Time of Breath

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by Paul Mannering




  Paul Mannering was born, as we so often are, to biological parents (literally, his father was a Marine Biologist).

  The youngest of 4 surviving children and an unknown number of others who never made it past zygote, or were simply sold for research purposes to make ends meet. (The 70’s were a hard time for his family). Born in Kaikoura, New Zealand, where steep mountains plunge into dark seas with canyons so deep that colossal squid and whales duel it out in the crushing depths.

  Moving to Christchurch at 14, after a year of boarding school, he fought his way through high-school and then started the first of many full time jobs. He became a father at 19, went through various life experiences, went to a community college as an adult student, studied nursing, traveled overseas, returned, worked and did all the fun things that you do when you are in your 20’s and 30’s.

  Realising that he really missed writing, Paul started taking it serious­ly again in his late 30’s. Since then he has had a dozen novels published, a pile of short stories released into the wild, and he has written and produced a lot of podcast audio drama. He even won awards.

  Paul has recently relocated to Australia from New Zealand where he now lives under an assumed identity as a functional adult in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.

  The Drakeforth Series

  Published by IFWG

  Engines of Empathy (Book 1)

  Pisce of Fate (Book 2)

  Time of Breath (Book 3)

  The DRAKEFORTH SERIES BOOk 3

  Time of Breath

  BY PAUL MANNERING

  This is a work of fiction. The events and characters portrayed herein are imaginary and are not intended to refer to specific places, events or living persons. The opinions expressed in this manuscript are solely the opinions of the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the publisher.

  Time of Breath

  All Rights Reserved

  ISBN-13: 978-1-925956-38-2

  Copyright ©2019 Paul Mannering

  V1.0

  This ebook may not be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in whole or in part by any means, including graphic, electronic, or mechanical without the express written consent of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Printed in Palatino Linotype and Voodoo Eye Title

  IFWG Publishing International

  Melbourne

  www.ifwgpublishing.com

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Thanks to everyone who made this book possible. Gerry Hunt­man of IFWG for taking on the series after two books. Noel the Editor, for diligent Google-Fu.

  For the world at large for giving me enough material to fill a library of books about the curious nature of the Universe. And to the readers, particularly the ones I have never met, who were under no obligation to buy the book, but did anyway.

  Of course, if you got your copy through a book pirating site, may you have a long and utterly tedious existence with absolutely nothing but regret and adult diapers at the end of it.

  For Bill Hollweg

  Artist and dreamer.

  Chapter 1

  In many cultures, Death is represented by a human figure who carries gardening tools, though the exact implement differs between each culture and country. If Death carries a pruning saw in Escrustia, a rake in Nytolix or a watering can according to the mythology of Phooget, each is equally symbolic of Death’s role as the harvester of souls.

  The truth, of course, is that death cannot exist without life, and life exists best when all the factors are balanced. Nothing balances the factors like aerated soil, well-pruned branches, and a sprinkle of fresh water.

  Like any dedicated horticulturist, Death comes for us all and generally cannot be avoided. Metaphorically, it is the same as spotting an ex-paramour across the room at a party, leaving you lurking by the kitchen for the rest of the evening while they have a great time dancing in front of the stereo all night with the one person who seems remotely interesting.

  I sipped my drink and peered around the kitchen door into the darkened living room. My escape route was blocked by people who enjoyed nothing more than having a few drinks with old friends, while making new ones by dancing with them.

  The only thing that could possibly make my evening more intolerable, was currently dancing with an interesting woman in front of the stereo.

  “I’m guessing,” a man said in my ear while he weaved drunk­enly half a beat behind the music.

  “What?” I said, without breaking my surveillance of the living room.

  “I’m Lyal Guessing. This is my friend’s party.”

  “Oh, that’s nice.” I moved closer to the kitchen door, calc­ulating the quickest way out of the apartment.

  “I’m guessing you’re in need of a drink.” Lyal gave a thin laugh. He let it taper out through his nose, giving me plenty of time to join in. If I wanted. Anytime now…

  “Gus, could you do me a favour?”

  “Lyal,” he corrected.

  “Lyal,” I agreed. “Could you do me a favour?”

  Lyal nodded with the deliberate focus of the happily drunk.

  “Go away.”

  “Right. Yes…okay.” Lyal nodded and turned to his left.

  Finding his way blocked by a couple making out, he twisted right and blinked at the fridge. The awkwardness of his entrap­ment elicited another sinus-flute chuckle.

  “Gestating gerbils,” I muttered as the dancing couple paused for breath and he gestured towards the kitchen, where there were drinks to be had.

  For me, the kitchen was the washed-out bridge on the only road out of town. I had nowhere to go and no way to avoid him.

  Taking a deep breath, I moved closer to Lyal.

  “Kiss me,” I said, glancing over my shoulder towards the door.

  “What?” Lyal blinked.

  “Kiss me, please. Now.”

  Lyal’s nostrils flared in readiness for a guffaw. I stifled it by pressing my lips against his.

