Glorielle skipped into the room, petal-pink wings fluttering
behind her as she called out in her young, sweet voice.
“Dame Imraldera?”
The lady turned to small child, placing a
quieting finger to her lips. Glorielle’s already large blue eyes grew wider
when she saw a group of other Faeries gathered around someone lying on a bed.
She tucked her light hair behind one ear and cocked her head. “Who’s that?”
Imraldera smiled gently. “He is the prince of
Parumvir, and his name is Felix.”
“Oh.” A mortal boy. She had never seen a mortal
before, and couldn‘t contain her curiosity. Tip-toeing closer as the Faeries
moved away, she asked, “Why is he hurt?”
“He was attacked by a dragon.”
Even young as she be, Glorielle knew how
dangerous it was to have dragon poison in you. Kneeling beside the boy’s
bed and peering curiously into his face, she asked. “Will he live?”
“ … I think so.”
The boy suddenly groaned, and Dame Imraldera
stepped closer. “You are awake.”
The boy grimaced, before his eyes focused on
the lady standing over him. “Who are you?”
“I am Dame Imraldera; my Prince brought you
here and asked me to care for you.”
“And I’m Glorielle,” the young faerie
brightly said. She became thoroughly confused when the prince ignored her and
continued to speak with Imraldera.
“Your what? Where is here? What’s happened?”
His voice tightened with panic “I … where am I?”
Glorielle perched a hand on her hip, and said
with childish innocence. “He doesn’t have very nice manners.”
One of the Faeries, Celetta by name, leaned
closer. “He can’t hear you, love. He can’t hear or see any of us Faeries.”
“Why not?”
“Because he’s a
mortal, Glori.”
“Oh … It’s sad that
he can’t hear us. I could cheer him up!”
Glorielle pitied the boy, who looked like he
was trying not to cry as he said. “My father? Una?”
Dame Imraldera gestured for someone to bring
her a wet cloth. “My Prince will care for them, child. Sleep now.”
Glorielle quickly grabbed the needed object and
handed it to Imraldera, who gently touched it to the boy’s eyelids, and he sank
into sleep.
“Who’s Una?” She asked, bouncing on the balls
of her feet as she spoke. She never could sit still.
“His sister, the princess.”
“He’s worried for her.” With a nod of her head,
she made it a statement instead of a question.
“I wouldn’t presume otherwise.”
“When will he hear me?” Glorielle wanted to
meet the mortal, this strange prince who looked nothing like her prince.
“He won’t ever hear you, love.” Imraldera said,
a soft smile playing on her lips.
“Oh.” Disappointment lingered on her face,
before she brightened and fluttered into the lower boughs of the tree, where a
Faerie named Elwind was perched. “Then I guess I’ll just talk to you!”
Imraldera shook her head and silently laughed
as the cheerful child peppered the Faerie with question about the mortal boy.
* * * *
Glorielle visited the sick room many times
after that, never certain herself if she came to see the mortal prince, or talk
with Imraldera and the Faeries. But today she came to tell a story.
“And then!” She crowed in her best theatric
voice, clinging the tree with one hand as she precariously perched on a branch.
“The princess shouted in fear, and tumbled down the cliff, and was never seen
again!”
With a dramatic swoon, she tumbled down from
the tree and collapsed in a heap into Dame Imraldera’s arms.
Imraldera couldn’t help it. She laughed.
Glorielle looked up at her with a pout on her face, choosing to ignore the
other Faeries whom she knew were hiding smiles. “But it wasn’t supposed to be
funny!”
“I’m sorry, I don’t mean to laugh,” the woman
said, as Glorielle eased out of her arms. “You tell a very good story.”
That seemed to make the child happy, “I do,
don’t I?”
Whirling in a circle, the faerie girl’s fingers
brushed the top of a water pitcher, and would have sent it crashing to the
ground if Dame Imraldera hadn’t leapt up and caught it. Glorielle blushed and
her wings trembled with embarrassment, “Sorry.”
“No harm done,” Imraldera placed the pitcher
back where it was, “but we don’t want to wake him. Why don’t you play quietly
for awhile?”
“Okay, Imraldera.”
* * * *
Glorielle continued her frequent visits, it was
fun to be Dame Imraldera‘s center of attention while the Faeries cared for the
strange mortal boy Felix. But in the back of her mind, she knew that Felix
would wake someday soon, and things would change.
She just didn’t expect it to be today.
Skipping ahead of Dame Imraldera, she parted
the ivy so that the woman could step in, and quickly followed behind her. But
as soon as she slipped into the room, she noticed something was wrong.
