Jingo (39 page)

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Authors: Terry Pratchett

Tags: #Fantasy:Humour

BOOK: Jingo
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“Really? Fascinating. And to whom will you show this proof, Sir Samuel?”

“We’ll have to find a court.”

“Intriguing. A court in Ankh-Morpork, perhaps? Or a court here?”

“Someone told me that the world watches,” said Vimes.

There was silence except for the muffled sounds of Carrot, outside, and the occasional buzz of a fly.

“…
bingeley-bingeley beep
…” The Dis-organizer’s voice had lost its chirpy little edge, and sounded sleepy and bewildered.

Heads turned.

“…
Seven eh em…Organize Defenders at River Gate…Seven twenty-five…Hand-to-Hand Fighting in Peach Pie Street…Seven forty-eight eight eight…Rally Survivors in Sator Square…Things To Do Today: Build Build Build Barricades
…”

He was aware of surreptitious movement behind him, and then slight pressure. Ahmed was standing back to back with him.

“What is that thing talking about?”

“Search me. Sounds like it’s in a different world, doesn’t it…?”

He could feel events racing toward a distant wall. Sweat filled his eyes. He couldn’t remember when he’d last had a proper sleep. His legs twinged. His arms ached, pulled down by the heavy bow.

“…
bingeley…Eight oh two eh em, Death of Corporal Littlebottombottom…Eight oh three eh em…Death of Sergeant Detritus…Eight oh threethreethree eh em and seven seconds seconds…Death of Constable Visit…Eight oh three eh em and nineninenine seconds…Death of death of death of
…”

“They say that in Ankh-Morpork one of your ancestors killed a king,” said the Prince. “And he also came to no good end.”

Vimes wasn’t listening.

“…
Death of Constable Dorfl…Eight oh three eh em and fourteenteenteen seconds
…”

The figure in the throne seemed to take up the whole world.

“…
Death of Captain Carrot Ironfoundersson…beep
…”

And Vimes thought:
I nearly didn’t come. I nearly stayed in Ankh-Morpork
.

He had always wondered how Old Stoneface had felt, that frosty morning when he picked up the axe that had no legal blessing because the King wouldn’t recognize a court even if a jury could be found, that frosty morning when he prepared to sever what people thought was a link between men and deity—

“…
beep…Things To Do Today Today Today: Die
…”

The sensation flowed into his veins like fresh warm blood. It was the feeling that you got when the law ran out, and you looked into a mocking face on the other side of it and you decided that you couldn’t go on living if you did not step over the line and do one clean thing—

There was shouting outside. He blinked away the sweat.

“Ah…Commander Vimes…” said a voice somewhere back over the border.

He kept his aching gaze sighted along the bow. “Yes?”

A hand darted down and grabbed the arrow out of its groove. Vimes blinked. His finger automatically squeezed the trigger. The string slamed back with a
thunk
. And the look on the Prince’s face, he knew, would keep him warm on cold nights, if there were ever cold nights again.

He’d heard them all die. But they
weren’t
dead. And yet the damn thing had sounded so…accurate…

Lord Vetinari dropped the arrow fastidiously, like a society lady who has had to handle something sticky.

“Well done, Vimes. I see you’ve got the donkey up the minaret. Good morning, gentlemen.” He gave the company a happy smile. “I see I am not too late.”

“Vetinari?” said Rust, seeming to wake up. “What are you doing here? This is a battlefield—”

“I wonder.” The Patrician gave him a very brief smile of his very own. “Outside there seem to be a lot of men sitting around. Many of them seem to be having what I believe is known in military parlance as a brew-up. And Captain Carrot is organizing a football match.”

“He’s
what
?” said Vimes, lowering the bow. Suddenly the world had to be real again. If Carrot was doing something as dumb as that, things were normal.

“Quite a large number of fouls so far, I’m afraid. But I wouldn’t call it a battlefield.”

“Who’s winning?”

“Ankh-Morpork, I believe. By two hacked shins and a broken nose.”

For the first time in ages Vimes felt a little pang of patriotism. Everything else in life was in the privy, but when it came to gouging and kicking he knew which side he was on.

“Besides,” Vetinari went on, “I believe quite a large number of people are technically under arrest. And clearly a state of war is not, in practical fact, in being. It is merely a state of football. Therefore, I believe, I am, shall we say…back. Excuse me, sire, but this won’t take a moment.”

