The Good, The Bad, and...
Summary: Lucy and The Ghoul encounter a shadowy figure from his past while on their way to New Vegas. This stranger, nicknamed Red Eyes, is intent on collecting a bounty on The Ghoul as a means to settle a feud between the two after they were betrayed by him. Will Red Eyes succeed, or will they have a change of heart based on their complicated feelings toward the man?
(Cooper Howard x OC/reader)
Words: 2,941
A/N: I forgot to post chapter 1 of this on here sorry guys. Anyway this is low key a Star Wars AU because as a Cad Bane fan I simply could not help myself so this is technically kind of a follow up to this fic. Enjoy!
Chapter 1
From the Desert Comes a Stranger
āIāve taken down so many of dese clones over da yearsā¦ā Her father began in his heavily accented manner, sighing, and pushing his hat back with his pointer finger as he glanced at her from the corner of his eye. The red of his irises were somehow muted by the red lenses of the goggles he wore, which made it hard to see the look in his eyes as it was. He quickly dropped to his knees and with a single swipe of his knife he removed something from the cloneās body. She couldnāt quite make out what it was before he pocketed it.
He turned around quickly, pointing his gloved finger up at her. She straightened up.
āNow, Ciella, what ya need to know isā¦ā He handed her the bloodied knife, closing her fingers around the hilt and holding her smaller hand in his. It was one of the only times he made a tender gesture towards her other than the odd hug here and there.Ā
āOnce you figure out one da rest are easy.ā She had to wonder what the point of all this was.Ā
When they arrived on the site - an old, decrepit warehouse with a caved-in roof - her father was quick to corner the clone that now lay dying before them. He tried his best to grab the gun that was strapped to his leg, fumbling with it and managing to point it in her fatherās general direction before he was gunned down. Two shots in the chest from the looks of it, shots that left the man (clone) heaving and wheezing on the floor with blank eyes, and she knew thatās what he wanted to happen. If he wanted to shoot the man in the head he would have. He was the fastest shot in the Wasteland, and it would stay that way for many years.Ā
āNow, I want ya to take dat knife dere and,ā He finally stood and moved her closer to the dying man. āYer gonna have to cut his throat, unless ya want to hear him scream. Iām not against it but itās best dat we keep him quiet. Donāt want any stragglers cominā in and takinā us by surprise.ā
Ciella drew in a deep breath as she knelt down beside the man. His blank eyes suddenly held so much emotion, it was a look sheād seen in her own eyes a few times before. Mostly on dark nights in the Jewel as she listened to the way men spoke to her motherā¦ and the way her father spoke to her at times. It was the look she saw in the mirror after she saw how her mama took care of those men - their purple, mangled faces contorted in pain and their eyes bloodshot staring up at her, and their hands clutched around their throats.Ā
This man was in pain, and he was afraid of dying.Ā
There was a large tattoo on the side of his face, around his eye. It was a symbol, most likely belonging to whatever faction he belonged to since escaping his vault. From what she overheard her dad discussing, Vault 66 seemed to be defunct, with the clones created within revolting and escaping into the Wasteland. He had been hunting down the clones for the last five years, among other things. She never quite understood why anyone would flee a vault to live on the surface.Ā
Her father took the respirator off of his face, letting it hang below his chin. She felt more at ease at this, happy to hear his own, unmodified voice walking her through what she was about to do. Her heart was beating fast and felt like it had leapt into her throat. She glanced at the open ceiling and focused on the large, white moon that hung in the deep blue sky.Ā
Perhaps the sky full of swirling stars would be enough to comfort her.
āWhen heās dead, cut off da part of his face with da tattoo and hand it to da Tin-Man. Den we can go home.ā He instructed. Ciella hesitated.Ā
The clone looked at her, stared her down, silently begging her for mercy. He was just a clone, and he was wanted so he must have done something bad, right? She looked back at her dad, who had pushed his goggles up onto his forehead, revealing his bright red eyes staring back at her expectedly. Tufts of navy blue hair peeked out from under his hat and over his goggles and his lips were curved into a small smile.Ā
He actually looked like a supportive father for the first time in his life.
Ciella made her decision at that moment, and the girl at only eight years old turned around and drove the knife into the cloneās throat. His eyes widened and met her gaze for a moment and she felt her heart drop. He groaned and wheezed, the blood gurgling in his throat as the crimson substance dribbled from the corners of his mouth. A sputtering cough had his blood spraying across her face and she wasnāt sure if it was on purpose or not. She tried not to heave at the disgusting feeling.Ā
On instinct, she pulled the knife from his throat and drove it back into his flesh. Over and over. A larger, warmer hand wrapped around her wrist and stopped her mid motion.Ā
āDere ya go.ā Her father smiled wider as pride swelled in his chest. His baby would be a killer, just like he was. āAfter dis Iāll teach ya everyding I know.āĀ
ā ā ā ā ā ā ā
The sun bore down unbearably upon the duo traveling along the Mojave Desert. It had been miles and miles of desert between the Griffith Observatory and the place the Ghoul was certain Lucyās father was heading. The vaultie was starting to fall behind, clearly tired from the constant moving. It was hard to find shelter all the way out here, and unfortunately for her the Ghoul didnāt feel comfortable stopping out in the open.Ā
They had traveled through a few settlements at that point, each one growing more and more decrepit and sparse. The people were quieter and hid away in their own corners of the small towns, eyeing the Ghoul and his traveling companion wearily. The whispers and glares of the different townsfolk hardly made for good hospitality, if anything it was that fact that drove him away from each place. Something was happening, someone said something, and he felt it was too risky to stop for a few nights in any of the settlements.
