Pixie Hollow Terence

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THE ACCIDENT

Tinker Bell, Disney Fairies and all related content are the property of The Walt Disney Company. The character of Tinker Bell originated by J.M. Barrie.

Pixie Hollow TerencePixie Hollow Terence

This fan fiction is not monetary gain and is intended solely for the entertainment of its audience.

1.

'Who is your friend that always delivers?' Terence asked as he arrived at the water's edge. This was where Tinker Bell had been constructing her latest innovation: The Pixie Dust Express.

She had to think it over. 'Hmm…, Fawn?'

'No,' he replied with a silly grin.

'Iridessa?'

'Me,' he told her right before presenting the tinker fairy with a 'stretchy thingy.' A rubber band he thought might help with the vessel she had designed. Her first test of that watercraft didn't go exactly as planned. It bounced around, skidded onto the shore and up a tree.

That was so many years ago.

Pixie Hollow Terence Jones

~O~

That vessel had been Tinker Bell's single greatest failure since arriving in Pixie Hollow. She had designed the boat to help the dust keeping talents make deliveries to the scouts at the farthest reaches of Never Land. What made the boat design unique was an optional mode she had dubbed 'Hydro-Drive.'

In Hydro-Drive, the craft would deploy two skis from its underbelly allowing it to skim effortlessly across the surface of the water at high speeds. At least that was how it worked in theory. In practice, controlling it in this mode was incredibly difficult. It was too unwieldy and no solution she had thus far devised resolved the problem. Every attempt to use Hydro-Drive had ended in disaster and usually wound up damaging or destroying the boat's hull, which had been fashioned from a gourd. Fortunately, Tinker Bell had always come away from these failed tests unscathed.

Many people she knew had tried to make helpful suggestions. Fairy Mary had proposed slowing it down. Meanwhile Clank and Bobbled put in their two pebbles worth by advising Tink to push the skis further apart for more stability. Terence kept insisting that her balloon carriers were all the dust keepers needed, but she just gave him a dirty look for his troubles.

'Balloon Carriers were too slow,' she kept telling him. She wanted something that could reach the coastline of the island and make deliveries quickly. The determined little tinker fairy wasn't going to let this blasted thing get the best of her. Giving up meant failure and failure was not an option.

She kindly thanked everyone for his or her suggestions and then promptly went off on her own. She would put a third ski in the front of the craft to improve steering. To that end, she found another gourd whose size and shape fit her design needs and fashioned the fifth and latest version of The Express from it. When the current prototype was ready for testing, she launched it into the water from the very same dry dock where she had built all her earlier models. Since he believed that the balloon carriers were a worthwhile alternative, Terence thought this was unnecessary. However, just like with each previous test the dust keeper was by her side.

~O~

Tinker Bell and Terence had been the best of friends since she first arrived in Pixie Hollow several years ago. They shared many adventures together and he had developed quite a knack for pulling her out of sticky situations. Like when she tried to fix the moonstone that broke, Tink went away by herself telling no one, failed to fix the precious stone and got herself marooned on a distant, uncharted island far north of Never Land. Terence figured out what she was trying to do and went after her.

They would also travel to the mainland together where they got into some real scrapes with their human friend, Lizzy. Afterwards, her father Dr. Griffiths would give his daughter a good lecturing and then deliver another to the two fairies for encouraging this behavior.

Terence would bring her lost things for her inventions and food when she became so absorbed by a project that she would forget to eat. Whenever an invention failed, he was always there to pick up her spirits.

Ask anyone in Pixie Hollow and they would tell you that Tinker Bell and Terence were the perfect couple. It was so obvious that they were deeply in love with each other, except that neither of them knew it. Tinker Bell was a restless spirit who needed constant intellectual stimulation and excitement filled adventures, sometimes to the point of complete distraction. The bigger the adventure the more she enjoyed herself.

Terence, on the other hand, was as responsible as they came. He always put his work above everything else, even Tink's strange proclivities for danger and breaking the rules when it suited her needs. Terence didn't like to break the rules, unless it was absolutely necessary. Tinker Bell found this highly annoying. He broke the rules once when she left to fix the moonstone. It showed how much he valued their friendship. In the end, Terence's superior Fairy Gary would have approved anyway if it meant bringing back a lost fairy, much less Tinker Bell.

Just when life in Pixie Hollow seemed at an end for Tink, Peter Pan showed up. He promised her an exciting life beyond anything Terence could provide, so she went away with him. Her adventures were the grandest a fairy could have. She and Peter fought the pirates lead by the infamous Captain Hook. They visited the mainland and brought human children to his secret underground hideout so they could tell stories to the Lost Boys. Then they would engage the Indians on the island in mock warfare, or cause mischief with the Cannibals. The mermaids loved to listen to him talk about himself. The time they spent together was legendary. Peter didn't care much for responsibility. He was a free spirit who loved to charge in headfirst, just like herself. Nothing could go wrong with this arrangement, it seemed.

Then they visited that Wendy girl. She got in the way. Tinker Bell didn't want Peter to abandon her for the human girl and have fun and adventure with her. So Tink got mad. So mad, in fact, she tried to have Wendy killed. Sadly, nothing was the same after that. Peter became enamored of Wendy Darling. He enjoyed her bedtime stories about him so much he would visit the Darling household regularly to hear them from the window. He treated Tinker Bell more like an accessory than a full partner. Taking what he needed from her and then ignoring the little pixie when he didn't. Even the Lost Boys got more respect than she did.

Truth be told Peter Pan always treated her like that, she would later come to understand. She was just having too much fun early on to realize just how bad their relationship had been. Tinker Bell finally left him, disconsolate and sullen she wandered aimlessly around Never Land for months asking herself why she left Pixie Hollow and if she could ever go back, unsure if anyone there would still be her friend.

When Tinker Bell silently flitted into Pixie Hollow one evening she made her way to the Pixie Dust Tree and announced herself to the Queen. Queen Clarion immediately embraced 'her lost fairy who had finally come home.' All of Tink's friends welcomed her back with open arms, too, though Tink did have to apologize for leaving so abruptly. Even Terence was happy to see her. Actually, he was ecstatic. This time he promised to find a proper balance between his responsibilities as a dust keeper and their friendship.

Tinker Bell knew immediately that this is what she needed in her life. Terence hadn't always paid attention to her before, but was willing to change. Pan paid almost no attention to her, but he didn't care to change. He made a genuine attempt once, but change meant growing up and he couldn't let that happen. Growing up was for adults and Peter Pan was going to stay a carefree, irresponsible boy forever.

It was then that she had an epiphany. Terence's responsibility was what made him such a great friend. She had missed it the first time around. Maybe he put his work above their time together on occasion, but that was because the whole fairy civilization relied on him and his peers. More than any other guild, the dust keepers were the most crucial to the survival of Pixie Hollow and the fairy way of life.

Pixie dust helped the fairies to fly and gave them life when a child's first laugh arrived from the mainland. Without it, the fairies wouldn't be able use their magic, or bring the seasons to the world. No new fairies would be born and slowly, over millennia, their numbers would eventually dwindle to nothing. By devoting himself to the continued existence and stability of Pixie Hollow, he helped to maintain world where their lives were safe and their friendship could be an easy one.

She told him how much she valued this.

'I love you, Terence,' she told him.

'You do?' he asked.

Pixie Hollow Terence X Reader

'Yeah, you're the best friend any fairy could have.'

Pixie Hollow Terence Brown

She loved him as a friend, nothing more. He was so happy to have her back, but Terence had a change of heart she never knew, and now he couldn't tell her.