 Lesser Faerie by tashni
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  A forest of purity forever marred by the greed of one.
       In the forest lived the lesser faeries, small 
    enough to fit in one's
        hand and with little magic about them. They 
    were once innocent,
        pure--a part of their forest, with just enough 
    magic to avoid its dangers.
        Then someone from outside came, a lupine being. 
    He stole faeries
        from their home, quick to learn how to overcome 
    their magic. None
        of the captured faeries ever returned, but 
    the Lupe did. He came again
        and again, each time carrying away more of 
    the sisters.
  
        The faeries labeled him Balthazar, 
    "violator."
 
Attack! The little air faerie heard the cries of her 
  sisters and saw the bulge of muscles under his mangled fur. The Balthazar's 
  gaze came to her, turning her heart to ice. She darted through the forest on 
  her little wings and thrust herself with the wind. He was howling with the thrill 
  of pursuing her. She paid no attention to where she was going, only on getting 
  away. Leaves slapped against her, burning her cheeks and legs. His breathing 
  was a rhythm of pants and growls. The shrieks of her sisters whirled around 
  her, threatened to drown her. 
      A group of air faeries had joined together in 
  flight like a constellation of blue stars. She aligned herself with them. Combining 
  their magic, they made themselves invisible in a current of wind through the 
  trees. The Balthazar knew that trick, and continued to gain on them. She pushed 
  harder in the current of air, desperate to speed ahead of the others. They were 
  all so scared; all struggled to get ahead, to not be last. The Balthazar swung 
  his net, and four more of her sisters screamed as they were caught. The air 
  faeries panicked and split in three directions. He halted, looked in his net, 
  and grumbled. He ended the chase and left the borders of their land.
      'It wasn't me,' thought the air faerie. 
  She stopped and hovered inside a bush, giving her heart time to stop pounding. 
  'It wasn't me.' Her eyes closed and she relished the wind in the air. 
  She did not leave the safety of the bush until the sun set behind the endless 
  trees. On the wind she drifted back to the clearing where they would gather 
  for the night. 'I am still free.' By dark, the faeries were gathered 
  together once more around a great fire. The little air faerie flitted about 
  it with her hundreds of sisters. The faeries made their own music, humming ancient 
  tunes, their sweet voices merging to form a grand orchestra. They were like 
  stars dancing in the sky, each pushing the day's horror out of her mind. Dancing 
  always brought the little air faerie joy, but tonight her thoughts could not 
  let go of the hunt. 'He has never been that close to me before.' She 
  left the faeries dancing in the air to sit on a rock and watch. 'I am so 
  tired.' Who were the ones taken? She could not tell. There were too many 
  individuals to know, yet so few left since the Balthazar's arrival.
      The moon was bright, but she did not notice the 
  figure behind her. Her thoughts kept her trapped within herself. The Balthazar's 
  net flew swiftly, silently. She was captured and her screams could not save 
  her. No faerie escaped once in the Balthazar's net.
      The other faeries saw her capture; horror spread 
  on their faces. They fled. She knew what they were thinking: 'It wasn't me.' 
  But this time it was her.
      The Balthazar dumped her in his sack; she was 
  his first catch of the night. She alone lit its darkness as the bag was whipped 
  and jostled in the Balthazar's pursuit of other faeries. Soon others were caught 
  and joined her. Some screamed endlessly while others wept. She sat with her 
  arms wrapped around her legs and her dead eyes focused on nothing. After the 
  bag became crowded, the Balthazar quieted down and the rhythm of his walking 
  gently shook the bag. Soon the faeries would know where their captured sisters 
  went.
      The sack was thrown on a hard surface, bruising 
  the little air faerie's arm. A giant claw reached down through the top, leaving 
  no room for escape. It groped around and grabbed a light faerie. She kicked 
  and bit at the claw, but was effortlessly lifted out of the bag. One by one, 
  the faeries were taken in this manner. An earth faerie, an air faerie, a fire 
  faerie. She lost count, but eventually she, too, was taken. She did not struggle; 
  resistance had not helped any of the others. Outside of the bag was a large 
  room of stripped and chopped trees lit by a roaring fire. Lining the walls were 
  hundreds of her sisters, all in tiny jars with barely enough room to stand. 
  She panicked as she saw the Balthazar bring a jar up to her. She clawed at him 
  and wriggled, using all her might to escape. He slipped her into the glass prison 
  and sealed her inside, piercing air holes into the lid with his claws. She pounded 
  on the glass to no avail, slumped down and cried. After all the faeries were 
  imprisoned, the Balthazar dropped onto a bed and slept. The little air faerie 
  did not want to succumb to the vulnerability of sleep, but soon exhaustion left 
  her no choice.
      She awoke at the warmth of light against her 
  eyelids. Her eyes opened and saw the sun through the trees. 'What a beautiful 
  day.' Her wings fluttered open, but hit something at her sides. Looking 
  around, she remembered. She was in a glass prison, and the sunlight came through 
  a hole in the wood enclosure. It was so close, yet unreachably far. 
