ago, we found dozens of intact US Army Operations Manuals scattered all over the base. They outlined various tasks and procedures the soldiers and airmen who were stationed here needed to do to keep the base up and running smoothly. None of the books explain the why, just the what and the how, but we'd like to keep the Homeland running as smoothly as we can. So, we perform as many of the tasks in the manuals as we can."

"Is that why you play Reveille in the morning and Retreat in the evening over the loudspeakers?" Veronica asked. Was that the name of the bugle call I'd heard last night then? Must have been, since Raquel nodded.

"Exactly. Plus, it helps us keep in sync, and alerts everyone to the start and end of the duty day. Anyway, every Wednesday, every one of us who isn't busy with more essential tasks gets together on the flightline to perform the FOD walk," She turned away from us and looked back at the line of Boomers. "I don't know what the original purpose may have been, but I like to think of it as a great team building exercise. Helps to reinforce the sense of community. Besides, it's something the little ones can do to make themselves useful," Raquel turned back and smiled - or, the half of her face not covered in burns smiled. "They like to help out."

At that moment, ED-E appeared from out of the sky, and started zipping around the Jeep. He let out a trio of beeps, and settled into a lazy orbit around us.

"Hey buddy!" I said, trying to watch as he zoomed through the air around us. "Did Rauel get all the spare parts installed?" The eyebot whistled and beeped twice in the affirmative. "Great, that's excellent news!"

"That reminds me," Raquel cleared her throat. "Mother Pearl and Loyal sent word earlier. They want to talk to you in the old Headquarters building. It's just south of the hospital, across the street from the burned-out chapel."

"Got it," I turned the Jeep's engine back on, and it thundered into life with a steady drum beat of thuds. "I'll head there now."

"I think you should drop the Jeep off at the motorpool first, Outsider." Raquel turned to try and catch up with the line of Boomers on the FOD walk. "I'd appreciate if it didn't smell like dead bighorner any longer than it has to."

The headquarters building was very... unassuming. It was a squat one-story building, with only mild deterioration and a few cracks around the edges. There wasn't even a name on it, like the hospital. All I saw when I got close was a flagpole with two flags: a tattered US flag, and a blue flag with a crudely stitched yellow "34" in the middle. There was a Boomer guarding the front door who directed me where Pearl could be found.

"Ah, glad you could make it, Courier!" Mother Pearl opened the door of one of the offices in the headquarters building, and pulled me inside. Loyal was there, sitting at the large table in the center of the room, pouring over maps and files. "Please, come in, have a seat. There are things we must discuss."

"Things?" I asked, looking around the room. This looked like an old conference room. I half expected this to be the commanders office. Pearl just smiled, and patted me on the shoulder as I sat at the big table.

"You have done well to earn the trust of my people, child," Pearl said, sitting across from me. "I believe the time has come for you to show your value in full. Tea?" She offered a plate of tea and... were those cookies?

"I'm good," I said, waving off the plate. "What did you have in mind?" Loyal and Pearl looked at each other.

"Pearl and I have been talking, Outsider..." Loyal cleared his throat, and started spreading out the papers he'd been going over on the table between us. "And we feel that it's time to tell you about the Lady in the Water." I nodded slowly at the time... I'd definitely heard that before.

"Yeah, I think Pete mentioned that before. The Lady in the Water... what is it, exactly?" I asked.

"It was a B-29. A long time ago - long before the war the killed just about everything that ever lived - a B-29 crashed in Lake Mead. Pretty damn near intact, from what we could tell..." Loyal pointed at an old printout that he slid across the table in my direction. It looked like... it was black and white, and... it looked like I was seeing the silhouette of a plane from above.

"Is this what I think it is?" I asked. Loyal nodded, and tapped on the picture of the bomber several times.

"This is a satellite picture I found, along with some files and a magazine. We know exactly where it landed, and it's been in the same spot since July 21st, 1948." I looked over the pictures and files Loyal was sliding my way, but something was bothering me about this.

"If it's been in the lake for 300 plus years, how do you know it hasn't dissolved to a fine mist?" Loyal shook his head.

"Lake Mead is a freshwater lake. There's shouldn't be any danger of salt corrosion - maybe a bit of algae, but other than that it should be fine."

"Maybe," I said with a shrug. "But even if it's preserved, it's not going to fly."

"The Lady isn't the only bomber we know about," Pearl said, biting a biscuit in half and taking a sip of her tea.

"There was another B-29, part of a museum exhibit that we found near here. Do you remember the heap of junk I was working on when I gave you the sonic device?" I nodded, thinking back to the tube of metal in the other hangar. "It couldn't fly, because most of the important electronics were taken out... but it had a lot of spare parts, and the fuselage was almost completely intact. See where I'm going with this?"

"I think so..." I said with a smirk. "You want me to take a trip to Lake Mead to try and raise the bomber, so you can get that bird in the air." Loyal nodded slowly, and started to look... a bit pensive, if I'm honest. More serious than usual.

"Since I was a young man, I've dreamed of raising that Lady from the lake and bringing her back to life. What do you say?"

