Let's Play Fallout New Vegas: Journal of a Mojave Wastelander

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DustyDrB

Made of ticky tacky
Jan 19, 2010
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tlozoot said:
If anyone could tell me how I can copy/paste in text from MS Word without having to spend 15 minutes combing through it again and replacing all the apostrophes, dashes, ellipses and speech marks, then it'd be much appreciated. :p
I'd like to know the answer to that myself. That was a pain in the ass for the few User Reviews I've done here.

Anyway, I like your writing. Sometimes you read a Let's Play and you cringe your way through it. This isn't one of those times. Keep it up, I'll stick around.
 

tlozoot

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Feb 8, 2010
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Part 3 - Taking stock

After having wandered aimlessly out of Mitchell's house I had met up with a few people around Goodsprings to try and find out any information I could about my would-be killers. First I'd sheepishly walked into the Prospectors Saloon just down the road - a typical post-war piss-up joint with gaudy lights strung around outside like a fashionable noose and a sign that was very obviously stolen from three separate place. Thinking the saloon a good place to begin my inquiries, I checked it out. Inside it was a surprisingly attractive joint, with the red-velvet pool table and juke box almost offsetting the dusty, sun-worn feel of the place. I probably would have pulled up a stool and drank my way into a more interesting existence If I'd had the caps for it. As it was I was broke and needed some kind of work.

Inside the saloon I' met a girl named Sunny Smiles who'd heard of me from Doc Mitchell. Most everyone in the village had heard of me by the sounds of things. I got the impression that this was what you might call a close community but then again every settlement in the wastes had to watch one another's backs if they weren't going to make a swift transition from cheery neighbourhood to charred, corpse-ridden crater. The girl was nice enough to give me a rifle to help me back on my feet and she offered me a few dozen caps to help her clear out some geckos from the local watering spots.

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Later that evening I sat with the sun just disappearing behind the curve of the horizon, sipping a Sunset Sarsaparilla on the porch of the Prospectors Inn. It had been a warm day, but then again it was always warm in the Mojave. Hot days with the landscape blurring in front of you and nights so cold as to cloud your breath were a familiar meteorological see-saw for every wasteland wanderer. Still, I enjoyed the warm glow of the sun on my bare arms. It was a pleasing balance. Less pleasing was the woman sitting opposite from me. Sunny had pointed me to Trudy as someone who might know more about my attackers and someone who could give me a decent grounding on the area surrounding Goodsprings. Expecting a curt run-down of the situation, I got a full on interview with the most overly-familiar woman in all the wastes.

"So where do you hail from?" she asked, breaking me out of my musings. I had been staring into the horizon, locked up in my own thoughts. It hadn't occurred to me that a silence had dropped onto the conversation since my last short answer to her. I turned my head to her; a slender woman whose thick southern accent seemed at odds with her smart dress - a long flowery skirt and smart cardigan.

"Nearby." I answered curtly. I really couldn't be bothered to go into much detail. "I'm from the Mojave. Was working for the Express down in Primm until recently. You know how it is" Trudy nodded with what she probably thought was a sage expression.
"I've lived in the Mohave all my life same as you. Born to a group of travellers just moving around, never staying nowhere too long. Eventually got bored and a few of us decided to set up shop right here in this spot. I became the de-facto mayor o' course" she said with a barely contained smile. "I tend to take charge of situations - tend to be the leader." I nodded and took a silent swig of my Sarsaparilla. I wondered vaguely when she was going to get the hint, although it didn't bother me too much. The sun was pleasant, the Sarsaparilla was sort-of chilled and things were definitely going better for me than they were a day ago. Trudy's shameless nattering was simply like a fly buzzing around my face. "Another drink Deckard? On the house of course." she said, and then handed me another dusty bottle without waiting my reply.

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"So these guys that shot me." I asked non-chalantly. "You know where they're headed?"
"Sure do. They came on in here that evening. Tried to get them some drinks on the house." Trudy pulled a smug expression. "Didn't get any though."
"Ok." I said patiently. "Any idea in what direction they were heading?"
"Sure do. I think there were speakin' about going back up to the North. Dangerous up around there though as far as I know. I suppose you'll be blazing after them and setting them straight." I retained my poker face. How come everyone in this rat-assed little hole thought I actually wanted to hunt down those bastards? Revenge? Revenge got hot-headed people killed and I preferred to keep it cool.
"Oh definitely." I said. "Can't wait to get those low-life's in my sight and...Bang!" I said, mimicking a gun shot with my hand. Bullshit. I thought to myself. I'm fucking off in the complete opposite direction. I finished off the dregs of my Sarsaparilla and made my excuses to head off to the room I was renting for the evening from Trudy, leaving her in mid-speech about something I couldn't quite remember or bring myself to care about.

Now that'd lost the platinum chip the Mojave Express probably weren't going to be sympathetic to a courier down on his luck, but I know I had to make my way down to Primm to talk things over with them. The folks down at the Express made it pretty clear to you when you started out how they felt about couriers who didn't deliver the goods and then didn't get in touch. It was probably only going to be a few more days until I had a fat bounty sitting above my recently bullet freed head and I knew that the folks the Express got in to do their 'reclaiment work', as they put it, were dab hands at their job. No...lying low probably wasn't the safest thing. Far better to be up front with the Express and then try and work towards compensating them for whatever the damned chip had cost. It wasn't the easiest or particularly attractive course of action, but having a course on which to act was a damn site better than lying at the bottom of some dust-bowl with your blood soaking the wilderness dirt.
 

