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This Rage of Echoes

Simon Clark




  This Rage of Echoes

  Simon Clark

  For Janet

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  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

  chapter 37

  chapter 38

  chapter 39

  chapter 40

  chapter 41

  chapter 42

  chapter 43

  chapter 44

  chapter 45

  chapter 46

  chapter 47

  Copyright

  chapter 1

  When he becomes you, then who are you?

  Say again, what’s the question? OK, listen to this: it’s in us. We make it happen. Somehow.

  Does that make sense? Not that I’d believe for one minute that you’d understand from the start what was happening to us. After all, the mechanics of it are a mystery to us as much as any one else. But, I can’t stress this enough, it is important you do understand, because if the kind of trouble I’m facing now comes your way, then what I write here might help you not only make sense of it but fight it. And stay alive.

  I guess this isn’t clear what I’m telling you. But I’m going to try as hard as I can to make it understandable. Damn, this feels like I’m sitting on my stupid butt and lecturing you. As if I’m just about to say, ‘Take out your textbook, turn to page thirty-one and compare and contrast the merits of killing with a knife or a shotgun …’ And that’s a bunch of balls – big, hairy balls with fucking bells on. No. Your life – and whether you keep it or not, or whether you spill your hot, steamy blood all over the damn floor – just might depend on what you read in the next five pages. So, I’m going to dive right in and describe one occasion where they tried to take us by surprise, then I’m going to tell you how we killed them, then I aim to describe what they are. And why they are dangerous. Not just dangerous to me but to you, too. After all, deep-down, you know they’re out there, don’t you?

  So, picture this. We’re living in a house that isn’t ours. The owners are on vacation – it says so on the calendar in the hallway, so no mystery there how I uncovered that fact. I’m baking frozen pizza. Here in the kitchen with me are four people in their twenties. Two men, two women. Casually dressed. I’m the guy in the black T-shirt and jeans. There’s that hot oven smell, a mixture of hot oil, meat juices, herbs – the ghost of a thousand roasts. This conversation might not have taken place word for word: it’s an edited mix of conversations we’ve had before. Oh, and by the way, this is where I change tense from present to past. It reads better like that. Parts of this are story; parts are a bit like the commentaries you get on DVD. That’s where I try and explain ‘this happened because …’ OK? And, yeah, this seems like a dollop of muddle because life’s like that – a muddle of events, of intimacy, fear, anticipation, blood, bacon wraps eaten too fast because you’re late for the bus, answering e-mails, washing clothes, bedtimes, broken nails, the dog whizzing on the rug – all that stuff you deal with. You try and weave it into a pattern that you hope not only makes sense but is meaningful as you go along. So, even if this isn’t as clear as the glass in your living-room window, one thing is rock solid certain: This is the start:

  As I fed pizza into the smoky mouth of the oven Ulric said, ‘Why couldn’t they have been vampires? These days who’s frightened of vampires? You throw garlic at them, then nail them down dead with a stake.’ Ulric’s Norwegian, a Viking warrior of a man with blond hair, and the kind of face that seldom hosts a smile. Even when he speaks in a friendly way there’s never a grin; his ice-blue eyes are always hard, but then they need to be.

  Ruth, on the other hand, smiles a lot. I even saw her smile when she threw an Echoman’s head down a well with a ‘If you can get out of that we’ll call you Houdini.’ At that moment she was rattling bottles of beer out of the refrigerator. Smiling. Of course she was smiling; she always smiles; her eyes twinkled, her face was framed with short black hair and, at that moment, she joined in with, ‘Or why couldn’t it have been werewolves? They only appear when the moon is full.’

  ‘Then zap them with silver bullets,’ Ulric added.

  ‘Exactly.’

  Dianna matched her classical name. Tall, slim, long blonde hair, athletic body. Do all Diannas in the world look like that? Blonde goddesses one and all. She set out plates on the kitchen table. ‘After guzzling out of paper bags for the last three weeks we’ll be civilized for once and eat off proper crocks.’

