|  The Rise of the Space Faerie: Discovery - Part Threeby desibick
 
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 By the time Laimane had arrived at her home on the outskirts 
of Faerie City, the moon had begun to set. Shadows danced and crawled across the 
streets and darkness settled happily across the walkway like a thick shroud, content 
that, without the moon, it could remain there undisturbed until the sun rose. 
Its only irritation was the soft candlelight filtering through the thick curtains 
that blocked the house's front window.
      She frowned as she noticed the candlelight. Had 
  she honestly been that careless, to leave a candle burning when she left the 
  house? Her brows furrowed; an action uncommon to her face that caused her forehead 
  to crease sharply. No, that could not be right. She had left hours ago, the 
  candle would not have burned that long. 
      There was only one conclusion to make. Someone 
  had entered the house, and was possibly still there. 
      Giving the child in her arms a nervous glance, 
  Laimane silently padded over to the gate that lead to her garden behind that 
  house and effortlessly climbed it, the girl still firmly held against her hip. 
  Dropping behind and silently cursing the crunch her feet made against the gravel, 
  she hurriedly hid herself amongst the thick plants of her garden.
      Laimane had put her heart and soul into her garden 
  when she had moved to her small cottage in Faerieland, years ago, and it had 
  grown more and more magnificent under her tender care. Arranging and caring 
  for the most fickle, but most beautiful, plants she could discover, she had 
  grown a miniature jungle for herself; a jungle consisting of plants from all 
  different climates and parts of the world. It was a feat only an earth faerie 
  with her skill could have accomplished. The rapidly dying moonlight did not 
  do the garden justice, but Laimane was beyond noticing that, she was too relieved 
  to be safe amongst the haven of plant life.
      Huddling the sleeping girl next to her, Laimane 
  considered the situation. It would have taken a powerful faerie to make it through 
  the locks she had on all of her doors, or, she thought bitterly, a group of 
  powerful faeries. Had the dark faeries finally discovered where she lived and 
  broken in? And if they had, why would they leave a candle burning to warn her 
  of their presence? It might be a mistake, but all Laimane knew of her enemy's 
  doings pointed to her being an extremely careful plotter, too careful to make 
  such an elementary mistake. 
      Soundlessly she shifted, pondering the situation. 
  So where had the candle come from? She crouched there, debating the answer, 
  until it occurred to her that no normal candles gave off enough light to be 
  seen through her curtains. Any light strong enough to be seen through the curtains 
  would be amplified by some form of light magic. 
      That was a comfort, at least; she doubted that 
  any dark faerie knew much about light magic, and certainly not enough to make 
  a candle burn that brightly. But it was strange for a light faerie to work with 
  candles, candle flames tended to respond more to…
      Fire magic. For an instant she sat there, stunned, 
  and then gave a large sigh of pure relief. The very air around her seemed to 
  loosen, and a soft, cooling breeze rustled the plants around her. There was 
  only one faerie she knew of who could control both fire and light magic, a faerie 
  powerful enough to make her way into the house. The candle had not been a mark 
  of her enemies, but a sign to alert her to her ally's presence. 
      Neatly and fearlessly she emerged from the garden 
  and headed to her back door, easily undoing the lock with her magic and entering. 
  Instantly she headed for the room with the candle in it: her kitchen. 
      The kitchen was small but comfortable; large 
  wooden cupboards lined that wall on two sides and a large, sturdy dining table 
  set with multiple ornate wooden chairs occupied most of the floor space. Neatly 
  exchanging the dripping cloak that sheltered the child for a knitted blanket 
  from a cupboard, she carefully dried the child and laid her on the tabletop 
  before turning to face the riddle that had been left for her.
      At first glance it gave off the aura of a deceptively 
  ordinary candle, one of the many Laimane had in every room of her miniscule 
  cottage. The earth faerie smiled as drew closer to examine it, enjoying the 
  surprising warmth that the tiny flame emitted. She loved codes and all manner 
  of secret messages, the more challenging the better. It was merely another sign 
  that the candle was left by a friend that they recognized that she would be 
  attracted to the challenge the strange candle supplied.
      She ran her finger along the wax and found that 
  it was made of the finest beeswax, its scent sweetened by a drop of clover honey. 
  As an Earth faerie, its very materials gave her a sense of joy; she could taste 
  almost taste the warm summer air and smell the rich soil that had given forth 
  to the clover. Forcing herself not to be distracted by such pleasures, she calmly 
  ran her fingers down its smooth, supple length until her finger met an inconsistency, 
  something unheard of in such fine candles. Drawing her face close to the candle, 
  being careful not to burn herself on the amplified flame, she saw that it was 
  a small etching of a star, surrounded by a ring of flame. 
