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Part 1
Summer Forest was ideal for resting. The night air was warm but not sticky, accompanied by a breeze that refreshed but did not chill. Perfect for those who made their bed under the stars, but just as suitable for those who preferred a roof over their heads. The sweeping expanses of stone kept rooms cool and airy and guaranteed a good night's sleep. A sleep that appeared to be impenetrable, as no matter how loudly Hunter shouted at Elora's window she didn't stir.
“Elora! Hey, Elora! Wake up!” he screamed from the ground below. Her only response was to roll over, moving from comfort to an even deeper comfort. A thin smile stretched across her face as pleasant dreams filled her head. Secluded coastal resorts; the winding backstreets of ancient cities, lost in all of them without a soul in sight. Just her, abandoned in such beautiful places. She sank deeper into the blankets, thoroughly trapped in her dreams and deaf to the louder screams of the cheetah.
“Elora!” he roared, throat burning, but between the chirp of crickets and the lapping of the lake there was no sound of shuffling from above. “Oh, c'mon!” Hunter whined, “Elora! Wake up!” But his desperation was not enough to penetrate the soothing bubble that enveloped the faun. “Alright,” he groaned, reaching behind his back, “You're gonna go crazy, but it's your own fault.”
Elora was feeling the tide lap against her toes when the first arrow struck her wardrobe. A hollow crack splintered the night, shortly followed by the sound of tumbling clothes as their hangers broke, but all Elora heard was the splash of surf. A second arrow struck the back wall shortly after, hitting a picture frame and shattering the glass, but again the sound was lost to the pleasure of twisted cobbles leading down an Alpine village. Hunter couldn't help but admire the commotion he had created with just two shots, but it still wasn't having the desired effect, and that burned his patience down to the wick.
“Sorry, Elora,” he sighed, ramming his hand to the bottom of his quiver, “But I've got to wake you up somehow.”
His hand clamped around the small box hidden there, and with an almighty tug he freed it from the snagging points of the arrows. He held it up to the moonlight and opened it. The innards of the box were split in two; one side occupied by small strips of cloth, the other home to a handful of matches. He lifted a strip from the box and wound it round an arrowhead, then plucked out a match. He struck it against the coarse fur of his thigh and held the flame to the cloth. It ignited in a flash and quickly spread to give the arrow a burning head. Satisfied, he pulled the bow taut and took aim at Elora's window.
“Sorry,” he said, then fired.
The clatter of the arrow hitting her desk didn't wake her, but the noxious smell of burning paper did, though only because she was fairly certain that beaches didn't smell of ashes. She was slow to rise, opting not to sit up in order to enjoy the soft blankets for a while longer, but when she spotted the flicker of flames she was on her feet in an instant.
“Ah!” she screamed, fright locking her muscles, but as the fire encroached on a thick pile of books she forced herself to react. She grabbed the corner of the papers with her fingertips and pulled the pile onto the floor, then stamped on them for all she was worth. At first the only product was a stinging warmth on her hooves, but eventually the flames yielded to her weight and began to fade away, their height and spread diminishing until the last peak of yellow was gone with a hiss and a wisp of smoke.
Elora stood deathly still, breathing in the sickly scent as she panted away her shock. She placed her hands on the desk to steady herself, and as she looked amongst the ashes of burnt paper she spotted an arrow. Wooden; beech, perhaps, with a thin metal point as its end. Nothing unique about that, but she saw something familiar in the flight. A spectrum of brown and yellow feathers, growing progressively darker as they reached towards the arrowhead. She clicked her tongue as she tried to remember where she had seen that before, and when the memory came her face twisted in fury.
“Hunter!” she roared, striding over to the window and glaring to the ground below.
“Finally,” Hunter said, letting his bow rest at his side.
“What's the meaning of this?” she said, holding out the arrow.
“I was trying to wake you up.”
“What? You try to wake me up by setting my house on fire?” she hissed, “What if I hadn't woken up? I might have burned to death!”
“Which was why I tried other stuff before shooting a fire arrow at you.”
Elora glanced behind her for a moment, and when she turned back her eyes were fiercer than ever.
“Oh, you are so dead,” she said, “Do you know how much it costs to get those pictures printed?”
“Look, I'll pay for the damage, but before then there's something I need to show you.”
“What?”
“This.” He held up a torn envelope, behind which sat a neatly folded letter, “You'd better come and have a look, this is quite interesting.”
Elora initially didn't move, but while her fury still burned curiosity prevailed and she disappeared from the window.
Despite the stone walls the sharp clatter of Elora's hooves on the steps were audible to Hunter, as were her trudges through the grass as she stomped over to him and yanked the letter out of his hands.
“Alright then, what is this?” she said, pulling the letter taut.
“Letter that arrived earlier today.”
“Today? It's practically midnight.” The gears whirred in her head, “Is that owl on postal duty again?”
“I guess so.”
She shook her head.
“Honestly, they need to do something about him. He knocks everyone out of sync,” she looked at him, “Much like you, really.”
“Hey, the letter's urgent.”
“Well I bet it won't be that urgent.”
“Is that why you still have your nightshirt on?”
“Yes. I'm going to read this, quell whatever fears you have, then go back to bed.” She turned her eyes to the letter, and they widened. “This is addressed to me!” she exclaimed, “Hunter, have you been going through my mail?”
“Yeah,” he said casually.
“Oh, you are the absolute penultimate!” She placed her hand to her forehead, “What have you seen, exactly?”
“Oh, I only open the letters with the Crest of Avalar on.”
“The Government letters.”
“Yeah, freedom of information and all that.”
Elora breathed a sigh of relief, and mercifully Hunter didn't hear it.
“So anyway,” Hunter said, “Have a read of that and see what you think.”