The last place theyād been to was a dayās walk away at this point, and the talk amongst the people in that saloon made him deeply uncomfortable. Then there was the body.Ā
In the sandy dunes of the last settlement they had been to laid a man with sun kissed skin and snow white hair stained at the temples with red. The poor man had his brains blown out, by whoā¦Ā well, letās just say he had a good idea of who it was. It was clear the job was done quickly, the man clearly didnāt see them coming, and the fact the manās armor and other supplies went untouched raised even more alarm bells. He got them out of there quickly and quietly.
Unfortunately for Lucy, the Ghoul was one-track minded at the moment. His family was out there, he could feel it. There was a reason he kept going for over two hundred years, and he would not let those years of anguish be in vain.Ā
He would kill anyone who tried to get between them.Ā
āThereās gotta be somewhere we can stop, right?ā Lucy sounded hoarse, tired. He wished he could answer her truthfully. He hadnāt traveled this far into the desert before, and the way the sun seemed to hang so high in the sky for so long made him question whether anyone ventured that far, let alone set up shop. He shrugged.
The dunes seemed to stretch on for miles and miles, with only a few rocky formations on the horizon. A few dried plants littered the ground here and there, somehow finding the strength to grow in such a harsh climate. It was a wonder anything was able to grow and flourish after the bombs. Maybe he should have sent the vaultie to ask for some sort of transport back at the saloon instead of being stubborn like he usually was.Ā
āMaybe that personās coming from a settlement down that way?ā The Ghoul froze, feeling himself go numb.Ā
Among the dancing heatwaves stood a dark-clad figure on the horizon.Ā
They stood still, any discernible features hidden by a wide-brimmed hat and respirator over the figureās mouth. The wind blew and kicked up dust and whipped the figureās coat to the side, revealing the large holster against their hip. Their dark attire starkly contrasted with the bright blue sky and pale sand.Ā
The words of the men in the saloon ran through his mind.Ā
Someoneās lookinā for a ghoul just like ya! There was a bounty put out not too long ago, I think itās been taken offa the board. A lotta caps goinā for that guy. He considered that a warning at the time.Ā
Anyway, it looked like the guy who took the bounty was Red Eyes. He had the goggles anā everything, but we all thought he was dead.Ā
And Red Eyes was supposed to be dead. He died around five or six years ago.Ā
The figure in front of him was a ghost.Ā
Red Eyes stopped a good twenty feet in front of them, standing perfectly still. The wind shifted again and from beneath the wide-brimmed hat came a tuft of navy blue hair that blew in the breeze. The desert was all too quiet now, and it felt like something from one of his old movies. Red Eyes felt like an old western villain, dark and ominous, seemingly a force of nature. He worried the figure wasnāt only after him.Ā
āLucy, you should head back.ā The Ghoul muttered, putting a hand out to stop her from moving any further. She stared at the figure for a moment, suddenly afraid because of the Ghoulās reaction.Ā
āItās only one person.ā She muttered. āMaybe theyāre lost?ā The Ghoul stayed silent. He would not repeat himself.
Her doe-like eyes flickered to him and she noticed the way his mouth was set in a seemingly permanent frown. His whole body looked stiff, like a cornered animal. She nodded, understanding finally, before turning on her heel to make a run for it.Ā
The Ghoul watched as the stranger glanced in Lucyās direction. Red Eyes observed her, seemingly studying her like an unbothered predator eyeing a nearby animal knowing it couldnāt do anything to stop it. He grit his teeth and took a few steps forward, spurs jangling with each stride.Ā
This was not good.Ā
āNow I know that fancy getup you got on is not yours.ā He began through a false bravado, flashing teeth that used to be a pearly white. It was so easy for him to slip back into a role, something he had been doing this entire time. Yet, this time, he was given the chance to play the good guy. It felt unfamiliar somehow, after all, it had been several years since heād done such a thing. He was almost grateful for this strangerās theatrics. āWho might you be? Cause you sure as hell aināt Red Eyesā¦ heās dead.āĀ
He knew all too well who this was.Ā
Red Eyes looked up, the red goggles reflecting the bright sun and making it impossible to see past their lenses. More of the strangerās hair seemed to flow from behind them, long strands of navy waving in the wind like a flag. Their stance shifted from one of leisure to subtly looking like they would pounce. The stranger moved their coat away from their hip, revealing the large gun strapped to their form.Ā
āIād be careful where I was sticking my nose if I were you.ā The heavily modulated voice called out. āOr lack thereof.āĀ
The Ghoul bit his tongue. āIām assuming that corpse we found back there was you, then? Certainly wasnāt the handiwork of any olā fiend.āĀ
āWasnāt much work.ā Red Eyes spat quickly. āWas a clone. They're easy. Woulda gotten in my way.ā Their accent, even through the voice changer, was thick. Louisiana, most likely from the New Orleans area.Ā
āYouāre here for me.ā He didnāt feel the need to ask. He threaded his thumbs through the belt loops on his trousers, opting to seem more relaxed than he was. He knew Red Eyes would see right through his guise.