  Ulric was stone-faced as he watched her. ‘Or why couldn’t it have been zombies?’

  Paddy leaned against the doorframe to the hall, keeping guard. ‘Because vampires don’t exist. Neither do werewolves, gorgons, demons or leprechauns.’

  ‘You’re Irish,’ I told him. ‘You have leprechauns in your blood.’

  ‘My grandmother was Irish. I know squat about Ireland apart from one thing: the Irish are sick of tourists with their leprechaun jokes.’ Paddy is a big man with plenty of muscle and bushy dark hair that gives him a grizzly-bear look. Above his eyes are a pair of black eyebrows that are bristly as those caterpillars that you sometimes find creeping into your house in early spring. Paddy enjoys comfort and food. It doesn’t have to be good food, but he likes plenty of it. Right at that moment he eyed me peel a plastic membrane off another pizza.

  ‘How many of those things are there?’ he asked.

  ‘Eight.’

  ‘Might as well cook them all,’ he said, ‘we don’t know when we’ll get to taste another.

  ‘Paddy?’ Ruth raised an eyebrow, ‘You do realize that’s two pizzas each?’

  ‘There’s five of us,’ Ulric said.

  ‘And that’s one and a slice each.’ After I slid the pizza from the last of its crinkly wrapping, I redistributed disks of pepperoni that had migrated to one side.

  ‘No,’ Ruth insisted. ‘That’s two pizzas each. I hate pizza. It’s all I can do to bear the smell.’

  ‘That’s the garlic,’ Paddy told us. ‘Ruth is a vampire.’

  Ulric didn’t smile. ‘There’s no such thing as vampires. Remember?’

  ‘No, but there’s something else that’s following us. So that’s why I’m standing here at the door.’ Paddy nodded as he recalled the mayhem. ‘The danger’s still out there.’

  I warned you earlier that this conversation didn’t exactly happen like this. I’ve cut words; I’ve added a phrase or two. Paddy didn’t actually utter ‘the danger’s still out there’ but it sort of captures the essence of similar conversations while we’ve been on the run.

  And we have pizza. This would be the first real sit-down hot meal in ages. For the last couple of weeks I craved pizza. I drifted away to sleep in the back of the truck thinking about pizza. I imagined how the world’s best pizza
would smell. In truth, I’m not even a pizza addict, but, my God, I developed a craving for it. Perhaps it’s because I couldn’t have it. At home when I opened my freezer door those dough wheels all covered in cheese, pepperoni, onions, bacon, chicken, spicy beef, teriyaki turkey would come tumbling out. I’d curse those pizzas because I wanted chicken fillets at the back or frozen peas. But, like the devil himself had willed it, I’d be engulfed with pizzas every time I flipped the door. And just two floors beneath my apartment was a pizza restaurant. I breathed pizza vapour from noon until past midnight. Pizza delivery folk would tramp the apartment corridor with arms full of steaming, aromatic pizza. It was only when I was cut off from a world seemingly engulfed with those frisbee shaped circles of bread topped with bubbling cheese, tomato sauce and toppings galore that’s when I craved pizza. Now I had pizza. After the fifteen minutes required baking time I would sit at the table with my gang and stuff my gullet with it until I felt like bursting.

  Ulric watched me slide another pizza into the oven. ‘You might find this ironic, but the pizza we eat isn’t like the native Italian dish. It doesn’t look or taste the same. The product we eat has stolen the identity of the genuine item. It’s not really pizza. We only think it is pizza because we’ve grown up with a product that pretends to be the real thing.’ Yeah, Ulric really does intone things like that.

  Paddy shook his head. ‘If that’s supposed to spoil my enjoyment of eating them, then you’re mistaken.’

  ‘Ah, but did you enjoy the irony of the situation? The entire world is becoming counterfeit.’ Yup, he can get blood out a stone the way he riffs on a subject that fascinates him.

