Making his way back
to the well, David
was lost in thought,
not paying attention
to his surroundings.
When his shoe caught
a rock, he found
himself face down
before the well. As
he rose with a curse
on his lips, a very
feminine giggle
greeted him.
David stood slowly
and came face to
face with the young
woman he had seen in
his dream. She sat
perched on the well,
and he took two
steps back, caught
the rock again and
landed on his
backside.
“Are you a clumsy
one?”
“I-I-” His mouth
fell open.
“Sitting on your
rump in the middle
of a wooded field
with your mouth wide
open will only catch
you a bug or two.”
“W-Who are you?”
“I am Lena, and you
are the very unique
David.” She hopped
down from her seat.
“I am the fairy of
Stonewell Village.”
David stood and
brushed himself off.
Then a thought hit
him.
“I get it now. Angus
set this up, didn't
he?”
“Angus?”
“Either that or Kyle
got wind of me
finding that coin
and is playing a
joke.”
“I am sorry, David,
but I am only here
because you made
your wish and tossed
the coin.” She
smiled. “I thank you
again. It has been
long since I have
been called upon.”
David watched her
for a moment,
wondering how he
could prove this was
either a hoax or
real. He snapped his
fingers.
“If this is real,
tell me what I
wished for. If you
know that, I will
have to believe you
because I didn't
tell a soul.”
“I find it very rude
of you to ask such a
thing, as it was you
who called on me.
However, I felt how
deeply you wanted
your wish. You
wished for a friend,
David, and so here I
am.”
Feeling his legs go
weak, David once
again found himself
sitting on his rump
beside the well. It
was impossible, but
it was real. Lena
was real, and she
was a fairy.
“This seems like a
dream.”
“No, you are not
dreaming.” She sat
beside him on the
ground. “Now,
please, tell me all
about you. If we are
to be friends, we
should know one
another.”
It took him awhile
to adjust to what
was happening, but
he soon found
himself opening up
to the woman from
the well. He told
her of his move to
Scotland, his
mother's marriage to
a kind man, and of
the trouble with his
brother.
“Sounds like a good
thrashing is what
the young man
needs.”
“Will you tell me
about you, Lena?”
“What is there to
tell? I am a fairy.”
“How old are you?”
“I do not know for
sure, David. The day
has yet to come when
I can step from the
world I know and
into your world.”
“What do you mean?”
“It is said that
once a fairy meets
the one who wins her
heart, she will step
into the mortal
world. She will be
able to live a human
life, have children
and be a wife. But I
have been lost so
long since the
village fell; I fear
my time will never
come.”
“Well, if that's all
it takes, I can find
you a husband.”