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Mother is out getting Rapunzel more paper and ink, among other errands. Rapunzel is taking advantage of the privacy to do some indexing. Notebooks per se are usually hard to come by, so Rapunzel drills little holes in stacks of loose leaf, ties them together with twine, and rearranges pages as it suits her to do so every now and again. She has already done the day's chores and has dinner slow-roasting in the oven; she'll make the sauce when Mother's back with the herbs she wants for it.

She finishes rearranging last summer's leaves of paper by topic, ties them up, stacks them in her closet for reference, goes to lean on the windowsill, and contemplates what to do with the remaining hours before Mother returns.

The options - while the oven is spoken for, anyway - are mostly crafts (assorted) and music (her own voice, her guitar, her piccolo, and her xylophone). She has a lot of crafts, really. Mother understands that while Rapunzel doesn't mind being left alone she does mind being left with nothing to do. At this point Rapunzel is reasonably accomplished, at least according to her own aesthetics since she has no peers to compare against, at: rug-hooking and painting and interestingly layered-and-carved candles and embroidery and pottery and beading and knitting and sewing and other things she's come up with to do with the same materials. Half her books are patterns and recipes and sheet music. Most of the tower is space for her to work on projects, except for Mother's rooms and the family room and the kitchen on the bottom and Rapunzel's bedroom at the very top. She sits in a sling of her hair, hooks it at the ceiling over the empty center of the spiral staircase, and lowers herself down. She nearly enters the studio; contemplates the tub of clay and stops; reaches for her guitar where it's propped on the stairs within reach and stops. She does pick up a stray xylophone mallet and toss it towards the corresponding instrument, where it plunks out a middle C before clattering to the floor.

Maybe it's time to pick up another hobby. Mosaics? There's a collection of glazed, broken shards from past pottery projects and dishes that have fallen, maybe enough that she could chip them into smaller pieces and make something of them. She has plaster left. Or at least start an elaborate mixed-media - something.

That doesn't sound interesting either.

She winds up on the bottom floor in the family room where the stairs end. She sighs and picks up one of the ubiquitous combs and starts draping her hair over the furniture so she can get at it all. This is always something to do. It doesn't get remotely as tangled as it would if it weren't magic - it doesn't really tangle at all - but it still looks and behaves best when maintained, and there's a lot of it.

When she has brushed it all out, and gone back through her studios (via the stairs, since she pulled her hair down after her and can't climb it back up) to note what she's low on and should add to Mother's shopping list, and practiced the tricky part of that one sonatina on her piccolo until she manages it correctly all the way through one time, Mother comes home.

Rapunzel goes to the window, hooks her hair around the relevant protrusion, and heaves the rest of it over the edge. Mother hangs on, Rapunzel hauls her up. Regular hair would suffer some damage in the process - Rapunzel has looked at what Mother leaves on her own hairbrush, how easily it'll snap, how often it's split - but Rapunzel's is fine. Mother steps lightly into the room, Rapunzel gathers her hair in again. They hug. Mother sets down the day's shopping.

"I'll go make the sauce for the beef," says Rapunzel, when she identifies which bag has the herbs, and she slides to the ground floor on her hair again to get started.

And she serves dinner, and Mother tells her about her day, and wants to see what Rapunzel has been working on, and likes the piccolo piece but is less impressed by the morning's half-a-sampler. Mother sits down with some tea. Rapunzel hairs her way back upstairs to write, and is called down fifteen minutes later because Mother is feeling "run down".

Rapunzel gets her a comb and sits at her feet and sings. The whole tower brightens. Mother looks much better.

Rapunzel hugs her again, remembers to offer her the shopping list - she's low on white paint, which is a long trip to fetch, but she goes through a lot of it - and she goes upstairs again.

The next day Mother makes sure there's enough food in the house for Rapunzel for the next three days because she's going to get the paint. Rapunzel hugs her again, while they're on the by the window. "I love you very much, dear," Mother says.

"I love you more," recites Rapunzel, smiling a little.

"I love you most."

And off she goes, down to the lawn, letting go of Rapunzel's hair, saddling up the burro, riding into the forest that surrounds the tower.

Rapunzel hauls her hair back up and goes downstairs to make a batch of muffins or something and design a new pair of slippers for Mother, which she'll piece together later. Mother works very hard to keep her supplied and safe in their tower and Rapunzel appreciates it.

There's always something to do.
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Someone climbs in the window at the top of the tower.

He's paying more attention outside than in, because the bottom of the tower is pretty clear on its lack of a viable exit, and this climb is not a climb someone much less limber could make. Is there a floor in there, yes, does it hold weight, yes, good, in he goes.

