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#couriersix
igimacigy · 7 months
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playin new vegas again
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birds-of-a-fallout · 1 year
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Made some new little portraits for my fellas <:)
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zombdoll · 11 months
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courier 6 and benny gecko 
courier 6 outfit based on The Courier mod
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anyakatja · 1 year
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ain't that a kick in the head (?)
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Wanted to have a go at some realism, and what better way to do that then with Fallout New Vegas fanart! #fallout #falloutnewvegas #fanart #art #myartwork #couriersix https://www.instagram.com/p/CdTuDy8MBeK/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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mysteriouspenguin29 · 2 years
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dean vs Boone who will win
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base can be found on devianart by weirdsushi
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absentmoon · 1 year
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im that horse
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pregnantsecondo · 2 years
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sniper PEMNIS ! ! ! LOL
Please i just want genuine asks 💀
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yesmanbot · 2 years
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MR. YES MAN, YES ME A MAN
Make him the yes-est that I’ve ever manned! (:
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Idk if u listen to s.o.a.d. but if u do I wanna know what u think the meaning to chic n stu is
Alright hold on gonna listen to it rq will keep u updated [3
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vnprofessional · 4 days
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trick's gambit;
summary: courier six/the king.
notes: they/them non-binary courier.
ao3: link.
They’d done this walk a few times now. Knew their way through and up to his room when he wasn’t downstairs enjoying the show, educating those boys of his on how to perfect their impersonation. Upstairs, it was just him in the relative peace of his high-end suite, sometimes with Rex, sometimes with a groupie draped over him while he spoke business. Trick proved themselves to him without ever really meaning to, doing work around Freeside for their own ends before his. To the point that they could tell his groupies apart now. 
What happened with Pacer wasn’t intentional. At least, not at first. Technically, he was collateral in the grand scheme of things — poked too hard too many times until he’d spilled to the King. He was gone the next day, and the King’s smile had disappeared, too, as much as it could behind the facade.
But he gave Rex to Trick, and they had to find him a new brain. Figured, that dog was maybe the only real thing he had left.
The yapping was unbelievable when they got back — that was a miracle in and of itself, how they even managed to get him across the Mojave in the first place. At the King’s feet, he barked and jumped, and the King bent down to him, gathering him in his arms and baby-talking him, and for a brief moment Trick thinks they hear that silly accent fall away, all for his dog. It feels like they’re intruding, standing still in front of them amongst the other kings smoking. Watching, Trick’s blood runs a little bit warmer than they’d like to admit, and their throat closes up looking down at him like that. When he gets up, Trick is reminded — as they often are — of how broad he is.
That, and he’s smiling — genuinely smiling — for the first time in a long time. 
And still, he sends Rex away with them, to do their jobs. Both their jobs. It’s an arrangement they can agree to. The School of Impersonation always has a room open for Trick when they’re back in Freeside, spare flannel and rags to wipe the dirt off their skin, old cigarettes, and a thin, musty mattress they can lay down on for a night. 
It’s louder inside than it is anywhere else in Freeside. 
“You look good, Six,” he says one day, and Trick had briefly forgotten their hair was bleached white. A groupie in the room whipped his head around to look at them in an instant, and Trick took a step back. 
“I’m going to the Wrangler.” It came out too loudly, too much effort put into the deliberate attempt of skating past his comment. Any banter they had had pretty much died when Pacer… left. And although Trick was never particularly nice to the King, they were suddenly forced to confront the idea that that was by design.
“I’ll be back for Rex in a couple of days.”
The dog barked and wagged his tail. 
“Whatever the boss thinks is best,” he scratched Rex under his chin. “Right, Rexie?”
In an instant, their insides coiled, and their blood burned the vessels they were soaring through. Trick’s grip on their bag threatened to break the scarred and calloused skin around their knuckles, and they couldn’t admit it then that they were fucking flustered, a feeling entirely too new for them to parse. Instead, they scoffed, mostly at themselves before they stormed out of there, not looking back to see him staring after them with a smirk plastered on his face. 
Boss? The fucking ham. 
Trick paid Bea triple that night and lay awake to the sounds of Freeside — to the distant sound of the King’s songs. 
