Hi! It's my first ask ever, I usually don't go further in interactions than just like and reblog, but oh god your "I don't know why I bite" fic touched some parts of my soul and my brain so deeply. The way you describe the relationship and interaction between reader and Wolverine, the thoughts and analysis of the nature of their relationship, and how you portray that they actually benefit from distancing - all that is a literal breath of fresh air! It's a literal pleasure to read the healthy dynamic between characters, written so wonderfully by you Thank you so much for sharing your works with us, I wish you happiness and luck in your life!
I hope I won't scare you with my feelings but I'm just so grateful for this fic đ
I'm honored to be your first ask, it makes me feel like I actually had an impact with the fic I wrote and that's a wonderful feeling. You're not scaring me with your feelings at all, I love having readers in my inbox even if it's just to tell me how much they liked a certain fic.
Honestly, I was a little worried about posting this one because this was more therapy for me than it was fanfiction lol. I've been on both sides of the situation, one where it's a silent toxicity and other times when it's a volatile hurt.
I was sick of seeing readers in fics like this being painted the victim and the character groveling towards them because I know how it is on both sides of the situation. There's a certain toxicity to forcing your help onto someone who just needs space to breathe and find who they are. And then there's also just being a dick to those around you.
Idk, this was more me venting and exploring how I've felt on both sides of the situation. I'm glad you liked it and it seems to be resonating with people. I think it's fun to explore those darker aspects of characters.
It happened again
Had my first shift at my new job today
Manager is already trying to overschedule me
and an old man grabbed my arm in the creepiest way possible - he squeezed it, that's not necessary đ
hoping to have something posted for you guys tomorrow
How About a Nuke?
Part I / Part II
Cooper Howard x fem!reader A/N: This is really a prelude to the real story. Itâs who they were before the bombs dropped and not as fleshed out as it could be. Summary: Hollywood doesnât agree with you, as much as you wished it would. Until you meet Cooper Howard and he flips your world upside down. (Image below does not represent reader, I mean I donât even look like that)
âQuench your thirst and a little bit more,â you winked and held up the dripping bottle of Nuka-Cola. You shot your best smile at the camera in front of you, holding it until the director let out a loud âCut!â The smile dropped instantly and you dumped the bottle back in its cooler.Â
Tom walked behind the camera, a frown on his face as he replayed the clip. Youâd been here two hours already for a thirty second promo, thereâs no reason it should have been taking this long.
You shifted, the leather on your legs creaking uncomfortably. They had you in some odd little space suit, more sexy than functional. The backdrop behind you was of painted stars and an out of scale moon. You werenât sure how space and Nuka-Cola connected but a check was a check.Â
âIs that who I think it is?â
You turned around at the sound of gasping. Your eyes widened and your stomach dropped when you watched the Cooper Howard walk through the entrance of the studio. Your biggest celebrity crush and idol just walked through the door and you were dressed like a sexy astronaut. This is beyond embarrassing.Â
You had begged your agent to let you take some more serious roles, or at least a few fun ones. Youâd been stuck in the same role of sexy bombshell for too long. You couldnât even escape it doing a few advertisements. You wanted someone like Cooper to think you were classy or distinguished at least. Not some sellout with over lined red lips.Â
You whipped your head around, hoping he wouldnât notice you, and pretended to be fascinated by the cheap set you were on. âMr. Howard, a pleasure,â you briefly glanced over your shoulder to watch your director shakehis hand. Cooper looked up, his eyes briefly catching yours. You winced and turned back around.Â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âFilming a new advertisement for Nuka, would you like to see?â
âWhy, yes I would.â
Oh, this was wonderful. Just great. You reached up to pinch the bridge of your nose but your hands just jammed painfully against the plastic of your helmet. You listened to them replaying your clip, hating the sultry tone of your voice. You hated being typecast like this.Â
You didnât work so hard to earn your spot in Hollywood just to be forced into the role of a sex symbol. You could be more, you knew it. You just needed a chance. âYou did wonderful.â
You jumped in shock at the voice near your ear, your helmet hitting something hard. You heard a groan of pain and turned around mortified to see Cooper holding his nose. âOh, Mr. Howard, I am so, so sorry.â
He shook his head and held up a hand, smiling amicably at you. âMy fault, sweetheart, shouldnât have snuck up on ya.â
You let out an annoyed huff and finally pulled the damn thing off. âHonestly, I should pay more attention, this damn thingâs a safety hazard.â He chuckled and it made you smile without even realizing it. You could feel the heat already blooming under your skin, just barely resisting the urge to fan yourself. But you couldnât help but be flustered. It was Cooper Howard!
He finally let go of his nose and you sighed in relief when you saw that it wasnât too badly damaged. He seemed to understand your relief because he laughed again. You heard whispers behind the two of you and finally realized just how close you both were. A couple PAâs stood huddled together, pointing at you with accusing fingers and harsh glares.Â
Probably not smart to be a sex symbol and stand so close to a married man.Â
You dropped the smile and took a step back from him. As much as you disliked typecasting, you would hate losing jobs more. You didnât need any rumors to spread because you smiled too widely at Cooper. Lord knows your career barely survived the last round of gossip, that youâd been sleeping your way into roles. Which you hadnât. You donât need anything more like that bothering you now.Â
Cooper glanced over your shoulder and seemed to notice the same thing as you, but he didnât seem bothered by it like you were. Of course, he was a man and he was very happily married, he didnât have to worry about the same things as you. He was secure in both his relationship and place in the world. Youâd just barely gotten a foothold on everything.Â
âI thought you seemed just sweet as peaches in that clip.â
You gave him a brief smile, âThank you.â
âThough,â he frowned and glanced over at the director. You rolled your eyes when you saw Tom point over at you and then gesture to his stomach. If they sinched your waist one more damn time your ribs were going to crack. âI donât quite understand why you had to be seductive.â He seemed genuinely perplexed but it didnât take a genius to understand the underlying message of his words.Â
You shrugged, âJust seems to be the way my career is going right now.â
âIs that what you want?â
Your brows furrowed in confusion. You haven't been asked that before. Of course youâd spoken up about being unhappy with your roles, though you still took them. But no one had ever asked you what you wanted. An odd feeling bloomed in your chest and you took another precautionary step back. âUm,â you frowned and shook your head, âno. Itâs not what I want.â
He smiled, seemingly pleased by the answer. âLook, sweetheart, I didnât come here to drink cola or chat,â he held up his hands in apology, âas wonderful a conversationalist as you are. Iâm filming a movie right now. We're looking for a lady with a strong presence to be my companion in the film. Iâve seen your movies, youâre capable of a lot more than theyâre giving you to work with. I think youâd be perfect for the role.â
Your ears started to ring as you stared at him in shock. It was hard to keep your jaw closed the longer he spoke. Thereâs no way that everything youâve been wanting was just being offered to you on a silver platter. Stuff like that only happened inâŠ
Well, it only happened in movies.Â
âThat is if you want the role? Youâre not looking particularly enthused,â he gave you a charming grin and you finally remembered you actually had to respond to him to get what you wanted.Â
âYes!â
You didnât care how loud you were or how dirty the looks you were getting from others were. There was nothing on your mind other than the man in front of you and what he was offering you.Â
Everything you wanted.Â
You stared up at the poster on Cooperâs wall. âI always thought I looked ridiculous in this one.â
âWell,â Barb came up behind you and handed you a martini. You took it from her with a grateful smile and took a sip. You tried to stop your face from screwing up but alcohol had never really sat well with you. âI think you look amazing.â She smiled at you and walked back towards the living room.Â
You stayed where you were at the end of the stairs, staring up at the too-large poster. You and Cooper were standing back-to-back, your gun raised to your lips and a smirk on your red lips as your hat laid tilted over your eyes. The bright red cursive title sat under your spurred boots, The Outlaw and The Sheriff.Â
Well, they certainly hadnât been creative with the name. You couldnât really bring yourself to care, though, it had been your first real role. You had played someone of substance, someone whose entire life didnât revolve around the man she wanted to have an affair with. Cooper had opened up more doors for you then he would ever understand.Â
You turned from the poster and back to the party. For once you werenât being surrounded by a group of groping producers or Hollywood execs. Being a part of Cooperâs family, someone he was mentoring, it carried a certain power within the den of vipers. You werenât untouchable, but you werenât someone to be so easily ruined.Â
You flashed kind smiles and coy waves at the people who called out your name and made your quick escape to the backyard.Â
Cooperâs new movie had been released and he was having a sort of celebration party. Though, you think itâs just Barb trying to integrate Vault-Tec into the movie industry. From the disgusted looks on some of your co-starâs faces you could tell it wasnât going very well.Â
You sighed in relief at the fresh air and slowly made your way over to the pool chairs. Your feet ached in your heels and you could already feel blisters starting to form. You undid the straps and slipped them off. You lowered yourself onto the edge of the pool and dipped your toes in, the relief instantaneous.