He realizes his mistake pretty much as soon as he stands up and steps away from the window. It's too clean - there's things - is this someone's bedroom - who the hell lives here, flying forest hermits?
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Someone who lives here is on her way up the stairs holding a fresh muffin. It has cranberries in it.

She opens the door and is far too stunned to react right away.
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The man standing in the middle of the room stops his bewildered turning in circles when the door opens.

"I'm sorry, I didn't know anyone lived here," he says, sounding mildly alarmed about it. "A ruined tower looked like a reasonable place to spend the night - how do you get out of here, is there a secret door? Because I don't think I can make that climb again this soon. It was hard enough on the way up."
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"eep," is the best Rapunzel can manage.

She looks like she wants to run away from him and has some very good reason not to.

Also she has truly improbable amounts of hair.
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"I'm really sorry! Are you okay?"

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"Who are you what are you doing here how did you find me how did you get up here?"

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"My name's Rolan, I'm running away from some people I may have slightly annoyed earlier, I found you completely by accident and I am very surprised about it, and I am a really good climber," he says.

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"Well - you can't be here - so - climb back down and find somewhere else to run away to."

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"I'm not that good a climber," says Rolan. "I need like - half an hour and maybe a snack, if I'm going to do that without falling and breaking my neck. Are you saying there's not a secret door? I remain confused about how you get out of here. Or do you farm mushrooms in the basement or something? This is a fascinating look into the lives of flying forest hermits."

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"Flying f- I don't leave. You are going to leave. Here." She approaches just near enough to thrust her muffin in his direction. "Snack. And half an hour. And then you have to go, you cannot be here."

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"Sure. Okay," he says, gingerly accepting the muffin. "Thank you. What do you mean, you don't leave? I was joking about the mushroom farm. Mostly joking. Do you have a mushroom farm?"

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She jerks back like she thinks he's going to burn her when he's got the muffin. "I mean I don't leave. I - I don't think I had better tell you much of anything."

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"Ooookay. Sure. Do you want me to tell you things? I talk when I'm nervous, you might have noticed, so it's pretty unavoidable if you're going to stick around while I have my snack and my rest - can I sit in one of your chairs please?" He nibbles on the muffin.

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"Thank you."

He goes for the comfy one, because it's closer and the desk chair is tucked in. Sit sit nibble nibble. "This is a really good muffin, did you make this? - I guess the answer to that might come under 'much of anything'. It's still a really good muffin. I am impressed with you and/or your flying forest hermit cooking staff."
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Rapunzel's hand, meet Rapunzel's face.

"Yes, I made it."
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"The flying forest hermit thing," he adds, "in case you're confused, is because when I climbed in here and saw how lived-in it looked, after the ordeal I went through getting up the side of the tower, I wondered who could possibly live here and thought that it might be flying forest hermits. And now I just really like the phrase. Flying forest hermits, kind of catchy, isn't it?" Nom nom muffin.

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"People can't fly," sighs Rapunzel.

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"Well, there goes that explanation. It's probably possible, though. Lots of things are possible. I could fly down from a height like this, if I had a big enough kite and a clear landing space. I did that once. Wouldn't want to try it in this forest, though, that's a good way to get stuck in a tree and laughed at by squirrels."

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"Do squirrels laugh?"
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"I have, in the past, imagined that squirrels were laughing at me. It's hard to tell if they really were or not. I was laughing at me, though, and the squirrels were there, and they were looking at me in what I might describe as a funny way. This is a different story from the hang gliding experiment, by the way, the hang gliding experiment worked like a charm, the laughing squirrels was when I shipwrecked on the bank of a very calm river in a large wheelbarrow full of chestnuts." He illustrates this with his hand, sailing it through the air in a leisurely way and then tipping it over sharply as though it encountered some unseen obstacle. "Clonk. In my defense, it was my first time operating a water vessel of any kind, and wheelbarrows aren't exactly known for their riverworthiness. I guess the chestnuts gave the squirrels a reason to be hanging around other than the entertainment value of watching the tall human fail at things."

Nibble nibble muffin.
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Rapunzel has almost no idea what to make of this person.

"Oh," she manages.
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"Haven't you ever seen a squirrel? I guess if you never leave the tower you might not have. They have very fluffy tails. I bet they'd be nice to pet if you found a friendly one, but I've never found a squirrel that friendly so I can't know for sure. I did pet a mouse once. Some kid had a pet mouse and they were sitting in the town square together, it was the most adorable thing. The mouse's name was Bubbles. I forgot to ask why. Can't even remember what town it was. Might have been near the capital, but I wouldn't swear to that in a court of law."

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"Sometimes squirrels climb the ivy. You're very talkative."

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"Yes I am!" he agrees. "I'm not like this all the time, it's kind of a nerves thing. Still adjusting to the fact that the abandoned tower is inhabited by a non-flying forest hermit." Muffin muffin.

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