He held up a metal cylinder and began to unscrew the end.

For some reason Vimes felt inclined to take a few steps away from it. “What’s that?”

“I thought this might become necessary,” said Vetinari. “It took some preparation, but I am certain it will work. I hope they’re readable. We did our best to keep the damp off them.”

A thick roll of paper dropped out on to the floor.

“Commander, have you nothing you should be doing?” he added. “Refereeing, perhaps?”

Vimes picked up the roll and read the first few lines.

“Whereas…heretofore, etc., etc…. City of Ankh-Morpork…
Surrender
?”

“What?” said Rust and the Prince together.

“Yes, surrender,” said Vetinari cheerfully. “A little piece of paper and it’s all over. I think you’ll find it all in order.”

“You can’t—” Rust began.

“You can’t—” said the Prince.

“Unconditionally?” said General Ashal sharply.

“Yes, I think so,” said Vetinari. “We give up all claim to Leshp in favor of Klatch, we withdraw all troops from Klatch and our citizens from the island, and as for reparations…shall we say a quarter of a million dollars? Plus various favorable trade arrangements, most-favored nation status and so on and so on. It’s all here. Feel free to read it at your leisure.”

He passed the document over the head of the Prince and into the hands of the general, who flicked through the pages.

“But we haven’t
got
—” Vimes began. Perhaps I
did
get killed, he thought. I’m on the other side, or someone hit me very hard on the head and this is all some kind of mirage—

“It’s a forgery!” snapped the Prince. “It’s a trick!”

“Well, sire, this man certainly does appear to be Lord Vetinari and these do seem to be the official seals of Ankh-Morpork,” said the general. “‘Whereas…whereby…without prejudice…ratification within four days…way of trade’…yes, this does, I have to say, look genuine.”

“I won’t accept it!”

“I see, sire. It does, though, appear to cover all the points which in your speech last week you—”

“I
certainly
wouldn’t accept it!” Rust shouted. He waved a finger under Vetinari’s nose. “You’ll be banished for this!”

But we haven’t
got
that money, Vimes repeated, but this time to himself. We’re a very rich city, but we haven’t got any actual money. The wealth of Ankh-Morpork is in its people, we’re told. And you couldn’t remove it with big pliers.

He felt the wind change.

And Vetinari watching him.

And there was something about General Ashal. A certain hunger…

“I agree with Rust,” he said. “This is dragging the good name of Ankh-Morpork in the mud.” To his mild surprise he managed to say that without smiling.

“We lose nothing, sire,” General Ashal insisted. “They withdraw from Klatch and Leshp—”

“Damned if we will!” screamed Lord Rust.

“Right! And have everyone know we’ve been
beaten
?” said Vimes. “
Outwitted
?”

He looked at the Prince, whose gaze was hunting from man to man, but occasionally staring at nothing, as if he was watching some inner vision.

“A quarter of a million is not enough,” the Prince said.

Lord Vetinari shrugged. “We can discuss it.”

“There is much that I need to buy.”

“Things of a sharp metallic nature, no doubt,” said Vetinari. “Of course, if we are talking about goods rather than money, there is room for…flexibility…”

And now we’re going to arm him, too, Vimes thought.

“You’ll be out of the city in a week!” Rust screamed.

Vimes thought the general smiled briefly. Ankh-Morpork without Vetinari…ruled by people like Rust. His future was looking bright indeed.

“The surrender
will
need to be ratified and formally witnessed, however,” said Ashal.

“May I suggest Ankh-Morpork?” said Lord Vetinari.

“No. On neutral territory, of course,” said the general.

“But where, between Ankh-Morpork and Klatch, is there such a thing?” said Vetinari.

“I suppose…there is Leshp,” said the general thoughtfully.

“What a good idea,” said the Patrician. “That would not have occurred to me.”

“The place is ours anyway!” snapped the Prince.


Will
be, sire. Will be,” said the general soothingly. “We will take possession. Quite legally. While the world watches.”

“And that’s it? What about my arrest?” said Vimes. “I’m not going to—”

“These are matters of state,” said Vetinari. “And there are…diplomatic considerations. I am afraid the good ordering of international affairs cannot hinge upon your concerns over the doings of one man.”

