Four Hours Before - Somewhere in Cadentia, Rhy'din, 2020(?)
Fixing the transmitter had not been a particularly successful endeavor for The Courier. It had, in fact, been an absolute failure. Shocking to her, though not surprising to the rest of humanity, her fourteen year old son had not been able to put the transmitter back together again, despite the lickity-split acquirement by Dillon of the needed materials. Fennec had no frame of reference when put face to face with the transmitter's alien technology, and the boy genius' efforts to fix the damned thing had rendered any hope of future repair impossible.
Coydog was not angry at the boy. It wasn't his fault, really, but that knowledge did not stop tears of grief from trailing down her cheeks, or the frustrated, anguished scream that followed. It so startled Fennec that he dropped his backpack, sending tools scattering at his feet. His dark eyes grew wide, fixated as they were on his mother, and the color drained from his face.
"Mom, are you gonna kill me?"
A horrified look struck Coydog then, her eyes red and puffy from crying and her voice only slightly raspy. She reached a hand out to him, bidding him closer. "Fennec, no. No. I'd never hurt you. It's not your fault, baby. Please don't think it's your fault. I'm..I'm the moron that made you do this."
To her surprise he did not turn tail and run away, screaming in terror. Instead she watched those dark, dark eyes shift from side to side, as if he was unsure about moving closer. But then he did, and when he was close enough he knelt down next to her, only to be gathered into an almost cloying bear hug. He did not protest or fight. Fennec was a good child and did not like to see his mother cry.
"What are you gonna do?"
She buried her cheek against her child's head and heaved a heavy sigh. The pile of technological rubble just yards away almost seemed to taunt her. "I'll have to hope that Plan B works, Fenn."
"What's Plan B?"
The boy shifted in her embrace and she looked down into his face, her heart wracked with a storm of conflicting emotions; there was the grief and disappointment of their failure and Bart's unknown status mingling with a love for Fennec that was so big and bright that it threatened to burn her alive.
"We'll have to boost ED-E's signal and hope Bart's near a two way radio."
Fennec's features scrunched up and he shook his head like a dog dislodging a bee from its mouth. "Mom, that sounds like a long shot..."
Before he could think better of the hug, Coydog pulled him closer and began to rock back and forth. A miserable laugh tumbled from her lips. "Oh honey, life ain't nothing but a series of long shots. It'll make sense one day."
The boy stuck his tongue out. He highly doubted that. There wasn't much about his mother or her life that made sense.
Fenn wondered if that might be genetic.
Back To Our Regularly Scheduled Program. Still That Damned Desert, Rhy'Din (2020?)
So it was that the Courier and her child mapped out the location of the tallest radio tower in the area. It was hours away from the shack, but that didn't stop Coydog, the boy, and ED-E from hunting it down in its godforsaken corner of the desert. It was night time by then and already cold. Fennec tended a small campfire at the base of the massive, blinking spire, one of his mother's revolvers loaded and tucked into his backpack just in case some night-time beasty tried to make a meal of him. High above him ED-E hovered, keeping pace with Coydog as she climbed. The tower swayed slightly, screeching and groaning, its ragged beams promising tetanus should The Courier place a hand or foot where it didn't belong.
Once there at the top, shivering despite her shearling coat, Coydog whistled for ED-E. That high up even the little EyeBot shook and grew sluggish in the cloud speckled chill. Hanging from a hole drilled into his chassis was a length of frayed wire. The blonde reached out a leather gloved hand, grabbed it, and tugged it and the robot closer. Careful not to snip any live wires with some rubber handled scissors, Coydog quickly patched ED-E in. The little robot hummed, vibing as he was with the radio tower.
Coydog swung herself to the other side of the tower and followed its spire up with her eyes, all of the way to where its blinking tip disappeared into the tempestuous swirl of clouds. "Okay ED-E," she shouted, steam chasing her words. "ENGAGE BABY!"
Her eager expression was swiftly crumbling to disappointment when five minutes passed and nothing happened. But then there was a click and the hiss of radio static. Her heart went insane in her chest, fueled by that awful hope. Coydog took in a deep, trembling breath and cried into the winds.
"Bart?? Are you there??"
More static and then, "S-sure am... Coydog..."
"Bart!!" So jubilantly did she shout his name, and so full of absolute joy was she, that Coydog nearly lost her grip on the tower. A bit of fancy footwork against an eyebeam and an arm slung around another, she righted herself. Tears stung her cheeks. Bart was alive. She'd fucking known it!