      Without further ado, she snapped the candle in 
  half, breaking it off right next to the symbol along its length; the flame was 
  extinguished instantly, as though she had thrown water on it. Not surprisingly, 
  the candle was hollow, with an area inside just wide enough to fit a small object. 
  Turning the two halves upside down, she twitched her wrists lightly so that 
  whatever they contained would come out. Like clockwork, a miniscule bronze key 
  fell with a clatter upon the table. Picking it up, she instinctively ran her 
  fingers over the complicated series of sharp protrusions that would unlock the 
  door. She had checked so many keys like this before that she instantly knew 
  what it would unlock: the door to the most important room in her house; the 
  reason she had remained hidden all these years. And, just as interesting, the 
  symbol at the key's handle was the same as the one on the candle: the star surrounded 
  by a ring of flame. 
      Where is she then? Laimane frowned again 
  as she saw that the key had been left for her. Did she leave? Or is she hiding 
  somewhere else in the house? Why didn't she just go in the room and wait for 
  me to find her…
      She found herself interrupted in mid-thought 
  as she glanced at the table. Two more symbols were there, subtly, but legibly 
  carved on its worn surface. The first was a mountain, its peak obstructed by 
  a cloud. The second was a rippling pool with a scallop shell in the middle. 
      So they were here too. They were most likely 
  waiting in the room, waiting for her to come down. Why all three of them had 
  come at the same time, on such short notice, Laimane sensed she didn't want 
  to know. 
      Scooping the faerie girl, who had slept through 
  Laimane's puzzling, into her arms, Laimane dug a small key, almost identical 
  to the one hidden in the candle, out of the deep pockets of her breeches. The 
  only clear difference between her key and the other was the symbol engraved 
  in the top: a pattern of intertwining vines with an amaryllis in the center.
      Placing the girl in a safe place on the counter 
  top, she neatly went over to one of the four battered chairs surrounding the 
  table. Engraved on the side of the wooden armrest, slightly more elaborately, 
  was the pattern of vines which matched her key. Impatiently she thrust the chair 
  to the side and knelt, searching the floor beneath the chair until she found 
  what she was looking for: a small brass lock smoothly carved into the floor. 
  The wooden surface around in was slightly rounded, caused by the constant pressure 
  from the chair leg that had covered it, undisturbed, for almost a decade.
       Laimane slipped the key into the lock and twisted 
  it 180 degrees.
       The effect was instant. She had hardly stepped 
  away from the lock when a resounding crack met her sharp ears. She could not 
  see what was happening, but she could feel it with her magic. Vines of all sorts 
  of plants writhed like snakes beneath her feet, twisting in and out of complicated 
  knots and patterns that had held the floorboards beneath the chair together. 
  The plants twisted and wove, their movements emitting a rhythm Laimane could 
  feel in her bones, the weaving increasing in speed until it made her ache. She 
  could not help but feel a surge of pride: she had done well when she created 
  this lock. Only an Earth faerie, one who was very well trained in controlling 
  her powers, could resist the spell the vines wove, all others would find themselves 
  hypnotized until they could not act further. 
       Finally the vines released the last floorboard 
  and thrust them all outward to land with a series of clunks on the kitchen floor; 
  the aching in Laimane subsided into nothing. She opened her eyes and found that 
  the faerie girl had been woken up by the vines. Laimane's heart began to pound. 
  What if she had been hurt? But the girl didn't seem to be the least bit scared; 
  indeed, she didn't seem to have been affected at all. She met Laimane's eyes 
  easily with no trace of fear or pain, only mild curiosity, as if she had seen 
  a magician do a puzzling trick she knew was not real, but couldn't figure how 
  to do for herself.
       The spell was made so that it would not hurt 
  anyone not trying to open the door, but it would cause discomfort; more than 
  enough to trouble a young child. A sharp fear caused Laimane's nerves to tingle. 
  Who was this child she had found? Why was she abandoned? And what were the powers 
  that she had?
       Laimane knew she would have to find these answers 
  out soon, if she was going to think of a way to keep her safe-her instinct left 
  her without a doubt about the girl's importance-and there was also the question 
  of what kind of faerie she was. Who could teach a faerie that didn't have an 
  element?
       The others would know more than she did, and 
  together they could hopefully figure out what to do. And if there was going 
  to be any possibility of danger, it would be safer to keep the girl in the secret 
  room for now, rather than Laimane's exposed kitchen.
       Cradling the girl in her arms, Laimane tiptoed 
  to the side of the hole in the floor and jumped. Wincing as her aching feet 
  hit bottom, she laboriously padded across the cold stone to a wooden door at 
  the end of the passage under her home, beams of light greeting her from the 
  crack underneath it. There was no doubt in her mind now: they were there, waiting 
  for her.
       Shifting her weight, Laimane opened the door 
  and screamed as she was thrust to the ground in an explosion of light.
 To be continued...
					 
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