Chapter 1 - The Times They Are A-Changin'
Added 2023-06-29 00:20:16 +0000 UTCMason truly hated parties. Especially the kind of gathering of emotionally weak, socially posturing, shallow socialites his brother Blake attracted like flies.
âYou canât spend literally one hundred percent of your time at work, the gym, or preparing for the end of days,â Blake had told him en route, hand draped casually over the wheel of their parentâs Bentley. âYou need to socialize, bro. Expand your horizons.â
âDonât call me bro,â Mason said for the five hundredth time, glaring out the window with his arms crossed. He was being petulant, he knew that, but he also knew there was a zero percent chance heâd enjoy himself, or âexpandâ anything.
But as usual, when Blake called, Mason answered.
Puffed up, tryhard, blowhard, know-it-all, preppy, smug, blue-eyed, blonde haired, annoyingly perfect specimen of a creature Blake may beâhe was also Masonâs brother. And if Mason had a creed, or a rule in life, it was this: look after your own.
Well, they werenât technically brothers. Mason and Blake were both orphans whoâd been delivered to an orphanage so young neither knew their birth parents. Some kid had stolen Blakeâs stuffed rabbit, causing him to cry all night every night until Mason had punched the kid in the head and taken it back. Then heâd returned it to Blake, and theyâd ripped up some old magazines someone had left at the orphanage, and laughed all afternoon with pictures stuck to their faces. And that was that. Friends for life.
âWell I canât drink. And I need decent protein by 2pm,â Mason said. âI have a meet on Saturday and I wonât bloody lose time because I was being âsocialâ with your snobby friends.â
Blake casually popped the glove compartment and took out a plastic bag apparently filled with roast chicken, then gave one of his damned perfect, infectious grins.
âMomâs special seasoning. Whoâs the best brother in the world?â
Mason sighed and took the bag. âOK, Iâm glad you brought this, but Mom, really? Can you literally not cook a piece of chicken?â
âUh, why would I? When it makes Mom happy to do it?â
âYouâre literally the most coddled human being on the planet. You need to move out of that house. Thereâs South Korean, trustfund Youtubers with more practical skills than you.â
Blake slapped Masonâs knee as if pleased, and Mason squinted.
âWhat?â
âIâm proud you know what Youtube is! And Korea, for that matter. And youâve answered a philosophical question for me: if itâs not at the gym, does Mason know it exists?â
âHey I read.â
âMagazines? About guns and zombies?â
âAnd books about guns and zombies. You know some of us need to be prepared if the power grid goes up in smoke, or if the government turns tyrant, or the damn Chinese invade, orâŠâ
âOr the Canadians!â Blake put on his fake serious face. âIâve never trusted the Canadians. All that politeness. Theyâre plotting something.â
He grinned, and Mason rolled his eyes, but had to look away to hide his grin, too.
âYou should bring up your plans for a bunker and an arsenal at the party. Youâll be a real hit with the ladies.â
Mason snorted. âMaybe I will.â
They pulled up to a big house on a boojee street, rich and gaudy and exactly what Mason expected. There were spotless high end cars parked all over the road and driveway.
âGod, man, do I really have to?â Mason stared out the window.
âYou really do,â said Blake happily.
âFine. I hate you. But fine.â He kicked open the door and walked up feeling like he was back in freshman year. He waited at the door for Blake to stroll up and ring the bell, winking in Masonâs direction.
âIdiot,â he frowned.
âMoron,â Blake just kept on grinning.
âIâm coming!â yelled some high pitched feminine voice from somewhere inside.
âNot yet, but just wait.â Blake wiggled his brow, and Mason pretended to vomit.
A girl you might have plucked from a teen magazine opened the door and revealed shining white teeth.
âOh my gawd, Blake! I was hoping youâd come!â she stepped out and squeezed her already squeezed tits into Blakeâs chest. âAnd whoâs your friend?â
âThis is my brother, Mason. Heâs a bit shy. So hold his a hand a little for me will you, darling?â
Mason refrained from choking his much smaller, skinnier brother until he was dead.
The girl laughed like it was the funniest joke sheâd ever heard, then pulled them both inside. She gave them âthe grand tourâ, which Mason paid very little attention to. Then he turned down a dozen drink offers with a âthanks, but I canât. I have a meet. Yeah, track and fieldâ. Then theyâd say âoh, itâll be fine!â like they knew anything about anything, and heâd say âno really, but thanksâ until the next person trying to win Blakeâs friendship by being nice to his brother gave it a whirl.
It wasnât really that bad, if Mason was being honest. They were mostly just trying to be nice. Mason liked to complain, but watching Blake schmooze and charm his way through Houstonâs elite like he wasnât just one of them, but the best of them, was always entertaining to watch. Mason could remember when his brother was a snot-nosed brat crying because he was scared of a new house. Now just look at the magnificent bastard, he thought.
While they werenât biological brothers, they were in fact technically brothers. Theyâd been adopted together. At least sort of.
Their eventual parentsâsome of the wealthiest business magnate types in the cityâhad made Blake and Mason their experiment. Well, one of their experiments. Blake was the success; MasonâŠnot so much. He did fine, he supposed. He just hated school and wouldnât even be at university if they hadnât forced him and paid for it. He wasnât stupid enough not to realize what a big deal that was, so he went for kinesiology. Maybe heâd be a part time masseuse, or physio therapist, or something. But frankly heâd rather just go work on an oil rig. Heâd have joined the army right out of high school but he was pretty sure he couldnât stomach all the rules, and it would have meant leaving Blake.