/
They told him a few days and had meant it, at the time. But now, just before noon, they found themselves back at the School, Rex greeting them excitedly. A king leaning across the counter tells them that the King is upstairs and isn’t looking to be disturbed. He relays this information without turning to look at them, more concerned with the rings of smoke he was blowing in front of him.
Trick pets Rex between his ears and makes their way up anyway.
Before they round the corner up to the second floor, they stop to the sound of hushed muttering down the hallway. 
“Well, he ain’t been the same since Pace,” a voice said. “Did you ask him if he wanted me instead?”
“I tried everything. It’s been weeks,” a different voice says, huffing impatiently. “Jesus, it’s fucking boring around here.”
“More than usual, you mean?”
The smoke was reaching Trick now, misting up the hallway. All these clowns did was smoke. So maybe Trick was meant to be a king after all. 
Just before they decide to let it go and carry on past them, they hear it. 
“Yeah, but when that courier comes around, he lights up. What’s with that?”
“It’s business. Y’know, appearances.”
Trick lets that settle, rolls that over in their mind a few times, and it doesn’t make them feel any more comfortable. The awkwardness weighs them down to their spot on that last step, clenching and unclenching their fists. Unfamiliar. Or too familiar.
When they finally decide to turn the corner, they're met with the groupies' stares through the wafting smoke. Trick comes up empty for any retorts and only manages to glare back before going up the next flight of stairs. 
Outside his door, Trick stands and listens to the unusual quiet, despite the songs playing through the School. Bouncing between on the balls of their feet, they knock on his door.
“What?” comes his impatient reply in a tone of voice they don’t even recognise. It doesn’t nothing to settle their nerves.  
A beat goes by, their voice lost somewhere in their chest, before they bring their hand to the door. His back is turned but with a look over his shoulder, cigarette between his fingers, he turns and rubs a knuckle between his brows.  
“Oh, Six,” he says in a much more resigned tone. “Didn’t expect you back so soon.”
“Yeah, well,” they can only hope they don’t betray their nerves, even if they don’t have an excuse. “It’s boring in Freeside. No offence.” As far as saves go, it’s not their worst.
But it’s definitely not their best work.
It earns them a wry chuckle and he leans against that shitty wooden table of his. The King of Freeside can’t get a table that doesn’t look and sound like it’ll collapse underneath him.
It doesn’t. 
“Sorry we couldn’t keep you entertained,” he says, picking up the pack of cigarettes — crisp and new, somehow — from the table and holding it out. They get closer to take one, letting him light it without so much as a look his way, focusing on the flame between them. 
Trick blows the smoke over their shoulder. Studies him when he isn’t looking.
There’s only so much uneasiness Trick can take. Only so many risks they can leave untaken.  
“You know, people talk.”
He looks at them from under his brows. 
“Your people. They wonder about you, down there.”
At that, he just looks at his feet, the dim light catching the shine of his shoes. What Vegas sun found its way in through his boarded-up windows was drowned in the fluorescence of the lights, always on.
The ash on their cigarette falls to the ground before they make it to the ashtray.
And there’s too much silence sitting there, mingling with the smoke. 
“I— I’m sorry about Pacer.”
He whips his head up to look at them, the lines returning to his face, his brows closer to his eyes. At first, it looks like anger — or, maybe, frustration — but then he sighs, padded shoulders coming down.  
“Before this,” he says, gesturing to the room around him, to the School. “We were violent. I was violent.” 
Redundant, Trick thinks. Was there any other way around here? It was never in question; the unspoken and seen rule of the fallout etched into every crevice of New Vegas. 
Maybe something flashes across their face that betrays the thought crossing their mind.
“That’s what we Kings believe in. Freedom. Freedom for every man to do whatever the hell he wants, to be whoever he needs to be. A shot goes off in Freeside and so long as I know about it, I’m good, it’s settled. If bruising your knuckles is what makes you who you are then who am I to say no? But—” he inhales. “I’m a leader. And I don’t know how much leading I’ve been doing. And maybe, just maybe, if I had drawn that line, then Pacer would still be down there. Getting all up in your face, refusing to let you in, sure. But he’d still be here. I just let it happen — didn’t have to see the Jet and the blood because I didn’t want to.”