You werenât out very long before you heard steps approaching. You let out a deep sigh, mentally preparing yourself for your peace to be ruined by whoever wanted to bother you. âYouâre not skipping my party, are you?âÂ
You opened your eyes to find Cooper smiling down at you. You always wondered how his smiles could be so genuine when he spoke to you. You hadnât felt like youâd given anyone a real smile in a long time. This industry had taken a lot from you and lately youâd been wondering if it had stolen your happiness too.Â
You shrugged, âIt was getting a little boring.â
He grinned and slipped his shoes off. You watched him roll his pants up and groan as he dipped his legs in the pool with you. His smile slipped and his eyes widened when his legs landed in the water, âDamn, itâs fucking cold!â
You barked out a laugh, rough and very unladylike while he squirmed like a girl at a little cold water. âDidnât you fight in a war?â You teased.Â
He nudged his shoulder into yours, âWatch it,â you shook your head, dismissing his faux warning. You knew he didnât really mind when you bugged him. Itâs how you two had been acting around each other since day one. Tabloids labeled you two as close as kin, brother and sister.Â
As much as it bugged you every time you read a headline like that while standing in line at the grocery store, you supposed it was better than everyone thinking you were some two-timing slut. But it bothered you how much your relationship being labeled siblings in nature irritated you. He had a wife and child, you couldnât let some pathetic crush cloud your judgment like this.Â
It was real hard to remember that, though, when he looked at you the way he did. Sitting by his side, under the moonlight, his eyes warm and earnest as he sent you an easygoing smile. Youâll never figure out if itâs in your head, but you swear he doesnât smile at anyone the way he does at you.Â
You feel like the only woman in the world sitting there with him. Like there wasnât a party going on a few yards away in his house. And you hadnât just accepted a martini from his wife who had graciously invited you into their home. It was just you and him.Â
You didnât realize you were leaning in until your lips were brushing his. He should have pulled back. You shouldnât have leaned in. But his hand was on your waist and the other was buried in your hair, desperately pulling you closer.Â
It wasnât gentle or slow like youâd always imagined it. His mouth was moving hungrily over yours, practically devouring you in his desperation to get as close to you as possible. His hand tugged at the roots of your styled hair, a pained moan slipped through your lips. That wasnât enough to snap you out of your trance, but his tongue licking into your mouth was. He groaned, tasting and savoring you like you would be his last meal. Like he had wanted you just as much as you had wanted him and he wasnât going to let this chance slip away.Â
You jumped back but he didnât let you go far with his hands on you. His eyes slowly opened while the reality of the situation dawned on you both. You let out a horrified gasp at the sight of your lipstick smeared over his lips. âOh, god, Coop.â You whispered, voice strained as you stared at him, âWhat did we do?â
His eyes darted between yours, the realization coming slower to him. When it did, you could pinpoint the exact moment it hit him. His mouth drew up in disgust and he ripped his hands off you. He leapt up, water splashing your dress as he did, but you were too hurt to really care. He clamped a hand over his mouth, looking very much like he was about to throw up on you. âFuck,â he hissed, jaw clenched and eyes squeezing shut.Â
You grabbed your bag and shoes and rushed to your feet. You dug around in your purse, hands shaking so much you could barely undo its clasp. When you finally found your handkerchief you dipped it in the pool and held it out to him.Â
He glanced towards your outstretched hand and then to your ashamed face in confusion. âYou have my lipstick on your lips,â you whispered. He snatched it out of your hand and scrubbed at his face so hard you wouldnât even be able to make out the lipstick with how red his skin was.Â
Slowly, and without a word, you both made your way back into the house. The tension was thick, neither of you able to look at each other. You kept an unusual amount of space between you for two people who were always so close. If anyone looked out the door at you right now, well, even Bud Askins would be able to tell something was wrong.Â
You made it to the glass door and Barb intercepted you. Your heart leapt to your throat. Youâd never been more disgusted with yourself. Not only did you kiss this womanâs husband, you had fucking enjoyed it.Â
In fact, you wished you were out there still. As small a taste youâd gotten of him, you craved more. Your body was on fire with desire, core throbbing when you thought about the way heâd kissed you. You forced yourself to stop imagining what it would be like if he had kissed somewhere else. God, the thought made you burn.Â
She laughed and gave you an odd look, âYou look like you saw a ghost.â
Cooper chuckled and you whipped your head towards him in shock. Not only did he look completely unaffected, but he was smiling at you. You couldnât look at him long, afraid your face would further give you away. You were a good actress, but not nearly as good as him.Â
âThis one almost accidentally took a dip in our pool,â he and Barb both laughed and you forced yourself to join in.Â
âYeah, and I think that might have been enough excitement for me.â You smiled at Barb and leaned in to kiss her on the cheek, the taste of her husband still on your lips. âIâm gonna head home. Enjoy the rest of the party.â
Cooper stopped you before you could completely slip away, âIâll walk you out to your car, honey.â You nodded, not willing to argue in the middle of his crowded home. Still, you didnât make it easy for him to keep up with you. You were at the door before he could blink, practically flying out of the house.Â
You probably would have made it all the way to your car without another word if it werenât for him clasping a hand around your elbow. âWe need to talk.â
You shook your head and he let out a disappointed sigh. You already knew what he was going to say, and you agreed wholeheartedly. What had happened tonight was a mistake. Not only were you risking your career but you could ruin his whole life if you continued down this path. As much as you wanted him, as much as you had yearned for him, you couldnât be so selfish.Â
But you also couldnât handle hearing him say that to you. It would break your heart to have to listen to him explain all the reasons you could never be with the man you were so desperately in love with. âI know, Coop, I know.âÂ
His grip tightened on you when you tried to slip away. You set pleading eyes on him, praying he couldnât see the tears already starting to build. You knew he could, though, when his gaze softened and he eased his grip on you. After another whispered âpleaseâ he finally nodded and stepped back from you.Â
You slipped your arm from his hold and ran to your car. You leapt inside and peeled out of the driveway like the devil was on your tail. And maybe he was, maybe you deserved it. Because you still couldnât help yourself, glancing in the rear view mirror to see Cooper standing at the end of his driveway, watching you go with a distraught look on his face.Â
You wiped the tears off your face and turned back towards the road. You could never be with him. You could never love him the way you wanted. Youâd have to be satisfied for the rest of your life with the taste youâd gotten tonight. That would be all you would ever allow yourself.Â
âA fallen star, Cooper Howard has become a reject within Hollywood. Fellow actors and actresses have been refusing to work with him, making it difficult for the former celebrity to find work. Recent reports say heâs been seen at birthday parties more than on set.â
The female reporter shook her head, âSuch a shame. Weâve been hearing that this is all due to his former ties with Vault-Tec. Ties which were recently severed in a grisly divorce with ex-wife and Vault-Tec employee, Barb-â
You clicked the TV off, shutting the ridiculous news report up and ran a hand down your face. You hadnât seen Coop in a few months. After that night at his house, youâd dropped the movies youâd been doing with him and put as much distance between the two of you as you could.Â
That thought made you feel like the worst piece of shit. You couldnât have known that Hollywood was going to turn its back on him. You couldnât have known that nearly two weeks after you cut ties his entire life would go up in flames. You should have been there for him. How you feel about him shouldnât matter when your friend needs you.Â
Heâd given you everything he could and you couldnât even be there for him when he needed you. Of course, once youâd heard about the divorce, youâd called up Sebastian. But he had warned you not to try and reach out to Cooper. He seemed to think it would only make things worse. The more you heard, however, the more guilty you felt about not being there for him. Tabloids and gossip columns certaintly hadnât been kind when the news of his divorce had come out.Â
They pounced on the opportunity to further rip into his wounds and present them to the world. You glanced down at your couch cushion, the magazine youâd picked up in the store staring back at you. The front was a picture of him walking out of a house, donned in cowboy gear and clearly performing for a childrenâs party.Â
You sighed and decided you should finally push aside your pride. You snatched your keys from the hook and headed out the door.Â
Cooper didnât seem to believe it was you when he opened the door. His eyes, cloudy and red, narrowed before he frowned and took a step back. âThat really you?â
You offered a weak smile and a, âHi, Coop.â
He scoffed and you could tell he was getting angry. His accent always got a little rougher when he was pissed off. ââHi, Coopâ,â he mocked, a sneer on his face. âFour months without contact and thatâs all you have to say. Fuck off,â he went to close the door but you blocked him with your foot.Â
It stung, honestly, the cruel way in which he spoke to you. But you knew he could be a lot meaner if he wanted to and it wasnât as if you didnât deserve it. You had been a shitty, selfish friend. âIâm sorry, I was just nervous. I just,â you paused, struggling to find the right words to make this any better. He crossed his arms, still refusing to let you into his house. âI called the second I heard, but Sebastian had told me it would be better if I didnât come.â
His brows furrowed before he glared at you. âSo you donât even fucking call?â
âI was wrong and selfish. Cooper,â you reached out, laying a gentle hand on his arm. âIâm sorry, Iâm not asking for you to forgive me. I am genuinely so sorry I wasnât here for you. But Iâm here now, if youâll let me be.â
The next minute was unbearable. You felt too awkward to take your hand off his arm and he refused to speak. He didnât even blink, just glared at you, the longer the silence went on the more you could feel yourself losing your nerve. Maybe this had been a mistake.Â
Finally, he sighed and your heart leapt to your throat. âCome in,â he stepped to the side and opened his door up further. You kept your mouth shut and slipped into the house. It seemed to be the only thing heâd been able to hold onto since the divorce.Â
The door slammed shut behind you and he pushed past you to slip into the living room and throw himself down on the couch. You followed slowly behind him, taking oddly tentative steps, like if you made a noise he would kick you out.Â
He had his arm thrown over his face, his eyes clenched like he was in pain. You perched yourself on the edge of the chair you usually sat in, feeling oddly uncomfortable. You fidgeted restlessly on the cushion, crossing and uncrossing your legs, tapping your toes against the floor.Â
It had seemed like such an easy decision to come here half an hour ago. But you hadnât had a plan and that was really biting you in the ass now. Desperate for anything other than the sound of the fabric underneath you, you blurted out the question that had bothered you for months.Â
âWhat happened?â
He sighed, like heâd been expecting it. He sat up slowly, grabbing a glass of brown liquor off the coffee table and taking a swig. He leaned forward on his knees, glaring over at you. âWhat are you talking about? Youâre gonna have to be specific, sweetheart, everything in my life has fallen apart.â
You winced, hating the callous way youâd asked the question. Youâd meant to approach the subject more gently, but it wasnât easy to keep your curiosity contained. âEverything, I guess. Last time I saw you, you were on top of the world. What happened?â You tried to ask your questions as gently as possible, but there really was no use sugarcoating anything.Â
âFlew too close to the sun and I fell,â he shrugged and sent you a sarcastic smirk. âBut I see youâve been doing great, huh?â
âNot really, Iâve stepped back from taking on any contracts. I would have dropped Nuka-Cola too if their lawyers werenât so damn good.â
He shrugged, like he didnât really give a shit about your life or how it was going. This hurt, how he was acting, youâd never seen him like this. He was acting so mean and despondent. âFound out Barb was advocating for nuclear war and Vault-Tec was backing her. Finding out your wife is orchestrating war crimes really puts a wrench in your marriage.â
You wished you could be surprised, but Barbâs odd behavior since joining the company had been obvious to everyone but Cooper. He laughed when he saw the look on your face, âYou say âI told you soâ and Iâll throw something at you.â You shook your head and sank back in the chair. âAnyway, Vault-Tec dropped me and since everyone in Hollywood hates me that was the last paying job I had. Now, Iâm working kidâs parties.â He scoffed and smiled mirthfully, but the hatred in this look was directed at himself. âHow the mighty have fallen, right?â
He threw back the rest of his whiskey and slammed the glass back on the table.Â
âI really am sorry, Coop. I should have been here.â
He didnât look at you, just shook his head, âNo point. If you had been, I would have dragged you down with me. Probably the smartest thing you could have done.â You hated this, it made your heart hurt to see him so down on himself.Â
This wasnât the Cooper you knew. This was a man completely broken by what life had thrown at him. You hated this. You hated yourself for not helping him. Hated his wife for abandoning him. You hated the world for so easily turning their back on him like he was nothing to them.Â
You slipped from the chair and kneeled in front of him. You grabbed his hands in yours, holding on tight when he tried to slip away. âIâm sorry, Coop, truly. I wasnât here for you. But I am now, I swear. Let me help you, please.â
He glanced down at you and stared quietly, trying to decide whether he should be an asshole and tell you to fuck off or just accept the help. He had been lonely for a long while now. He needed someone to tell him he was doing okay. That he had done the right thing in getting Barb out of his life. So, he nodded and squeezed your hands back.Â
âPancakes?â
You laughed and sat up in bed, glancing over at Cooper while he got dressed. âIs that all you know how to make?â He smiled and crawled back onto bed to plant a hard kiss against your lips.Â
âYou want food or not, smartass?â
You laughed and pressed another quick kiss to his lips, âPlease.â He shook his head and walked out of his bedroom and towards the kitchen. You sank back against the pillows and stared blankly up at his ceiling.Â
