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A Beginning at the End

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by Mike Chen




  Six years after a global pandemic wiped out most of the planet’s population, the survivors are rebuilding the country, split between self-governing cities, hippie communes and wasteland gangs.

  In postapocalyptic San Francisco, former pop star Moira has created a new identity to finally escape her past—until her domineering father launches a sweeping public search to track her down. Desperate for a fresh start herself, jaded event planner Krista navigates the world on behalf of those too traumatized to go outside, determined to help everyone move on—even if they don’t want to. Rob survived the catastrophe with his daughter, Sunny, but lost his wife. When strict government rules threaten to separate parent and child, Rob needs to prove himself worthy in the city’s eyes by connecting with people again.

  Krista, Moira, Rob and Sunny are brought together by circumstance, and their lives begin to twine together. When reports of another outbreak throw the fragile society into panic, the friends are forced to finally face everything that came before—and everything they still stand to lose. Because sometimes having one person is enough to keep the world going.

  Praise for Mike Chen’s

  A BEGINNING AT THE END

  “A brilliant story about how the best parts of ourselves won’t be stopped by a little something like the apocalypse.”

  —Sam J. Miller, Nebula Award–winning author of Blackfish City

  “An intimate, surprisingly gentle vision of post-disaster humanity, less concerned with how we might survive than with why—and for whom.”

  —Alix E. Harrow, Hugo Award–winning author of The Ten Thousand Doors of January

  “Strikes the perfect balance of dystopian collapse...and a fresh start for humanity. It’s science fiction with heart...you won’t be able to put it down.”

  —Meghan Scott Molin, author of The Frame-Up

  “With beautifully-drawn characters and an intricately imagined future history, A Beginning at the End tells an intensely human story about people reaching out through trauma and loss and discovering who and what to hold on to after the end of the world. Gripping, poignant, hopeful, and heartfelt.”

  —H.G. Parry, author of The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep

  “This is a story that’s as fun as it is moving.... Mike Chen has richly imagined every detail... Truly a special addition to the post-apocalyptic genre, and it stands up right alongside heavy hitters like Station Eleven and The Last.”

  —Megan Collins, author of The Winter Sister

  “Mike Chen crafts a detailed and intelligently rendered world, but the true heart of his work is human: a rich, complex and deftly written experience of love, loss and connection between flawed, fascinating characters.”

  —Rowenna Miller, author of Torn and Fray

  Also by Mike Chen

  Here and Now and Then

  A BEGINNING AT THE END

  Mike Chen

  For Mandy, the strongest person I know.

  Mike Chen is a lifelong writer, having crafted fan fiction as a child then somehow getting paid for words as an adult. He has contributed to major geek websites, including The Mary Sue, The Portalist and Tor, and covered the NHL for mainstream media outlets. A member of SFWA and Codex Writers, Mike lives in the Bay Area, where he can be found playing video games and watching Doctor Who with his wife, daughter and rescue animals. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram, @mikechenwriter.

  www.MikeChenBooks.com

  Contents

  Prologue

  Six Years Later...

  Excerpt from The Post-MGS Resource Report

  Part 1: Strangers

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Excerpt from Mayor Sees Potential for National FSB Initiative

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  From the Online Encyclopedia page on MoJo

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Official tally of individuals presumed missing

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Excerpt from President Tanya Hersh’s speech on the first post-quarantine fatality

  Part 2: Partners

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Excerpt from Before the Fourth Path

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  From the Online Encyclopedia page on MoJo

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Message recovered from Thomas Greenwood’s email

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Excerpt from President Tanya Hersh’s speech on the mutated MGS 96 strain

  Part 3: Enemies

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Excerpt from “The Most Dangerous Gun Incidents Following MGS”

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  From the Online Encyclopedia page on MoJo

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Excerpt from Police Report #4ADSIRE

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Excerpt from President Tanya Hersh’s speech on the accelerated lockdown window and spreading MGS

  Part 4: Friends

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Excerpt from Walking in the Dark: An Oral History of the Fourth Path

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  From the Online Encyclopedia page on MoJo

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Excerpt from Walking in the Dark: An Oral History of the Fourth Path

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Excerpt from President Tanya Hersh’s speech on the MGS 96 vaccine

  Part 5: Family

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Excerpt from the dissertation Un-Paused

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  People were too scared for music tonight. Not that MoJo cared.

  Her handlers had broken the news about the low attendance nearly an hour ago with some explanation about how the recent flu epidemic and subsequent rioting and looting kept people at home. They’d served the news with high-end vodka, the good shit imported from Russia, conveniently hidden in a water bottle which she carried from the greenroom to the stage.

