Free Novel Read

ENDURE: Epoch’s End Book 1 : (A Post-Apocalyptic Survival Thriller Series) (Epoch's End)




  ENDURE

  The Epoch’s End Series

  Book 1

  By

  Mike Kraus

  © 2021 Muonic Press Inc

  www.muonic.com

  ***

  www.MikeKrausBooks.com

  hello@mikeKrausBooks.com

  www.facebook.com/MikeKrausBooks

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, without the permission in writing from the author.

  Table of Contents

  Preface

  Introduction

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Want More Awesome Books?

  Want More Awesome Books?

  Find more fantastic tales right here, at books.to/readmorepa.

  ***

  If you’re new to reading Mike Kraus, consider visiting his website and signing up for his free newsletter. You’ll receive several free books and a sample of his audiobooks, too, just for signing up, you can unsubscribe at any time and you will receive absolutely no spam.

  ***

  Special Thanks

  Special thanks to my awesome beta team, without whom this book wouldn’t be nearly as great.

  Thank you!

  Epoch’s End Book 2

  Available Here

  Preface

  A remote island off the coast of New England

  The wet sand cooled Robert’s feet as he pulled the small sailboat a little farther onto the beach and stepped back to ensure the gently lapping waves wouldn’t drag it away. Once satisfied the boat was stable, Robert put his hands on his hips and gazed across the beautiful North Atlantic from the island’s shore.

  The sun glinted off the flat surface, the stark blue horizon line dividing the water and the clear blue sky, birds calling down the shore. Robert took a deep breath of fresh air and let the tension drain from his body, stress from the day job melting away like wax down the side of a candle. He backed up the beach onto the drier sand and wiggled his toes in its warmth.

  A pair of wine glasses clinked together, and Robert turned to see Denise kneeling on the beach blanket, auburn hair whipping around her shoulders as she held up the glasses and tapped them together, a sly expression on her face.

  Robert couldn’t help but grin, his beautiful wife looking like a goddess against the backdrop of the old lighthouse on its grassy rise. Turning his back on the ocean, he grinned and tried to wipe away the mild guilt at drinking so early in the day. But it was their vacation, and the picnic was just the start of things to come.

  “Coming, honey,” he said, starting over when his daughter called from the lighthouse yard.

  “Hey, Dad! Look!”

  Robert turned to see Cleo’s head sticking up above the tall grass, her golden-brown hair sunbaked as it lay over her shoulders. Her finger was aimed at something in the ocean, and he turned to face the water as a school of flying fish burst from the waves and flitted upward in a spray of dazzling foam.

  “Flying fish! Exocoetidai!” Robert’s smile was wide and a little strained. Being from New Bedford, Rhode Island, he’d heard of the flying fish reaching as far north as Buzzards Bay, though it was strange to see them so far out.

  They were beautiful creatures, sunlight glinting off their cylindrical bodies in sparkles of wiggling movement as they soared hundreds of meters through the air. Gulls swooped down and plucked some out of the sky, beaks snapping them up in a frenzy of activity.

  Robert turned away from the ocean and trudged through the sand toward his wife, kicking warm “You sure it's not too early for wine?” Robert asked with a smile, already knowing the answer.

  “It’s never too early for wine! The kids are playing in the lighthouse. Now," she smiled, holding a glass up toward him, "this lady wants to spend some quality time with her husband.”

  The children’s laughter danced down the hill, and Robert glanced up at the lighthouse to watch his son, Brad, chase his sister around. They were running the sand trails between the dunes, the rustic lighthouse and its beach-scrub yard lingering in the background in its deep brown granite face, the iron catwalk spotted with rust where it encircled the octagonal lighthouse on top.

  “Stay where we can see you!” Robert called up to them.

  “Okay, Dad!” Cleo called back.

  Robert started to sit when the feeding birds clambered and squawked excitedly, the burst of activity causing his wife to tick her head to the side.

  “The flying fish are beautiful, aren’t they?” Robert reached for a wine glass.

  “It’s not just flying fish anymore,” Denise replied, still staring at the ocean, nodding at the water.

  Brow furrowed, hand still held out for a glass, Robert half turned and gazed back at a dozen or more dorsal fins cutting through the water, moving south at a high rate of speed, tails churning up the foam as sleek gray forms accelerated like bullets across the surface. Clicks and squeals penetrated his ears above the sounds of rolling surf, drawing him the rest of the way around to face the water.

  He squinted. “Those are… dolphins?"

  Denise put her hand to her forehead to block the sun. “I think so. And… Oh, look at that!”

  Five large humps rose above the water’s surface, massive gray backs with hard crescent shapes slipping through the waves and diving hard, sending sea foam splashing up. They drove through the ranks of dolphins and sent them turning and zipping away through the water.

  “Those are humpback whales.” Jaw hanging open in awe, Robert stared at the whales’ barreling, knob-ridden snouts as they pushed through the other animals, knocking them aside, fins smacking the water as whale songs lifted high and strained.

