PlayfulLilDarlin
Writer of wrongs
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2021
- Posts
- 2,780
[Red Dead Redemption 2 setting, before the events of 1]
She just needed two or three more scores to set her up proper for leaving the country. Sadie Adler had grown into a skilled and respected bounty hunter since her life went up in flames.
Sadie had been numb at first when she’d been brought to their camp, having just lost everything she’d ever had, ever loved. She’d watched through the cracks in the floorboards when the O’Driscoll men had cut Jake down. She still hated the cold even now from the memory of three days in the near-frozen earth of a root cellar scared for her life. Too scared to sleep, too scared to make noise. A nightdress all she had to keep warm, she hated feeling the cold seep through her clothing even now.
She’d resolved to build a good amount of money and leave the quickly civilizing United States for the wilds that still remained in South America. She just needed the money but be damned if she’d say that out loud, it’d be too much like Dutch and she still snarled at the thought of that bastard. He’d lead to the deaths of too many good people.
Still, it was a fact of life, and sometimes death, that money was the thing that made all else possible. It wasn’t faith or God or some prophetic words, money was the one thing that could sway anything up to and sometimes including death. That’s where she’d become resolved to take the largest bounties, she could reasonably handle for payouts that would expedite her leaving.
There wasn’t a whole hell of a lot she’d miss about this place, the friends she had left were dwindling and her presence wasn’t helping much. Leaving John and Abigail to raise their son without her there as a constant reminder of a life John wasn’t supposed to be part of anymore. And they were all bound to discuss friends that were no longer with them, a pain for her that was more than she’d ever spoken aloud.
Wasn’t her place to step into the grief of a family for their own and she’d never really had anything with Arthur that was spoken between them. There’d been feelings, trust, caring, but she’d been too fresh from hurting and laying her ghosts to rest to let herself reach out to another man. Jake was years dead now and so was Arthur, the two best men she’d ever known and the two reasons she’d cried in the past six years.
No use dwelling on the reasons she had to leave when there was work to be done though, even if Hera was doing the majority of it. The solid, strong mare kept plodding through the snow up around Glacier where the most recent lead had sent Sadie. Word was a man fitting the tall, wide description of her latest, maybe last, bounty had been seen around the snowy northern remote area, just into the Redemption Mountains.
“Damn.” She muttered and clapped her hands to her arms to rub the blood into them. She had a good thick coat, warm boots, thick trousers, and underthings but if it was the cold or the memory of it brought on by the wind, she was still feeling chilled to the bone. Her breath a shadow of the twin plumes from Hera’s nostrils as the horse grunted and climbed the incline toward where Sadie thought she’d spied light the night before.
It wasn’t far now, another half mile, maybe a mile and she’d be there. Revolver and repeater ready for when she was. But another ten minutes on and she had to rein Hera to a stop. “Whoa, whoa. You see that?”
Talking to her horse was a habit she must have picked up from Morgan and Marston over the years. She spoke softly and eased down out of her saddle into the knee-deep snow. She walked a short way ahead and sure enough, there was a path, a trail of solitary footprints in the snow. Fresh enough that they were barely dusted by the fresh flakes in the air.
She turned toward the tree line and scanned it. It’d be dark soon; dusk and dawn were the best times to hunt deer. So, he was probably hunting. The stride was right for a big man too. “Looks like we’re takin’ a detour girl.”
Sadie Lumbered back to the horse and hauled herself up into the saddle, a single hand laid reins to turn her to the trees and she set her at a canter. She’d be closing in on her target soon enough that she made sure the repeater and revolver were ready to draw.
She just needed two or three more scores to set her up proper for leaving the country. Sadie Adler had grown into a skilled and respected bounty hunter since her life went up in flames.
Sadie had been numb at first when she’d been brought to their camp, having just lost everything she’d ever had, ever loved. She’d watched through the cracks in the floorboards when the O’Driscoll men had cut Jake down. She still hated the cold even now from the memory of three days in the near-frozen earth of a root cellar scared for her life. Too scared to sleep, too scared to make noise. A nightdress all she had to keep warm, she hated feeling the cold seep through her clothing even now.
She’d resolved to build a good amount of money and leave the quickly civilizing United States for the wilds that still remained in South America. She just needed the money but be damned if she’d say that out loud, it’d be too much like Dutch and she still snarled at the thought of that bastard. He’d lead to the deaths of too many good people.
Still, it was a fact of life, and sometimes death, that money was the thing that made all else possible. It wasn’t faith or God or some prophetic words, money was the one thing that could sway anything up to and sometimes including death. That’s where she’d become resolved to take the largest bounties, she could reasonably handle for payouts that would expedite her leaving.
There wasn’t a whole hell of a lot she’d miss about this place, the friends she had left were dwindling and her presence wasn’t helping much. Leaving John and Abigail to raise their son without her there as a constant reminder of a life John wasn’t supposed to be part of anymore. And they were all bound to discuss friends that were no longer with them, a pain for her that was more than she’d ever spoken aloud.
Wasn’t her place to step into the grief of a family for their own and she’d never really had anything with Arthur that was spoken between them. There’d been feelings, trust, caring, but she’d been too fresh from hurting and laying her ghosts to rest to let herself reach out to another man. Jake was years dead now and so was Arthur, the two best men she’d ever known and the two reasons she’d cried in the past six years.
No use dwelling on the reasons she had to leave when there was work to be done though, even if Hera was doing the majority of it. The solid, strong mare kept plodding through the snow up around Glacier where the most recent lead had sent Sadie. Word was a man fitting the tall, wide description of her latest, maybe last, bounty had been seen around the snowy northern remote area, just into the Redemption Mountains.
“Damn.” She muttered and clapped her hands to her arms to rub the blood into them. She had a good thick coat, warm boots, thick trousers, and underthings but if it was the cold or the memory of it brought on by the wind, she was still feeling chilled to the bone. Her breath a shadow of the twin plumes from Hera’s nostrils as the horse grunted and climbed the incline toward where Sadie thought she’d spied light the night before.
It wasn’t far now, another half mile, maybe a mile and she’d be there. Revolver and repeater ready for when she was. But another ten minutes on and she had to rein Hera to a stop. “Whoa, whoa. You see that?”
Talking to her horse was a habit she must have picked up from Morgan and Marston over the years. She spoke softly and eased down out of her saddle into the knee-deep snow. She walked a short way ahead and sure enough, there was a path, a trail of solitary footprints in the snow. Fresh enough that they were barely dusted by the fresh flakes in the air.
She turned toward the tree line and scanned it. It’d be dark soon; dusk and dawn were the best times to hunt deer. So, he was probably hunting. The stride was right for a big man too. “Looks like we’re takin’ a detour girl.”
Sadie Lumbered back to the horse and hauled herself up into the saddle, a single hand laid reins to turn her to the trees and she set her at a canter. She’d be closing in on her target soon enough that she made sure the repeater and revolver were ready to draw.
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