  “The show must go on,” her father proclaimed, like she was doing humanity a service by performing. She suspected his bravado actually stemmed from the fact that her sophomore album’s second single had stalled at number thirteen—a far cry from the lead single’s number-one debut or her four straight top-five hits off her first album. Either way, the audience, filled with beaming girls a few years
younger than herself and their mothers, seemed to agree. Flu or no flu, some people still wanted their songs—or maybe they just wanted normalcy—so MoJo delivered, perfect note after perfect note, each in time to choreographed dance routines. She even gave her trademark smile.

  The crowd screamed and sang along, waving their arms to the beat. Halfway through the second song, a peculiar vibe grabbed the audience. Usually, a handful of parents disappeared into their phones, especially as the flu scare had heightened over the past week. This time nearly every adult in the arena was looking at their phone. In the front row, MoJo saw lines of concern on each face.

  Before the song even finished, some parents grabbed their children and left, pushing through the arena’s floor seats and funneling to the exit door.

  MoJo pushed on, just like she’d always promised her dad. She practically heard his voice over the backup music blasting in her in-ear monitors. There is no sophomore slump. Smile! Between the second and third songs, she gave her customary “Thank you!” and fake talk about how great it was to be wherever they were. New York City, this time, at Madison Square Garden. A girl of nineteen embarking on a tour bigger, more ambitious than she could have ever dreamed and taking the pop world by storm, and yet, she knew nothing real about New York City. She’d never left her hotel room without chaperones and handlers. Not under her dad’s watch.

  One long swig of vodka later, and a warmth rushed to her face, so much so that she wondered if it melted her face paint off. She looked off at the side stage, past the elaborate video set and cadre of backup dancers. But where was the gaffer? Why wasn’t anyone at the sound board? The fourth song had a violin section, yet the contracted violinist wasn’t in her spot.

  Panic raced through MoJo’s veins, mental checklists of her marks, all trailed by echoes from her dad’s lectures about accountability. Her feet were planted exactly where they should be. Her poise, straight and high. Her last few notes, on key, and her words to the audience, cheerful. It couldn’t have been something she’d done, could it?

  No. Not her fault this time. Someone else is facing Dad’s wrath tonight, she thought.

  The next song’s opening electronic beats kicked in. Eyes closed, head tilted back, and arms up, her voice pushed out the song’s highest note, despite the fuzziness of the vodka making the vibrato a little harder to sustain. For a few seconds, nothing existed except the sound of her voice and the music behind it—no handlers, no tour, no audience, no record company, no father telling her the next way she’d earn the family fortune—and it almost made the whole thing worth it.

  Her eyes opened, body coiled for the middle-eight’s dance routine, but the brightness of the house lights threw her off the beat. The drummer and keyboard player stopped, though the prerecorded backing track continued for a few more seconds before leaving an echo chamber.

  No applause. No eyes looked MoJo’s way. Only random yelling and an undecipherable buzz saw of backstage clamor from her in-ear monitors. She stood, frozen, unable to tell if this was from laced vodka or if it was actually unfolding: people—adults and children, parents and daughters—scrambling to the exits, climbing over chairs and tripping on stairs, ushers pushing back at the masses before some turned and ran as well.

  Someone grabbed her shoulder and jerked back hard. “We have to go,” said the voice behind her.

  “What’s going on?” she asked, allowing the hands to push her toward the stage exit. Steven, her huge forty-something bodyguard, took her by the arm and helped her down the short staircase to the backstage area.

  “The flu’s spread,” he said. “A government quarantine. There’s some sort of lockdown on travel. The busing starts tonight. First come, first serve. I think everyone’s trying to get home or get there. I can’t reach your father. Cell phones are jammed up.”

  They worked their way through the concrete hallways and industrial lighting of the backstage area, people crossing in a mad scramble left and right. MoJo clutched on to her bottle of vodka, both hands to her chest as Steven ushered her onward. People collapsed in front of her, crying, tripping on their own anxieties, and Steven shoved her around them, apologizing all the way. Something draped over her shoulders, and it took her a moment to realize that he’d put a thick parka around her. She chuckled at the thought of her sparkly halter top and leather pants wrapped in a down parka that smelled like BO, but Steven kept pushing her forward, forward, forward until they hit a set of double doors.

  The doors flew open, but rather than the arena’s quiet loading area from a few hours ago, MoJo saw a thick wall of people: all ages and all colors in a current of movement, pushing back and forth. “I’ve got your dad on the line,” Steven yelled over the din. “His car is that way. He wants to get to the airport now. Same thing’s happening back home.” His arm stretched out over her head. “That way! Go!”