āIsnāt that obvious?ā Their hand twitched beside their gun. He eyed them wearily.
āWell, Iām not goinā willingly.ā A low, rumbling chuckle sounded from the stranger.Ā
āI never said I was gonna take ya in alive.ā They answered, voice cold with an edge to it. He fought the urge to argue, to call their bluff, for doing so would be too risky.
Truthfully, Red Eyes had every reason to want him dead. It had been a few years, five to be exact, since they last saw each other. Five long years since he turned the fellow bounty hunter in for killing a crime lord. Five years since he left them for dead. This would be a fitting end for their little rivalry, even if it wasnāt always that way.Ā
But he wouldnāt go down just yet. Not without a fight.Ā
He had to find another way to fight them. A quick draw duel would mean a death sentence for him, unfortunately. Red Eyes was and still is the quickest draw in the Wasteland. He would have to throw them off somehow, say something to really disarm them.Ā
He did the only thing he could think of, and instead of indulging in the stranger - instead of going for his gun - words that he never thought he would say slipped from his dry, cracked lips.
āCiella, Iām sorry.āĀ
Red Eyes froze. Their hand was still dangerously close to their gunās grip. Over the wind, he vaguely heard the sharp, uneven intake of air from the figure. The breeze picked up again, blowing open the strangerās coat to reveal the figure of a woman.Ā
āItās a bit late fer that, isnāt it, cher?ā It most definitely was her. āI came ta finish the job. I shoulda known a coffin wouldnāt hold yer ass.āĀ
Cooper held back a laugh. Ciella Bane was an ally at one point, and maybe even a friend, but the moment her picture was up on one of those boards he knew their partnership was over. Someone was offering a hefty reward for whoever could bring the bounty brat in, preferably alive.Ā
That was his mistake. He knew he probably should have killed her while she was sleeping and taken the smaller reward for her corpse. Killing her like this would be a pain in the ass.Ā
āYou wanna take off that ridiculous getup and let me see you?ā He taunted, much to Ciellaās dismay. He just had to hit her where it hurt, get her emotional and in her head so she missed when she inevitably shot at him. However, it had been a few years, he couldnāt be sure that trick would still work.
Though with dear olā daddy not around to give her more of his tips and tricks he doubted she would have improved much more than the last time they brawled.Ā
Ciella scoffed. āThe last thing youāll see are these goggles. Everyoneās gotta know it was Red Eyes who took ya out, ghoul.ā She spat, though there was a sadistic playfulness in her voice. Cooper rolled his eyes.Ā
āI got places to be, girl.ā Cooper countered with equal venom. He was getting antsy, and he felt she was wasting his time. āLet us through andā¦ā He stopped.
What would he do? What could he do? What could he possibly offer her where she wouldnāt be on his trail while he and Lucy trekked the Wasteland on a wild goose chase? Ciella coming back from whatever corner of the world she ran off to after burying him alive was the last thing he wanted.Ā
āLet us through and we can finish this some other time. Iāll tell you where Iāll be and you come find me.ā He offered finally, feeling the weight of his words in his chest. He wouldnāt give up finding his family so she could have her petty revenge, but maybe one day, when everyone around him was gone and he knew his daughter was safe and could live a happy life, he would go to Ciella and let her put him out of his misery.Ā
āWe do this here and now.ā The bounty hunter replied. āThat head oā yers is fetchinā a pretty penny. Figured it was better I did it than some chem addicted fiend on the street.ā Her words were purposefully inflammatory. She was doing the same thing he was.Ā
She straightened up again, mimicking the stance of a cowboy in a western getting ready to draw, and Cooper knew what it meant. She wasnāt giving him a choice. Theyād done this dance once before, and unfortunately for him it didnāt end well.Ā
The Ghoul sighed and moved his coat from his holster, and he mirrored her stance. āThis aināt gonna go the way ya think it will, sweetheart.ā
āI doubt that.ā That same, robotic voice answered, yet he knew she was still all too human underneath.Ā
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