Firstly, to all, but most specifically to Starman and the judges, I apologize for being a complete loser.
Despite several warnings and invocations to the contrary, I did NOT take this contest as seriously as I should have from a time-wise perspective. I waited until nearly the last minute to begin working on my story, did not complete it in time, and then compounded the problem by forgetting to post even my partial text before going out drinking last night with my friends at work.
I suck and am full of epic fail. For that I apologize.
Piratecat is correct, however, that I don't get to get off without posting what I did come up with, and you will find that below the sblock.
By all means, please do not hesitate to snark at me and ridicule me mercilessly for my failure -- I definitely deserve it (although I am too hungover to read any of it, so you might want to save it for now).
Here goes:
[sblock]The single toll of a bell sounded throughout the lush and verdant valley that was the heart of the Forest of Emeranna. All other sounds were stilled in an instant, silencing even the birds and fauna throughout. The people within the valley were struck dumb and motionless as well, as if turned to stone, hoping desperately that the warning had been a mistake. As the echoes of the toll faded, a single lark's song chirped hesitantly, waiting for its mate's response.
The bell tolled again, three sonorous and ominous tolls in succession. It was no mistake.
The Khanathrai were coming.
The bell then continued to toll without cease, frenetic like the heartbeat of the afraid, sending a cascade of din and echo washing down the valley, breaking upon the walls of Wovenbough, the people's village crafted and woven high in the treetops of the Forest. The villagers broke their stillness, dropping whatever they carried, abandoning their chores, moving quickly towards the trees that edged central clearing in the Wovenbough's midst.
In the clearing, Chaili rose from her tending of an herb garden, to look in the direction of the bell's tolling, her heart skipping a beat. Around her, the other young girls blanched in fear, whimpering and wailing, some breaking with panic to run towards the trees. Chaili set her spade and bag down, shaking the dirt from her hands and brushing it from her smock, and then set about unbraiding her hair.
"It is time, girl-child," the voice croaked behind her, with slight sad tone belied by the harshness of age.
Chaili turned to face her grandmother, bending down slightly to kiss the crone's forehead, without ceasing her unbraiding.
"I know, Mémé, I know. I only wish I had just a little more..."
"Time?," Mémé cut her off bitterly. "Time? Don't we all wish this? Don't we all wish for that which we cannot have, that which we can never have. If wishes were loaves, we would all be bakers and then grow weary with the surfeit of bread. No, girl-child, you can wish for nothing but your duty, and pray to the Goddess that you do not fail in it, and if you fail, that you have enough courage and sense to die well. This is the only thing you can wish for, Chaili, the only thing that you can ever or will ever call yours."
Her grandmother's rare use of her name made the sting of the words the more painful. "I know this, Mémé, you do not have to be so cruel in telling me what I have known my whole life. I know what my duty is, and I will not fail, and if I do, then I will die well and bring no shame to my people."
Chaili looked up at the sky, as a shadow passed across the sun, blocking the light that dappled the treetops and shone through to the clearing.
"It is just that in this moment, Mémé," she said as she finished unbraided her and shaking it about her shoulders, her head turned upwards to the growing shadow, "that I have no doubt, no fear, no question save one. Why me, or any of the others? Why were we chosen without given any choice of our own? It is not..."
"Fair?," Mémé snorted. "No, girl-child, it is not fair. And you are a fool to even have that thought cross your silly little mind. There is only the truth of what is, and that truth is you were born Fae-wyrd and that you have come into your moon-blood. That the Khanathrai come is also the truth of what is, and that they have now come to take you and any other Fae-wyrd girl-child who has come into their moon-blood.
"There is no fair, there are no wishes... not for you. That you are what you are is the truth of what is... and the Khanathrai now come."
In the same instant that the crone finished speaking, there was the sound of innumerable trees groaning, snapping and splintering into thousands of shards. The floor of the valley shook as if a giant fist slammed down upon it, followed by quick succession of the ancient giant trees of the forest being crushed as if mere sticks, and the hard quakes of something huge slamming into the ground.
The sun above Chaili and Mémé was completely blotted out by an impossible sight: a island floating in the sky, shaped like a mountain peak, covered by a city of towers harshly hewn at odd angles from the very stone of the mountain itself, the bottom of the mountain shaped into a conical plow which now hovered above the clearing. It descended slowly, in a silence made eerie by its impossible size.
Up and down the valley, smaller floating island cities pushed down upon the edges of the forests, smashing tree and groud aside as they slammed hard into the earth, planting their plows deep within. The tolling of the bell abruptly ceased.
"Step back with me, girl-child," Mémé said softly, "for it is time, the Khanathrai have come, and there is no more time for anything else."
Chaili turned as Mémé gently tugged her, and they moved quickly back towards the edge of the clearing, where the other villagers waited, on their knees with heads bent, holding onto each other. The tip of the giant plow slammed heavily into the soft earth of the clearing, shaking the earth mightily as it tore into it, crushing Chaili's herb garden and all other growing life within, as a giant wave of earth was pushed up and outward towards the forest's edge.[/sblock]