  Ruth glanced through the window as the sun dipped behind the mountains. ‘More importantly. Did you know that there’s someone in the tree?’

  ‘Echoman?’ Paddy picked up the shotgun from where it reclined against the wall.

  Ruth nodded. ‘There’s just the one as far as I can tell.’

  Ulric gazed through the window. ‘The garden’s full of trees. There might be more of them.’

  ‘No worries,’ Paddy said. ‘I’ll take care of them.’

  ‘We’ll give you a hand.’ Dianna drew a handgun from a leather satchel she carried everywhere. ‘Mason, make sure the pizzas don’t burn.’

  They still think of me as the newcomer, I told myself. They’d been together six months when I joined them three weeks ago. I’m still the outsider. They don’t see me as part of the team. I slid a pizza out; its three-cheese topping had started to blister.

  ‘You’ve got ten minutes until this one’s done.’

  ‘This should only take five.’ Ulric turned to Ruth. ‘Bring a carving knife. I want to see what’s under this one’s skin.’

  They talked in whispers as they headed for the back door of the house. They’d circle round the building then take the Echoman in the tree by surprise. I’d seen this happen – or something very much like it – a dozen times by now. So I concentrated on baking pizza. If anything it irked me that they still treated me as a stranger who had just happened to tag along with them rather than an integral part of the gang. I positioned myself so I could see through the window without being noticed by the Echoman in the tree. Not that I could see much of him, or her, either. A branch flicked as they climbed about twenty feet off of the ground. A few chestnut leaves spiralled down lazily where the intruder had dislodged some greenery.

  What if it’s just some kid? And they’re just climbing a tree for fun? In thirty seconds Paddy and the rest are going to hit that tree with a lot of hot metal. But who else could it be? This place is at least two miles from the nearest house. It has to be an Echoman.

  ‘Stupid Echoman,’ I murmured, as I found a pizza cutter. ‘Don’t you shit-wits ever learn?’

  The roasting cheese, spicy meats and herbs smelt wonderful. People talk about ‘making your mouth water’. It had never happened to me before but mine was suddenly awash. I was just aching to sink my teeth into a slice of savoury heaven.

  At that moment I caught sight of a dark shape moving on the periphery of my eye. Quick; no noise; more shadow than a solid figure. It had vanished by the time I turned to get a better look. Whatever it was had passed by the open doorway, along the hall in the direction of the stairs. OK, so I was armed with nothing more formidable than a pizza cutter, a little steel wheel at the end of a rubber-coated handle. Nevertheless I needed to check what was there.

  Gunfire rattled the window panes. Outside, Ulric, Ruth, Dianna and Paddy exploded the tree. The blast of shotguns, handguns and rifle made the branches billow. Cascades of leaves fell, a green rain that covered the lawn. From the smell of the pizza it must have been almost done. It was time to move quickly before the crust burned. Did I tell you I have an addiction for pizza these days? Any will do. Any but tuna, that is. I can’t stomach tuna. Tuna smells like dead people.

  I stepped into the hall as I hunted the invader. Immediately, I saw it – him? – sitting on the third stair from the bottom. A gaunt figure with dark-red skin. Its eyelids were closed. There was no hair on its head. The scalp was a mess of cracks with holes that revealed a bare skull of dull brown bone.

  Even though his eyes were closed as he sat there on the stairs I knew he watched me. One leg was straight so it lay flat against the risers. The other was crooked so the knee was raised toward his bandaged chest. One hand rested on his lap so that it resembled a spider lying on its back, albeit one with red skin; the fingers were partly curled inward. Despite the body being a ruin, the fingernails were perfect ovals, the colour of pearls. The man didn’t move.

  ‘I haven’t seen you since I was sixteen years old,’ I told him. It surprised me my voice was so matter-of-fact. ‘What brings you back?’

  I didn’t wait for a reply. The pizza would burn if I didn’t get it out of the oven now. As I recrossed the kitchen to the stove, I saw that Paddy and the others had killed the Echoman. His legs must have caught in a branch of the tree. He dangled headfirst with his arms straight down. He was my age, my build. Ruth had already started to cut away his face with the carving knife.

