Marna, having finished with her chores, set out towards the woods as usual. Today was her eighteenth birthday. She decided that she had better make it an extra long walk in the woods today, to give her mother and father time to prepare the special birthday dinner she knew was coming. She did not look back, but Marna knew that her parent's eyes were on her, even as she walked the half mile between their home and the woods. They would be watching to make sure she was gone.
When she reached the woods she looked back. The house looked inviting in the cool grey autumn afternoon, but the woods beckoned her even more. She decided that she needed a new reading spot, since her old one was too near an ant pile for her comfort now. This was going to be her birthday present to herself, or from the woods, she couldn't decide which. The woods were almost her best friend, she thought as she walked through the large sugar maples and ash trees that thrived there. She always felt as if she were in a church, her church, when she was there.
Marna stood a bit shorter than most girls in the village, and quite thin. Her hair was so light yellow it looked nearly white at times. Her features were most fair; big eyes and dainty nose and chin, although she usually looked as if she were unhealthy or malnourished. Her parents couldn't seem to feed her enough to keep up with her feet. They were always off walking somewhere, when she wasn't tending to the family farm.
Marna had decided upon the area she would look for a new reading spot. It was a part of the woods that she hadn't really explored thoroughly, as the underbrush got a bit thick in some places. The leaves were beginning to fall, so Marna thought her chances of finding something were a bit better now. She searched for a log or a stump, or even a rock on which to perch. It had to be comfortable and clean, and it needed to be secluded so she wouldn't ever be bothered by passerby.
Down a steep slope, across a very old stream bed and through a thicket of smaller maples, Marna thought she spied a promising spot. Was it a log? A rock? She moved forward through the brush until she came upon the log. It was a big, old sugar maple that had fallen maybe a decade since. It lay with the top of the tree facing downhill, which was usual. Marna walked around it until she stood at the mass of leaves and ivy that had been the tree's roots. There seemed to be a small hollow of some sort, in the ground near the base of the tree...
Marna's head swam as her body fell. There was a rush of leaves, the air whisking past her head, her stomach seemed to leave her body and she finally landed with a soft thud. She could feel her body sliding down hill for a short distance after she hit ground. Leaves, small rocks and dirt showered all around her. She kept her eyes closed and covered her face with her hands, lying like this for some time until she was sure it was safe to move again.
It was dark! She had fallen into a hole. Was it the hole where the tree's roots had been? Was it a bear den? Marna's eyes were taking too long to adjust to the dark for her tastes. She began to scramble up, trying to climb towards the light. In doing so, she found that the ground was a thick carpet of leaves, and she slid right back down. Marna lay on her back and tried to pull herself together.
The hole she had fallen through was about three feet across by the look of it. She scanned the incline that had brought her here and decided that she must be at least ten feet underground and, craning her neck to one side, she could see that it went deeper off to her right. A mass of roots hung down all around, catching her hair and making it hard for her to move. The ground was actually quite soft. Years of leaves had probably blown into this hollow, making a thick cushion to break her fall.
Marna suddenly realized that this was quite the interesting find. The steep grade up to the opening did have a few thick roots which would allow her to climb out to freedom, but she didn't want to leave just yet. Pushing herself up, she stood inside the small cave, for it was big enough to be a cave, and looked around. A large part of the cave was made up by a hollow beneath the fallen tree's roots. The roots made up a large wall off to her left. Down and to her right, a small tunnel led downward, and into deeper darkness. She didn't dare go further down.
She moved back towards the roots of the tree and studied the ceiling. The trunk of the tree hung down into the cave and went out and up towards the middle. She had plenty of room to sit among the roots. She imagined that this was the type of thing forest gnomes would make their houses out of. She couldn't tell if anything lived here. There was no evidence that made her believe this was the case.
She sat there in the quiet hole, plucking sticks and leaves from her now tousled hair. The tunnel on the other side was curious, but she could not get herself to go near it. It was too dark, too uncertain. She knew she would have to go near it to get back up and out, but for now she was content to sit and think.
She began to think about last summer, when the man had come to the farm to sell them ice. The ice man was tall and dark haired, and very handsome. Marna even caught her mother sighing to herself after the man left, and she knew it must be the same sigh she had uttered. The man left them both feeling lovesick, but they would not speak of it to each other. Marna tried to keep her eye on the road for a few days afterward, watching to see if the man would come by that way again. He did not, but Marna had dreamed about him often ever since. She almost wished to fall asleep here, in the dark quiet of the cave, she thought, so she could dream of him again.
After some time in the darkness, Marna stood up again. She realized then that she had dropped her book somewhere when she'd fallen down into the hole. It must be in the mass of leaves somewhere. Marna got down on her hands and knees and began to search through the leaves below the hole, mindful of the dark tunnel a few steps away.
Suddenly her eyes were torn from the leaves and debris as her attention was drawn towards the tunnel. Had there been a sound? Something? She couldn't be sure. All she knew was that her heartbeat was so loud that it thumped in her ears and her breath caught in her throat as she stared into the blackness. Every inch of her flesh seemed to crawl with goose bumps.