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Authors: Pippa Dacosta

Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Literature & Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy

BOOK: Darkest Before Dawn
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“I get my city back.” He smiled a broad wolfish smile. “I have no desire to see this world burn. I’m content with playing these humans for the fools they are. Boston is mine, and I will not suffer any demon, prince or otherwise, who dare attempt to steal what is mine.”

That sure sounded like the Akil I knew. I slumped against the couch, suddenly bone-tired. The news report, the plea from Adam to help the Institute, Stefan’s breathless cry for help, and Akil telling me I’m somehow caught in the middle of it all were too much. “And Stefan? He’s really a prince?”

Akil straightened, squaring his shoulders. “Impossibly, yes.”

“You knew?”

“I did.”

“For a long time?” I sighed as he nodded. “Why didn’t you tell me?”

“He’s beyond saving, Muse. He became prince not long after he believed he’d killed you. From what I understand, he laid waste to parts of the netherworld, attracting the attention of the princes. He made short work of Wrath. It should not be possible, a half blood as a prince...” He sucked in a breath, hissing air through his teeth. “Once Wrath fell, my brethren retreated. The damage was done. Had I told you, you’d have gone to him, and he’d have killed you again. Wrath is not just a name, Muse. It’s a title. Wrath is his purpose. There’s nothing you can do for him, but you can help stop the princes. Stefan will be among them, should he choose to be.”

No, he wouldn’t. He’d come to me, asking for help. He knew what he was, but he was still in there—that kiss hadn’t been cold—and he needed me. I was sure of it. “Damn, Akil, this is a lot to wrap my head around. I need space to think.”

“While you do that, may I suggest you help your former colleagues patrol the streets? The princes have begun summoning their lesser cousins. Their presence will rouse chaos, and where chaos reigns, the remaining princes will follow. Should chaos swell beyond control here, the veil will fall. Control the lesser demons, stem the flow, and buy yourselves time to regroup because, make no mistake, when the princes arrive, they will destroy Boston, and they won’t stop at one city.”

Stopping lesser demons was something I was definitely capable of. “And what are you going to do? Go and find this phantom King?”

He smirked. “You’ve already met him.”

“I’m pretty sure I’d remember meeting the King of Hell. Forked tail, cloven hooves, goat legs, plays the fiddle?” Akil chuckled. “You’re not going to tell me, are you?”

“No. While he is weak, it is better you do not know.”

“You don’t trust me?” I almost laughed when he frowned. “That’s rich, coming from the Master of Lies.” I snorted, then abruptly asked, “Is it you?”

“No. Again. You appear to be having difficulty hearing the truth.”

“That’s because, coming from you, truth and lies, right and wrong, they all sound the same.”

“They are all a matter of perspective.”

“Urgh...” I groaned. “I think I liked it better when you told me everything and nothing. Can we go back to that?”

“We are both too much changed to return to how things were.”

I stood and raked my hands through my hair. “You know what would be handy right now? A half blood who could kill princes.” I clicked my fingers. “Oh damn, you just sacrificed the best weapon we had against them.” Scrunching my nose up, I asked, “Whose side are you on again?”

He gave me a sideways glance, arched an eyebrow, and twitched his lips. “Not the best weapon by far. I have that right here.”

“Yeah, well, this blunt weapon of mass destruction is going back to Boston to find Stefan. The end of the world can wait. I can drive there, or you can take me back right now so I can at least try to convince the Prince of Wrath to fight on our side.”

“Stefan is beyond listening to reason. His demon rules him.”

“He’ll make that call.”

“I don’t like it.” A flicker of fire touched his eyes.

“I don’t like you much either, but I can’t seem to get rid of you, so how about we stop talking and start doing?”

Akil eyed me cautiously. “Stefan and I... The Prince of Wrath will not stop until his debts are paid.” I read that as it was intended. Stefan would kill Akil. Stefan was more powerful with the weight of another world behind him. He had the potential, the motive, and no reason not to. When Akil and Stefan threw down, I had no doubt who would walk away. Stefan’s only weakness was his mortality. I swallowed and denied those thoughts purchase. “Then stay out of his way, at least until I can talk to him.”

Akil’s eyes sparkled while at the same time managing to rake me with a sympathetic gaze. “You can’t save half bloods. The trappings and foibles of your humanity provide you with great strengths but also insurmountable weaknesses.”