“You trusted him.”
“I shouldn’t have—”
He stares daggers into them. Trick isn’t entirely sure they’re meant for them, but some of them sure are. Like they had pulled him out of the shroud and forced him to confront it all. The courier rolls into town and rips up the Earth in their wake, but then again, people die here all the time. All for the sake of every man being allowed to follow their own path, even if the path was laden with drugs and brass.  
“I shouldn’t have done that to him.”
His voice is whisper quiet. The scar on Trick’s head stings. 
“Wasn’t your fault, maybe not even his,” even as they say it, it sounds like a lie. 
He only hums at that, looking back at his feet with his cigarette between his lips. Trick hands him the one they’ve almost finished to be put in the ashtray. His fingers brush theirs.
“Was it mine?”
“No,” he says, pushing the stump into the ashtray.
There’s a beat while he finishes his own, the smoke sitting heavy in the room now. The rays of sun coming through actually manage to catch against it, illuminating the wafting dust with gold. And that was it.
He draws himself up and tilts his chin, mask back on.
“You worried about me, boss?”
A familiar frustration sparks inside them, twisting and tightening just about every muscle within them, etching something ugly into their veins. Ugly with envy, with greed. Ugly with want and desire. And then the quiet resentment entwined with it, for wanting it at all. 
“I said people talk,” they say firmly. It only makes his smirk tilt even more. 
“You can do better than that,” he pushes off of the table and Trick pushes off the chair, defensive, clumsily closing the distance between them without meaning to. He’s fucking tall, and broad, even with his shoulders slacked. His blazer is stark white, and Trick can only wonder whether he’s actually ever been outside. 
“Been a while since you took a shot at me, Six.” Like he missed it. 
Trick opens their mouth, then closes it. Instead, they stare straight ahead at his chest rising and falling in front of them. When the moment lingers, he shifts slightly and Trick catches the way the collar of his black shirt moves against his neck, against the skin beating with his pulse. And they can’t will anything to come — not a single wry joke at his expense, and not the will to just walk away. 
Trick never hesitated, not before getting a bullet to the head, and not after.
Until him.
“It’s Trick.”
“What’s that?”
The innocence in the question is so genuine that it makes their jaw tighten. But there’s no way his hands are as smooth as him. He just admitted as much — he bent to the memory of Pacer. All because Trick asked.
And now, he’s asking for a joke.
“You can call me Trick.”
Trick grabs the lapels of his blazer, meaning to be rough and indelicate, to tug him down hard into a bruising kiss, but it doesn’t happen that way. The lapels between their fingers are so alarmingly soft in their grasp, and their tug is too light to do anything besides give him permission. Their face is hot with the number of mistakes and missteps they’ve made, with the heat of this New Vegas morning and each one before it, and with the desire to push the King of Freeside against a wall. 
It doesn’t happen that way, and that only makes them more impatient. Their own incompetence makes their guts coil against that agonisingly slow pace of his. His kiss is achingly gentle, just his lips against theirs. He is painfully real, lips dry, and although Trick’s are definitely worse off, it is maybe the only comfort in this. He tucks a hand under their chin, lifting it up and kissing again, and again, and again. 
Trick feels like their heart is going to beat out of their chest and distantly wonders if they look like those old movie posters plastered across the Strip.
Getting greedy now, aren’t we?
When his hand slides against their jaw, they make a noise they didn’t know they had in them. 
The embarrassment boils over, and Trick feels the burn of tears behind their eyelids, a throbbing in their head. All they feel is the pure humiliation of thinking they could ever just get what they needed — wanted, which was it? — and leave in the shadows. The evidence of them ever having to admit that they wanted this, threatening to spill over with every new touch and every noise that escaped them. But then they feel the unmistakable upturn of his mouth against them as his hands moved to grab at their waist, spreading them flat against Trick’s lower back, pulling them together even closer.
Out of any other ideas, too far in to go anywhere else, Trick opens their mouth and gives him permission for the second time today. 