Chechosaurus

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Jul 20, 2008
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Very much enjoying this so far. Making me crave some New Vegas fun times which is going to cost me a fortune in DLC. Keep 'em coming.
 

tlozoot

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Feb 8, 2010
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Part 4 - The Blue Star Caps

I once had a comic when I was a kid. It was about some pretty regular guy who had something happen to him that should have killed him, but then instead it gave him superpowers. I had found myself vaguely wondering if this might have been the case with me but so far attempts at shooting eye-lasers or telekinesis had just made me feel sickeningly dizzy. It was morning in Goodsprings now and I had said my obligatory goodbye to Trudy, Mitchell and Sunny and was just heading by the local general store before I hit the trail again. I shielded my eyes with a hand as I approached. But what if you did have superpowers I thought to myself, there being nothing much better to do. Wouldn't it be great to just...fly off out of here? There's got to be some place better somewhere. That was just idle thinking though. No place in the country survived the bombs entirely.

The Goodsprings general store was like most around the wastes - just some beat-up shack where a nailed down drifter sold battered guns, dirty ammo and other trinkets from around the wilds. Most had a background in wandering the lands, rooting around abandoned buildings, combing over the same forsaken holes that others had gone over long before. Every now and then you got lucky and find a shiny cap that the past scavenger had overlooked. If you came across a working rifle then you'd hit the jackpot. There was somebody else in front of me at the general store, so I had to busy myself with browsing the marked, wooden wall while the storekeeper was done with the other guy.

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"You sure you wouldn't be willing to sell my friend?" I overhead the two speaking and made no great effort to not listen in. The store was no more than a mid-sized room, so there seemed little point. "I can offer you two hundred caps. Surely that's worth it."

"I'm afraid you can't budge me sir, I'm not selling for no less than four hundred a piece. I know what they are." The customer looked agitated and I could see his eyes narrow.

"Are you sure? You do know they say those things are cursed. Could be I'd be doing you a favour taking them off your hands." At this the shopkeeper riled.

"Are you threatening me you dirt-eating little weasel?" He roared, snapping out a 9mm pistol and pointing it with a steady hand. "Get the fuck out of here before I blow your brains all this gentleman. Not that it'd be much o' an inconvenience seeing as you don't have any brains worth mentioning." I saw that the customer had his hand fondling what I could only assume was his own gun hidden inside his coat.

"Well then...don't say I didn't tell you about that bad luck then" the guy said with a leer as he turned away and stomped out of the store. My eyes followed him out the shop and I took my own hand away from the handle of my pistol. Welcome to the wasteland! I said in my head. Bastion of crazies, thugs and shopowners who don't want to splatter brains over their customers. I guess that's probably bad for business.

"Sorry about that. Deckard aint it?" I turned to face the shopkeeper - a round faced guy who looked about my age.

"Yeah, that's right. Just here to grab some supplies before heading out." The man relaxed and set his pistol down on a shop counter that passed for polished by wasteland standards. "Err...what was that guys problem?" I asked jabbing a thumb in the direction of the door. The store-keeper took a seat on his bench behind the counter and lit a cigarette. He took a drag and stared at me for a few seconds before seeming to come to a decision.

"You ever heard of the star bottle caps?" He asked, his voice loaded with caution. Ah, that makes sense I thought. I shook my head at any rate. "A stupid wasteland myth I reckon - y'know how people like a story to go chasing when they've got nothing else...well...this is just another one of them stories. Gives people something to do - something to chase. Personally I don't believe it but there are plenty of people who do and..." The shopkeeper grinned "A fool and their money are soon parted."

"Tell me about these caps then, you've got me all intrigued Mr..." I left the sentence hanging in the air.

"Names Chet" the keeper said giving me a nod.

"Mr. Chet then. I've heard all kinds of things around the wastes but nothing about no star bottle caps. They worth much?"

"To the right man" said Chet, nodding. "People think they're treasure, or put more accurately they think they give you access to some treasure."

"They used in some kind of treasure vending machine then?" I asked. Chet laughed, but I could see that he was still being entirely serious.

"Something like that...something like that" he said nodding to the rhythm of the radio. "People think there's some guy named Festus out their somewhere guarding this horde of pre-war trinkets. Word is he'll only give you access if you got enough of these babies." Chet had been rummaging around in his inner pockets and held out a slim disc of metal in front of my face. At first glance it had just looked like a regular bottle cap. On closer inspection it looked just like the one I had in my own pocket - its shape distorted like all other wasteland caps, but the print of a star very visible on the blue, chipped paint.

"Aint that a beauty"

"A pretty lady for sure, and she's got many suitors. I've heard of men killin' just on the suspicion that some lonely traveller is carrying one of these. Me? More sane men will pay a pretty penny for one. I found a few back before I settled down in Goodsprings. Selling ?em off has made me a pretty penny for sure.? I nodded vaguely, almost aware of the shape of my own star cap in my coat pocket. They were certainly worth a lot of currency in these parts, but in my personal experience I couldn't make up my mind whether they were quite worth the trouble.

***

Bags clanking jollily with renewed piles of ammunition I had set off from Goodsprings, going south towards Primm via the highway. I had my old 9mm pistol holstered at my hip as well as the rifle that Sunny Smiles had given me slung around my back. The broken highway stretched out into the distance, eventually becoming blurred as it wound its way among the mountains, hidden by waves of heat emitting from the ground far off. Following the road lamely were scratched and broken pylons, each jutting out from the arid earth every dozen of metres or so, each draped heavy with thick wires that no longer worked. Perhaps I should have felt a sense of ceremony walking out back into the wilderness again. Maybe if there had been some definitive dividing line between Goodsprings and The Wastes I would have stopped, looked out to the wilderness, took a breath and stepped over the dividing line sending a brief prayer to whatever deity might be passing. As it was I trucked on out of Goodsprings with barely a look back. No time to hang around and get sentimental. Stuff needed doing.

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