      The faeries in the jars on either side of her 
  were awake as well. On her left was a light faerie. The normally luminous tone 
  of a light faerie was nonexistent in her; she was actually dim. To her left, 
  a fire faerie was leaning against the back of the glass with tears in her eyes. 
  The little air faerie recognized neither, but all lesser faeries looked alike.
      A thud made her jump; her eyes flew to the source. 
  The Balthazar was out of bed and walking toward her. She cringed against the 
  back of the jar, trying to be invisible, but he passed by her. He stopped at 
  a shelf of jars filled with things other than faeries. Out of one of the jars 
  he took some sort of dried meat and stuck it between his jaws. His eyes roved 
  over the imprisoned faeries. It made the little air faerie shudder. A smile 
  lifted his lips above his yellow teeth.
      The Balthazar walked outside of the enclosure. 
  The air faerie sighed in relief, but he was not gone long. He returned and began 
  to pull faeries off the shelves, into his arms, and walked them outside. He 
  returned a moment later and repeated the process, taking out row after row of 
  terrified faeries. One little earth faerie screamed and pounded on the glass, 
  but the Balthazar had no pity. The little air faerie watched with rapt attention 
  as the Balthazar came closer and closer to her. Inevitably, he took the faerie 
  to her right, then her, then the faerie to her left. There were no screams left 
  in her chest and her eyes were dried up. It was hopeless. She was carried out 
  of the enclosure and saw the forest--so beautiful, so peaceful. She knew in 
  her heart she would never see it again.
      The faeries were stacked on a wooden contraption 
  with wheels. The Balthazar placed her and the others with them, so that the 
  little air faerie was surrounded by her sisters below her and to her sides. 
  He went back in the cottage for more faeries, and soon even the light above 
  her was closed off by more jars. After a while she felt the cart move, but she 
  could not see where it was going. She was left to imagine what lie ahead. They 
  continued moving for hours, and her jar seemed to get smaller with each passing 
  moment. Only a little fresh air could reach the faerie through the tiny holes 
  above her, and most were covered by the jar above her anyway. There was no room 
  to stretch her legs or arms, but she forced herself not to panic. Surely she 
  would burst with anxiety, but hope jumped to her chest when the movement stopped. 
  She never thought she would be so elated to reach their destination. The faeries 
  above her were unstacked, layer by layer. Finally, the Balthazar removed the 
  jar above her. Fresh air poured in and caressed her face; it cleansed her lungs 
  and cleared the cloudiness in her head.
      The Balthazar carried her to another room full 
  of shelves and tables. A blue, starred creature with horns and four legs watched 
  as he worked. At last! Someone who could help! Surely it would release her. 
  The Balthazar put her and some others down on a table. After bringing in the 
  rest, he spoke to the starry Neopet again. The blue one pointed to a large bag 
  filled with gold discs. The Balthazar took the bag and left. He was gone! The 
  little air faerie felt glee like she had never experienced before.
      She and the other faeries were not released. 
  Only a few minutes after their captor left, their new steward opened the doors 
  of the room, and dozens of creatures stormed in. Chaos engulfed them as faeries 
  were grabbed off the shelves and tables. The air faerie screamed in shock as 
  she was taken by one of the creatures. It ran through the room, causing her 
  to lose her balance and bump into the glass. Beyond the glass jar was a nauseating 
  swirl of fur and gold and scales and eyes and all her sisters experiencing her 
  same fear. Before she knew what had happened, she was taken outside of the building, 
  but it was not the outdoors she knew.
      There were no trees, only sun beating down on 
  grass. Even the grass was cut up by more buildings than she could count, and 
  it was pushed aside by fields of smooth stone. Endless new creatures were swarming 
  about the place. This was not the world she knew, and her mind recoiled at the 
  thought of living in this place. She was tossed about in the jar as her third 
  captor carelessly swung her around. Her head began to ache and her stomach went 
  into her throat as she was carted through this strange place. She got sick of 
  looking at the world of butchered trees and confined grass, and looked up to 
  examine her new captor. It looked something like herself, only it had no wings, 
  did not glow, and its skin was a color like light wood. Eventually it brought 
  her to a small building and took her inside.
      With fear she examined the place. Unlike the 
  other enclosures she had seen, this one was filled with odd things that looked 
  like stumps, but were not, and pink grass! The captor walked to a side of the 
  enclosure and opened part of the wall. It smiled as it stuffed her jar behind 
  several objects. It closed the wall, and she was alone in the dark. For a while, 
  she relished the calm darkness, but soon the reality of her situation gripped 
  her. There was only her own soft glow to light up the place, and all she could 
  see were alien objects up against the glass. She remained in the jar in the 
  dark.
      After the first day, panic set in. She slammed 
  her fists into the glass and mustered small gusts of wind from her fists to 
  break it, but she could not. She tried to widen the air holes so she could slip 
  out, but she was not strong enough. Soon her fear turned to anger, and her tears 
  became screams releasing the heat building up within her. There was no way out 
  of this little glass jar. The little glass jar the Balthazar had put thousands 
  of her sisters in. The little glass jar countless faeries suffered in. Did the 
  Balthazar know what he did? Why would no one help? Was the world outside her 
  forest really so heartless? It was too much to fathom, and in the darkness she 
  brooded. There was no way of telling time in the dark, but it was long enough 
  to change her very soul.
