Danie Ware - Ecko Rising

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Ecko Rising: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In a futuristic London where technological body modification is the norm, Ecko stands alone as a testament to the extreme capabilities of his society. Driven half mad by the systems running his body, Ecko is a criminal for hire. No job is too dangerous or insane.
When a mission goes wrong and Ecko finds himself catapulted across dimensions into a peaceful and unadvanced society living in fear of 'magic', he must confront his own percepions of reality and his place within it.
A thrilling debut,
explores the massive range of the sci-fi and fantasy genres, and the possible implications of pitting them against one another. Author Danie Ware creates an immersive and richly imagined world that readers will be eager to explore in the first book in this exciting new trilogy.

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Ress had no such problems now. He stood by Feren in the cart, his hip braced against the side, and he smoothly fitted a heavy spear into the wood-and-leather thrower on his forearm. He had an almighty range with that thing. The first spear arced over Jayr’s shoulder but fell short of the incoming beast.

Bleakly, he fitted another.

The beasts were not shooting back – as they came closer, Jayr saw they bore no weapons, or garments, of any kind. They were fast though, their forelegs and chests pushing through the grass, their huge claws crushed and tore at it. Even as Jayr reached her, Triqueta slowed her wild-eyed mare and, unspeaking, cross-drew her two wicked-looking serrated short-swords.

Jayr came up next to her. She was grinning, bright and hard as a polished metal blade. Her blood thundered, she could feel it in her belly and thighs and in the horse beneath her. Any minute now, her frustration was going to detonate.

The beasts came closer.

Now, Triqueta turned her mare in tight, agitated circles, trying to calm the animal down. Jayr’s gelding tossed his head up and down, up and down. Big as he was, he was skittering, all four hooves tamping the soil like a crouching bweao – he wanted to fight as much as she did.

A second spear shot over them. This one crested its arc – then fell full-force into the horse chest of the lead creature.

“Ha!” Way behind them, Ress’s shout was pure defiance.

The beast staggered, but was still running. Then he reached down to yank the thing bodily out of his flesh and snap it into jagged halves and flying kindling.

And he grinned.

Furious now, Jayr tightened her knees and her gelding sprang forwards, the grasses parting under the onslaught of horseflesh. Dismissing her bundle of javelins – she couldn’t hit shit with them anyway – she unclipped her big, heavy-shafted spear.

The beasts were upon her. She held her horse in a thigh grip like a terhnwood pincer, and lifted the spear two-handed to aim it solid and point down.

The injured beast flashed past. A moment later, she heard Triqueta’s high, ululating war cry; heard Ress’s echo from further back. The other one came at her, chest first, wild haired, bare fleshed and screaming in anger and hate.

She snarled fury, leaned forwards, ready for her horse’s move...

And the gelding stood straight up on his hind legs, his massive, cracked forehooves gleaming in the sinking sun. One caught the creature’s human face, smashing his jaw sideways into a maddened, flopping gape. Blood and spit exploded over them both.

With all her weight and power behind it, Jayr rammed the spear downwards, past her mount’s ear and into the muscled shoulder of the half-breed beast.

The point scored a red gouge in his flesh as he blocked the strike with fist and forearm. Gods , he was hugely strong. As the gelding plunged back to the ground, the creature reared in his turn, massive foreclaws extended and scrabbling.

A second spear rammed – thunk – into his horse ribs. He staggered, fell back to four claws, raking the soil into grooves of blood and fury.

What did it take to stop this thing?

One hand grabbed the spear and yanked it free. There was pain in his broken face now, rage in his eyes, righteousness where his jaw should be.

With the spear in his hands, mimicking Jayr’s grip, he went to rear.

Anticipating her command, the gelding spun to slam him with both hind hooves.

Jayr knew he’d got it wrong when he buckled under her and screamed, shattering the daylight into tumbling shards of sound.

* * *

As the creature came at her, Triqueta sheathed one of her jagged blades.

She controlled the spooked mare with an effort. The animal danced broadside, her knees high and her eyes rolling white. Fresh froth dripped from her chin.

With one hand on the pommel, Triqueta came to a combat crouch, feet on the saddle. The beast seemed to think this was funny, it was grinning – the thing had incisors as long as belt-knives.

A little closer, you accursed alchemical half-breed, a little closer...

In moving, she’d lost her contact with the mare. As she leapt like a performer from one horse’s back to the other, the mare gathered her legs and bolted – jarring Triqueta’s take-off. Instead of landing on her feet on the creature’s back, she landed and skidded, went splat on her belly, nearly going nose first over the far side.

The creature stank of sweat and flesh.

It shrieked, spat vicious defiance – his human body twisted this way and that as his hands tried to reach for her. Beneath her, his horse self plunged and kicked out, then went to rear.

Triqueta grabbed a handful of mane, pulled her body up and let one leg slide over his back. A moment later, he was tight between her knees.

And he went berserk.

Plunging, kicking, bucking, shouting wordless fury. His human torso leaned forwards, backwards. He twisted round, his hands scrabbled furiously to try and dislodge her. She was riding a whirlwind, a thunderstorm. His hair was everywhere, in her face, caught in her garments. She twisted one hand in his hair to the wrist; the other clung grimly to the serrated blade.

He fought like an unbroken wild thing, outraged and screaming. She gripped him with legs that had been riding a lifetime, rode the spasm and plunge and twist of his back. Dimly, she was aware of the gelding’s sudden scream but her focus was sharp as a bodkin, honed to a fighting point and absolute.

For a moment, he stilled, quivering.

Calm as the eye of insanity, Triqueta brought her feet under her and rose into a half crouch.

Instantly, he started again – now racing forwards, tilting left and right trying to tip her from his back, then stopping dead to buck, and buck, and buck like a overexcited foal. She was riding him like a champion charioteer, knees absorbing his motion, hand and arm overtensed and shaking with the effort of hanging on. She was panting, sweating, the sun was making the pollen itch on her skin; her eyes were dazzled by the light. As the creature tore in a desperate circle, she clung – and her heart was hammering, hammering.

He stopped again. As if he knew what was coming, he bawled wordless aggression, turned his body round to seize her by the ankles.

But it was too late. With a scream that might’ve been pure insolence, she rammed the blade straight through his neck and rasped it free, ripping out his windpipe and the front of his throat as she did so.

His anger became a bubbling hiss, an explosion of air and gore. His hands scrabbled frantically as he tried to stem the gush, his chest and ribs strained as he tried to draw breath.

Die you bastard thing!

His great body staggered, righted itself, staggered again and crashed into the grass.

Hand and blade red with the creature’s death, Triqueta jumped clear.

Her knees gave – but she was flushed, exhilarated. Head back, arms spread to the sky, she loosed the Banned’s war cry again, a shriek of triumph.

* * *

Jayr’s gelding screamed and sprang, leaping away from the creature he’d kicked at with his heels.

Jayr kept her seat – just – but the suddenness of the movement, the pitch of the horse’s cry had her grabbing for his mane, barely clinging on to her spear. For a moment, she thought he’d bolt. She craned her neck to see what had happened to him.

And blanched.

Two lots of three massive gashes had carved a wicked, deep chevron in his rump. Raw flesh bulged visibly through ripped hide. Blood was streaming across his haunches and matting his tail, running in rivulets down his legs and staining the grass to scarlet red.

Strong as he was, the gelding was shaking. His back legs quivered and she felt him falter.

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