And maybe it’s the first time Trick has tasted anything since rising from the grave, even if that taste was stale tobacco and alcohol. The scorching paths he leaves behind and instantly replaces feel like new scars. Trick realises — partly out of fear that he will, too — how passive they’ve been; hands on him with no direction, all their muscles tensed, and feet firmly planted on the floor.
He's in no hurry.
Only, Trick has never been known for patience. 
Flattening their hands against his chest, they push him away. When they look at him, his brows are furrowed in question, eyes half-lidded. And his lips are begging for theirs.
For all the fire burning inside Trick, something finally ignites. And they’re alive all over again. 
In one motion, Trick shrugs off the ratty jacket on their shoulders and grasps him again, winding their fingers around the white fabric. And with that, they pull. 
Once more with feeling.
He chuckles against their mouth, managing to speak before they’re back on him.
“There’s the Six I know.”
They tighten their grip, and the crushing force of the kiss stifles the smile threatening to take hold of their lips. His hands ghost over their hips before they slot themselves forward into his hold. A killer’s hands on a killer’s hips.
He turns them both, and Trick lands against the table, the edge digging into their spine. 
The desk whines as the songs of the School croon, the wood settling and creaking around them. His hands slip to the surface, crowding them. Trick’s fingers find the nape of his neck, the ends of his slicked-back hair. 
No part of him unravels, not without him knowing. Not without him letting it. And Trick can hear the noises he makes, can feel them reverberate through their being. To have their moans against him echoed back only makes the ache that much worse, even with them pressed together like this. 
He is still gentle with them, despite it all. He knows when to be soft, where to be rough — Trick can only chalk it up to force of habit, perhaps. A trained rule of when to bring his hand down, when to raise his gun up. Hands of destruction and death, hands of so-called prosperity and rule on either side of them.
Between breaths and kisses, Trick thinks of how strange it would be to say his title out loud right now. Does he remember his own name?
Would he tell them if they asked? 
They beg for anything but gentleness, clawing at whatever part of him they can get their hands on, but he offers it. He still doesn’t hurry, no matter how harsh they are. His lips whisper down their neck and Trick parts their mouth to the cracked ceiling of the School as his hands roam under their shirt, yielding to his pace — to simmering under his practiced touch, his lingering attentions. Maybe, it'll be okay like this.
In return, they move their hands to his shoulders, pushing until his blazer wisps down to the floor. He follows soon after, fingers pulling at the laces and clasps of their boots.
And it occurs to Trick, then, just how much they enjoy seeing the King on his knees.
/
His mattress is not much comfier than any other mattress in the Mojave.
It had been the subject of much mockery from Trick. Sitting on the floor in its heart-shaped glory, adorned with worn crimson sheets and groupies to match. Jokingly, Trick had called him a romantic, and kicked at a stray pillow at their feet. 
“What. No heart-shaped pillows to match?”
And he laughed.
Trick blushes a little at the memory, suddenly aware of him all over again splayed out next to them. Tilting their head in his direction, they study the line of his profile; the bump in his nose, and, rather proudly, the stray hairs come loose out of his pompadour. His lips purse around a cigarette.
The sun was now high in the sky outside, still fighting to get in to the strings of smoke floating around them. Voices outside and in let them know that Freeside is properly awake.
A new song starts up through the building, one they recognised hearing when they first walked into the School.
“What’s this one?”  
“We can’t go on together, with suspicious minds,” he sings.
“God," they scoff. "Give it here,” Trick moves up on one elbow while he smiles around the cigarette they pull from his mouth. The corner of his eyes crinkle as they lazily move over their frame next to his, silken sheets barely covering the array of scars and bruises over their skin. 
They don’t see his smile fades as Trick lets the smoke fall out of their mouth. 
They stiffen when they feel his fingers against their shoulder, but they don’t move away either. He traces a line here, an old stitch there, and hums along to the tune coming through the walls. The back and forth of it almost makes Trick want to lay their head back down and spend the rest of the week here on this tattered mattress, as though they’d both have time for that.
The scar on their head sings for a different story. 