"Huh... Huhur... Hahuhurhurhurhuhrhurhur.... Oh wow, man... Hey, did you turn on ED-E's little communicator thing like, a minute ago?"
She sniffled and grinned. It didn't matter if anyone else could see it. "Yeah! Uh..yeah, yeah I did. It's so good to hear your voice, Bart." Then the pained hitch in his voice really hit her and her heart suddenly froze. Her brows furrowed. "Are you okay? Are you hurt? You..you sound hurt."
"Oh, Yeah!!! I'm >gl-hlourglk!!<... Hff... I'm hurt real bad, but... I uh.... turned on this Medical ED-E like... a minute ago, so... Heyhey!! Hurhurhur."
"Medical ED-E?" There was only one ED-E that she knew of, at least since the one in the Divide had heroically sacrificed itself in a blaze of utter glory. She eyed ED-E, her ED-E, floating nearby. Had to have been another eye-bot, not that Bart would have known. "....Is
Medical ED-E working on you? He should be using his little healing zap gun..thing." The tears began anew and it was all that she could not to start sobbing. "Oh Bart. I'm gonna get you home, okay? I'm gonna get you back to me."
"Blblrrrlblrlblrblrbl-Guk!!! Phew! Yeah, that's why I'm... makin' all these scary noises. This beam is really... not meant to treat Everything From the Divide all at once. Oh yeah! I'm in the Divide!!! You know I love you, right?"
"The Divide?" She howled, silently cursing the universe beneath her breath. "Oh shit. What in the hell are you...yeah. Yeah. I know you love me, but you really need to get out of there."
"Yeah, I gathered that." He spoke plainly, as if discussing weather conditions. "Anyways, I found a time travel rock in the flats west of here. Met Hanlon, n' the Sarge..."
Sarge? The woman blinked away her tears, made cold from the altitude and the desert night. Coydog hadn't laid eyes on her mother in almost ten years. She shook her head; she could ponder the chances of Bart finding Sarge later. "You met my mom? That's...one way to do it, I guess." She couldn't strike the tears from her voice, no more than she could keep them from welling up in her eyes again as she spoke, but at least there was the ghost of a smile playing on her lips. "I'm sorry." It was a weak attempt at humor.
"Aw Cakes, it's a-a-all good!" He seemed to laugh in spite of himself, though he did sniffle. "She doesn't take a lick o' shit from anybody. She'd fuckin' hate me, but she'd miss me if she got to know me."
Coydog's hands were shaking where the gripped rusted metal. "...yeah," she muttered softly, sure that the wind would carry the words away. "That sounds like Sarge alright." Then she looked over her shoulder. From where she was, she couldn't see the ground below; just the pinpoint light of Fenn's campfire in a vast sea of cloud streaked, bruised darkness. Taking a deep breath, the Courier looked up. "...can we please wax poetic about Honey some other time? I don't know how much longer this signal can hold up here. I need you to tell me where you are. Exactly where you are. Describe shit to me if you have to."
"I am in the Hopeville Missile Silo, say so on the tin. I'll get outta here. But before I go, you know anybody I can take this guy to if he needs fixin'? Your fittings are like... I ain't used to 'em for little stuff, and shit happens a lot around here!"
"Okay. So you're pretty close to the exit. Good, good, that's good. When you get through the big old blue buses, there should be a box in this heap of trash on the other side. It's a long shot, but there might be a stim-pak in there, and a pistol." Deep breath. "You'll need to find The Followers, like May's folk. You're best bet is Freeside for that. The uh, the Old Mormon Fort if they've not amscrayed. They can probably fix your, uh, ED-E, and patch you up too."
"Nice, nice... Definitely gonna need that stimpak." He had the hint of a benign scheme in his voice. "Alright. Followers in Freeside, in the Old Mormon Fort. Got it... Shit. Wait--!! Shsh.... ... ... There's more o' those skinless guys in here..."
Fuck. Coydog stayed silent, lest she alert the Marked Men to her husband's location. It was all that she could do to keep her teeth from chattering.
Then Bart's voice - tinny though it was due to time and the vast distance between them - began again. "Hey, I'm gonna go do my thing." A few low electric hums came through the transmission, cutting through in waves of static that he spoke between. "I Love-- You. See Yy-You S-Soon."
"I love you too. I love you, I love you, I love you, Bart! Magic and all! Get to the Big Empty! The satellite! Find the satel---
*Click*"
And just like that Coydog was alone again, with only the beating of her heart and ED-E's steady humming to keep her company. With a sigh, she hung her head, her blonde hair falling to curtain the sides of her face.
"Well
bawls."