Once again Vimes felt that the words he was hearing were not the words that were being said.

“I won’t—” he began.

“There are larger issues here.”

“But—”

“Sterling work, nevertheless.”

“There are big crimes and little crimes, is that it?” said Vimes.

“Why don’t you take some well-earned rest, Sir Samuel? You are,” Vetinari flashed one of his lightning-fast smiles, “a man of action. You deal in swords, and chases, and facts. Now, alas, it is the time for the men of words, who deal in promises and mistrust and opinions. For you the war is over. Enjoy the sunshine. I trust we shall all be returning home shortly. I would like you to stay, Lord Rust…”

Vimes realized that he’d been switched off. He spun round and marched out of the tent.

Ahmed followed him. “That’s your master, is it?”

“No! He’s just the man who pays my wages!”

“Often hard to know the difference,” said Ahmed sympathetically.

Vimes sat down on the sand. He wasn’t certain how he’d been managing to stand up. There was some kind of a future now. He hadn’t the faintest idea what was in it, but there
was
one. There hadn’t been one five minutes ago. He wanted to talk now. That way, he didn’t have to think about the Dis-organizer’s death roll. It had sounded so…
accurate

“What’s going to happen to you?” he said, to drive the thought out of his mind. “When this is over, I mean.
Your
boss isn’t going to be pleased with you.”

“Oh, the desert can swallow me.”

“He’ll send people after you. He looks the type.”

“The desert will swallow them.”

“Without chewing?”

“Believe it.”

“It shouldn’t have to be like this!” Vimes shouted, at the sky in general. “You know? Sometimes I
dream
that we could deal with the big crimes, that we could make a law for countries and not just for people, and people like him would have—”

Ahmed pulled him upright and patted him on the shoulder.

“I know how it is,” he said. “I dream, too.”

“You do?”

“Yes. Generally of fish.”

There was a roar from the crowd.

“Someone’s scored a convincing foul, by the sound of it,” said Vimes.

They slid and staggered up the side of a dune, and watched.

Someone broke from the scrum and, punching and kicking, staggered toward the Klatchian goal.

“Isn’t that man your butler?” said Ahmed.

“Yes.”

“One of your soldiers said he bit a man’s nose off.”

Vimes shrugged. “He’s got a very pointed look if I don’t use the sugar tongs, I know that.”

A white figure marched authoritatively through the mill of players, blowing a whistle.

“And that man, I believe, is your king.”

“No.”

“Really? Then I am Queen Punjitrum of Sumtri.”

“Carrot’s a copper, same as me.”

“A man like that could inspire a handful of broken men to conquer a country.”

“Fine. Just so long as he does it on his day off.”

“And he too takes orders from you? You are a remarkable man, Sir Samuel. But you would not, I think, have killed the Prince.”

“No. But you’d have killed me if I had.”

“Oh, yes. Flagrant murder in front of witnesses. I am, after all, a copper.”

They’d reached the camels. One looked round as Ahmed prepared to mount, thought better of spitting at him, and hit Vimes instead. With great precision.

Ahmed looked back at the footballers.

“Up in Klatchistan the nomads play a game very similar to that,” he said. “But on horseback. The aim is to get the object around the goal.”

“Object?”

“Probably best just to think of it as an ‘object,’ Sir Samuel. And now, I think, I shall head that way. There are thieves in the mountains. The air is clear up there. As you know, there is always work for policemen.”

“You thinking of returning to Ankh-Morpork at any time?”

“You’d like to see me there, Sir Samuel?”

“It’s an open city. But be sure to call in at Pseudopolis Yard when you arrive.”

“Ah, and we can reminisce about old times.”

“No. So you can hand over that sword. We’d give you a receipt and you can pick it up when you leave.”

“I’d take some persuading, Sir Samuel.”

“Oh, I think I’d only ask once.”

Ahmed laughed, nodded at Vimes and rode away.

For a few minutes he was a shape at the base of a column of dust, and then a shifting dot in the heat haze, and then the desert swallowed him.

The day wore on. Various Klatchian officials and some of the Ankh-Morpork people were summoned to the tent. Vimes wandered close to it a few times and heard the sound of voices raised in dispute.