You wished there was a title to describe what you were to each other, but you werenât completely sure yourself. A few weeks after youâd stopped by his house youâd slept together for the first time. And then again and again, and youâd taken to staying at his house more than your own apartment.Â
Youâd worried that you were letting yourself be a rebound after his divorce. Afraid that he was simply going to sleep with you and move on once heâd found something better. But he didnât treat you like you were something to throw away.Â
But that doesnât mean anything when heâs never explicitly stated that he wants something serious with you. You sit up when you hear him padding back down the hall, a tray in his hands. You smile at him and help him settle back in bed.Â
When youâre done eating you both lay back in bed and you figure you donât need something definitive for now. Youâll just enjoy what you have while you have him. The shrill ring of the phone jolts you both out of your comfortable state.Â
He sighs and reaches over to grab it from its place on the nightstand. The cord stretches over you while he leans back and talks to whoever is on the other line. âHello?â His brow furrows in confusion when the other person began to speak. You can make out their muffled voice but not what theyâre saying. You give him a questioning look but he just shrugs and hands you the phone. âItâs for you, sweetheart.â
âHello?âÂ
Cooper watches you with growing confusion as your face lights up and you shoot out of bed. He sighs, knowing his morning is probably over. He figures he should go ahead and get dressed while you finish up the call.Â
When he comes out of the bathroom youâre still talking. Your finger is coiled through the cord and youâre pacing a track into his rug. Youâve got a serious expression on your face, listening intently, before you light up once more and let out an eager, âOh, thank you so much!â You slam the phone back down on the dial and turn to him with an eager smile.Â
âThat was Tom, heâs got a role for me.â Cooper shoots you a happy smile but he canât help the twinge of jealously in his gut. A few weeks ago some pictures of you two together had been leaked. While your career and offered had considerably slowed, you hadnât been completely stonewalled by all of Hollywood like he had.Â
He couldnât help but resent that at moments, that you still got to live your dream while he was punished for doing what he thought had been right. He wouldnât let that ruin your mood right now, though. âThatâs great, what is it?â
You shrugged, going through the room and quickly changing into a long skirt and blouse. âHe couldnât give me many details over the phone. He wants me to head over to his house to pick up the script real quick.â You ran up to him, planted a quick kiss on his cheek and darted towards the hall. âIâll be back for lunch,â you called over your shoulder.Â
Cooper sighed, overwhelmed slightly by your whirlwind of energy. He called out a quick goodbye he wasnât sure you heard and tried to ignore the nauseating feeling settling in his stomach.Â
You stared up at Tomâs door, knocking quickly. You were the perfect picture of naĂŻvetĂ©, wide-eyed and eager as you waited for him to open the door. When Tom wasnât directing Nuka-Cola ads he directed only serious movies. The type that only critics liked.Â
Getting another serious role could really help in getting you back on track. Maybe you could even start helping Coop out, he was going to have to sell the house soon if he didnât make real money.Â
The smile on your lips was hard to dismiss as you impatiently waited for the door to open. It didnât take much longer, you could hear Tom approaching through it and then it was swinging open. He had a wide smile and seemed oddly breathless as he stared at you. âThere you are! Come on in, Iâll grab the script.â
Not thinking much of the odd invitation you took a step inside and glanced around. You heard voices in the next room and your smile dropped just a little. âCome on,â he waved you forward when he noticed you had stopped, âIâll get you something to drink.â
âOh,â you took a hesitant step forward. âIâm fine, really, I need to get back home pretty quick.â Tom stopped in his tracks and turned around. The look on his face had your hairs standing on end, both of your smiles completely gone now.Â
âI said come in.â You tried to back up but your back hit something soft. Jumping forward, you turned to find one of the tallest men youâd ever seen towering over you. He pushed forward and you stumbled back, starting to feel real panic settle in.Â
He kept pushing until you found yourself standing in the middle of a crowded living room. Execs you recognized from meetings with your agent and premieres circled around you like a pack of hyenas. Each of them tittering and laughing, pointing at you with a dangerous gleam in their eyes.Â
You felt tears pricking your eyes, your gaze darting up to Tom. But he refused to look at you, accepting a large wad of cash from one man and shaking his hand. He spared you one brief glance, a distant regret in his eyes as he walked out the room.Â
You spun in a quick circle, breaths coming short and fast when the men started to close in on you. One of them grabbed you and you threw your elbow back into his face, it didnât matter. They were all reaching for you now. Hands snagged on your blouse and the buttons popped open.Â
You opened your mouth, to scream or bite one of them, you donât know, it didnât matter. A large hand clamped around your mouth, forcing you to breathe in the cloth on their palm. You sucked in a sharp breath, something sweet tickling your nose before your eyes were rolling back in your head.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the game/show Fallout, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
ANOTHER FLAWLESS CHAPTER!!!!! Iâm glad coop is finally realising âoh damn I kinda did shoot her twiceâ like yeah bro youâre lowkey awful đđđ I LOVEDDD the hallucinations and coop realising sheâs still thinking about him :(((( Sylvie gives me BAD VIBES like compensation for WHAT???? And he just left her there?? Coop you fucking idiot đđ
HIGHKEY awful heâs a horrible person but I love him lol
I was so worried the hallucinations wouldnât read as well as they did in my head but Iâm glad people are enjoying them
Also THANK YOU not enough people on Ao3 were picking up on the compensation line, she is not to be trusted
Connor: Whatâs up guys? Iâm back.
Hank: What the- you canât be here. Youâre dead. I literally saw you die.
Connor: Death is a social construct.
Pairing Ë˰âą*ââ· Arthur Morgan x fem!reader
A/N: Oh. My. God. I am so sorry this got delayed so many times. This is such an important chapter to me, it plays such a pivotal role in "Y/N's" development that I kept scrapping it and starting over. I didn't want to give this to you guys until it was perfect, and I think I've gotten about as close as I can. I'm predicting one more story chapter and then possibly one short epilogue.
Next Part - Hell Hath No Fury Series
Summary: Arthur's gone and you're own once more. The familiar ache of grief lingers as it always does. But the clouds must always part for light. Through death and grief, you still manage to find yourself.
It always seems to be cold at night, now that Arthurâs no longer there to keep you warm. You curl into yourself, knees tucked to your chest as you smother your face in the thin pillow on your cot. You press the fabric tightly to your mouth, trying to keep the sounds of your crying out of the otherâs dreams.Â
There should be no surprise that youâre on your own again. Beating a dead horse doesnât make it move, but somehow, you keep finding yourself tangled in the reins, dragged along by the memory of men whoâve long since let go. You wonder, sometimes, if your life is one bet of many between god and the devil, seeing which one of them can get you to break first. What you could have done to draw their ire, you donât know, but youâre not sure how much more pain and loss you can handle. Your lifetime is filled with the empty graves of those youâll never see again. Now, Arthurâs is just another headstone to add to your endless cemetery.
You worry that youâre too loud on the harder nights. But no oneâs ever complained that they hear you crying and you figure theyâre all probably too busy mourning in their own way to notice the way you do.Â
Abigail is practically an empty shell of herself without John. As much as they fought she doesnât seem to know what to do with herself. Especially knowing heâs in jail, destined for the noose, and there is nothing she can do about it.Â
Karenâs not doing much better. With Sean in jail alongside John, sheâs fallen to the drink. Sheâs adopted a fatalist view that, without Dutch, you are all doomed to die at the hands of the Pinkertons. Sometimes, looking at the depressing faces of those around you, you think she might be right.
Stuck out in the middle of nowhere, with only two rotting cabins between what was left of the gang, you are a far cry from the fearsome outlaws you once were. This is no longer the Van der Linde gang. Now, youâre barely any better than a group of desperate wanderers.Â
You know sleep wonât come to you tonight, youâve been tossing and turning for hours. Any longer and youâll wake everyone else up. Wiping roughly at your eyes, you slip a blanket around your shoulders and head toward the creaking door of the cabin. You try to keep in mind that one wrong step and the groaning wood below you will alert everyone.Â
Barefoot, you walk along the muddied planks of the porch and head towards whatâs left of tonightâs fire. Itâs not ever-burning as it once was. The gang takes care to ensure if anyone were to come looking for you all, you wouldnât be such easy targets.Â
You sink onto the log before the dying fire, with embers glowing faintly in the darkness. Sparks flicker and leap from the blackened wood, a futile effort to reignite the flame. Their struggle is in vain, though, there is no life left to kindle, no warmth to revive. The fire is gone.Â
Light footsteps make their way towards you, but you keep your gaze steady on the flickering struggle before you. âIâm gettinâ real tired of this,â Sadieâs disappointed sigh is a familiar one as she comes to stand behind you.Â
âWere you in town again?â You ask, ignoring the glare you feel boring into your back. She stares at you for a while longer before letting out a rough sigh and throwing herself down beside you. The log shifts slightly under her weight and you dip towards her.Â
âI was,â she grumbles, something white balled up tightly in her fist. You turn towards her finally, eyes narrowed on the paper in her grasp. Her face is drawn tight, jaw set angrily as something vengeful burns within her gaze.Â
âWhat is that?â You ask, tone inquisitive but not truly interested. Her eyes dart towards you before she shakes her head and tosses the paper to the dying fire. Whatâs left of it, licks eagerly at the paper, trying its damndest to burn brighter.
âNothinâ, donât worry about it. Why canât you sleep?â Her switch in conversation is quick and far from subtle. Your head tilts slightly in curiosity, gaze switching between her and the paper thatâs slowly curling up at the edges. Sheâs hiding something, itâs easy enough to tell from the way she refuses to meet your eyes. Besides, sheâs snuck into town plenty of times, youâve never seen her come back this riled up before.Â
You jump to your feet and she startles at the quick move. âDonât,â she snaps, snatching at your wrist as you rush by her and swipe the paper from the fire pit. Sadie gets to her feet, hand held out with an expectant look as she waits for you to give her back to paper. When you donât comply immediately, she says your name, voice low and tense, a warning.Â
Lips curling up slightly in challenge, you leap back as she lunges for you, holding the paper away from her. âWhat is it?â You tease, curiosity curling over the lingering ache from earlier.Â
She snaps your name again and you flinch back in surprise, âI mean it, donât look at the goddamn paper.â Youâd only been joking with her, trying to focus on anything other than Arthur. Now, thereâs a familiar churning feeling of dread as you look at your friend. Sheâs not angry at you, sheâs angry at the thin sheet youâre holding. Thereâs something on here she doesnât want you to see, not for her own sake, but for yours.Â
Your breath quickens, heart dancing dangerously fast against your ribs as you finally look at whatâs in your hand. She hisses your name but you stubbornly ignore her, frowning when you realize itâs a torn-out piece of a newspaper. Itâs a smaller article from the local St. Denis paper stand, talking about a ferry being lost at sea.Â
âOh, god,â you whisper, hand coming up to cover your mouth as bile rushes up your throat. You bite down on your tongue until the taste of iron fills your mouth, holding back the nausea. âThis is him, isnât it?â
Sadie lets out a rough sigh, shoulders slumping in defeat. âI didnât want you to know.â
âYou were just gonna hide this from me?â You nearly shout, taking one angry step towards her. Her brows turn down in guilt, mouth settling into a thin line as she shakes her head. âNo? You werenât?â You demand, tone rough with grief. âYou were just going to wait until I put the pieces together myself?â
âDammit, woman, youâre barely holding it together,â she barks out, snatching the paper from you once more. She turns her back on you, shredding it into pieces so small youâll never be able to finish reading it. âI was going to wait until I didnât think you were on the brink of completely fallinâ apart. Besides, it doesnât say anything about the people on the ship, we donât know what happened.â
âWe never will!â The words tear out of you, a sharp, bitter exhale. A panicked smile twists your lips as you struggle to keep yourself upright. âSadie, your husband is dead, you know that. You have your answer. I never will. I will never know what happened to him. And it doesnât even matter because he left me!â Your voice cracks, a sob slipping free despite your best efforts to swallow it down. âI shouldnât care about that goddamn bastard, but I do.â You turn away from her, shoulders caving in as you wipe roughly at the tears streaming down your cheeks.Â
Thereâs a beat of silence behind you. You miss the way her face falls, her hardened exterior falling away just for a moment. She looks at you with something like understanding, pity more likely. She steps forward, her arms winding around your shoulders, trying to hold you steady through the pain. You struggle against her hold for a moment but she keeps her grip firm, forcing you to succumb to the small comfort.Â
You sink into her embrace, breath hitching as the grief claws its way up your chest, relentless and unyielding. You canât keep doing this. You arenât made to endlessly love and lose, to watch pieces of yourself crumble with every goodbye. It feels as though there should be nothing left of you- no bleeding heart, no raw edges. And yet, every time you think youâve reached your limit, life finds a way to push you further.Â
But life, pain, and the ugly company of grief never stops or goes away, despite how much you wish they would.Â
A few weeks later
Physical pains and ailments heal. There may be scars left behind, but for the most part, you can be wholly healed. Anguish of the mind and heart is a different beast to conquer altogether. That sort of pain ebbs and flows. It doesnât slip away neatly. It comes and goes, sneaking upon you when you least wish for it.Â
Distractions can dull the edge. The looming danger of death and the law from any of your multitude of enemies helps. But more often than not, the weight remains a leaden burden on your shoulders and a gnawing ache deep in your chest.
