Decker

Decker is the most powerful crime boss in the Hub and the head of the Underground and the Friendly Lending Company in 2161.

Background
Decker is the true power in the Hub, and little happens there that he is not aware of. He seeks to control the entire water distribution business. He is wary of threats to his position, including the Children of the Cathedral, whose attractive preaching and aggressive expansion endanger his operations. Likewise, he also looks for a way to control the Hub police, whose head, Justin Greene, is less corruptible than his father.

He also presides over the Friendly Lending Company, a loanshark operation managed by Lorenzo Giovanni, which was recently accused by the Hub police of extortion.

Quests

 * Dispose of Jain, Dispose of merchant: Should the player character impress Kane, his right-hand man, Decker will offer two jobs: remove Daren Hightower, Daren's wife and his security detail, and later Jain of the Children of the Cathedral, to cripple their operations in the Hub.
 * Take down Decker: At any time during or after the above quests, he can be reported to Sheriff Greene. The player character will be asked to assist in taking him down; as expected, neither Decker nor Kane will be too pleased.

Other interactions

 * Sometime before 2161, Decker captured an initiate of the Brotherhood of Steel who was visiting the Hub and held him as a prisoner in Old Town, torturing him to get information on the Brotherhood of Steel. The player character can rescue the initiate as part of the Rescue Initiate from the Hub quest given by the Brotherhood.
 * Decker's death is the knell of the Underground. His absolutist control of all criminal activities within the city results in a lack of a successor. With no one to succeed him, the Hub police can subsequently eliminate any criminal elements without fear of retribution.

Appearances
Decker appears only in Fallout as a talking head.

Behind the scenes

 * The character is mentioned in the Fallout Bible.
 * The Maltese Falcon, the name of Decker's bar, is a reference to a detective novel from 1930 of the same name.