In the Cabot House in Fallout 4, players can undertake a questline revolving around the Cabot family and their strange situation. This requires the player to do a series of tasks for Jack Cabot, who gradually reveals more details about his family as the player progresses. The conclusion to the questline is an interesting one, ripe with moral choices and consequences, but the Cabot family’s story is far more than what little is revealed in their quests.
Should the player do some snooping around the Cabot House, they can find Lorenzo Cabot’s journal as well as terminals belonging to other family members. These text entries paint a more complete picture of the Cabot family — one that extends further than even the map of Fallout 4.
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Long before the Great War, Lorenzo Cabot was an archeologist who searched for ancient civilizations. His journal contains the oldest text entries among the family, dated 1894. The accounts detail Lorenzo’s journey from pre-war Boston to the Empty Quarter or the Rub’ al Khali, a desert in the Arabian Peninsula.
The very first entry details Lorenzo’s departure from the United States via boat. As he leaves, his wife and daughter — Wilhemina and Emogene — see him off, with Emogene begging him to stay. His son, Jack, however, is not present, and Lorenzo notes that it’s because the young Jack doesn’t see the point of such expeditions. The following journal entries follow Lorenzo as he and his team travel across the Atlantic to Oman, and finally the Arabian desert.
When they arrive at the Empty Quarter, Lorenzo has his colleague and fellow archeologist, Metternich, make use of an item known as the “electrical sensing apparatus” to look for ancient
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