For now, the pain has numbed into something dull that makes you clench your teeth and hiss. But if you force yourself, you can find steady ground to stand on. You can keep yourself calm and sated, if you focus yourself on the anger rather than the grief.Â
Anger comes easier than healing. It lashes out at the world and balms over the constant pain, if only for a little while. You find yourself getting into more and more fights around camp. The forgiveness of shared grief has its limits and youâve been testing them for a while. Youâre curious how far you can push before youâre forced out by the rest of them.Â
Sadieâs efforts of finding a new place for you all to hide donât go unappreciated. But this cabin feels like a cage, no matter how far youâve come from the mud and chaos of the old abandoned camp. The tight space presses against you, the silence weighs heavy against your chest and constricts around you tightly. You hear the faint rustle of the trees in the wind, but itâs a vacuous cavern inside.Â
The memories of Shady Belle plague you like a ghost. The brief moments when you could almost forget everything pressing down, but now, that place, too, is just another reminder of whatâs been lost. Memories of nights spent with Arthur or sitting outside and listening to Javier play his guitar are tainted with loss and rage.Â
Sadie and Charles provide you brief comfort, but it will never be enough to make this place feel like home. You try to shake thoughts of Arthur, what the gang once was, and everything that came before. Youâve been running for so long, from your past and who you once were, but it feels like youâre being dragged right back.Â
Unable to handle the suffocating silence any longer, you take Arthurâs bow out from the chest under your cot. You grab a handful of arrows and jump to your feet. Throwing the door of the cabin open, you stride past everyone lingering outside. A few people give you odd looks, but they donât stop you from leaving. Youâve become a dark cloud around camp, your presence heavy and actions unpredictable. Itâs almost a relief for them when youâre gone.Â
Ladyâs just as restless as you are, except the dumb beast doesnât understand that neither of them are coming back. Charles doesnât know what happened to Diablo or the other horses when he fled St. Denis and youâre not interested in looking for them. Sheâll just have to live with the pain, same as you.Â
âLetâs go,â you mutter, swinging onto her saddle and leading her out of camp. Itâs as if a weight slips from your shoulder the further you get from camp. The tight grip constricting around your chest loosens and for the first time in days, you can draw a full breath as the world opens before you.Â
The thick groves of trees thin and give way to sprawling plains of grass and wildflowers that stretch endlessly. Steering Lady off the trail, you ride her hard and fast, determined to put as much distance between yourself and those suffocating cabins. Dirt kicks up under her hooves, flying up behind you as she pushes herself to the limit.Â
The world around you blurs into streaks of green and gold as memories and grief slip away from you. You lean forward over Ladyâs neck, urging her to go faster even as she huffs beneath you. Youâre racing the wind, chasing after a dream thatâs been lost to you. The air lashes at your face, the sting sharp and cold. Your eyes burn and you tell yourself itâs the wind, even as wet streaks drip down your cheeks.
Bright beams of sunlight streak across the ground, illuminating the path forward. Morning dew glistening under the light, transforms the earth into a field of stars beneath your boots. You draw in a deep breath, letting the crisp air fill your lungs, and tighten your legs around Ladyâs sides, signaling her to slow. Her chest heaves beneath you, each breath a puff of steam in the cold air. You can feel her desire to keep running, that shared, desperate need to escape clawing at both of you.Â
But sheâs exhausted, and no matter how much youâd like to keep going, you canât push her until she collapses. Youâre tethered, whether you like it or not, youâre always going to be pulled back to camp. Itâs a cage and a haven. Though you hate the confinement, deep down you know survival outside of it might be beyond you. You donât trust yourself not to wither in the wilderness alone.Â
The sound of water rushing draws your attention and you turn towards a green hill rousing in the distance. Guiding Lady toward it, you crest the incline and slip off her saddle, letting her graze.
Below, a river carves through the land. Its rushing currents are strong enough to carry something away with no hope of return. You step closer to the edge, peering down as the sunlight dances on the waterâs surface. It runs like liquid gold, unnaturally beautiful, almost hypnotic, like the siren call of a sailorâs doom.Â
A herd of deer drift alongside the river, their presence serene and almost make the idea of simply drifting away, peaceful. Your foot inches closer to the edge, slipping on the wet grass, and for a split second, the earth feels like itâs tilting forward. Â
âYou donât usually ride out this far.âÂ
The voice snaps you back, and you gasp, spinning around. Charles stands behind you, one hand on Taimaâs saddle, watching you with a calm but expectant expression.Â
âI canât stand being there,â you say, moving toward Lady. Your hands fumble with her saddlebag, needing something to occupy them. His eyes flick briefly to the river, then back to you, his gaze sharp and knowing.Â
âYouâre not the only one.â He strolls to the edge and whistles softly. âFar drop.âÂ
You keep your hands busy, pretending to rummage through your belongings. âIâm a good swimmer,â you tell him, voice flat.Â
âNot that good.â His tone is clipped, a warning wove into his words. Â
You let out a sharp breath and finally turn to face him. âWhat do you want, Charles?â
He shrugs, resting one hand on his belt as his dark eyes assess you. âThought you might want some company.â He pauses, his voice lowering. âOr, at least someone to keep you from doing something stupid.â
You wince, knowing how it must have looked. Youâre hurt and desperate, but youâre no fool. The river might be pretty, but youâre not looking to drown yourself in it. âIt wasnât anything like that,â you insist, and Charles gives you a sharp, assessing look. âCharles,â you snap, exhaling in frustration. âHonestly. I just,â you take in a slow breath, shaking your head, eyes downcast. âI need a break.â
âAlright,â he says simply. âWeâll take one together.â He walks back to the cliffâs edge, dropping down to sit with his legs dangling over the side. He glances over his shoulder and motions you to join him.Â
Your fists clench at your sides as you take slow, reluctant steps toward him. The dew on the grass seeps into your pants as you sit beside him, hands folded in your lap. Out of the corner of his eyes, you catch his profile, calm, steady, and scarred.Â
The aftermath of St. Denis lingers on his face. A fresh scar cuts along his jawline, a reminder of how close he came to joining the others who didnât make it. Yet, with some of them gone, he seems more at ease. Charles never agreed with Dutchâs grandiose visions, and though he and Arthur had a bond, itâs clear the gangâs collapse has freed him from some invisible yoke. He wears his hair in a braid lately, speaking with nearby tribes and helping them when heâs not in camp.Â
If it wasnât for some odd honor-bound obligation heâs got to you and a few others in camp, you donât doubt that heâd be riding free by now. Still, he stays with you, and selfishly, youâre glad for it.Â
A gunshot cracks through the quiet, echoing among the hills. Birds take flight from the treetops as a hunting group crashes through the grove below. They circle around the herd of deer and let their bullets fly wild. Their hounds snap at the flanks of the animals, jaws clamping around the soft throats of the doe.Â
Charles scoffs, shaking his head in disgust. âYou donât kill the does,â he mutters angrily. âJust the bucks. These men... they have no respect for the laws of nature.â
You let out a sardonic huff of laughter, gesturing toward the chaos below. âWelcome to the future of our country,â Your gaze drifts toward the horizon, where smoke from St. Denis factories smudges the sky. Even this far out, civilization stretches its claws, unstoppable. âThe west is dying, Charles. The time of outlaws, of freedom, is being shackled and destroyed.â
You turn to face him, meeting the same burning anger in his eyes thatâs been smoldering in your own for weeks. Itâs the first time youâve seen that fire in him so clearly- the shared, silent rage, youâve both been trying to suppress. âOur time is over,â you tell him, voice low with finality.Â
His eyes narrow, jaw tight with defiance. For a moment, he says nothing, but then he rises to his feet, his movements purposeful. âMaybe,â he says, his voice steady, âbut not today.â
Without another word, he strides toward Taima, tightening the saddle and checking the reins with precision. âWhatâre you doin?â You call after him, brows knitting together in confusion.Â
He gestures toward the hunters below, his tone sharp. âYou want to do something stupid. Fine. But take it out on someone who deserves it, not yourself.âÂ
His words hit like a slap, and before you know it, heâs leading Taima down the hill.Â
You linger in the sharp sting of what he said only for a moment. Jumping to your feet, you rush to Lady, adrenaline coursing through your veins as you mount her. With a kick of your heels, you follow Charles down the path toward the hunters, your rage finally finding a target.Â
For the first time in a long while, the weight around your chest lightens. You might not be able to fix the world, but you can make sure someone pays for tearing it apart. And as you ride beside Charles, you remember why heâs still here. Heâs not just keeping you alive, heâs giving you something to live for.
Sitting inside the cabin, the smell of venison drifts toward you. After the incident with the hunting party, you and Charles salvaged what you could of the herd. Neither of you liked the idea of anything going to waste. Some materials were given to the local tribe, and the rest have been feeding the camp for days now.Â
Last night, youâd scoured the woods for herbs and other ingredients and discreetly left them on Pearsonâs cooking table. You were growing desperate for a flavor other than plain meat. Judging by the faint smell of mint wafting through the air, it seems he finally took the hint.Â
Propped against your flimsy pillow, you run your fingers along the worn leather of the journal in your lap. For weeks, youâve toyed with the idea of opening it, of seeing the world through Arthurâs eyes.Â
Here, in the rare serenity of a quiet camp, you finally give in. The journal is as you would expect, sketches, details of some of the more pivotal moments for the gang. Every once in a while youâll find a sketch of someone and a brutally honest recollection of how Arthur thought of them. Some of them are less flattering than you would have thought, youâre almost worried for how he might have seen you.Â
You make it through his entries about Blackwater, the sun setting lower in the horizon as the light from the window gets dimmer. Outside, voices grow louder as people gather around the fire for dinner. You force your eyes to stay on the page, blocking out their drifting voices.Â
His entries after the mountains are almost amusing. Heâs clearly frustrated about something, though, he skirts around directly addressing what it is. Only a few times are you directly mentioned, for the most part, he avoids writing about you. But you catch glimpses of yourself hiding in the pages. A half-finished sketch of your hand holding his, the beginnings of your face abandoned before he can finish.Â
Thereâs an entry a few weeks after you acquired Lady. A sketch of her and Diablo grazing together, their noses nearly touching as they crane their necks towards the grass. Surrounding the drawings are small notes about herbs and foliage heâd collected on his hunting trips. Among those sketches, thereâs a small blurb about the horses. Â
Diablo seems to be taking a liking to Lady, odd pair, I think.Â
An odd pair, you suppose thereâs not a better way to put it. Something that never should have worked, a devil and a lady, yet it still clawed and fought to find its way. In the end, though, one of them was always going to be left behind. You canât help but wish it hadnât been you.