Anyway. The Nimitzâsâtheir foster parentsâhad really only wanted Blake. But by seven the boys were pretty much inseparable already. The Nimitzâs had come in and seen Blakeâs bright baby blues and melted like candles, the same as everyone. Theyâd wanted him right then and there but had to jump through all the paperwork, and never looked at old brown haired, brown eyed Mason twice.
Seven year old Blake said not to worry. He said he wouldnât let them be separated, not ever, and Mason had said âyeah sureâ because even at seven he was a professional orphan and knew how it was. But that was the thing about Blake. When he said a thing, straight to you one on one like that, he meant it.
So ten days later that same waspy, rich couple who hadnât looked at the plain, dirt smudged, frowning boy twice, came back with red, glassy eyes. They hadnât been sleeping, looked like, and Mason guessed a certain blue-eyed angel had spent the whole time howling like a banshee, promising it would go on forever until they gave in. So the Nimitzâs talked to the orphanage people. They filled out more paperwork. And then they gave big fake smiles and loaded Mason into their expensive car, where Blake was waiting with his lopsided smile. And from that day on, they were brothers for real.
They did all the same sports. They joined all the same âadvanced education programsâ and summer clubs and music lessons and got all the same tutors. Mason crushed the sports, but struggled through everything else. Even at seven the boys were opposites, and that didnât change a jot by twenty. But they hadnât changed how they felt about each other, either, and remained not just brothers but best friends. As Blake sometimes put it, they âironed down each otherâs edgesâ. Or âlooked out for each otherâs blind spotsâ.
Mason mostly just smiled and nodded when his brother waxed poetic. He didnât have a damn clue what heâd do with his life, but if all he did was look out for Blake when he got lost in some crazy idea, maybe that was good enough. Maybe that was his purpose. Because even as a boy he knew that damned crazy kid was meant for greatness. And though Mason wasnât good for much in the civilized world, heâd been kicking the shit out of bullies for more than a decade, because Blake had attracted them like flies, and because Mason was a damn good kicker.
Mason blinked back to reality. Apparently some rich kid in a plaid jacket was telling him all about his investments. âETFs man,â he said for what seemed like not the first time. âETFs are the way to go.â
Blake pat Masonâs arm. âSounds capital. Excuse me. Iâll be right back.â
Mason stared daggers before noticing the pin-up girl whoâd let them in giving his brother the âcome fuck meâ finger from the edge of the hall. He rolled his eyes, and focused on Mr. Plaid Jacket.
Since they were about sixteen, his bastard brother practically tripped over eager girls. And sure enough while he chatted about âExchange Traded Fundsâ, he just barely heard the stifled moans from some back room down the hall. He finally accepted a drink, and by the time heâd powered down his whiskey Blake wandered by with a few ruffled, wet spots on his clothes, and the blonde went the other way as she adjusted her dress.
Mason sighed, and kept on âsocializingâ. He ate his protein. He told rich kids about track and field.
Then later he and Blake were finally standing on the balcony, looking out at the sunset over the East river, an alcoholic drink in both their hands. They grinned at each other.
âLifeâs not so bad, eh brother?â Blake elbowed him.
âNo it isnât,â Mason accepted with a frown. âThough it would be better if there was some bimbo everywhere I went ready to suck me off.â
âThat is why we socialize,â Blake wiggled his plucked eyebrows and yawned. âNow what the hell is that?â
Mason followed his brotherâs gaze, and his heart skipped a beat. He saw the rippling wave of force, first, rolling down the river like the tide. It was like a movie. Or a nightmare. He knocked Blakeâs drink from his hand as he grabbed his arm, and ran.
âBasement!â he called, pulling and running. âNow!â
âMason,â Blakeâs voice sounded panicked. âWhat theâŠwhat? RelaxâŠitâs justâŠI mean Iâm sure itâs justâŠâ
It was a giant explosion. Or a meteor. And Mason leapt past chatting, still smiling co-eds as he dragged his helpless brother down two flights of stairs like they were flying. He found the huge, stainless steel refrigerator heâd seen in âthe grand tourâ and sprinted straight at it, throwing all his weight to knock it over.
âMason! Jesus Christ what the hell isâŠâ
People upstairs were screaming now. A low hum of something like thunder filled the air and rose until it drowned out everything. Mason pulled out the drinks, food, and racks from the fridge and turned it over, ripping out the stuff like innards.
âUnderneath. Now!â He screamed over the din. Blake knew his brother well enough not to argue. Mason picked up a metal lamp and jammed it out the huge fridgeâs metal door before mostly closing himself and his brother inside.
âMason?â Blakeâs voice was subdued as they huddled together. He was afraid, and Mason didnât blame him. Suddenly they werenât in his world anymoreâthe world where he understood all the rules and was there to guide Mason through it. They were back in the orphanage, with mean little boys whoâd take your things and laugh in your face if you let them. A world of strength and cunning, cheaters and violence.
âItâs alright, brother.â Mason put a hand to Blakeâs shoulders in the gloom, thinking about his bug out bag, fresh water, radiation and being buried alive. âYouâre such a lucky son of a bitch,â he forced a smile. âSomehow youâll be the only guy who survives whatever this is.â
Blake smiled back in the dim light, the confident young man again. They held each other, but Mason kept his eyes and ears open, listening, watching, trying to understand, to be ready. Then it all went dark.