The hum in his ears intensified into a roar. His vision sharpened until he could see the individual gears in the raider’s rifle. As the Operators opened fire, Silas didn't feel the bullets. He felt the fusion. He wasn't just a scavenger anymore; he was the final product of a corporate experiment that had waited two centuries for a consumer.
"Batch NUKA-58: Fusion-Infused Cherry," the log read. "Initial testing shows a 400% increase in consumer alertness. Side effects include mild bioluminescence of the tongue and a slight metallic hum in the ears. Executive approval pending." NUKA-58
Silas looked at the bottle, then at the raiders. He didn't drop it. Instead, he twisted the cap. The hiss of pressurized, 200-year-old carbonation filled the room, followed by a scent like ozone and maraschino cherries. He took a long, glowing gulp. The hum in his ears intensified into a roar
The terminal in the bottling plant hummed with a low, irradiated thrum. On the screen, a flickering cursor blinked next to a log dated the day before the world ended. He felt the fusion
Silas, a scavenger with a rusted pip-boy and a thirst that felt like swallowing glass, stared at the single, pristine bottle remaining on the conveyor belt. Unlike the common Nuka-Cola Quantum, which glowed with a soft blue light, NUKA-58 pulsed with an aggressive, neon violet.