Meanwhile, the armies dug in. Someone had already erected a crude signpost, its arms pointing to various soldiers’ homes. Since these were all in part of Ankh-Morpork the arms all pointed exactly the same way.

He found most of the Watch sitting out of the wind, while a wizened Klatchian woman cooked quite a complicated meal over a small fire. They all seemed to be fully alive, with the usual slight question mark in the case of Reg Shoe.

“Where’ve you been, Sergeant Colon?” said Vimes.

“Been sworn to secrecy about that, sir. By his lordship.”

“Right.” Vimes didn’t press the point. Getting information out of Colon was like getting water out of a flannel. It could wait. “And Nobby?”

“Right here, sir!” The wizened woman saluted in a clash of bangles.

“That’s
you
?”

“Yessir! Doing the dirty work as per the woman’s role in life, sir, despite the fact that there is less senior watchmen present, sir!”

“Now then, Nobby,” said Colon. “Cheery can’t cook, we can’t let Reg do it because bits fall into the pan, and Angua—”

“—doesn’t do cookery,” said Angua. She was lying back on a rock with her eyes closed. The rock was the slumbering shape of Detritus.

“Anyway, you just started doing the cooking like you was expecting to have to do it,” said Colon.

“Kebab, sir?” said Nobby. “There’s plenty.”

“You certainly got a lot of food from somewhere,” said Vimes.

“Klatchian quartermaster, sir,” said Nobby, grinning beneath his veil. “Used my sexual wiles on him, sir.”

Vimes’s kebab stopped halfway to his mouth and dripped lamb fat on to his legs. He saw Angua’s eyes slam open and stare in horror at the sky.

“I told him I’d take my clothes off and scream if he didn’t give me some grub, sir.”

“That’d scare the daylights out of me, sure enough,” said Vimes. He saw Angua breathe out again.

“Yeah, I reckon if I played my cards right I could be one of them fatal femmies,” said Nobby. “I’ve only got to wink at a man and he runs a mile. Could be useful, that.”

“I
told
him he could change back into his uniform, but he says he feels more comfortable like this,” whispered Colon to Vimes. “I’m getting a bit worried, to tell you the truth.”

I can’t handle this, Vimes thought. This isn’t in the book of rules.

“Er…how can I explain this…?” he began.

“I don’t want any of them in-you-endoes,” said Nobby. “It’s a good idea to walk a mile in someone else’s shoes, that’s all I’m saying.”

“Well, so long as it’s just sh—”

“I’ve just been gettin’ in touch with my softer side, all right? Seein’ the other man’s point of view, sort of thing, even if he’s a woman.”

He looked at their faces and waved his hands vaguely. “All right, all right, I’ll put my uniform on after I’ve tidied up around the camp. Will that make you all happy?”

“Something smells nice!”

Carrot ran up, bouncing his football. He’d stripped to his waist. The whistle bounced on its string around his neck.

“I’ve declared half-time,” he said, sitting down. “So I’ve sent some of the lads into Gebra to get four thousand oranges. Shortly the combined Ankh-Morpork regimental bands will put on a display of counter-marching while playing a selection of military favorites.”

“Have they
practiced
counter-marching?” said Angua.

“I don’t think so.”

“Should be good, then.”

“Carrot,” said Vimes, “I don’t wish to pry, but how, in the middle of a desert, did you find a football?” And the voice in the back of his mind insisted: you heard him die, you heard them all die…somewhere else.

“Oh, these days I carry a deflated one in my pack, sir. A very pacifying object, a football. Are you all right, sir?”

“Eh? What? Oh. Yes. Just a bit…tired. So who’s winning?” Vimes patted his pockets, and found his last cigar.

“It’s broadly speaking a tie, sir. I had to send four hundred and seventy-three men off, though. Klatch is now well ahead on fouls, I’m sorry to say.”

“Sport as a substitute for war, eh?” said Vimes. He rootled in the ashes of Nobby’s fire and pulled out a half-consumed…well, it helped to think of it as a desert coal.

Carrot gave him a solemn look. “Yes, sir. No one’s using weapons. And have you noticed how the Klatchian army is getting smaller? Some of the chiefs from distant parts are taking their men away. They say there’s no point in staying if there’s not going to be a war. I don’t think they really wanted to be here in any case, to tell you the truth. And I don’t think it’s going to be easy to get them to come back—”

There was shouting behind them. Men were coming out of the tent, arguing. Lord Rust was among them. He looked around, talking to his companions. Then he spotted Vimes and rocketed furiously toward him.