  “This is crazy,” he said, blinking in amazement as the squarish head of a sperm whale breached the water’s surface, its body soaring several meters into the air, trailing salt water, a squid clenched in its mouth. The squid’s tentacles still clung to the whale’s head, hooked in even as the deep-sea creature was actively being devoured.

  “Those two came from deep down. Something must have driven them to the surface." He staggered closer, feet dragging through the sand, hand raised to his eyes in bewilderment. "What the hell's going on to get them running scared like that?"

  “Robert?” Nancy’s voice rose with an uneasy lilt. “Do you feel that?”

  “Feel what?” Robert watched as Denise backed up along the beach, hands held out as if she were trying to get her balance.

  A tremor echoed through the ground, a slow, low rumble of tectonic shift that shook the sand, sending his feet vibrating in a wave that moved up and d
own his legs, setting every hair on end. Eyes darting to Denise, she returned a wide-eyed horrified stare. The ground bucked, lifting Robert off his feet and tossing him into his wife, sending wine glasses flying, the bottle tumbling to the sand, red wine spilling out in a quivering gush. He caught her, turning, eyes darting like a pinball as they stumbled around. Robert held on to her, the two dancing on the balls of their feet to stay upright.

  Cleo screamed and Brad cried out, “Mommy! Mommy!”

  “The kids,” Robert’s voice ejected in a panicked grunt, watching as Cleo tried to stand before being violently thrown back to the ground. Brad ran toward his sister, but the grassy yard kicked upward and pitched him into the tall grass, tumbling head over heels.

  “No!” Robert cried. Teeth gritting against Nature’s fury, he braced himself with his hands on Denise’s shoulders, pushing himself to his feet. Denise helped stabilize her husband, gripping his arms until her fingernails made furrows in his skin, pushing and shoving him ahead like a shield. He stumbled forward five yards before losing his balance, and he threw his legs wide just to stay upright. Denise smashed against him then fell away, staggering, hands bent into claws as she strove to cling to him.

  Robert craned his neck back toward the beach, mouth falling open at the massive form surging toward them, skimming across the wet sand on a layer of brine like a water demon from the darkest depths of the ocean. At first, Robert couldn’t believe his eyes, but the massive black-backed creature slid toward them, its white underbelly plowing through the sand, displacing a thousand pounds of grains in a sweeping wake.

  Adrenaline shocked his limbs, and Robert jerked backwards, dragging Denise with him. They stumbled a dozen yards and fell to the side as the killer whale slid past them, six tons of massive bulk throwing a wake of gritty brown sand over their heads, a pungent brine smell washing over them.

  Wiping his eyes with one hand, spitting, choking, coughing up sand, Robert grabbed Denise and shouted into her face. “We’ve got to get to the kids!”

  “How?” she called back, straining to be heard over the rumbling.

  “Crawl!”

  Robert pulled her away from the Orca, falling to all fours and propelling himself forward any way he could. He kicked with his legs and knees, digging his arms into the sand, using them like flippers. Head down, ears honed-in on the screams of his children, he dragged himself across the shivering sand.

  After several yards of scrambling, Robert glanced back to see Denise lying sprawled on the beach, face turned up to him, frozen in terror, a silent scream ripping from her throat. Her hair shimmered where it fell across her forehead, arm outstretched and reaching, fingers clutching.

  Robert faced forward and dove with his arms spread wide, crawling harder, glaring up toward the rise as the brown granite of the lighthouse burst apart. The stones shook out of the wall, mortar turned to dust, sifting down in a dry cascade. Up in the lighthouse, glass exploded from the massive lantern pane, sending razor sharp shards zipping to the ground. The catwalk buckled and broke away, and the tower split and folded downward in a screech of twisting metal.

  The steel cupola rolled off and plunged end over end in a slow-motion free fall toward their children. The rounded bell smacked the ground with an ominous clang, cutting off their screams. A moment of shock and disbelief passed through his system, a dreadful reality gripping him with shock.

  “No!” Robert screamed.

  Tears and sand stinging his eyes, Robert pounded forward, arm over arm, dragging himself across a ground that had become more ethereal than firm, determined to somehow reach his children. Changing direction, he grunted and shouted unintelligibly as his struggle to crawl grew. He cried out in dismay as a crack ran across the base of the dune, sand sifting into the gap. The ground buckled, dumping the lighthouse into some bottomless underground chasm before a dozen water geysers sprouted up into the sky, the ends flailing outward in a fine mist.

  Up the beach, more geysers and cracks sprung open, vomiting up fish, eels, and gelatinous creatures onto the beach, leaving them squirming and flopping around as they died. Rolling onto his back, Robert tried to find Denise, his heart seizing again at the sight of another crack running into the sea, the killer whale floundering half inside the gaping fissure.