"I think I'd like to know how you expect me to raise a giant metal plane from the bottom of the lake," I said, trying to think back to when Cass, Veronica and I had visited Pete at the museum. Hadn't Veronica said something about raising the bomber? What did she say... I couldn't remember.

"It's simple! All you'd have to do is attach some deployable ballast to the underside of the plane, and then float it on up! Here," Loyal reached into his jacket and placed a small black trigger on the desk, sliding it toward me. "That's a remote detonator. Once the ballast is attached, just hit the trigger on the detonator from the shore, and let buoyancy handle the rest!"

"So, you're going to get me the deployable ballast later then?" I asked, turning the detonator over in my hands. It was pretty nondescript, with a red trigger guard over the button. Loyal nodded happily. "Alright, I'm game. Any ideas on how to get to the bottom of the lake without drowning myself?"

"Might try holding your breath," Loyal chuckled and gave a shrug. I just kept staring at him. He cleared his throat, and adjusted the goggles sitting on his forehead. "Well, if that doesn't sound good enough, talk to Jack. I think he was working on a rebreather once. He might be able to help you with something."

"Well, it seems like you've got everything figured out..." I scratched my beard, looking over all the information. "But this plane is pretty far into the lake. How do you expect me to get there? Swim?"

"I think I can help with that," Pearl smiled, sipping her tea. "I talked to Raquel earlier, and she said since you returned the Jeep in one piece, she'd allow you to borrow one of our Deuce-And-A-Half trucks, loaded up with a RHIB."

"A what?"

"RHIB," Pearl said again. "A Rigid Hulled Inflatable Boat. It's something the military used during exercises before the war. We don't really get out much, so we don't have much need of a boat. But I think you might find it useful." Pearl smiled at me, taking a final sip of her tea.

"Gotta hand it to ya, Shea," Cass said, looking around the roof of the barracks. "When y'said y'were holdin' a party on th' roof, I didn't think y'were serious." She looked a lot better, and was no longer wearing a bandage on her head. She must have been feeling better too, because she was back to drinking like a fish. She took another slug from her whiskey bottle as she looked out at the crowd of people collected here.

"Well, you know me," I chuckled, flipping over one of the steaks. "I like to specialize in the ridiculous."

The roof of the barracks was much more... crowded than it was the other night. Gregory, Pearl, and Raquel must have really spread the word around, because there were dozens of Boomers up here. Arcade, Veronica, Boone, and Raul were around here. Somewhere. I couldn't see them through the mass of people and lit tiki torches. ED-E, on the other hand, was happily flitting above the crowd.

"You enjoying the grill?" I felt a thick hand slap me across the back, followed swiftly by a slightly portly black man grinning at me. He didn't have a flight jacket like most of the other Boomers around, and his vault jumpsuit was only zipped halfway up his chest.

"Gregory! Yeah, this is a great barbeque - most creative use for an oil drum I've ever seen. Where'd you get all this charcoal, anyway?" I asked, poking at one of the half dozen steaks I had over the fire.

"Forget about it. Didn't you say you had a special way of cooking these you wanted to show me?"

"Oh! Right!" I turned to Cass, still drinking her whiskey. "Cass, think I could borrow a shotgun shell?" She was halfway through a drink when she paused, eyeing me suspiciously.

"Why?"

"Trust me, I got something cool to show you," I held out my hand and gave her my best shit-eating grin. She didn't seem convinced... but grabbed a shell off her belt and handed me one anyway. "Thanks, Cass." I pulled the brass head off with my teeth, and tapped the case, sprinkling buckshot and gunpowder on one of the uncooked slabs of meat waiting to be put on the grill.

"Uh... y'sure this is safe?" Cass asked, backing up slowly. Gregory, on the other hand, just looked more interested.

"Don't worry, I saw this in a movie once," I slapped the steak on the grill, and BOOM! There was a flash, a bang, and a huge cloud of hot smoke blasted me in the face. I waved the smoke away as best I could. "Ah-heh-heh... Aw yeah! Flash grills it in seconds, and tenderizes the meat all in one!"

Things had suddenly become incredibly quiet. Well... less noisy than before. I looked around, and realized that Gregory was staring at me, with a stupidly wide grin on his dark face. About two dozen other Boomers were gathered around him as well, all staring at me with the same expression... and then they all broke into tumultuous applause and cheers.

"That was awesome!" I heard from somewhere in the crowd, along with a round of "Do that again!" and "Damn, that looks fun!"

"You are nuts, Shea," Cass just shook her head and laughed. "You are seriously outta yer fuckin' mind."

"Maybe," I shrugged, peppering the uncooked side of the steak with the rest of the gunpowder. There was another flash and a burst of smoke when I flipped the steak over, followed by more cheering. I waved off the smoke, and turned back to Cass, grinning as wide as I could. "Of course, if you guys want more like that, I'm gonna need more shotgun shells." Cass looked unimpressed and rolled her eyes.

"Alright, fine. But yer gonna owe me fer all that ammo yer wastin', Shea."

"Thanks babe," I winked at her. "You're the best."

