Summary of Chapter 1256 from Hitched & Hitched Again: A Comedy of Marital Mayhem
Chapter 1256 marks a crucial moment in Aurora Montgomery’s Romance novel, Hitched & Hitched Again: A Comedy of Marital Mayhem. This chapter blends tension, emotion, and plot progression to deliver a memorable reading experience — one that keeps readers eagerly turning the page.
The animals in the dense forest suddenly scattered in all directions, panicked and screeching as if something terrible had just happened.
Birds exploded out of the trees, wings flapping frantically as they shot up toward the sky.
It was like something monstrous had just crashed into the woods—a predator, a disaster, something that sent every living thing running.
Tarquin, Elliot, Evan, and Elijah all frowned in unison, tense and alert.
Even the big guy with the scarred face—usually impossible to rattle—was glancing around warily, brows knit.
Elysia pulled Emmett and Baby close, her whole body stiff with worry.
The air felt charged with danger, every shadow hiding a possible threat.
Suddenly—thwup!
A muffled gunshot echoed through the forest. Someone was using a silencer.
A flash of color tumbled from above—a brilliantly plumed bird dropped out of the sky and landed right at their feet.
Its feathers were stunning, all bright blues and reds and yellows, the kind you’d only see in rare nature documentaries. But its head... its head was just gone. A bloody mess, shot clean through.
Everyone stared, eyes wide with shock.
Baby whimpered and squeezed Tarquin’s neck, burying her face so she didn’t have to see.
Elysia’s jaw dropped, panic written all over her face.
There was more movement in the distance. Tarquin’s eyes narrowed. “We need to hide. Now.”
If the bird had been shot, it meant someone else was close—and armed.
Behind them, a slope covered with tall, wild grass offered the perfect place to duck out of sight.
Tarquin hustled Elysia and the kids behind the grass, keeping close.
The scar-faced guy moved like a ghost, scrambling up the nearest tree and vanishing into the leaves.
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