He had scraped his nails on it earlier, and Trick hissed out of instinct — it was healed, by all appearances. He muttered an apology in their ear and chased it with an open-mouthed kiss to their temple close to the burning skin.
Now, his hand trails, making idle patterns against their shoulder blade. His jukebox flashes and flickers green against the pale scar tissue.
The urge to run through that door and out of the School that had accosted them every time they wound up here was nowhere to be found. Probably forgotten somewhere on the table the same moment their back had met its surface. Or maybe somewhere where he had made contact with the mattress, lost in the noises he made as he tugged at Trick’s hair. 
Trick pictures every groupie standing behind that door, ears close to the wood, holding glasses against it just to hear what their King was up to with that damn courier. Whispering and shushing until one of them takes it upon themselves to barge in. 
The door never opens. Not a knock. Doesn’t even creak. 
“No one comes to your door anymore?”
“Just you, lately.” I send anyone else away, he doesn’t say.
His hand leaves them.
“Did you get what you wanted?”
It earns him a look over their shoulder, their eyes narrowed while his cigarette hangs limply from between their lips. He chuckles; a low, rumbling sound as his hand reaches for the pack he’d flung somewhere nearby. 
“It’s lonely, being King,” he continues, propping himself up in search for the lighter. Trick finds it buried in the folds of the sheets. 
“How did you get to be the King of Freeside, anyway?” They flick the lighter on as he leans forward to the flame. 
“Why. You gunning for my spot?” He leaned back against his elbows, looking at Trick as they shook their head. 
“No.” The word drips with disdain, like it was an insult to even suggest it. “Although, I work for you enough that I’m starting to wonder why you haven’t made me a king yet.  
There’s a pause as Trick smirks to themselves, stubbing the cigarette out on the nearest ashtray. Beside them, the King hasn’t moved save for the rise and fall of his chest, carefully studying them as they shift back towards him. 
“Well?” Trick raises a split brow. 
“Oh, you know the drill,” he drawls. “The Kings are about an idea... every man free to do his own thing… own right. All that. You’re perfect for that. Coming and going as you please, holding up the right people, aiming that barrel at whoever you think will point you straight.”
They’d never heard him be so flippant about everything he stood for.
“You know, for a group that never shuts up about freedom and choice, you’re all on the same path. All look the same, dress the same, sound the same. All for an idea? Some fucking idea.”
“We each made that choice, didn’t we?”
Trick turns away, feeling the burn of his gaze on them. The lines on their back shift in front of him as they curl further in on themselves, skin itching in the absence of a cigarette to keep them busy.
“Get off your high horse for a minute - you’re not that much different than anyone else here. Trade a switchblade for a rifle, and we put you in some leather, what’s the difference?” he says with a laugh. The difference, he doesn’t say, because he knows Six isn’t stupid, and he didn’t want to have to say it. 
Something stirs in the pit of Trick’s stomach, different this time. Something akin to anger brewing under the surface. Getting Benny was final; no one could say or sway them any other way, and there wasn’t much else they cared about besides that.
And yet.
If there was some lesson here, Trick didn’t want to have to hear it, especially not from the man wearing a fossil’s voice. 
“Truth is, Six,” he sighs, blowing smoke out of his nose. “The Kings’d take you any day. But we both know; you wouldn’t take the Kings.”
He sees them freeze right next to them.  
“So, I’m going to ask you again. Did you get what you wanted?”
The question makes Trick shoot up to their feet in an instant, throwing the sheets off of their body. A wry laugh escapes him as he throws his head back onto the pillow, and it only makes them angrier. He knew that. Trick knew that he knew that, but anger, as it often did, got the better of them.  
“You think you’re so much better than us,” he says, still laughing. 
“Fuck you,” Trick says, picking up their clothes from around the room. It proves his point, but they didn’t have the patience for anything coming out of his mouth right now. More importantly, they didn’t care.
Spin that around enough times in your mind and it’ll be true , eventually.
This was about getting Benny. Putting a bullet in his brain and seeing how that felt for him. That’s all it was. A quick fuck wasn’t about to stop them.
All it was meant to be. 
His laughter dies down into a sigh, resigned. Sitting up on the mattress, loose strands of hair flop down onto his forehead. 