A rough sigh escapes you, and you flip past the next few pages. Then, you stop. A familiar pair of eyes stare back at you.Â
Youâve changed so much since this journey began. Your skin is weathered, your once-pristine hair is now more often than not dirtied and knotted from the wind. Your body has grown leaner, stronger, shaped by the relentless movement and harsh diet. The woman in the red dress from St Denis was already a stranger, someone you couldnât recognize.Â
Even from Arthurâs view, you still donât know her. The general shape of your face remains. You have the same slope to your nose, your jaw still tilts the same way. But your eyes are so different. He drew them with fire, with life, with a fight you had once thought yourself incapable of.Â
You feel invulnerable as you stare down at her, as though her fire can be passed so easily to you. The feeling flickers and fades, replaced with the same familiar ache youâve grown used to.Â
You canât make sense of it, how he could have seen you so kindly, and yet still walked away.Â
âGot that look in your eye again,â Sadieâs voice cuts through the stillness, startling you. She leans against the doorway, one hand lingering on the revolver strapped to her hip.Â
âWhat look?â You mutter, glaring down at the journal. It feels too raw, too personal to keep reading. Torturing yourself with thoughts of him isnât getting you anywhere. Heâs gone. Youâve faced death all your life- mourn, move on. Thatâs how itâs meant to go. Â
âAngry,â Sadie tells you, voice soft and knowing. âLike how I looked after I lost Jake. You ainât look like that when you lost your husband.â
You shrug, fingers tracing the lines of your face through Arthurâs eyes. âArthur was nothing like my husband. He leaves something to be mourned,â you tell her simply. She watches you a moment longer, but when you get to your feet, her expression sharpens.Â
âGoing somewhere?â
âOut,â you reply curly, the cabin walls closing in around you. Youâre growing tired of the suffocating way Charles and Sadie hover as if theyâre both waiting for you to break again. That moment on the cliff, your grief by the fire, it was all a lapse of judgment, nothing more. Youâve fought too damn hard for your freedom just to throw it away because the men you love always leave you behind.Â
âNeed some compan-â
âNo,â you snap, cutting her off. Your tone leaves no room for argument.Â
You step outside, the balmy evening air clinging to your skin as you head toward Lady. You donât know where youâre going, but thatâs fine. You just know you need to figure out how to live for yourself. And you can start by riding.Â
The moon hangs heavy in the sky, its light threading through the plains like silver threads. Clouds roll overhead, slowly swallowing the stars. You smell rain in the air, a promise of a storm tomorrow. Youâre sure youâll be holed up in the cabins tomorrow while it pours.Â
For now, you have the trail and the night for yourself. You let Lady take the lead, her slow gait a soothing rhythm as you settle into the ride. Normally, you donât risk staying away from camp overnight. There are too many lawmen and bounty hunters looking to make a name for themselves. Tonight, though, you make an exception.Â
A loud whoop cuts through the stillness, yanking you from your thoughts. You pull Lady to a halt, eyes roaming the dark horizon. A lone rider crests the hill, silhouetted against the moonlight, his path set toward something hidden around the bend.
âMust be my lucky day!â He hollers, voice manic. Thereâs a flash, the sharp crack of a gunshot splitting the quiet, and a scream follows.Â
You curse under your breath, driving your heels into Ladyâs sides. The two of you round the bend in time to see the rider poking his head into a finely adorned carriage. The driver slumps lifelessly over the reins, blood pooling beneath him.
Grimacing, you draw back into the shadows of the hill. âAlright, ladies first,â the bandit taunts. He reaches into the carriage, his groping hand causing a shrill shriek before heâs grabbing a woman and tossing her into the dirt. You grit your teeth, tucking yourself further out of sight, hoping to go unnoticed.
The glint of his revolver catches the moonlight as he climbs into the carriage. From inside, the muffled sounds of arguing give way to fists striking flesh. The woman lies with her face obscured by her hands. She flinches and sobs with each punch landed and the noises make Lady shift uneasily. Her hooves snap against the dried brambles of a dying bush.Â
âDamn horse,â you mutter, eyes clenched shut as the noises momentarily pause.Â
âWhoâs there?â He calls out. Itâs barely a moment before his patience snaps and he fires a warning shot into the air. âYou donât want me to come find you,â he warns, voice low and tight.Â
Knocking the brim of your hat down, you let out a resigned sigh and turn the corner, forcing yourself into the open. âHowdy,â you call out, trying to mimic the casual confidence Arthur used to have in moments like these. Bandits, outlaws- they all recognize each other through the ease with which they face situations like this. You only hope youâre a good enough liar. âJust passinâ through, friend, no need for problems.âÂ
For a moment, his gun dips to his side. Then, his face is twisting into a wide, erratic grin. âNice trail isnât it? Perfect for catching big fish,â he says, swinging the revolver toward the womanâs husband. She whimpers loudly and grasps at the slumped-over man. You can hear his shallow, wet breaths from where you sit.Â
âThere ainât no need to shoot âem,â you tell him, voice steady despite the tension coiling around you. âThereâs a fence not far from here, youâll get more money selling that carriage than you will killinâ them.â
He crackles and it makes your skin crawl. âWhereâs the fun in that?â He sneers, cocking the hammer back as he points the gun at the woman.Â
This man laughs, taking far more pleasure in tormenting others than in the act of robbery itself. Heâs malicious, sadisticâthe very picture of a perfect outlaw. For a fleeting moment, he sees something in you, thinks you might be cut from the same ruthless cloth. But heâs wrong, and thereâs something exhilarating about stepping beyond the mold your family and husband once shaped for you, discovering who you can be on your own terms.
Your hand drifts to the revolver on your side, slowly easing it out of your holster. His head snaps toward the sound of you pulling the hammer back, but itâs too late. From your spot atop Lady, all you see is blood splatter as his body drops to the floor. The woman screaming lets you know you hit your mark near perfect.Â
Opposed to the man now bleeding out in the dirt beneath you, thereâs no thrill in the kill, no satisfaction. Just the cold thrum of your nerves, the slight tremor in your hands as you slide off Lady and stride toward the couple.Â
With the bandit dead, the womanâs husband seems to make a miraculous recovery. He springs up, blood still streaming along his chin. âThank God for you, sir-â
He stops short when you tip your hat back. Perhaps his ears were still ringing from one too many blows, dulling his senses, or maybe he was simply too pigheaded to grasp the fact that heâd just been rescued by a woman. You level him with an unimpressed glare. âNot a problem,â you say flatly
âOh, good heavens,â the woman gasps, whispering your name with a startling familiarity. You freeze, eyes wide, as your blood runs cold.Â
Elsbeth Morton.Â
Youâd know the voice anywhere. Of all the people you could have run into, sheâs the last youâd ever want to see. Your tormenter through finishing school. She used to cut your hair in your sleep, stain your dress, and make your life a misery for sport.Â
Her sneer hasnât changed, though the lines around her mouth suggest her spite has only deepened. âWell,â she drawls, voice laced with faux pity, âI see nothing much has changed for you. Still scrounging out an existence in the dirt, are we?â
Your jaw tightens. âElsbeth,â you grit out. âYouâre welcome.â
She laughs, short and derisive in a way that makes you bristle. âFor what? Subjecting me to this humiliating spectacle? Honestly, I think I preferred the company of the bandit. At least he had the decency to get on with it instead of pretending to play the hero.â
You bite the inside of your cheek, forcing yourself to stay calm, but she doesnât stop. âItâs almost tragic,â she continues, brushing the dirt from her skirts as if trying to erase the sight of you. âYouâre still so desperate for approval, arenât you? Trying to prove youâre something youâre not. Whatâs next? A big speech about how strong and independent you are?â She snickers, tugging her husband to his feet. âWe both know better.â
Your voice comes out low and steady. âYouâve always been good at pretending youâre better than everyone else, Elsbeth.â God hates you, youâre sure of it. If he doesn't, why is she here? Dragging you back to everything you loathed about your former selfâthe vapid, dependent, hollow shell of a woman who had once believed her worth was defined by the man standing beside her.
âPretending?â she snaps, narrowing her eyes. âDarling, I donât need to pretend. You can wear all the trousers you want, but we both know youâre still the same timid little girl, hiding behind a man and hoping no one notices she doesnât belong.â
Her words cut, but they donât sting the way they once would have. Instead, they ignite something, a fire born not of anger, but clarity.Â
Youâre not the man bleeding out in the dirt, killing for the joy of it. But you arenât the polished girl she remembers, desperate for a manâs approval. Youâre something else entirely. Unbound by society, free to choose your own path, youâre a beast of your own creation. And if there is one thing youâve learned about yourself- you love putting your past in the grave.Â
You let out a slow breath, your hand drifting toward your revolver. âElsbeth,â you call, voice sharp enough to cut through her self-satisfied grin.
She stops, turning back with an arched brow. âWhat now?â she huffs. âCome to beg for my acceptance? Or just another pathetic attempt to-â
âThat husband of mine,â you interrupt, voice cool as steel, âwas good for one thing.â You draw your revolver, the barrel leveling with her chest. âTeaching me to shoot.â
Her eyes widen, her sneer faltering as her hand instinctively flies to her necklace.
Your lips curl into a wicked smile. âNow, how about you hand over those pretty jewels?â
She scoffs, but you see the way her grin falters, the slight fear in her eyes. You shoot her a wink and take a step closer, reveling in how she stumbles back.Â
âAnd while weâre at it,â you continue, voice tightening into a sharp, mocking edge, âwhy donât you hand over those earrings too?â You laugh, waving your gun recklessly as you shrug with a faux playfulness. âActually, what the hell, I think Iâll take that dressâseeing as youâve gone and gotten it all muddy anyway.â You take a step forward, your gaze narrowing on her trembling hands. âHell, even that hair ribbon. You always did like rubbing your finery in everyoneâs face, Elsbeth. Letâs see how you like losing it.â
She stares at you, disbelief flickering in her wide eyes, her hands frozen in hesitation. âYou canât be serious,â she whispers.
âOh, Iâm dead,â you pull back the hammer of your gun with a slow, menacing click. The sound hangs in the air like a threat. Your eyes narrow, and a dangerous smile tugs at your lips. âSerious.â
She moves hesitantly, every motion weighted with reluctance, disbelief etched across her face. You, the woman she used to torment and cow with a simple look, now dismantling her composure piece by piece. The power shift is palpable, and for the first time in your life, you watch Elsbeth Morton falter.
âGoân now,â you say, your voice cutting through her trembling silence. âDonât keep me waiting.â
Her husband flinches as she begins to remove her jewelry, her fingers trembling as she unfastens each piece. You hold out your hand, and she hesitates, her face flushed with humiliation as she steps forward to place them carefully in your palm, one by one, like a chastened child.
He glances at you, then at her, his eyes wide with a mixture of fear and disgust as if the sight of her submitting is too much for him to stomach.