Felix wasn’t in his bed. He was standing by the
window, and his attendants lingered by the tree. Imraldera’s voice held
surprise when she said, “Your fever has broken at last.”
Glorielle scampered up the tree and perched on
a branch, watching the boy with curious eyes as Dame Imraldera offered him
water. She couldn’t help but giggle when Felix asked if the water would do
anything to him. And neither could Imraldera, or perhaps the young girl’s
laughter was just contagious.
The boy accepted the water and drank it
quickly, before handing the silver bowl back to Dame Imraldera and asking a
question. “Are you a Faerie?”
Glorielle’s pursed her lips as she retorted.
“Of course she’s not, silly boy!”
Imraldera sent the girl a gentle warning look,
but shook her head at Felix. “Mortals cannot see Faeries within the Wood.”
“I can see you.” He said.
“But you cannot see the Faerie attendants
around you.”
Glorielle brightly counted the Faeries on her
fingers. “Celetta, Elwind, Lyra, Semara, Isiro, and me!” Her face suddenly fell
serious, and she cocked her head as Felix glanced quickly over his shoulder.
His eyes seemed to stare right where she sat. “Can he really not see me?”
Semara placed an arm around the girl’s shoulders and
gave her a gentle squeeze. “He really can’t, darling.”
Felix turned back to Imraldera and stated. “Then you
are not a Faerie. But can you see them?”
Dame Imraldera’s eyes strayed back to
Glorielle, which made the girl giggle. “I can.”
“Then you’re not mortal?”
She smiled, and Glorielle couldn’t tell
if she was smiling because of her or Felix. The young Faerie fluttered to her
feet and daintily walked across the branches of the trees as Imraldera checked
the Prince’s wounds.
Dangling her feet of the branch in a bored way,
she asked, “Imraldera, I wish I could tell him a story. I’m sure he would love
my stories.”
Imraldera paid the tiny girl no heed as she
tended to the prince. Glorielle sighed and decided that she was quite bored.
Bounced off the branch, she fluttered down to the unsuspecting Faerie below her.
Celetta caught her in ready arms, planting a quick kiss on the girl’s forehead
before setting her on the ground. Glorielle giggled, then waved a goodbye and
fluttered through the ivy.
* * * *
The next morning, Glorielle was back in the
Haven and humming to herself as she skipped around the room. Singing in her
clear voice, she amused Imraldera as she tended to her patient.
Beyond
the Final waters falling
The Song
of Spheres recalling
You whom
I chose to save
We can
never be tore apart
One of the attendants, Isiro, looked
affectionately at the sunny girl, who was scaling the tree to reach the utmost
branches. “For how much you sing, little one, you might as well be a bird.”
Glorielle grinned down at him, teetering
precariously where she stood. “I could be a bird.”
“Could you now?”
“I could, I’m sure of it!”
Imraldera watched the tiny fairy pace the
branch, trying to think of a way to prove Isiro right.
Felix’s voice suddenly echoed in the room.
“What’s that look for?”
“What look?” Imraldera blinked and turned away
from the Faeries and back to the prince.
“That faraway,
no-longer-paying-attention-to-what-you’re-doing look. Like you were suddenly a
thousand miles away. “
“No, no! I am very much present.”
“Good, because you’re got a knife in your
hand.” Felix added, “What’s wrong?”
“I was listening, that’s all.”
“To thin air?”
She laughed, and went back to work.
“Remember, I can see and hear what you cannot, Prince Felix.”
Glorielle pouted as she popped onto a
lower branch, blocking out Imraldera’s conversation with the mortal prince as
she replied to Isiro. “Okay, maybe I can’t be a bird. But I can be a princess!
I make a lovely princess.”
Lyra laughed, “That you do, Glorielle. That you
do.”
Only moments later, and well into the
middle of Glorielle’s newest act, a tall Faerie rushed into the room. His
strong face was filled with urgency. Dame Imraldera turned to him, facing away
from the boy that stood on the other side of the room.
“Chikato? Is something wrong?”
The broad-shouldered fairy nodded
gravely. “The boy’s father, Fidel. He has just been taken by the Dragon.”
Glorielle paused, one hand hanging onto the
tree as she prepared for her deathly fall. As Lyra reached a helpful hand to
push the girl back onto the branch, the child whispered. “The Dragon?”
Imraldera suppressed a gasp, but she couldn’t
say a word with Felix standing nearby. Chikato seemed to see her questions in
her eyes.
