[I hope this is okay with you, Alex and Rissa.]
Tekuri burst unceremoniously into the wagon with a disgruntled-looking Ilmena in tow. He seemed completely unaware that he was interuppting a private conversation and he was certainly not wondering why Nobody was in Celeste's wagon in the first place. The naked fear evident on his face was more than enough to explain his thoughts were on something far more important.
"The three of you must hide," he ordered, "and quickly." He made a move to leave as abruptly as he had entered but Ilmena stopped him.
"What? Why?" she demanded. "Why do we need to hide?"
Tekuri hesitated, then shook his head. It seemed he was not going to give her answer after all, but: "The faerie king -- the tyrant who rules this part of the forest -- is coming," he grimaced. "He has no liking for us wandering folk and has been looking for a reason to put us behind bars for years.
"That explosion," he waved his hand vaguely in a random direction, presumably where the explosion was meant to have taken place, "has obviously set him on our tracks. It's already going to be hard enough to wriggle our way out of this one without him finding you people. A human, or two," here he glanced warily at Ilmena, "or even three," he glared suspiciously at Nobody, "is going to be the death of us all. Now if you have any sense of gratitude to the ones who granted you safe passage from the unseelie* world out there, you are going to hide and remain hidden. And if you are not grateful, then you should hide to save your own skins. That tyrant will have you killed if he's in the mood for some bloodshed. Now be quiet." He leapt out of the wagon.
When he left, the first sounds of faint, faraway voices could begin to be heard. Although the actual words were not distinct, even from this distance they felt unfriendly.
---
Not too far away, a soldier was glaring at a small group of tiny devas. The devas were the most respected ones of the village and were representing the village. "I'm giving you two choices!" he bellowed. A few devas cowered and covered their ears, their hearing tender from the racket the giant soldier was making. "Either you tell me who caused the explosion, who caused the lake to dry up, who was passing through this forest last night and which of you was out wandering in the forest at midnight close to human footprints or you're going to pay a visit to the jail!"
"Some choice," a young deva muttered.
"What was that?" the soldier turned in the direction of the guilty deva. Clearly his hearing was functioning better than some of the poor devas.
"We don't know anything," a middle-aged deva stated firmly. "We were all asleep -- yes,
all -- when we heard a mighty explosion. That woke up the whole village and many of us were going outside to investigate. That was the first time we heard of a lake drying up, because that's what our scouts told us. And that," he said triumphantly, "must have been the ones who were 'wandering in the forest at midnight', as you say. Our scouts were just looking to see what had happened."
The soldier glared at the deva, infuriated that the deva was not cowering and grovelling before him. The deva glared right back at him, refusing to lose his dignity and composure even for a second. Clearly the soldier didn't believe the deva and he said so.
"I don't believe you," he said. "We know for a fact that there were two devas out in the forest, away from this village, before the explosion happened. And you can't convince me otherwise, because no scout would be scouting before a disaster happened, unless said scout was aware of the disaster beforehand, which then makes the scout a valuable source of information and a suspect."
*Unseelie: in my context (perhaps incorrectly), cruel, inhumane, miserable, terrible, black, evil, etc.
[Edit: The lake is not completely dried up but the soldiers are exaggerating and the deva is bluffing his way through this mess a little.
(Aka Lillie bluffing through a technical mistake when she wrote that the lake was dried up when it's only partially so.)]