Several hours later, all the meat was gone. As it turns out, the Boomers really liked the taste of the steaks I'd nuked. Gregory said he was going to try that next time he got his hands on some steaks. The best part was that all those shotgun shells Cass let me use certainly made the cooking of the steaks go a whole lot faster, so I had more time to enjoy the party.

Before anyone asks, no, I didn't 'nuke' the ribs. My one regret about the ribs is that I didn't have more time to slow cook them. They were still good, just not... fall-off-the-bone good.

Of course, just because I wasn't cooking any more meat didn't mean that the party was over. Far from it. Someone had found a keg from somewhere, and someone else had found an old rusty boom-box. Everyone seemed to be having a good time, and there was even some dancing going on in the center of the roof... or was it a fight? I couldn't tell from my spot on the edge of the roof.

"You're Sheason Fisher, right?" I heard a voice out of the darkness from somewhere to my right. I didn't answer him right away, because he caught me right in the middle of finishing off my beer. I set down the glass, and looked at the new arrival, and there were three things about him that immediately stood out to me: his hair was completely shaved except for a short mohawk, he was wearing a pair of sunglasses (despite the sun having set), and he was wearing a necklace visible through his partially zipped up Vault Jumpsuit. Except unlike the necklaces of spent rifle casings that Pearl and Loyal wore, his was made up of... sparkplugs?

"Uh... yeah. Yeah, I'm Sheason. Who are you?" I held out my hand, and he shook it vigorously, sitting down next to me.

"I'm Sebastian. Sebastian Hamilton. I gotta say, it's nice to finally meet you!" He smiled widely.

"Um... thanks?" I wasn't really sure what to say.

"Oh, don't mention it!" He just seemed to smile wider. "Because of you, I've had the most fun I've had in months!"

"What, the party?" I gestured to the group of Boomers out on the makeshift dance floor... at least, I was hoping it was a dance floor. "Glad you like it. I thought you guys would enjoy an excuse to cut loose."

"Oh no, not the party." Hamilton shook his head and kept smiling, "I mean, the party is great, don't get me wrong, but that's not what I'm talking about. Pearl wanted me to keep it a secret, but I -"

"Fisher," Boone's voice cut in. As per usual, he was wearing his beret and sunglasses... and he looked incredibly uncomfortable. "Do you think I can talk with you for a minute?"

"Sure man, sure," I got up, shaking hands with Hamilton again. "If Pearl wants you to keep it a secret, you should probably keep it a secret. I'll be sure to talk to you later, alright?" Hamilton nodded, and looked a bit confused as Boone and I walked off to a quiet part of the roof. "What's up, man?"

"Uh... it's..." Boone looked around, clearing his throat. "It's just... I'm not really sure what I should be doing here."

"What do you mean?" I asked, a bit confused. "It's a party, you should be having fun."

"That's what I mean," Boone looked incredibly awkward. Maybe even a bit nervous, but why? Boone nervous? That was just ridiculous. "I just... You can probably guess, but I'm not very good with... social... situations."

"So don't socialize," I said with a shrug. "Grab a brew, snag a deck chair, and loosen up a bit, away from the fight-slash-dance going on over there," I grabbed a beer bottle from a nearby ice chest, twisted the top open, and set it in his hands, slapping him on the shoulder. "The whole point of this is to have fun. You're thinking too hard about this, man."

"I... uh..." Boone finally took a swig of the beer after staring at it for a minute or two. "I guess I am. Thanks."

"Don't mention it, man. Stop thinking so much, and have some fun," Boone nodded, and wandered off. As he did, however, I suddenly became aware that the sounds from the party had changed considerably.

"What's that in the sky? Are those meteors?"

"Is that fire? Why is the sky on fire?"

"What is that? Are those shooting stars?"

I looked up, and saw the clear, cloudless mostly-night sky marred by several streaks of yellow and gold. The streaks twinkled and shimmered like stars, but looked much more like fire than the rest of the pure white dots in the sky, and the icy-blue sliver of moon. It seemed like every single one of the Boomers was looking skyward, transfixed by the spears of light streaking across the night sky. I couldn't count how many there were, because for every streak that disappeared, another streak would suddenly emerge and start to glow a fiery reddish-gold, or a big streak would break up into several smaller streaks.

I looked around, trying to find - aha! There she is.

"Hey V," I approached Veronica as carefully as I could. She was staring skyward, a rather somber expression on her face. I looked up when I joined her. "So, is that what I think it is?"

"ARCHIMEDES has entered the atmosphere," she said with a sigh. "Most satellites aren't designed to handle atmospheric re-entry," Veronica pointed at all the streaks in the sky. "That's why it's breaking up into so many pieces like that. The heat and friction are... it can't take it."

"We did the right thing today," I said, patting Veronica on the shoulder. She closed her eyes and nodded slowly. "It's breaking up harmlessly in the atmosphere, and it will never hurt anybody again."

"I know," she said quietly. I nodded, reached into my back pocket, and handed her the bottle I was saving for myself.

"Have a beer." I said, trying to get her to smile. "You're gonna be alright, V."

"I know," she took a sip of her beer... and smiled quietly to herself.


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