  Once I had the pizza safely out of the oven. I checked the hallway again. The figure had gone. OK, I realize I could have described him better, but why use a bunch of words when I can say: you’ve all seen an Egyptian mummy on TV, haven’t you? Well, that’s what had sat on the stairs. Listen, when I was a kid that same ancient Egyptian mummy turned up nearly every night; this three-thousand-year old priest, officially known as ‘Natsaf-Ty, keeper of the sacred crocodiles’. He’d gone all crusty as a pizza base on the outside – all hollow on the inside. Having an ancient dead man chat to you on a regular basis tends to kill the fear. If any other monsters come your way they aren’t so hard on the nerves. So, you see, I have a lot to thank Natsaf-Ty for.

  I told you from the start these events were perplexing to all of us. But it’s a case of dealing with them. If we didn’t, the consequences would be lethal. So, please bear with me. After this, I’ll explain the mystery of the talking mummy and something about what the Echomen are.

  A tap sounded on the window. I looked out to see Ruth standing there. She held the Echoman’s chopped-off head by the hair. She’d carved away the face to reveal the muscle structure beneath. Blood hung down in sticky, red strings from the neck. Its open eyes stared back at me.

  Brightly, she sang out, ‘Hey, Mason! This one’s you!’

  chapter 2

  I want to go home. The decision came as I sliced the pizza. What made me change my mind wasn’t seeing the Echoman with my face hidden beneath his own. No, not at all, it was the return of the mummy. Natsaf-Ty was his name and 3000 years ago he was the keeper of the sacred crocodiles in Alexandria. Uh-oh, what’s next, you’ll be asking yourself? Now we’ve had a mummy that walks (even if we haven’t heard it talk yet), will angels fly through the window to steal the pizza? Or maybe a dinosaur lurks in the basement? Is beautiful Dianna going to hear a noise from outside and say in a carefree way as she nib
bles pepperoni, ‘I’ll just go see what it is. Don’t worry. I won’t be long.’ She goes outside, never to return, because there’s a dirty great beast lurking outside.

  No. These are the facts. When I was eight, and my sister was six months old my mother couldn’t stomach living with her in-laws while my father worked on an oil platform in the Arctic. As opposed to a marital break-up where Mom walks out on Dad, she left my grandfather and grandmother. Shortly after what I suppose was a traumatic time for all of us, (I say ‘suppose’ because back then I didn’t have maturity to think of it in those terms) I visited a museum with my classmates. In the overseas history section was a near-naked mummy by the name of Natsaf-Ty. He lay in his coffin with his eyes closed and tongue slightly protruding from his lips. He was dry, crusty, all hollowed out inside. The other kids, me included, made funny comments, squealed in mock-fear, pressed our faces to the glass case to try and see his three-thousand-year-old willy. After that we went to play in the museum gardens. A couple of days later, Natsaf-Ty appeared at the house. For some reason after that first visit I’d wake just after midnight, when everyone else was asleep, and invariably I’d find the Egyptian mummy, Natsaf-Ty, keeper of the sacred crocodiles, sitting on a step near the bottom of the stairs. You can only ignore an ancient corpse-turned-museum exhibit for so long, so eventually we started to chat. Oh, how we talked. World events, television, school, birthday presents, family – you name it. Of course, the glib answer why a mummy came visiting is because of the family break-up. Psychologists will identify Natsaf-Ty as an externalized memory of my absent grandfather, whom I liked a lot. And whom I no longer saw.

  In the kitchen that evening we ate pizza. It tasted as wonderful as it smelt. Ulric tutted when a blob of tomato sauce fell into his lap. That spill annoyed him even though blood streaks created a kind of tiger pattern on his jeans. Ruth smiled when he mentioned how much he was looking forward to sleeping in a real bed. For now, things are looking up.