Page 1 of The Parting Gift




  THE PARTING GIFT

  by Noel Coughlan

  THE PARTING GIFT

  Copyright © 2015 Noel Coughlan

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Cover by Paula Becattini

  Edited by Finish The Story (https://www.finish-the-story.com/Editing.htm)

  Proofreading by Proofed to Perfection (https://www.proofedtoperfection.com/)

  Published by Photocosmological Press (https://photocosm.org/)

  Epub Edition: ISBN:978-1-910206-07-2

  Build: A

  For Michael Grant.

  I

  Certamen stared at the wooden floor as his mistress, the Sable warrior DarkGlad, scourged the Purpure, but the hands pressed to his ears could not block out the roars the creature retched forth as the whip stripped its flesh. The monster had brought this on itself. This was not the first time that, in the depths of night, it had started shrieking for no reason and roused either DarkGlad or her husband.

  Certamen shuddered at the sound of every stroke. No matter how he might be favored, he was not immune to the whip if he upset his owners.

  The Purpure’s desperate screeches dulled to groans and then simpers, but the whipping continued. Was DarkGlad going to beat the creature to death? An involuntary scream gurgled in Certamen’s throat. Suddenly, the lashes ceased.

  “Certamen,” DarkGlad said, panting.

  Head still bowed, his eyes strained upward to glimpse the Sable’s face. The symptoms of her exertion were obvious—the sweat drenching her round, vermilion face and the dark blotches on her cheeks. A scowl hooded her black eyes.

  She handed Certamen the whip. The greasy warmth of the Purpure’s blood smeared his pale yellow fingers as he gathered the cords.

  DarkGlad parted her mess of black hair, revealing the black geometric pattern on her forehead that represented the face of her race’s creator, the Dark Light, Solanum.

  “Clean it before you retire for what little is left of the night,” she said as she flexed her hand. She turned to the Purpure. “And as for you,” she growled as she kicked it in the ribs, “if you ever again disturb the Dark Light’s time with your screeching, I really will give you something to cry about.”

  The other slaves hid in the gloom beyond the candle. Most pretended to sleep as if it were possible to be so oblivious to the creature’s tortured cries. Certamen’s heart contracted as a baby’s sudden cry drew desperate shushes from its mother.

  DarkGlad answered his anxious glance with a sneer. “An infant’s wails won’t carry to my hall. Unlike this brute’s howls.” The Purpure shuddered as her boot struck its side yet again.

  After she departed, the slave house exhaled a collective breath. The other slaves stretched their limbs and shimmied about their straw mattresses. They were all Mixies—Argents or Azures stripped of their patrons’ colors. Their clumsy features provided no clue as to which race each individual belonged. Even their skin colors, a meaningless spectrum of browns and pinkish whites, could not be relied upon to differentiate them. Perhaps they themselves no longer knew. They certainly did not care.

  Certamen was the only Or on the farm. His flaxen skin and extra thumb on each hand set him apart.

  Labored breaths drew his attention to the Purpure. The creature no longer inspired dread as it had during the Light War. Its limbs were manacled to the floor, so it was only free to turn from side to side. It could not even wipe away the frothy drool smeared across its face. Its gray, hairy back was raw, crisscrossed with welts. Its deadly horn was long gone, sheared off by its captors. Its large, shining eyes drizzled tears. It was so pathetic it was hard to believe it belonged to the same species that had massacred most of Certamen’s race.

  Having cleaned the whip, Certamen stepped outside the slave house. The bloody sickle of the Red Light, Gules, hung in the sky, tingeing the night an eerie scarlet. As always, its presence was a taunting reminder of past suffering, like a scar that would not properly heal. Its barren deserts had been where the rival divine Lights fought for supremacy. There, the Ors had failed their god. Defeated and enslaved, they had lost everything, even their purpose.