“Vimes!”

Vimes looked up, hand halfway to his cigar.

“We would have won, you know,” growled Rust. “We would have won! But we were betrayed on the brink of success!”

Vimes stared at him.

“And it’s
your
fault, Vimes! We’ll be the laughingstock of Klatch! You know the value these people put on face, and we won’t have any! Vetinari is
finished
! And so are you! And so is your stupid, mongrel,
cowardly
Watch! What do you say to that, Vimes? Eh?”

The watchmen sat like statues, waiting for Vimes to say something. Or even move.

“Eh? Vimes?”

Rust sniffed. “What’s that smell?”

Vimes slowly shifted his gaze to his fingers. Smoke was rising. There was a faint sizzling.

He stood up and brought his fingers up in front of Rust’s face.


Take it
,” he said.

“That’s…just some trick…”

“Take it,” said Vimes.

Mesmerized, Rust licked his fingers and gingerly took the ember. “It doesn’t hurt—”

“Yes, it does,” said Vimes.

“In fact it—Aargh!”

Rust jumped back, dropped the ember and sucked his blistered fingers.

“The trick is not to mind that it hurts,” said Vimes. “Now go away.”

“You won’t last long,” Rust sneered. “You wait until we’re back in the city. You just wait.” He strode off, holding his stricken hand.

Vimes went back and sat down by the fire. After a while he said: “Where’s he gone now?”

“Back to the lines, sir. I think he’s ordering the men home.”

“Can he see us?”

“No.”

“You sure?”

“There’s too many people in the way, sir.”

“You’re quite sure?”

“Not unless he can see through camels, sir.”

“Good.” Vimes stuck his fingers in his mouth. Sweat was pouring down his face. “Damn damn damn! Has anyone got any cold water?”

Captain Jenkins had got his ship afloat again. It had taken a lot of digging, and some careful work with balks of timber and the assistance of a Klatchian captain who had decided not to let patriotism stand in the way of profit.

He and his crew were resting on the shore when a greeting rang out from over them.

He squinted into the sun.

“That…that can’t be Vimes, can it?”

The crew stared.

“Let’s get aboard right
now
!”

A figure started down the face of the dune. It moved very fast, much faster than a man could run on the shifting sand, and moved in a zig-zag fashion. As it drew nearer, it turned out to be a man standing on a shield.

It slid to a halt a few feet away from the astonished Jenkins.

“Good of you to wait, captain!” said Carrot. “Very many thanks! The others will be down in a minute.”

Jenkins looked back to the top of the dune. There were other, darker figures there now.

“Those are D’regs!” he shouted.

“Oh, yes. Lovely people. Have you met them at all?”

Jenkins stared at Carrot. “Did you
win
?” he said.

“Oh, yes. On penalties, in the end.”

Green-blue light filtered through the tiny windows of the Boat.

Lord Vetinari pulled the steering levers until he was pretty certain that they were heading toward a suitable ship and said:

“What is it I can smell, Sergeant Colon?”

“It’s Bet—It’s Nobby, sir,” said Colon, pedaling industriously.

“Corporal Nobbs?”

Nobby almost blushed. “I bought a bottle of scent, sir. For my young lady.”

Lord Vetinari coughed. “What exactly do you mean by ‘your young lady’?” he said.

“Well, for when I get one,” said Nobby.

“Ah.” Even Lord Vetinari sounded relieved.

“On account of I expect I shall now, me having fully explored my sexual nature and now feeling fully comfortable with myself,” said Nobby.

“You feel comfortable with yourself?”

“Yessir!” said Nobby happily.

“And when you find this lucky lady, you will give her this bottle of—”

“’s called ‘Kasbah Nights,’ sir.”

“Of course. Very…
floral
, isn’t it?”

“Yessir. That’s ’cos of the jasmine and rare ungulants in it, sir.”

“And yet at the same time curiously…
penetrative
.”

Nobby grinned. “Good value for money, sir. A little goes a long way.”

“Not far enough, possibly?”

But Nobby rusted even irony. “I got it in the same shop that sarge got the hump, sir.”