  They moved as a pair, Steven yelling “excuse me” over and over until the crowd became too dense to overcome. In front of her, a woman with wisps of gray woven into black hair trembled on her knees. Even with the racket around them, MoJo heard her cry. “This is the end. This is the end.”

  The end.

  People had been making cracks about the End of the World since the flu changed from online rumors to this big thing that everyone talked about all the time. But she’d always figured the “end” meant a giant pit opening, Satan ushering everyone down a staircase to Hell. Not stuck outside Madison Square Garden.

  “Hey,” Steven yelled, arms spread out to clear a path through the traffic jam of bodies. “This way!”

  MoJo looked at the sobbing woman in front of her, then at Steven. Somewhere farther down the road, her father sat in a car and waited. She could feel his pull, an invisible tether that never let her get too far away.

  “The end, the end,” the sobbing woman repeated, pausing MoJo in her tracks. But where to go? Every direction just pointed at more chaos, people scrambling with a panic that had overtaken everyone in the loading dock, possibly the neighborhood, possibly all New York City, possibly even the world. And it wasn’t just about a flu.

  It was everything.

  But...maybe that was good?

  No more tours. No more studio sessions. No more threats about financial security, no more lawyer meetings, no more searches through her luggage. No more worrying about hitting every mark. In the studio. Onstage.

  In life.

  All of that was done.

  The very thought caused MoJo to smirk.

  If this was the end, then she was going out on her own terms.

  “Steven!” she yelled. He turned and met her gaze.

  She twisted the cap off the water-turned-vodka bottle, then took most of it down in one long gulp. She poured the remainder on her face paint, a star around her left eye, then wiped it off with her sleeve. The empty bottle flew through the air, probably hitting some poor bloke in the head.

  “Tell my dad,” she said, trying extra hard to pronounce the words with the clear British diction she was raised with, “to go fuck himself.”

  For an instant, she caught Steven’s widemouthed look, a mix of fear and confusion and disappointment on his face, as though her words crushed his worldview more than the madness around them. But MoJo wouldn’t let herself revel in her first, possibly only victory over her father; she ducked and turned quickly, parka pulled over her head, crushing the product-molded spikes in her hair.

  Each step pushing forward, shoulders and arms bumping into her as her eyes locked on to the ground, one step at a time. Left, right, left, then right, all as fast as she could go, screams and car horns and smashing glass building in a wave of desperation around her.

  Maybe it was the end. But even though her head was down, she walked with dignity for the first time in years, perhaps ever.

  Six Years

  Later...

  Excerpt from The Post-MGS Resource

  Report a
s Commissioned by Acting President

  Tanya Hersh:

  Ultimately, the Commission came to the following conclusions:

  Potential for water, energy, communication, and infrastructure distribution were nearly half of pre-outbreak levels.

  Offers of support from former tech-sector leaders can support infrastructure logistics with tools for automation and management.

  Farming should be migrated to local population centers.

  Widespread manufacturing will take at least a decade to restart but unopened goods of all kinds can be recovered, centralized, and distributed by federal convoys.

  With a roughly 70% reduction in the American population due to the MGS pandemic, these resources remain widely available, and harnessing them creates new jobs for an economic reset. The Commission believes that the largest risk to stability in government-supported Metropolitan Zones is so-called “Post-Apocalyptic Stress Disorder” (PASD) and the way it destabilizes families, the building block of society. It is the Commission’s recommendation that all possible initiatives be focused on restoring the nuclear family unit, regardless of gender or sexual orientation, as well as the stability found in blood relations. Children, ultimately, are society’s future.

  State and local municipalities should be given discretion in managing these situations as needed to ensure federal resources maintain focus on larger-scale infrastructure as well as coordination with international governments for Project Preservation.

  Part 1:

  STRANGERS

  Chapter One

  Rob

  President Hersh to address first fatality in new flu epidemic.

  Rob Donelly sneezed as he considered the latest headline out of the Miami Metro. In surrounding cubicles, keyboards paused and conversations hesitated. It wasn’t a giant interruption; work didn’t grind to a halt, the San Francisco Metro’s local area network didn’t fall apart, and no one headed for the exits. But inside the office of PodStar Technologies, that single sneeze was a subtle bump in the road to the workday, and Rob heard the hum of a portable air sanitizer start up. If he stood up and looked around, he probably would see the purple glow from the device’s germ-killing UV light.

 

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