“You are so damn righteous, you know that? You don’t see where this is headed? What it’s gonna cost you?” 
“Don’t throw your bullshit on me. ‘Sides, isn’t that my right?” they spit, pulling up their dust-covered trousers. “Why do you care about what I—?”
“Because you’re a friend.” Because of what it cost me, he thinks. A new strategy for him then, caring out loud.
Caring.
“Please!” It cuts through the room, biting and loud “I work for you. We’re not friends.”
Trick glares at him until he turns away, and they put their shirt on in silence. The King pushes his hair back out of his face.
After what feels like a century, he moves, planting his feet on the floor and standing up, sheets falling to meet them. His form shamelessly exposed, he saunters over to where they left his slacks. 
“Well, aren’t we a pair?” There’s no hint of levity in his voice despite the permanent smile etched onto his face.
“We aren’t—”
“Hypocrites.”
It stuns them slightly, snapping their mouth shut — something they can’t argue with. He slides the latch closed on his trousers before taking a particularly long drag from his cigarette, finishing it. Trick takes his vest, sat just by their hand, balls it up and throws it at him. He catches it with one hand as they plop themselves down on a chair, pulling a boot up their right foot.
“Your problem, your highness, is you think I’m making a choice. You think I want this. I don’t want anything.” Until. They won’t say it, won’t admit it. Like the evidence isn’t sinking into the walls of the room with every second they spent here. “Have you ever been shot in the head?”
He tucks his vest in, looking back at them, and Trick can only hope that isn’t pity in his eyes. 
“I didn’t think so,” they take a deep breath and rest their elbows on their knees. 
“Try and understand that. Understand that it doesn’t cost me anything. It can’t, and it won’t. I delivered mail, kept my head low, and got shot for my trouble. And now, I’m in an equation I never asked to be a part of. I’m on borrowed time, and that’s someone else’s mistake, not mine.” 
The words leave their mouth calmer than they could’ve ever hoped for, despite the rage they felt. Righteously or otherwise, it didn’t matter. Searing fire licked at the scar across their head from within. They were already dead. A living dead thing.
“You need to do this,” he says, tonelessly.
When they look back at him, he has his arms folded across his chest, suspenders hooked onto his shoulders. The smile he usually has plastered on is nowhere to be found. There’s no hint of pity in his eyes. Something stern, and maybe something proud.
They can only hope that's all it is. 
He takes a step towards the table and bends to pick up their left boot, sole hanging off at the toes.
“Well,” he says, handing it to them. “I’ll be sure to let Benny know how much of a pain in my ass you’ve been.”
They tie the laces and fasten the clasps, seeing his waiting hand out the corner of their eye. They don’t need help to get up, but what reason seeps through their emotions can see it for what it is — a peace offering. 
They take it. 
“You’re a king as far as I’m concerned,” he says, pulling their hands closer to his chest. “And maybe, I’d like to be friends.”
Trick stares up at him, at the soft tilt of his brow, into his warm eyes. And maybe they had been cruel, before. The urge to apologise, foreign to them, sits somewhere in the back of their throat. But through it all, his face never faltered, the act held up. It was impossible to try and figure out where the man began, and the King ended. The persona, no longer a persona, but entirely him. Was this vulnerability — for their sake — or was it all part of the role?
Their mind wanders momentarily, to the idea of his name rotting away, never to be spoken again by anyone after Pacer, lost in the Mojave forever.
“Unless this was just—”
His voice shakes them out of it and before they feel him pull away any further, Trick pulls him by his neck and cuts him off with their mouth. They smile against him when they feel his surprise, but he wastes no time, hooking his hands around their hips.
When they pull apart, they lock eyes for a moment, hands still on each other. The gravity of it all shakes something loose in Trick.
“I’m not one of your fucking groupies, by the way," sticking a finger into his chest.
“Don’t get nasty.”
They relax slightly, Trick’s hands moving down to his arms. Both smiling.
“You don’t need to worry about my... affairs so much,” Trick says quietly, unsure. Not quite meeting his gaze, instead choosing to study a scar snaking out from under his vest until they feel a finger hook under their chin, forcing them to look back at him.