  “Charlotte?” The couple had reached the kitchen, and it was the young man with the sweptback hair who had spoken.

  I twisted away from Lyal’s enthusiastic mouth. “Oh, hey, Kip.”

  “How…are you?” Kip asked. The young woman with him gave a polite smile that barely reached her lips.

  “I’m…great.” A smile stretched towards my ears like the straps on a surgical mask.

  “I didn’t know you were going to be here,” Kip said.

  “Neither did I, but you know me: if there’s a party, I’ll be there,” I replied. My enthusiasm as fake as an astro-turf toupee.

  “Okay…” Kip looked around for something suitable to keep the conversation afloat. “Oh, this is uhm… This is my friend.” Kip presented the dark-haired woman with as much of a flourish as the close quarters of the kitchen would allow.

  “Hi,” I smiled. The woman simply nodded. “This is Lyal…?”

  “Hey.” Lyal leaned past me and shook Kip’s hand vigorously. The woman folded her arms before he could even try to take hers.

  “Great party,” Kip said.

  “Yeah,” I agreed. My relationship with Kip Alehouse had been brief and awkward. We were both taking papers in Dialectics, the science of verbal communication styles, and I broke up with Kip the same morning I decided to change my major to Computer Psychology.

  “It’s nice to see you again, Charl’,” Kip said.

  I winced. Of all the ways my name could be verbally amput­ated, leave it to Kip to find the one that set my teeth on edge.
>
  “You too.” I gave him the thumbs up and squirmed out of Lyal’s embrace.

  I looked past Kip in the vain hope I could see a reason to excuse myself and leave. It took a moment, and then I noticed that the dark-haired woman standing with Kip was also standing with the other people at party-central around the living room.

  I blinked and stared harder: it wasn’t just a group of dark-haired, pale-skinned women wearing black, though the college had enough of those for cloning to be a plausible explanation.

  “That’s weird,” I said. No one commented and I returned my attention to Kip. The dark-haired woman leaned in and whispered something in his ear. My jaw dropped as Kip faded in a swirl of multi-coloured sparks, and a moment later, his clothes stood empty as if his outfit had been put on an invisible mannequin.

  I waved a hand; it shed skin cells in a rainbow of sparks. “I think someone spiked my drink.”

  Lyal Guessing had also vanished, his rumpled suit continuing to grind incoherently without him.

  I struggled to breathe against a tightening band around my chest. A desperate moment later, my focus cleared as, wide-eyed and choking, I tried to speak. The pale woman smiled at me, reached out and—

  Chapter 2

  Hissss.

  Clank.

  Gurrrble.

  Whup-feee-ooooh. WUNG!

  Click.

  Light: cold, clinical, and serious. This light did not care for mixing with colours. This light had a job to do and took pride in doing it well.

  I closed my eyes tighter against the unwelcome intrusion. The air following the light into my space was colder than the antiseptic glow.

  “Mughpf?” I asked through the mask covering my mouth and nose.

  A silhouette blocked the light. Even through clenched eyelids, I could sense the figure was leaning over me. Hands removed the mask, and a tube attached to it exhaled the sweet scent of mint with a sigh.

  The hands came back; this time they lifted me out of the warm gel-bath I had floated in, as secure and contained as a foetus. With a firm grip, the silhouette set me on my feet. I barely felt my numb legs give way immediately.

  Sitting on the floor, I waited for my brain to process the latest updates. The floor, my skin reported, was cold and made of some kind of tile. Oh, and you are naked.

  I opened my eyes in preparation of being horrified. Everything was a blur, as it took a moment for my brain to kick-start the eyes.

  The silhouette leaned down as the light made an effort to be accommodating. The pale woman from the party looked into my eyes. I blinked, the woman didn’t. I had time to notice that the woman’s irises were dark to the point of being black. Her pupils had the shape of silvery human skulls.

  She lifted me smoothly to my feet and handed me a towel. She stood silently while I cleaned the worst of the pink goo off myself.

  “Contacts,” I said. “You’re wearing contacts.”

  The woman gave a slight smile and took the towel away. She offered a white robe of the fluffy kind that I had never seen outside of a sensie starring one of those impossibly perfect-bodied people who, I secretly hoped, were computer enhanced, if not generated.

  Wearing the robe made me feel warm and luxurious to the knees.

  “Did you ever have one of those experiences, where you wake up and everything seems distinctly…odd?” I waved a hand. “Like, when you fall asleep in the afternoon, and wake up and it’s still kind of light. Then you think it might be morning and you get up to go to class and about the point you’re trying to decide between breakfast cereal, or just tea…” I trailed off as the spots dancing in front of my eyes reminded me to inhale.

  The woman took my hand and led me across the floor. Contact with the cold tiles prodded me into thinking more clearly.

  “Arthur’s toes… I’m dead?”

  The woman holding my hand turned back and smiled in a complex expression. Enigmatic, not quite friendly, more amused and accommodating, without slipping into condescension.