      She was staring into the darkness when suddenly 
  her eyes were stunned by light. The wall was opening, and brilliance like the 
  sun flooded the darkness. Her eyes clenched shut and her hands flew up to shield 
  herself, unable to stand the brightness. Throbbing splotches of light danced 
  against her eyelids. She felt something pick up her jar, but she still could 
  not bear to open her eyes. The throbbing in her head gradually softened, and 
  she dared to flutter her eyelids, slowly allowing her eyes to adjust. Opening 
  her eyes, she could make out some shapes and colors. The world stopped glowing 
  and things began to come into focus. She was sitting on a large square tree 
  stump-thing, and no other creatures were in the room. Better here than in the 
  dark place, even if she was to spend the rest of her life in the glass cage.
       Around the corner came a creature with wings, 
  a mane and blue fur, along with the beige-skinned creature that had put her 
  in the dark place. She glowered at them and sat down on the glass floor. The 
  two approached her, and the blue one's eyes lit up at seeing her. What would 
  this one do to her? It grabbed the jar with no concern for its inhabitant, swirled 
  around and embraced its companion. The blue creature ran, jar in paw, into the 
  outdoors of their world.
       Then something she did not expect happened. 
  The winged creature began unscrewing the lid. An alien feeling welled up in 
  her: hope. Perhaps this world did contain beings who had a perception of compassion; 
  maybe this one knew what the Balthazar did to her and was now going to free 
  her! The lid was removed, sweet freedom loomed above. She rose to leave, but 
  a blue claw closed in on her. It grabbed her by her wings, and she yelled in 
  pain. She was dragged out of the glass prison and brought up to the blue creature's 
  face. What mistreatment would it bestow upon her? She cursed herself for letting 
  hope slip into her heart. No hope was better than dashed hope. The blue thing 
  began to yell at her, but its words she could not understand. She let her body 
  hang limp despite the pain in her wings. Resistance was pointless.
       She gasped in shock as her energy was suddenly 
  pulled out of her. The creature holding her captive laughed in glee as she felt 
  all of her energy drained. She panicked. What was happening? In front of her 
  a blue glow formed--her energy! She tried to struggle free, but there was nothing 
  left in her to struggle with. The ball of her energy grew larger, and she slumped 
  over, all of her power gone. The captor grabbed her energy and pushed it into 
  its chest. It gasped and dropped her onto the grass. She could see her own life's 
  energy enter the creature, its glee at gaining what had been stolen from her. 
  She looked at her hands--they were grey. What kind of creature did this to its 
  fellow creation? A breeze brushed against her, but it was hollow; she could 
  no longer be a part of it. Her hands disintegrated in front of her and she felt 
  herself blow away with the wind like dust.
       She was conscious as she blew about with the 
  wind, and watched as she was carried through the strange world the Balthazar 
  sent her into. She had no control over anything, but looked on as she was rushed 
  between buildings and over trimmed trees scattered about the land. Eventually, 
  she left their world and drifted over an endless field of water where the wind 
  became thick with salt.
      After several sunrises and sunsets of peaceful 
  blowing about, a dot of land appeared ahead. It looked a little like her forest 
  home, but the trees were tall and only their tops had giant leaves. The wind 
  spiraled down to the island, it passed through the trees and over the white 
  sand. After a few minutes on the island, she began to feel solid again. The 
  wind went ahead without her, and she looked down on her solid grey body. Where 
  was she? Why was she here? Would the Balthazar find her? She looked around at 
  the trees, and her mind began to relax for the first time in what felt like 
  forever.
      Above her, small dots of grey descended from 
  the trees. For some reason, they did not frighten her. She watched in curiosity 
  as they came closer, and she soon saw they that were faeries like herself--all 
  grey! Was this where all of the Balthazar's victims ended up?
      Some of the faeries landed on the sand and rocks 
  around her, while others peered down from the trees. One of them walked up to 
  her. "Hello," the grey faerie whispered. "Do not be afraid, we are all grey 
  faeries like you. All of our powers were stolen by the Neopians."
      Grey faerie? She spoke of it like it was an element, 
  but the former air faerie could not feel an element in herself. "I am," she 
  paused, "was, an air faerie. Were you air faeries?"
      "Each of us had an element that was stolen. What 
  we once were does not matter any more. We are all grey now."
      "Did you all come here as I did? Why am I here?" 
  she asked.
       "We do not know why, but we all come here. Those 
  that were of light become light, and when the sun shines here, they materialize 
  here. The ones that were of water evaporate, and when it rains here, they fall 
  here. You, as of the air, came here on the wind. It is part of our relationship 
  with the world's elements, no doubt. Who are we to question it? We have peace 
  here. After being part of the world plagued by the Balthazar, why should we 
  want to go back, with or without our element?"
      The faerie looked down at her grey hands, then 
  up at the countless faeries in the trees above her. A tear came to her eye, 
  the last that would fall. "Peace," she whispered as if it were the name of a 
  loved one.
 The End
					 
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