  The journey from Gules to Elysion had been like waking from one dream and falling into another. Fragments of memories remained—the glass tower extending like a lithe arm out of the desert into the ruddy sky, the steaming waters of the Rainbow Sea, the desolate mountains beyond it, the first marvelous green shoots peeping up through the scorched earth, and then the first glimpse of Elysion, a lush salad of forests and grasslands. Yet most of the journey was an elusive phantasm that flickered in the periphery of Certamen’s consciousness.

  He didn’t bother to secure the door and lock the slaves inside. The Sables’ equine brethren, the jet-black Cavals, were a greater deterrent to escape than any bolt. The herd grazing nearby consisted of four mares, a foal, and a stallion with a broken horn. The adults watched Certamen as he passed them. He answered their intimidating stares with a deferent smile.

  Even if a slave escaped the farm, where could he go? The world of Elysion belonged to the Sables. It was their prize for winning the Light War. Though Elysion was the embodiment of the Green Light, and though other Lights contributed to its beauty, the Dark Light was its undisputed ruler. His presence saturated Elysion. Scratch the surface, and he was waiting, lurking in every crack and crevice. From dusk to dawn, the world was wrapped in his shadow. He was inescapable.

  The Purple Light tinted the horizon. Instead of retiring to his resting place in the Sables’ hall, Certamen loitered outside to witness the dawn ripen. Gradually, other Lights revealed themselves. The soft luminescence of the Blue Light diffused across the firmament; the Green Light stirred in the drowsing countryside. The White Light, lord of storms, had spared the new day from his sourer manifestations, but he, too, was present as languid veils of mist reclining here and there in the meadows.

  These haughty deities were beautiful and powerful, and Certamen murmured thanks to them for choosing to bless this morning, but they were not the reason he declined his bed. The blushing sky to the east promised a visitation by the Golden Light, Aurelian. Certamen prayed to his creator not with his mouth but his heart. It chirped with the birds petitioning the sun to rise. The first tongue of golden fire pierced the sky. Aurelian—god, light, and sun combined—started his slow ascent into the heavens.

  Certamen’s soul opened like a flower; every sense stretched and tilted to catch his god’s radiance. Here was his dearest treasure, the certain proof of his creator’s resurrection. Of course, Aurelian was also in bondage. The Golden Light’s defeat in the Light War had made him a slave of the Dark Light.

  In a sense, it was comforting that Aurelian accepted his vassal status. The world had an order, albeit one not to everyone’s liking, and order ensured peace. An occasional whipping weighed little against the slaughter meted to the Ors on Gules.

  Certamen was happy with his lot. The Sables treated his race particularly well. The Ors’ continued fidelity to their Light had earned their masters’ respect. The delicacy of the Ors’ features, the luminosity of their hair and skin, also charmed the Sables. The Ors’ near annihilation by the Purpures in the Light War meant only the highest-ranking Sables owned them. They had become possession
s to flaunt and covet, like living precious stones.

  On some farms they were pampered like children, allowed to play away their days. On others, Ors lorded over their fellow slaves and allotted rewards and punishments according to their whims. The privileges granted to Certamen by his owners were modest in comparison, but they were sufficient to raise him above his fellow slaves. That was enough for him.

  The other slaves, bleary-eyed and yawning, gradually filed from their quarters and set about their chores. The Mixies pretended to ignore Certamen as they trundled by him, their contempt glinting in their eyes.

  Prodded by three wary Mixies, the Purpure shuffled outside. Shackles and chains deprived the creature’s movement of its native, murderous elegance. It greeted the day with a surly growl. Its guards examined the lacerations on its hide and declared it fit to work. It was led away to the fields to pull a plow for the day.

  II

  Certamen was about to start his own duties when he spotted a chariot drawn by two Cavals coming toward the farm. It was too far away to identify its passenger or the Or running behind it, but Certamen couldn’t wait. His masters must be informed immediately.

  As he raced into the Sables’ hall, he almost careered into PiousNight, DarkGlad’s husband.

  “Where have you