"Do you realize that because of your actions, our entire village could be destroyed?" The elder hissed into Tia's pointed ear with a look of disdain.
Tia looked straight ahead as she fought back tears. Her translucent, fragile wings were tucked together behind her, and her short blue hair was covered in dirt, "I'm sorry," she breathed, almost inaudibly as the elder circled her.
He was many hundreds of years older than her, but he wasn't yet stooping, and his own wings were pressed tightly together at his backside in a flat, sharp triangle. "There is no amount of apologizing that will undo this: you've gone against our oldest and most important rule," he looked at her squarely with intense eyes. They were filled with both anger and regret as he continued, "You know the consequence of your actions...as do all of us."
Tia was a young fairy, not yet a hundred years old and unbetrothed. In the moment that the elder had been looking at her, she felt all of her dreams and aspirations fall out from beneath her. What replaced them was a feeling of hollow fear and apathy, and she knew what he was going to say even before he said it, "Yes...I understand." She knew that no amount of begging would save her. Their village had survived for thousands of years in a forest that was unspeakably ancient, and the rules that had kept them alive were absolute.
She realized also, that she would never see her family again. She was standing inside of the elder's home, high up in a old tree. When she'd been found, she was brought there immediately, and she wouldn't even get a chance to say goodbye to anyone.
"I don't want to do this Tia," the elder looked away from her, obviously pained by the position he'd been put in, "But you know that I must."
Tia nodded once. She'd made a choice in a moment of empathy and desperation, and now she was going to pay for it by losing everything that was important to her.
The elder uttered a small whistle and a guard wielding a spear entered with a somber expression. He gave the young fairy girl a cursory glance before thrusting a cup toward her.
"Tia, drink," the elder said firmly, though this voice was laced with sadness.
The blue haired girl took the cup from the guard with trembling fingers. The beverage, whatever it was, smelled of berries and tea leaves, and she drank it quickly, so as not to drag out her ill fate. Seconds later, she began to feel dizzy, then the room went dark as she felt herself slump into the guard's arms.
Tapping. The sound began faintly, but was quickly becoming louder. It was a constant, yet deliberate tapping, and it was getting so loud that it was beginning to hurt her ears.
Tia's eyes opened suddenly as she felt something slimy sidle up beside her. Before she even knew what she was doing, she raised her hand and spoke a simple spell, "Lumil."
Her palm began to glow with a soft green light as the space she was occupying was illuminated.
Then, Tia screamed.
The bulbous brown face of a giant grub came into view. Its milky white body was semi transparent and its thin legs wiggled about as it tried to figure out if Tia was hostile.
The fairy's screams died down as she realized what she was being faced with. Although scary looking and overall unpleasant to touch, the insect larvae was harmless to her and had probably bumped up beside her by mistake. Still, it was blocking her path to the tunnel out, and she assumed because of its presence that she was inside a dying tree.
Before she could consider moving it, however, The tapping that had woken her up started up again. The tunnel began to splinter and cave, and Tia gasped as another round of tapping turned into a booming cacophony.
Splinters of bark dust exploded everywhere as sunlight flooded through a rough opening in the bark. An orange beak broke through the opening, and Tia screwed herself tightly back into the small tunnel. The grub attempted to wheel backwards, but it was already too late. With several more decisive strikes, the assaulting bird forced its beak into the opening and hooked up the helpless grub before yanking it backwards through the opening.
Tia bolted forward through the now open tunnel, frantic to escape a similar fate. She held her still glowing hand in front of her as her heart pounded in her ears. Behind her, she could hear the bird knocking around for more food, and she had no intention of letting herself become a meal.
The tunnel twisted every which way, but it didn't seem to be moving upward. A slow claustrophobia began to gnaw at her as she considered the prospect of being buried alive by the wooden walls, but she shoved it into the back of her mind as she pressed forward.
The tunnel opened up suddenly and she felt a slight draft. The light from her hands was gentle, and didn't pervade much past her own body, but she could feel and hear the presence of more insect larvae. She slowed her movement and quieted her breathing as she turned to face another beetle grub. She steered away from it, only to be faced by another. She took a deep breath and reached over her head. She felt open air, and she looked up to see if she was close to some sort of ceiling. There was an opening to another tunnel right above her head, and she opened her wings slowly. Within a second, the faint sound of her fluttering buzzed through the tunnel as she lifted herself upward.
She weaved through another series of tunnels, using the draft she felt as a guide. Soon, she saw sunlight, and she sighed in relief as she moved toward it.
Her relief was short lived, however, as the threatening orange beak peeked it's way through the opening.