  Denise was gone, disappeared, swallowed up or taken by the ocean waves. An anguished cry tore from his lips as he closed his eyes and prepared to meet his maker. Powerful forces tore apart the island, split by the violent tides. A chasm cracked the island’s bedrock, the yawning maw consuming rock and silt and sand, punctuated by geysers of freshwater stirred up from the ocean floor and shot up from the muck.

  The crack continued toward the east shore where it split the island in two. Stone exploded upwards, massive rocks tumbling through the air, cracking together like lightning before exploding into brittle bits, crumbles of sediment raining down, splashing into the spreading waves.

  The island slowly slid beneath the churning swell of silt and freshwater soup surging upward from the Earth’s crust, bubbles gurgling upward in a final, wet gasp.

  The sea fell silent, and it was all gone.

  Introduction

  The European Science Foundation believes a mini ice-age occurred between 8,000 and 15,000 years ago, starting in North America when Glacial Lake Ojibway reached maximum volume and joined Lake Agassiz. A broken ice dam allowed massive pulses of freshwater to flow into the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. The sudden influx of freshwater diluted the circulation of seawater in the North Atlantic, weakening its “conveyor belt” of warm water flowing north and locking the northern hemisphere in freezing temperatures.

  Ice sheets formed, throwing humanity into a mini ice-age for 1,300 years. Recent data shows this “Big Freeze” developed over the course of a few months or years, at most. We can assume the icy temperatures drove humankind’s ancient ancestors south toward the equator where it was warmer, following herd animals they might hunt. With room to roam and populations at lower levels than today, our ancestors could have adapted to such a harsh environment, using their survival skills to exist in the brutal cold until conditions improved.

  But what if, in the near future, a freshwater surge from the bottom of the North Atlantic caused another “Big Freeze,” developing over a period of weeks to disrupt the North Atlantic conveyor belt? What if flash-freezing cold fronts swept across the United States and Canada, driving temperatures to well below freezing, causing ice sheets to form, and raining down massive hailstorms? Such a swift climate shift would create the perfect conditions for tornadoes and mass flooding, with rising sea levels devastating coastal cities. Crops, livestock, and flora would be destroyed, bringing countries in the northern hemisphere to their knees.

  Imagine a future where most of North America becomes uninhabitable, a crackling, frozen wasteland covered in snow and ice. The United States infrastructure crumbles, vehicles and machines lock up and become useless, and supply chains break down beneath the weight of overpopulation. In this dismal future, survivors fight over essential supplies, rioting and killing each other within the first few weeks. Those unable to find food or shelter huddle in makeshift camps, burning anything they can find, for a single spark of heat.

  Desperate for food and fuel, those able to travel flee their worthless homes to head south in endless caravan lines, clinging to the hope of reaching warmer climates. People drop like flies during the trek south, the weakest falling first, whittling down the North American population bit by bit. As tent cities swell along the border of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, tensions between the United States and Mexico boil over. Mexico closes their border, and the two sides fight violent clashes that leave thousands dead, displacing what humanity remains. The survivors of the collapse pick from the scraps, form alliances, make enemies, and fight for their very existence.

  In this bleak and desperate new ice-age, only the most hardened and resourceful individuals will survive.

  Chapter 1


  Tom McKnight

  Portland, Maine

  Tom McKnight strode between the long rows of advanced technology on display at the Portland Undersea Expo, eyes roaming over tables filled with micro-tech camera platforms for seafloor mapping, advanced rovers with new engine designs, demonstrations of better skirting materials to be used for oceanic cleanup of plastics, and a wide array of budding technologies.

  He looked forward to events like the Undersea Expo to get out from beneath the daily grind of his day-to-day job with Maniford Aquatics Engineering. Spending time with his sixteen-year-old daughter, Samantha, was an added bonus that fit in perfectly at the end of her school’s summer break.

  “Check it out!” Sam gestured ahead, rushing from his side, trailing a mane of ringlet curls, sand-colored and long past her shoulders.

  She stopped before a heavy table where two pieces of machinery rested, each the size of a large dog. The rovers sat on tracks, outfitted with sleek-looking propellers nestled against their beetle-shaped bodies. With all the retractable cameras, clasps, and digging arms spread open, they looked like something off the Battle Robots show.

  “They’re the new B-Model iCore rovers.” A man with Suresh on his name tag peered over the display with a smile, glancing between Sam and Tom as he rejoined her side. “These have an improved engine design that makes them twice as maneuverable as the A-Model machines. They can stop on a dime, pivot, and even fit into crevices on the seafloor.”

  Tom knelt down in front of the glass front of the display. “Looks like they've got the older Series-6 Titan cores in them. Have you put them to use yet? Any big contracts?”

  “We signed on with the Oceanic Research Group to do some filming of the seafloor for a television special they’re airing next year.” Suresh placed a hand on each of the rovers’ black casings. “A week from now, these two guys will be down on the seafloor off the coast of California, filming amazing stuff.”