“He’s alive. But …” Chikato shook his head. “Do
not worry. Our prince will save him.”
Imraldera didn’t make a sound, but her furrowed
brow and worried eyes spoke in great measures. “Felix?” She called, urgency
ringing in her tone. “Felix, I’ve just received word of your father.”
The boy whirled away from the window, and
Glorielle darted up higher into the tree as Felix’s hand reached to grasp it
where she had perched moments ago. The sudden news seemed to startle him.
“What?” He demanded.
“He has been taken. By the … the Dragon.”
“Alive?”
“Yes.”
Glorielle crept lower as Felix sank to the
ground. “Is Felix all right?”
Semara opened her arms for the normally chirpy
fairy girl to jump into. “He’ll be fine. He’s just relieved … and worried.”
“At the same time?” Glorielle was
puzzled.
The prince suddenly snapped. “You must
let me go.”
Imraldera’s eyes radiated pity. “Felix, I-”
“You must. He’s my father!” Glorielle jumped as
the boy slammed his fist into the ground. “You cannot make me sit here a minute
longer when my father’s life is in danger!”
“Felix, there is nothing you can-”
“Don’t tell me that, he’s my father. That
counts for something. I can help; I know I can.”
Dame Imraldera seemed to be slightly
fazed. “The Prince will-”
“Aethelbald isn’t here.” Felix took a deep
breath. “When was the last time you heard from your master? Honestly.”
Imraldera bowed her head. “Not in a long time.”
Glorielle looked up into Semara’s face as the
Faerie lady put her down. Speaking quietly as Imraldera tried to explain the
effects of the poison to Felix, she asked. “But Prince Aethelbald is coming
back, isn’t he? So why does it matter?”
Semara looked to Elwind, who shrugged. “To him
… it does.”
“Oh.” Glorielle looked down thoughtfully, but
her train of thought was broken when Felix’s voice suddenly changed from
angered to hopeful.
“But you will let me go?”
Glorielle was surprised. “You’re going to let
him go?”
Imraldera chose to ignore the fairy, instead
responding to the boy. “I will.”
The prince leapt up, pounding the fist
with his air, before grabbing the very startled Imraldera in his arms and spinning her so that her tunic
and flowing trousers swirled.
Glorielle giggled and clapped her hands as she
bounced merrily. “Oh Imraldera, oh Imraldera!”
Felix set the lady down and smartly kissed her
cheek. “You will see,” he said, excitement in his eyes, “I’ll save him, I truly
will. And I’ll come back before the year is out, fit as anything, and you can
do whatever you need to do!”
Glorielle skipped in circles around the prince,
her petal-like wings waving happily, though he couldn’t see her. Shouting into
thin air, he called. “Attendants! Invisibles! Can you get me some real clothes?
Something other than this nightshirt! And boots and things. And a sword! Don’t
forget a sword! A sharp one!”
Glorielle froze, one foot in the air. “ … did
he just talk to us?”
Semara laughed. “Yes, but he doesn’t know who
is here. But still, we best follow his wishes. Come little one, you can help.”
Glorielle sang happily as she left the room
with the others.
Beyond
the Final Waters falling
The Song
of Spheres recalling
You whom
I chose to save
We can
never be torn apart
VOTING: If you would like to vote on this or any of the other fan fiction submissions, send me a list of your top three favorite POEMS and your top three favorite STORIES. (aestengl@gmail.com) Voting is for fans of the Goldstone Wood series only.
7 comments:
:D I like Glorielle :)
Oh, the Invisibles. This is such a sweet story.
This is such a darling story. I love seeing the events of Felix's care from another perspective! Gloriella is so precious! She made me laugh. Terrific work.
Thanks guys! I had a lot of fun writing about Glorielle :). I was a bit apprehensive to enter the story at first (I had barely edited it) but my sister, Skylar, told me I had nothing to loose, so I should just enter it. I'm happy that I followed her advice :). Glad you all enjoyed the story! ~Savannah P.
Aww, this was so sweet! Gloriella's so cute. :) It was fun to see those bits from another prospective. Felix. <3
So fun and sweet! :)
-Rebekah Lawrence
Adorable! Glorielle is cute, and I can't help thinking how much fun it would be to see her and Felix meet again, when Felix can see her.:D Great job!
Gawwwww Savannah, it's so beautiful and cute!! So much adorable!! I never thought of viewing the story from this angle, and you've done it so well!! Bravo!! And Glorielle's such an adorable little babu. :3
Fantastic job!
-Melanie
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