“I don’t worry about you, Trick.”
Trick’s smile widens. 
“For a man who doesn’t worry, you sure have a lot to say.”
“In my defence, you started it.”
Trick lets out a breath of a laugh before finally, gently, pushing him away so that they can grab their coat. He goes to grab his shirt.
“You taking Rexie with you?”
Fine company for a dog with a cybernetic brain. Fine companion for what lies ahead in the wastes. Fine excuse to keep seeing each other again.
“Of course,” they say. He hears the door open, and all the uneasiness that Pacer had brought about blossoms again somewhere deep in his gut. He hesitates to call it concern and settles for something between reeling and discomfort. Either way, it doesn’t show.
“Trick,” he says. “You better get him back to me in one piece.”
“‘Course.”
The door clicks shut behind them. 
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Everybody say hello to Felix Couriersix
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synthaphone · 1 year
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couriersix from virtu.pet suggested an amoeba paint brush color and so i made a little doodle for fun
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zombdoll · 1 year
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benny gecko & courier 6 wip 
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courierrsix · 3 months
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Can the person with the "couriersix" url dm real quick?
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It's urgent.
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fallsky-19 · 10 months
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lone wanderer oc vs courier six oc
lore down below, if youre interested:
so im on unoriginal bitch but my lone wanderer and courier six are one person, CourierSix!Fall being 29 years old (i am following the canon timeline of the game as well as the age of the player character, so LW!Fall is 19 when she left the vault)
her lore is based on my first playthrough of the 3d fallout games (my Sole Survivor is related to Fall, being a distant, distant, DISTANT relative 200 years up in the family tree), so here's a rundown.
LW!Fall takes after her father, being studious and looking up to him. she grows up to be smart and was slated to be the next vault doctor under her father's guidance when the events of the start of fallout 3 happen. thrust out into the unforgiving wasteland and forced to learn so much in such a short time, she meets burke in megaton and, after trying so hard to keep her cool with moira and her endless perilous errands, LW!Fall rigs the atomic bomb in the heart of the small town to explode. she blew it up due to burke's offer as well but shh
shes proficient with energy weapons and is surprisingly agile for someone who's led a barely active lifestyle the past 19 years in a vault, sticking to the books and all. she's traipsing between good and evil morals that both the regulators and the talon company constantly jump at bounties put on her head because she can really just flip the switch between being an angel solving all your problems and overall someone you could rely when you need to know something/get something done, to downright apathetic trigger-happy marksman who can clear the entire room in seconds (GRIM REAPER'S SPRINT BABY).
storyline follows the game, as usual, she finds her dad, helps him with the project, everything goes downhill, LW!Fall meets President Eden and fucking short circuits the AI in their first meeting and runs out of the Enclave HQ as its destroying itself as payback for General Autumn killing James after LW!Fall swore she was going to kill the man and made sure he heard it. then she finishes project purity, elects to contain the radiation in the heart of the purifier rather than sentinel lyons, gets radiation poisoning and is saved by the brotherhood, goes to the pitt, kicks ashur's ass and takes the baby for the greater good yada yada.
being an honorary member of the brotherhood and with things looking up for the DC area, LW!Fall really has nothing else to do other than to wait for her to be called on by the Brotherhood for guidance or special missions. there's nothing really left for her there since her dad is already dead and both the organization and the man who killed him are dead. on top of that, she feels EXTREMELY guilty about what she did to megaton, though she never told anyone else she did it other than James who sussed her out from the start.
she left for the Mojave, starting over and working as a courier, where life is quiet and she never had to pick up a gun ever again, though clean water is hard to find, but she gets by.
then the events of new vegas happens and thus starts Fall's emergence to be Courier Six. albeit this time, with experience from her Lone Wanderer days, she's a calmer, more rational, still trigger-happy but at least the energy is now focused on using it for the greater good, loves hacking terminals and snooping around, learning about the old world more and more, being chill with yes man and actually talking it out with people rather than shooting first.
tl;dr: local retired vaultie just wanted to rest only to get bopped in the head. proceeds to let the mojave find out that the person who changed DC has been with them for the past 10 years
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