  It was a great look and I wondered how she did it.

  We reached the shower without further comment or facial calisthenics. The woman left me to wash and rinse.

  Ten minutes later, I emerged fresh and towelled dry. As I dressed in the clothes I found on a hook outside the shower, I thought about which of the many questions deserved to be asked first.

  Stepping out, I went with an easy one: “Who are you?”

  The woman was regarding a painting on the wall, a mass-produced print of Lego Gonious’ famous painting of a bear play­ing some kind of harp while a woman swings upside down from the limb of a living oak tree with her hands holding her white dress modestly around the crux of her pale thighs.

  It was the kind of image that I thought would make an effective poster for a campaign warning kids to avoid recreational drugs.

  I clicked a mental stopwatch; sufficient time for a polite response had passed.

  “I only ask, because I’m sure it’s going to be important. When I tell this story to people later. At work during lunch, or at parties… Wait, we met at a party…?”

  The woman turned around and walked to the door. Opening it, she indicated that I should step through. With one last look at the empathic energy extraction tank that I had recently been in, I followed her out.

  Part of me wondered if some kind of afterlife was awaiting us on the other side of the door. However, if the salmon-green colour on the walls and the inexcusable carpet pattern were any indication, what came after death wasn’t as much fun as people hoped.

  The silent woman retrieved a pair of flight tickets from her coat. She handed them to me, and then deftly took one back.

  “We’re going somewhere?” I asked. “Of course we are going somewhere. I mean where are we going?” I shook my head in self-irritation, and then opened the packet with the ticket in it. “Pathia? Why in the herbalist are we going to Pathia?”

  The woman extended an arm and pointed, unwaveringly, in a South-westerly direction.

  “I said why, not where. Besides, I don’t have anything packed. I mean, I wasn’t expecting to come back from my last trip.”

  The arm moved with a compass-needle sweep to point north-northwest, and then angled downwards. I followed the hand and saw a set of cacolet-leather luggage waiting on the floor.

  “Well, okay.” I took a moment to consider why none of this seemed at all odd. “No, it’s not that it doesn’t seem odd. It’s just I have built up some kind of tolerance to odd.”

  The woman walked to another door, which proved to be an exit. I picked up the luggage and followed her into the street.

  Chapter 3

  A growing crowd of angry people gesticulating at a parked taxi told me all I needed to know about where Vole Drakeforth might be.

  “So sorry, excuse me.” I apologised, pushing my way through to the eye of the storm.

  Drakeforth screwed a monocle deeper into his eye socket and wriggled the fake moustache he was wearring under a leather chauffeur’s cap. “I can explain it to you, but I can’t understand it for you,” he declared.

  “You cut me off!” an angry driver shouted.

  “Where did you get your licence?” another demanded.

  “Scared me half to death!” a woman holding a bicycle added.

  Drakeforth waved their concerns away like buzzing flies.

  “Once again. It is true that I am driving, in the sense that I am travelling through a multi-dimensional spatial patrix that, even if you could perceive the full scope of it, you could not possibly hope to understand.” This casual dismissal of their concerns drove the crowd into a howling frenzy.

  I forged through, passing Drakeforth and going to the rear of the vehicle, which was jutting out into the street and clogging the flow of traffic like a tennis ball in a downpipe.

  After
opening the trunk and transferring my luggage inside, I got into the back seat and waited for Drakeforth to finish being annoying.

  The angry voices increased in volume while Drakeforth turned his back on the crowd.

  “Thank you, thank you,” he waved and smiled. He opened the door and got behind the wheel.

  “Hello, Drakeforth,” I said.

  “Pudding,” he replied, and started the engine. Without referenc­ing the rear-vision mirrors, the car lurched backwards. The air filled with the polite coughing of various car horns and the hysterical shriek of emergency braking.

  Slipping the gear stick into drive, Drakeforth hit the accelerator and the cab leapt forward as it if had been stung.

  “Wait!” I yelped. “The woman from the party…” I blinked; my silent companion was sitting next to me and regarding the blurred vista with interest.

  “Do you have your ticket?” Drakeforth asked.

  “The zippelin ticket to Pathia? Yes, but why?”

  Drakeforth’s response was lost in the squealing of tyres as we hurtled around a corner and drove the wrong way up a one-way street.

  “Wrong way!” I cried.

  “That is entirely a matter of perspective,” Drakeforth replied calmly.

  “Well, from the perspective of the oncoming traffic, we are going the wrong way.”

  “You left me a letter.” Drakeforth put the kind of accusation into that simple statement that I usually only heard when addressing myself.

  I started with, “Well, yes?”

  “A letter, Pudding. After everything we went through, you thought a simple narrative about our adventures, followed by a brief explanation of where you had gone, was somehow going to make up for the deceit of it all?”

  “That was the plan.” In fact, I thought the plan had been quite good. By the time Drakeforth finished reading my record, I would be well gone into the empathic matrix of the Python building and would be well out of it.

 

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