Your eyes narrow on him, your hand tightening slightly around the revolver. The smug smile creeping onto your lips says it allâyouâll deal with him next.
You understand, finally, that youâre no longer the woman shaped by the men in your life. The husband who failed you, the outlaw who abandoned you, the society that tried to break you. People will learn that you arenât afraid to take whatâs yours anymore, because for the first time, youâre carving your own path, and God help anyone who tries to stand in your way.
Next Part end. â I do not own the characters or the game Red Dead Redemption 1/2, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2025. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
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Part six of How About a Nuke is finished and will be posted tomorrow afternoon!! (I guess technically this afternoon bc itâs midnight but whatever)
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you guys are making me blush stawwwp
(don't stop)
The End of the Beginning
Previous Part / Next Part
Cooper Howard x fem!reader A/N: Iâm going to use my How About a Nuke? taglist for my Cooper Howard one shots/stories from now on. If you do not want to be on the taglist, please let me know and I will remove you immediately. Iâm considering writing some more for these two, let me know what you think in the comments.
Summary: You donât know how it starts. But you know how it ends.Â
Thereâs not a specific moment where you can pinpoint how this whole sordid affair began. Not a true affair, in your own defense. Nothing physical ever happened between the two of you, but what did happen was somehow almost worse.
Maybe it was when Bud first introduced you to him or when you began to eat dinners with his family. It could have been the times he would randomly drop by your home for a drink, youâre not sure. It doesnât even matter, you know that no matter what it never would have ended well for either of you.Â
âMr. Howard, it is a pleasure.â The man in front of Cooper is someone he should recognize, he knows heâs met him before. But his face could blend into any crowd, heâs drawing a blank and failing not to let it show.Â
âHowâre you,â the question trails off awkwardly and the woman beside the man is clearly trying to hide a smile.Â
âUh, Bud,â he offers up, his smile waning slightly, âBud Askins. We met a couple of weeks ago.â Heâs grasping at straws, eyes desperate for some sense of familiarity within Cooperâs own gaze. He would feel bad for him, but something about this man sets Cooper on edge.Â
âBud,â Cooper offers him the kind of smile he gives every fan and it does the trick like usual. Bud lets out a sigh of relief and shakes Cooperâs hand with a vigor that rattles his teeth. The woman clears her throat, glaring at the back of Budâs head.Â
He finally remembers himself and turns towards her. âRight, my apologies.â Bud moves back and she steps forward, her hand outstretched towards Cooper. Sheâs got a disarming smile which is a nice change from Budâs overeager one.Â
She seems happy to have met him, but not the starstruck joy heâs used to. Itâs refreshing to not have someone be eagerly shouting at him what his favorite movie of theirs is. She offers him her name and he repeats it, liking the way it feels when he says it. âIâm sorry, who are you?â
She doesnât get offended by the brusque question. She drops his hand and glances back at Bud, âI work for Mr. Askins. Iâll be helping you in adjusting to your new Vault-Tec life.â
He frowns, brows furrowed in confusion at the way she phrases her answer. âVault-Tec life? I thought this was just meant to be some ads, a few billboards maybe.â He chuckles, hoping to ease the tone of the conversation, but they donât buy it. She shares a concerned look with Bud and they glance back at Cooper before whispering something to each other.Â
Bud listens to her speak, but his gaze stays locked on Cooper. He doesnât look happy anymore, if anything he looks concerned. Cooper sighs and wonders, not for the first time, what Barb has gotten him into. As if summoning her, his wife pops up behind him.Â
She wraps an arm through his and he feels himself easing back into her touch, hoping she can provide some clarity. âI see youâve met Bud and his assistant.â Thereâs an odd tone to her words when she addresses the other woman.Â
Her gaze snaps from Budâs and she shoots Barb a sharp glare. âI am not Mr. Askinsâ assistant.â Barb clears her throat and she winces, quickly amending her statement, âIf anything, I believe I might be your husbandâs.â
Cooper wraps his arm around Barbâs shoulder and draws her closer to him. She smiles and looks up at him but he canât find it in himself to return it. With each new development in this Vault-Tec partnership he finds himself growing more and more hostile towards the company. Thereâs just something about this whole idea that has him unsettled.Â
Itâs not that he doesnât see the need for the vaults, he does. If anyone understands the dangers this war is presenting, itâs him. Heâd been on the frontlines, he knows just how bad itâs getting out there. But, the way Vault-Tec is going about everything is unsettling. Capitalizing off the American peopleâs suffering isnât something heâs interested in endorsing.Â
Heâs been questioning more and more everyday if that's exactly what heâs doing.Â
âThatâs the confusion, honey,â he glances down at Barb but sheâs sharing a look with the other woman that he canât understand. âI donât see why I need an assistant.â
She sighs and finally looks back at him. She laces her fingers through his and gives him a comforting smile, âLetâs go talk.â
You watched as Barb dragged Cooper away from you and Bud. You knew this wasnât going to go over well. Youâre not sure why anyone at the company even listens to Budâs asinine ideaâs anymore. You give your boss a discerning look but heâs still staring after his crush, the Cooper Howard.Â
There must be some cunning snake under the surface of this bumbling baboon. You certainly donât see it, but someone had to have at Vault-Tec for him to have crawled so high up the ladder. You look over your shoulder at Cooper and, not for the first time, a pang of guilt stabs through your stomach.Â
Same as everyone else, you idolized Mr. Howard. It was hard not to. Heâd fought for your country in the Sino-American War, defending Alaska. And then he came home and instead of protecting Americaâs citizens, he made it his job to uplift and entertain them.Â
He was an incredible man, and if you werenât so worried about protecting your own ass youâd feel bad for what Vault-Tecâs mission is going to do to him.Â
Barb had brought concerns to you and Bud that Cooper was⊠slipping. She seemed to think his priorities had shifted and he was growing suspicious of Vault-Tec, and by extension her.Â
He was right to be suspicious, there wasnât a day that you werenât disgusted with yourself for working for who you do. But you also would like to survive this coming nuclear holocaust, so you learned to live with it.Â
She seemed to think that giving him an assistant, one of Budâs Buds, would help get him back on track. Youâre not sure why Bud had chosen you for the job, but he seemed to think you would be charming enough to snag Cooperâs attention.Â
You were to bond with Mr. Howard, become his friend and gain his trust. When the time came for him to start questioning you about Vault-Tec and their true intentions, you would say something to calm him.Â
Essentially, befriend him and then lie to his face and make him think he wasnât promoting the end of the world. Barb didnât want her husband to ever learn about the truth of who was really pulling the strings of the war.Â
Cooper was led back to you both by Barb with a smile on his face. He seemed more open to you now, too, offering you a polite nod of his head which you returned. âBarb, here, seems to think I need myself a personal assistant.â
You laughed amicably and shrugged, âYouâre a busy man, Mr. Howard. Iâm just an extra set of hands.â
He shook his head and waved you off, âCall me Cooper, please, it seems like weâll be spending a lot of time with each other anyway.â
You smiled, your gut twisting with disgust when you saw the earnest look in his eyes, âCooper.â
âGood morning,â Cooper leaned over Barbâs shoulder, landing a quick peck on her cheek. She smiled and squeezed his arm before glancing at the clock and frowning. He already knew what she was gonna say. He was going to be late.Â
He smiled at her, taking a sip of his coffee. She seemed to notice the look on his face because she just sighed and shook her head. âI donât think youâre going to be able to get away with this anymore.â
He laughed and shrugged, âWhy not? Itâs a part of my signature, Iâm always a few minutes late.â
She glanced down at the Pip-Boy on her arm and something seems to have caught her attention. She let out a haggard breath and put Janeyâs lunch box on the counter. âDonât let her leave without this.â She ran to the front door and Cooper frowned as he watched her run around the house, frantically collecting her things.Â
âWhere are you going?â
She was already halfway out the door when she called out a quick, âWork emergency.â He shook his head and rinsed his mug out in the sink. Heâs had work emergencies before, none of them so urgent he would have left without saying goodbye to their daughter.Â
He sucks on his teeth, staring over at the front door. What does she do for Vault-Tec? Had she ever really told him?
Had he ever asked?