“Ah…yes.”

There wasn’t very much space in the Boat, and most of it was taken up with Sergeant Colon’s souvenirs. He’d been allowed a brief shopping expedition “to take home something for the wife, sir, otherwise I’ll never hear the last of it.”

“Mrs. Colon will like a stuffed camel hump, will she, sergeant?” said the Patrician doubtfully.

“Yessir. She can put things on it, sir.”

“And the set of nested brass tables?”

“To put things on, sir.”

“And the”—there was a clanking—“set of goat bells, ornamental coffee pot, miniature camel saddle and this…strange glass tube with little bands of different colored sand in it…what are these for?”

“Conversation pieces, sir.”

“You mean people will say things like ‘What are they for?’, do you?”

Sergeant Colon looked pleased with himself.

“See, sir? We’re talking about ’em already.”

“Remarkable.”

Sergeant Colon coughed and indicated with a tilt of his head the hunched figure of Leonard, who was sitting in the stern with his head in his hands.

“He’s a bit quiet, sir,” he whispered. “Can’t seem to get a word out of him.”

“He has a lot on his mind,” said the Patrician.

The watchmen pedaled onward for a while, but the close confines of the Boat encouraged a confidentiality that would never have been found on land.

“Sorry to hear you’re getting the sack, sir,” said Colon.

“Really,” said Lord Vetinari.

“You’d definitely get my vote, if we had elections.”

“Capital.”

“I think people
want
the thumbscrew of firm government, myself.”

“Good.”

“Your predecessor, Lord Snapcase, now he
was
mental. But, like I’ve always said, people know where they stand with Lord Vetinari…”

“Well done.”

“They might not
like
where they’re standing, of course…”

Lord Vetinari looked up. They were under a boat now and it seemed to be going in the right direction. He steered the Boat until he heard the
thunk
of hull hitting hull, and gave the auger a few turns.

“Am I being sacked, sergeant?” he said, sitting back.

“Well, eh, I heard Lord Rust’s people say that if you rat…rat…”

“Ratify,” said Lord Vetinari.

“Yeah, if you
ratify
that surrender next week, they’ll get you exiled, sir.”

“A week is a long time in politics, sergeant.”

Colon’s face widened in what he thought of as a knowing grin. He tapped the side of his nose.

“Ah,
politics
,” he said. “Ah, you should’ve
said
.”

“Yeah, they’ll laugh at the other foot then, eh?” said Nobby.

“Got some secret plan, I’ll be bound,” said Colon. “You know where the chicken is all right.”

“I can see there’s no fooling such skilled observers of the carnival that is life,” said Lord Vetinari. “Yes, indeed, there is something I intend to do.”

He adjusted the position of the camel-hump pouffe, which in fact smelled of goat and was beginning to leak sand, and lay back.

“I’m going to do nothing. Wake me up if anything interesting happens.”

Nautical things happened. The wind spun about so much that a weathercock might as well be harnessed to grinding corn. At one point there was a fall of anchovies.

And Commander Vimes tried to sleep. Jenkins showed him a hammock, and Vimes realized that this was another sheep’s eyeball. No one could possibly sleep in something like that. Sailors probably kept them up for show and had real beds tucked away somewhere.

He tried to make himself comfortable in the hold, and dozed while the others talked in the corner. They were very politely keeping out of his way.

“—ordship wouldn’t give the whole thing away, would he? What were we fighting for?”

“He’ll have a hard job hanging on to the job after this, that’s for sure. It’s dragging the good name of Ankh-Morpork in the mud, like Mr. Vimes said.”

“For Ankh-Morpork, mud is
up
.” That was Angua.

“On der other han’, everyone is still breathin’.” That was Detritus.

“That’s a vitalist remark—”

“Sorry, Reg. What you scratchin’ for?”

“I think I picked up a filthy foreign disease.”

“Sorry?” Angua again. “What can a
zombie
catch?”

“Don’t like to say…”

“You’re talking to someone who knows every brand of flea powder they sell in Ankh-Morpork, Reg.”

“Oh, if you must know…Mice, miss. It’s shameful. I keep myself clean, but they just find a way—”

“Have you tried everything?”

“Excepting ferrets.”

“If his lordship goes, who’ll take over?” That was Cheery. “Lord Rust?”

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