Danie Ware - Ecko Rising

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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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Walls. Ceiling. Stone. It wasn’t quite the old underground south of the river, but fuck was that better.

“What do you see?” Redlock was right behind him.

“Dark. Little patches of heat that say ‘bad guys went this-a-way’. How come there’s no beasties, no traps, no door?”

“No one comes out here,” Tarvi said softly. “Why would they leave the trade-roads – they’ve got everything they want. They don’t care about a load of broken rocks; they care about the grass harvest and the terhnwood flow, whether they can trade for a luxury this halfcycle. There’s only the taer, and few remember that.”

“Some things,” Ecko commented, “just don’t fucking change.”

He flicked out his heatseeker.

And saw there was light.

It was so faint, he could almost have imagined it. It danced broken, refracted and reflected from something he couldn’t see – something below the level of the steadily descending floor. If he looked up, minute echoes played in the crack over his head, stalactites – or were they the other ones? – had an edge of glitter, like amethyst chandeliers in some trippy-hippie bedroom. There were lichens on the wall, opening like a myriad mouths, as though they hungered for the taste.

They were kinda creepy.

Whatever this was, it was no fucking dungeon – no set of mines. This was more like fantastical potholing – never mind sixty feet of rope and a grapple pistol, he needed a hard hat and a flashlight.

The illumination was just enough for his starlites. As the harsh rock walls around him became a soft wash of grey-green, he crouched low to the coarse, pebbled floor and crept downwards.

The creatures’ heat had left a trail of soot a blind cleaning ’bot could follow.

The others came after him, weapons in hand.

* * *

Slowly, the passageway began to open out.

Here, there were fragments of regular stonework in the natural stone walls, nonsensical oddments of order amid the rising rock ripples of an expanding cave. Ecko could hear the steady drip of water.

There was more space here. Above them, a crack in the ceiling had lifted and opened out into a wide and jagged layer of fangs, uneven and shining as the cracked light touched them.

The trail came from there – on the cave’s far side, a wide, dark mouth full of dancing glimmer. The burns led that way like an unwound ball of string. If the goblins were guarding anything, he’d guess that’d be the door.

The girls were whispering, their voices carrying up into tiers of teeth.

And the small cave answered them.

A shattered crystalline sound, atonal and dissonant. It oscillated in uneven waves, an irregular rebroadcast from stalactites and walls.

Ecko shuddered. Redlock turned, but they’d quietened instantly.

The four of them paused in silence.

Water dripped, faintly, maddeningly regular.

Gesturing for the others to stay put, Ecko was off. He made no sound; he left no trace. Following the beasties’ trail, he ducked under the arced maw of spikes and raced, swift as a darting insect, across the openness to slam his back against the far wall.

He looked into the entranceway.

A target-length before him, the ceiling lowered to twin fangs, joined floor to ceiling as if the jaws were lodged half shut. Between them were the recently shattered remains of a forced stone door – behind it a throat that swallowed the light.

Before this entranceway, like a towering guard, was the biggest fucking wind chime he’d ever seen. Suspended from the ceiling, it was taller than he was – hell, it was taller than Lugan – it was more than an artwork, more than some fucked-up chiming-crystal mobile... The rocklight at its centre was trapped to loose crazed rave-party shafts of brilliance across the entranceway, out across the cave and deep into the darkness of whatever lay beyond.

He flicked out his starlites and stared, stunned.

Ecko had never been one for nightclubs – even before Pilgrim had gotten a hold of them. Now, though, he stood as if he were the last fucker left on the dance floor – alone amid a spangled kaleidoscope of reds, blues, purples. Dark lights surrounded him, like a promise – or a threat. The thing lit the walls to a hundred shades of insane goth.

As he looked, he could see that it was damaged – it was half hanging, crystals split and darkened, smeared in soot.

An ancient light show, shattered by the heat of the sortie?

Experimentally, he let out the faintest, audible breath.

And it answered him, a struggling discord of warning.

Echo, Ecko. It was a security system, for chrissakes, guarding the doorway. If the cave out there condensed noise, it must’ve been placed in exactly the right position to go off like an aural claymore the second someone coughed...

Fuck knows how long it had hung here, singing gently to the drip-drip-drip of the water and waiting for something to set it off... Then the stone beasties had kicked the door down and thundered past it like Lugan’s old Harley. Whumph – exit one doorbell.

So – this “Maugrim” not only left a “bad guy this way” trail for the city authorities to follow... but he disabled his own defences?

He was either a prize asshole or he knew something they didn’t.

Maybe both.

Bollocks.

Telling himself he was only going to take a little look – who knows, maybe it had a switch? – he slipped over and past the broken remnants of the door.

* * *

Redlock was sweating.

The air was close and still. He was uneasy, dry mouthed, aware of the reek of dried blood and the itch of his now-stiffened garments. There was a stone in his boot.

Behind him, Tarvi twitched constantly, hands fidgeting with her neckline, her belt. He was perturbed by her inexperience, concerned about some explosive delayed reaction to the horrors she’d seen. Behind her, Triqueta twisted her ankle and cursed under her breath – she felt like rising tension. He trusted her combat instincts, her courage and reliability... but she didn’t like enclosed spaces and he knew the rock was pressing down on her chest and throat. She wasn’t one to scream – but she may well loose the Banned’s battle cry purely to defy her own fear.

As for the other one...

Trust me or don’t.

Redlock had been riding the trade-roads nearly twenty returns. He knew the Varchinde, its cities and markets, its trade and its predators. He trusted his instincts as much as his axes... and this whole damned thing stank like last week’s fish.

Despite Tarvi’s assurances, he trusted that... thing... about as much as he trusted his one-time wife.

Damned crusaders and damned kids – he worked alone for a reason.

Whatever that “Ecko” thing was, when it turned, he’d be ready for it.

* * *

Past the busted door, Ecko slunk through a tight neck of stone and paused at the edge of a broad, flat-floored chamber. A scent teased his nostrils – something familiar – oh for chrissakes so familiar...

He stopped, breathed it in like a fragrance.

It was overwhelming, so good, so missed . A scent that breached walls, worlds and memories and brought his past into his forebrain with a crash.

This is the Bike Lodge, mate. We’ll find some work for ya, gotta pull your weight roundere.

For a moment, he clung insanely to the hope that he was home. That he’d passed his fucking test, that she’d taken pity on him – that he’d stumbled through some fucking interdimensional rift – and he was there, waking up in his own sleeping bag. That it was all over; that tomorrow, the only thing that awaited him was a twist of solder and Lugan’s battered old arc welder...

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