His thoughts are interrupted by a series of blaring honks outside his front door. He figures Barb had forgotten her keys in her rush to get out of the house. But when he steps onto the front lawn he sees you parked along the curb, staring expectantly at the door.Â
You lift your sunglasses up, your lips tilted up into an easy smile and you wave at him. âMorning, Mr. Cooper,â you shout across the driveway.Â
He scoffs and walks towards your convertible. Youâve got the roof tilted down, a scarf wrapped around your hair to keep the style. You light up a cigarette while he approaches. He leans into the car and stares at you with a disbelieving look on his face.Â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âWeâve got a packed schedule today, canât be late.â Barbâs warning suddenly makes sense now. You, apparently, werenât the type to let him be a little lazy.Â
Heâd almost forgotten sheâd forced an assistant on him. Heâs still not happy with it, feeling like heâs being babysat more than anything else.Â
Sheâd made it clear, though, that there wasnât much room for arguments when it came to you. He doesnât understand why she was so adamant about this. Most wives would prefer their husbands didnât spend all day with such pretty assistants.Â
âBarbâs just run out, Iâve got to drop Janey off at school today.â You sigh, face screwing up as he speaks. You flick the cigarette onto the pavement and fiddle with the Pip-Boy youâve got on your passenger seat. Heâs surprised not to see it on your wrist, most Vault-Tec people treat it like a fifth limb.Â
You screw around with it for a minute before you finally look back up at him. âWe can make it, get her out here.â You toss the Pip-Boy in the back and place your hands on the wheel. You give him an expectant look and he realizes youâre not gonna let him argue with you about this.Â
âArenât I your boss, darling?â
You scoff, tone sardonic, âSure, Mr. Howard.â He sighs and finally heads back inside. Janey is more than happy to ride along with you. Cooper less so. You seem keen on breaking every damn speeding law to get him to work on time. Heâs not sure he trusts his life in your reckless hands.Â
You peel into Janeyâs school, practically kick her out of the car, and then youâre off again. âYou can slow down, you know.â
You glance over at him, a sly smirk on your lips. âIâm not making you sick, am I?âÂ
He eases up his grip on the door handle and shakes his head. âIâve worn a power suit, sweetheart, not much can make me carsick.â
You shrug, âGood, then I think Iâll keep going like this.â He shakes his head, slightly miffed by the insubordination, slightly impressed. Itâs nice to have someone who treats him like heâs just another regular Joe.Â
Most of his former assistants kissed the ground he walked on and were terrified to say one word against him. It gets tiring after a while, that sort of behavior. Heâs seen plenty of his costars let it get to their heads and turn into someone egotistical and vile to be around. He doesnât want to turn out like that.Â
Heâs never wanted the fame to twist him into something he isnât. He has a feeling you donât let many people walk over you. You also donât seem to have a problem with being assertive. Itâs odd, these behaviors in someone in a position of subordinance.Â
Makes him wonder if being an assistant is your actual job, or if Bud had demoted you for some other odd reason.Â
âI really donât want to intrude.â
Cooper waves you off and shakes his head, âNot at all. Iâm inviting you, honey.â You sigh and grit your teeth. You know what youâre supposed to say. Youâre supposed to thank him and accept the invitation to dinner.Â
But being with him everyday for the past few weeks has made it nearly impossible to keep this up. Heâs an incredible man, kind and honest to a fault. Heâs got such strong principles, to be openly manipulating those against him makes you sick to your stomach.Â
You thought you would be able to do this. So many times in your life youâd heard never to meet your heroes. You figured Cooper would be like every other pretentious asshole in Hollywood and you would have no problem lying to his face.Â
But he is so much more than that. Heâs so much better than the people you work with and for, so much better than you.Â
Still, a job is a job. You donât do this and youâll be kicked out of Budâs program and left out with the rest of civilization to burn up when the fallout begins.Â
You reason with yourself that by doing this youâre also ensuring Cooperâs safety. As long as he believes in Vaut-Tec, in you, heâll have a place at the end of the world.Â
It doesnât make you feel any better.Â
âThank you, Iâd love to join you.â
He grins at you and walks off to wrap up his last scene of the day. You let out a long breath, slumping against the concession table and rubbing at your forehead. Youâre losing sleep over all of this. Your nails are brittle, hair splitting, and health declining with the amount of anxiety and guilt youâve been carrying around.Â
Despite your resolve mentally, youâre really not sure how much longer you can go on like this physically. Youâve always been a horrible liar, especially when youâre lying to people you care about. You should have gotten an Oscar for getting this far with him.Â
The drive to Cooperâs home that night is silent. To punish yourself, you donât turn on the radio and force yourself to wallow in self hatred the whole way there. You berate yourself and come up with about five different reasons to get yourself out of being his assistant.Â
But when you knock on the door and see his smiling face you canât force a word out. Heâs so handsome, cleaned up and his hair slicked back. You could get lost in his eyes when he speaks to you. You force yourself to keep your mouth shut and just eat dinner with him.Â
Barb keeps sending you appreciative smiles all throughout dinner and you want to stab your fork through her hand. You might be a horrible person for lying to him, but she has to be the worst damn wife youâve ever met. She claims to be in love with Cooper, to care about him, but the way she manipulates him goes against that.Â
You donât get to claim to love someone and then treat them like that. She wonât even let him take Roosevelt! You know for a fact that animals can go into certain vaults, she just hates that dog.Â
âI have to be a good man gone bad in this one.â Cooper explains to Barb. Sheâd asked after the latest script changes but she didnât seem wholly interested as she messed with her Pip-Boy. âI donât really like it, Iâm meant to be a sheriff, not a cold-blooded killer.â
Barb scoffs and shakes her head, âEven good men have to make bad decisions, Cooper.â
Cooper straightens up and glares at her. At his silence she finally looks up, her face quickly becoming guarded at the look on his. âNot all of them,â he argues, voice soft. You and Janey glance between the two of them, this goes beyond a simple script change.Â
âWell,â Barb goes back to cutting her steak, shaking her head at him, âthatâs a very naive way of looking at the world.â She gives him a sharp smile, her eyes empty and cold.Â
Youâre grateful when Janey passes a piece of broccoli to Roosevelt and the both of them are snapped out of their pseudo argument. Barb snaps at the dog and Cooper laughs, you shrink into your chair, wishing to be anywhere else.Â
When dinner is over, you clean up while Cooper and Barb put Janey to bed. You slide open the door to the backyard and tug a cigarette out of your case. You dig around in your bag for a while, nearly breaking down when you canât find your lighter.Â
âNeed this?â Fire sparks up before you and Cooper grins as he holds his lighter out. You smile in relief and thank him, sparking up the end and taking a deep inhale. You feel yourself relax slightly, easing off of the meltdown you were about to have.Â
Little things keep seeming to build and build on top of you. Youâre hanging on by a very thin thread and youâre worried about whatâs going to happen when it snaps. âYou alright, sweetheart?â He seems genuinely concerned and you canât even look at him anymore.Â
You take a seat and nod, focusing instead on the stars above you. Heâs further out from civilization, heâs got a better view of the night sky than you do from your crowded apartment. âJust been a little stressed out lately.â
He sits beside you and reaches over, his hand lands on your thigh and he squeezes. It lasts less than a second, itâs clearly meant to comfort you but it sets your body on fire and you turn away from him slightly. He frowns, an apologetic look on his face and he backs off.Â
You canât find it in yourself to feel guilty. You donât need to start being attracted to him on top of lying to him. Not when you just scorned Barb for the exact same thing. âI hope I havenât been adding to that.â
You look over at him and shake your head, âNot at all,â youâre the only reason Iâm like this.Â
He seems to catch onto what youâre not saying. He might not know exactly why heâs stressing you out, but heâs more perceptive than others give him credit for. Still, he doesnât say anything. He just nods and takes a swig from the glass of whiskey resting in his lap.Â
âSorry about earlier.â
âWhat?â He sighs, giving you a look that tells you not to bother playing dumb. You shrug, âWasnât the worst fight Iâve ever had to watch.â
He shakes his head and runs a tired hand over his face. âIt wasnât even a fight. Thatâs what bothers me, she says these little things and sometimes it just goes right over my head.â
You find yourself speaking before you can stop yourself, âItâs only later that you realize she was being cruel.â
He looks over at you and nods. His head tilts in confusion, âYou know what Iâm talking about?â
You nod, puffing on the cigarette between your fingers before you continue. You feel yourself starting to ease up again, your shoulders finally lowering from their place next to your ears. âYeah, Iâve got a long list of exâs like that.â Your mouth snaps closed when you realize what you said.Â
You probably shouldnât be saying ex to the man youâre trying to keep with his wife. But he doesnât get upset, he only sighs. The sound is resigned, like youâre only confirming something he already knew to be true.Â
âYou donât seem very happy,â Cooper glanced over his shoulder and spotted you. You had your heels in your hand, making your way across his back deck to stand next to him at the pool. You drop the heels on one of his lawn chairs and sit down to dip your legs in the pool.Â
He stays standing, staring down at you. You look up and offer him a tired grin. You must have been about as sick of this as he was. After a minute he finally sat down beside you. âCanât say Iâm pleased to have all these people in my house.â
You both glanced back at the party. Dozens of Vault-Tec employees streamed in and out of his living room, their voices carrying, even back to where you and Cooper were hidden away. He hated this, feeling out of place in his home.Â
âNone of your friendâs wanted to come?â You glance over at him, a concerned look on your face. He appreciates it, your concern for his comfort, especially considering Barb doesn't seem to care for it at all. She hadnât asked if he was okay with this, or comfortable with this wrap party. Sheâd simply gone ahead with it and then sprung it on him.Â
âSeb was here a while ago but he left.â He scoffed and threw back the rest of his drink. âCanât say I blame him, if it wasnât my house I would have left hours ago.âÂ
You shrugs, âLetâs go.â Youâre staring at him, eyes wide and earnest like itâs the simplest solution in the world.Â
He laughs, more surprised than anything, âWhat?â
You stand up, tugging your heels back on and holding a hand out to him. âLetâs leave. I canât say Iâm very happy to be here either.â
He argues, âThese are your coworkers, sweetheart.â But he still takes your hand, getting back to his feet and letting you lead him through his back gate. You tug your keys out of your purse, sliding into your little convertible and giving him an eager smile while you wait for him to follow.Â
âThey're a bunch of vultures, Coop. Letâs just get out of here.â Hearing you use his nickname affects him more than he wants it too. Affection has been few and far between at the house lately, he finds himself leaning into it when you offer it more than he should.Â
Things are tense between Barb and himself, but heâs still a married man. He shouldnât get so happy when you call him Coop. And he really shouldnât be leaving his wife behind at this ridiculous fucking party and getting in your car. But he finds himself going against his better knowledge and following anyway.Â
He doesn't ask where youâre taking him. He doesnât even care, he just wants to be near you. Youâre kind, you donât judge him. You leave him feeling a little weightless everytime you snap one of your witty little retorts at him. Heâs charmed by you, more than he should be, but he canât bring himself to be bothered by it.Â
Youâre eating shitty junk food and sipping on Nuka-Colaâs in the back of your convertible. Cooper kind of feels like a teenager again. Itâs been a long time since heâs had some decent greasy burgers. Barb doesnât like bringing fast food into the house and itâs been a while since he and Janey have snuck some on the way home from school.Â
Youâve parked your car in the desolate parking lot of the closed shopping center. Youâre both quiet, staring up at the stars or the bright flashing billboards across from you. Cooper glances over at you and curiosity gets the better of him.Â
âHowâd you end up working for Vault-Tec?â You give him a questioning look and he shrugs, taking a sip from his bottle. âJust doesnât seem like your sort of company.â You seem too kind for them, too compassionate.Â
âI, um,â you chuckle, swiping away some condensation that had dripped onto your bare thigh and Cooper follows the movement lazily. âI got swept up in the war time efforts. There were a bunch of campaigns to get women to start assisting during the war.â You rolled your eyes and laughed, âThe Nuka-Cola girl roped me in with her patriotism and I found myself at a plant assembling your power suits.â
Cooperâs shoulders tense up and he has to fight off a nasty retort. You catch his gaze and flinch away from it slightly. He doesnât blame you for all the faulty defects in those suits, but heâd watched good men and women die on the frontlines because of those damn things. Itâs hard not to get angry when theyâre mentioned, especially because theyâd told them the suits werenât safe. The government forced them into them anyway.
âI know, there were a lot of defects. A lot of people died because of those suits. Thatâs how Bud discovered me actually, I raised hell with my supervisor. I tried to get them to fix the issue or just stop manufacturing them. We were wasting good supplies on death traps.â
You shook your head and sighed, âIt didnât matter what I said. They never stopped making them. But, Bud, liked my fire. He thought it showed good leadership skills that I was so willing to stand up for what I belived in. He took me to Vault-Tec when he left the suits behind.â You took in a deep shuddering breath, for a moment Cooper could swear he saw tears in your eyes. âI always seem to work for the wrong side.â
Heâd been reaching out, hoping to offer some comfort, when his hand stopped. It dropped back down to his side and he glared at you. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
Your eyes widened and you froze, seemingly caught off guard. âWhat?â
ââI always seem to work for the wrong side.â Whatâs that supposed to mean, sweetheart?â Is this it? The confirmation that heâs been looking for that his fears werenât unfounded. Had you known this whole time heâd been fighting with Barb and not told him?
He didn't want to believe it. He couldnât believe it. How twisted had his life become that he was putting more faith into you, practically a stranger, than his own wife.Â
You shook your head, a frown appearing on your lips and eyes boring angrily into his. âThatâs not what I said.â
His mouth opened in shock, not quite sure he was hearing you properly. âWhat? Yes, it is.â
âCooper,â you snapped, his name sounding harsh for the first time. Youâd always spoken so sweetly to him, he couldnât understand where this was coming from. âThatâs not what I said, what is your problem?â
Could he have misheard you? Youâd never gotten mad at him before. You would only be acting like this if he really was wrong. He sighed, figuring he should just drop it before he made things worse. âSorry, sweetheart.â
Your eyes softened and you reached out, giving his hand a quick squeeze. âItâs alright. Letâs just enjoy tonight.â He nodded, leaning closer towards you while you reached forward to turn the radio on. Despite the both of you knowing it was a bad idea, you rested your head against him. Snuggled up together and watching the stars, he could get used to this.
You hear your name, rushed and bordering on a shout. You whip around, frowning when you see Cooper barreling towards you. He reaches you, grabbing you by the elbow and dragging you into an empty office.Â
Youâre taken aback by the aggression in his actions but youâre more concerned when you notice his eyes. Theyâre bloodshot and his cheeks are flushed, like heâs been crying or was trying not to. You reach up before you can think, hand cupping his cheek and ignoring the minute way he leans into it.Â
âCooper? What is it? Whatâs wrong?â
His eyes are wild, darting all around the room like heâs waiting for someone to jump out and grab him. âItâs Barb. I put a transmitter on her Pip-Boy and I heard her in her meeting. Sheâs talking about starting the nuclear war, sheâs going to fucking kill everyone.â You step back from him, arms dropping to your sides.Â
âCooper,â his name is a barely heard whisper. âWhy did you have to dig?â Itâs over. You knew this was coming. Cooper was too smart not to start digging on his own, even without your reassurances. Youâd only delayed the inevitable and hurt yourself in the process. Hurt him.Â
He frowns and shakes his head, stepping back from you. His face moves through a hundred different emotions, faster than you can process, but you manage to catch a few of them. Heâs betrayed, hurt, disgusted by the sight of you. âYou knew?â The words are spit out with such venom you nearly flinch from him.
You can feel tears burning the back of your throat and you glare at him, âWhy couldnât you have left it alone?â Itâs misplaced anger, you know. Youâre mad at yourself for getting involved in this, for dragging him down with you. Youâre mad at Barb and Bud and all the fucked up corporations you keep finding yourself employed by. But the anger strikes out at him and you regret it immediately.Â
âYou knew!â Itâs not a question anymore, itâs a realization. He shakes his head and he almost looks more hurt than when he discovered Barb. âYouâre fucking sick, all of you!â Heâs out the door and down the hall before you have a chance to stop him.Â
You sink back against the wall, wiping at tears that wonât stop coming. Betty finds you, she takes one look at you and then a dissapearingCooper before sheâs dragging you into Barbâs office. âYou need to wait here for them.â
You donât argue, thereâs no point. Youâd failed in your mission and Cooper was beyond Barbâs grasp. Maybe it was for the better, that he got away from her while he could. Dying rather than being trapped in a vault with her might be a better ending for him.Â
You canât get that look of his out of your mind, not even while Barb berates you. She nearly fires you, but Bud stops her. She storms out of her office and you just keep replaying that moment with Cooper. You could have played along with him, never let him know you knew about Vault-Tec and just run away with him.Â
But the thought of living the rest of your short life lying to him makes you sick to your stomach.Â
Bud calls your name for the inth time and grabs your shoulders. You snap your gaze up to his, finally noticing that heâs been kneeling in front of you this whole time. âYou have to go in early.â
You shake your head dumbly, not understanding what heâs saying. He frowns, eyes desperate and he keeps glancing over his shoulder. âBarb is livid. She wants you gone. Weâre gonna have to send you down early.â
âYou meanâŠâ you trail off, mind going blank at the thought of being put into cryo months before you were prepared to. You want to argue with him and tell him you need more time. Thoughts of going after Cooper and trying to make him see reason float through your brain.Â
He seems to track your train of thought because he shakes his head. âWe canât delay this. You go now or you donât go at all.âÂ
You hadnât realized just how much Bud seemed to care for you until this moment. The sheer determination on his face that he wouldnât let Barb bury you would have made you sentimental were it not for the current gut wrenching feeling of heartbreak you were experiencing.Â
He stands up and glances over at Betty. The worry slowly disappears as a plan starts to formulate within him. âBetty will take her car and get you to the vault, Iâll have people there ready to take you in.â He grabs your arm and yanks you out of your chair. âYou need to leave now, before Barb comes back with security.â
He and Betty share a look over your shoulder before she nods. She grabs your elbow from Bud and marches you down the hall. Youâre barely present for the walk through the hallways of Vault-Tec. You donât have time to take in the world around you, appreciate the beauty before itâs gone.Â
Youâre numb. Stuck in a limbo and paralysis of your own creation. When you make it to the vault, Betty leaves you there to be taken in by the guards. They lead you to Vault 31 and march you down the long hall until you reach your cryo pod.Â
You donât know when youâll be released, what the world will be like when you come back out. But you know Cooper will be gone and there'll be nothing left for you.Â
You step into the pod and let your eyes slowly drift closed.Â
Your pod pops open with a hiss and your head lolls to the side. Thereâs an odd buzzing noise before you but you canât see much of anything. âIt will take a minute for your eyes to adjust.â
Your brows furrow as you place the voice, âBud?â Your hands grope blindly through the dark for the edge of your pod. Your eyes begin to thaw, vague shapes and colors making themselves clear to you first. âIf youâre here, how long have I been asleep?âÂ
Odd, you canât make out his form anywhere, but it sounds like heâs right in front of you. You step down and thereâs a loud buzz, like wheels rolling across metal. âWatch out!â You tilt your head in confusion, blinking the rest of the frost out of your eyes and gasping when you see whatâs in front of you.Â
A brain on a fucking vacuum. âBud!â You shout, completely caught off guard by this new look of his.Â
He sighs, the sound robotic and staticky. âYes, itâs me. Itâs the only way I could stay alive to monitor the success of my vaults.â Even just as a brain, you can still hear the pride in his voice, âI am proud to say that we have been most successful these past two hundred and thirteen years.â
You canât respond, winded by how long itâs been since youâve been asleep. Everything youâve ever known was gone. Officially.Â
Your mind drifts to Cooper but you stop it before it gets too far. Even before he found out about your role in Vault-Tec, you were never going to be in the same vault as him. No matter what, the two of you would never have seen each other again.Â
Thereâs no reason to mourn him now.Â
Bud rolls in front of you, leading you to the door of the vault. âHank MacLean and Betty will be here to greet you. Youâll be a part of the Triennal trade, your official entry into vault 33.â Heâs rapidly firing off information faster than you can keep up.Â
You know the protocols, they were drilled into you long before you came down here. For every one of Budâs Buds they had to marry their way into the vault they were entering. You just prayed Hank was kind enough to give you someone nice to marry, maybe even tall.Â
The vaultâs door is rolling open before you get a chance to prepare yourself. Ten smiling faces stare eagerly at you, you offer them tentative looks. You search among them for Betty and Hank, it takes you a moment to recognize them. To realize that the two old people at the front are Hank and Betty.Â
Theyâd been out much longer than you had if the wrinkles were anything to go by.Â
âWelcome to vault 33!â A big eyed girl shouts at you from behind Hank. You offer her a shaky smile, racking your brain for what youâre supposed to say.Â
âThank you,â the words are stilted and you wince internally. âIn honor of your welcoming, my vault has sent ahead supplies and crops. My overseer apologizes for not being here to greet you all, but Iâm happy to be here!â The words sound scripted, more than you would like.Â
Betty picks up on your discomfort and ushers you forward. âCome on, you should meet your husband.â You shoot her a scared look but the face she gives you shuts you down. Thereâs no backing out of this, as much as you might want to. This is your reality now.Â
âNorm, meet your new bride.âÂ
Well, heâs certainly not tall.Â
âI still canât believe you're not pregnant.â You hand Lucy a wrench and she frowns from her place on the floor. She pauses in her repairs of the pipes for a moment to pester you further. âHave you had the doctors check my brotherâs sperm count?â
âLucy!â You admonish, glaring down at her. She shrugs, not finding any fault in the question. You donât have the heart to tell her that in the three years youâve been married to her brother youâve only had sex once.Â
It was your wedding night, extremely awkward and unpleasant for both of you. Norm wasnât the type to just easily trust someone he didnât know and you were still nursing a heartbreak he could never comprehend. He wasnât a bad husband, he was actually amazing.Â
You two just seemed to work better as partners rather than husband and wife. You both kept your nightly activities, or lack thereof, to yourselves. It wasnât exactly smiled upon to not be actively trying to repopulate the earth. But the extremely personal questions about your husbandâs sperm and your fertility were beyond annoying.Â
Still, everytime you even consider trying again with him you think of Cooper and want to cry. âHis sperm count is fine. It just takes longer for some couples.â She doesnât seem like she wants to let it go, but you force her to by shoving her back towards the broken pipe.Â
You know sheâs only been bugging you about it because her time in the trade is coming up. Sheâs just worried that her relationship will be like yours and Normâs. She wants kids in a way you canât bring yourself to and sheâs worried her fertility takes after her brotherâs.Â
You understand the fear, but if she asks you one more damn time youâre going to clock her over the head with a hammer. Steph comes up to you both and gives you a placating smile. She must see the murder on your face because she offers to distract Lucy.
You thank her and storm off back to your housing unit. Norm, thankfully, isnât home when you get there. Heâs too perceptive for his own good sometimes. You donât think youâre mentally there enough to try and lie to him about why youâre upset today.Â
You decide to just call it a day. Youâll go to bed and when you get up, it will be time for Lucyâs wedding. You can just look forward to that and ignore the issues within your own marriage.Â
You clutch your bleeding stomach while Norm grabs you and drags you under a picnic table. You both watch in stunned, traumatized, silence as your fellow vault dwellers are slaughtered all around you. Normâs hand is gripping yours so tight you can feel your bones grinding together but you canât point it out.Â
A raider shoots at Bob, the kind old man who would slip you extra jello, and his blood splatters into your open mouth. Itâs only a shoulder shot, he could live. But the raider is pulling out his machete and charging towards him. You make to leap out from under the table but Norm yanks you back.Â
âNorm!â You hiss, but he just shakes his head. Your eyes widen in disbelief, you canât believe him. Sitting here and watching your friends just die. You could help, you canât just sit here. You yank your hand out of his and charge out from under the table.Â
Your arms wrap around the raiderâs waist and you both go flying. He lands on top of the wedding cake, frosting smearing across his bald head. You wrestle for his machete, eventually ripping it out of his hand. You thrust it up into his chest and he falls limp on top of you.Â
You grunt at the impact, slipping on top of Lucyâs ruined cake while you roll him off. Lucy storms down the stairs, holding onto a wound matching yours. She offers you her hand and helps you to your feet. âNorm?â She questions, eyes watering and desperate. You point to where he still sits under the table.Â
Across from you Steph grabs a gun and starts mowing down raiders left and right. Youâre bending over for the raiderâs machete when someone knocks into you from behind. You fall forward, head snapping against the concrete and vision going black.Â
You donât know how that horrible beginning with Cooper Howard started. When exactly you began to fall for him among your betrayal. But you know how it ends. It ends with you following Lucy MacLean out into the brightness of the Wastelands. It ends with his death and the Ghoulâs birth.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the game/show Fallout, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
Iâm not sure if Iâve put this in my last few posts or not. But, all of my dividers are the creation of @saradika-graphics (give her some love bc sheâs amazing)
đ€ - completed series
ÊÉ - smut
àȘâ⎠- personal favorite
⏠- series
đŻ - dark
Śâ°â†WOLVERINE
àłââ· Logan Howlett
kid?
nasty dog ÊÉ
weâre dating?
broken promises - forgotten promises ÊÉ
SFW & NSFW alphabets ÊÉ
i donât know why i bite
not your priority
big bad wolf ÊÉ
chameleon
the newlyweds àȘââŽ
àłââ· The Worst Logan
youâre not her àȘâ⎠ÊÉ
mistake
Śâ°â†KATE & LEOPOLD
àłââ· Leopold
timeless
Belle ll 21 II she/her ll Current Obsession: Charles-RDR2 ll Requests CLOSED Masterlist ll Nameless blogs = blocked ll Ao3 ll
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