“Yeah, yeah, half bloods don’t get happy endings. I get it. I’ve never been one to follow the rules.” I flashed him a bright smile and held out my hand. “Take me back.”

He glowered at my outstretched hand and made no move to take it. “The safest place for you is here.”

“It’s about time you trusted me, Akil. Isn’t this what it’s all been about? What were you keeping me for, if not to use against your enemies?”

His gaze softened. “Once, yes. Now I find myself in the alarming situation of fearing I may lose you again and caring.”

I instantly shoved that unnerving revelation to the back of my mind, ramming it down into the existing mental box marked
‘deal with this shit later.’
I could not even begin to consider what his words meant. Not with everything else crowding my head.

I stood, grabbed his hand, and met his curiously pained expression. “Surely the Prince of Greed and the Mother of Destruction can kick some demon-ass back to the netherworld. It might mess up your street-cred, but I’m sure an ego the size of yours can take it. Once we’ve averted disaster, you can go back to being the slippery, back-stabbing son-of-a-bitch I know so well.”

He allowed himself a faint smile. “Boston is mine. I protect what is mine with every weapon at my disposal. No member of the Dark Court will take that which I possess.” The fierceness behind his words wasn’t lost on me.

“Good. Hold onto that thought.” The enemy of my enemy was my friend, and right then, Akil was the only friend I had. It wouldn’t last. He wanted me so he could pry Damien out of my soul, take his place, and wield the weapon he’d been fashioning for himself since he’d first seen me all those years ago. Words like ‘love’ and ‘care’ were cheapened when falling from his lips. He was the spider in the web, but I saw him now.

He looked askance at me, narrowing his eyes. He was an ageless chaos demon, and he wasn’t buying my thinly veiled enthusiasm. “Why do I feel as though I’m the one making a deal with a devil?” He closed his fingers around mine.

I flashed him a sharp-toothed smile. And now we were equal.

Epilogue

I
NSTITUTE CONFIDENTIAL SUBJECT REPORT

FAO: VP Sabine Sturgill, New York Hub. Source: Adam Harper, HO, Boston Hub.

OPERATION TYPHON UPDATE

(Previous file destroyed due to security breach).

SUBJECT EPSILON

a.k.a. Dawn.

STATUS
:
Contained & holding.

O
peration Typhon progresses
despite the recent destruction of our Boston hub. We are now in possession of Subject Epsilon, a.k.a. Dawn. Regrettably, there were unavoidable casualties, due in part to how we acquired her. All necessary. Epsilon is alive and securely contained on site at the Middlesex Fells facility. From various reports by field Enforcer, David Ryder, Epsilon exhibits an element as yet untapped, but which could prove vital if Class A demons do breach the veil, as reports suggest. While demon chatter claims Subject Beta (Muse) terminated the Prince of Envy, David Ryder has confirmed Epsilon was responsible. Epsilon has the potential to be an invaluable asset. Her detainment is of the utmost importance. Her current status must remain confidential.
Her continued existence is vehemently denied.

Note:
David Ryder is aware Epsilon lives. This was an unfortunate necessity as Enforcer Ryder played a large part in her capture. While his devotion and commitment to our cause continues to be exemplary, it may be necessary to apply emotional pressure. I advise a trace be planted among his estranged family should his devotion lapse.

S
UBJECT GAMMA

STATUS: Contained & holding. No change.

SUBJECT DELTA

STATUS: Contained & holding. No change.

S
UBJECT BETA – Muse
, Charlie Henderson.

STATUS:
Consistently volatile and unpredictable. Borderline demon. Beta’s allegiances have yet to be proven. She has the potential to be a valuable ally, but her relationship with the Prince of Greed is undesirable. She will cooperate while she believes she is in control, but her actions of late border on needing a termination order. If it were not for her connections in the netherworld, we would have allowed her to perish at Subject Alpha’s (Stefan Harper’s) hand. Demon chatter indicates her father, Asmodeus, has shown an interest in acquiring her. She is currently under his ‘protection.’ This makes her useful, and invulnerable to all but her father. We will continue to rally Beta to our cause and utilize her connections among the demon hierarchy. However, should she lose control of her demon—which I believe to be an imminent threat—a termination order will be issued.

Note: Demon chatter refers to Beta as the Mother of Destruction. This title is not to be dismissed as idle gossip. I suspect there are events in her recent past of which we are unaware. These events have increased her standing among demons. I strongly advise Enforcers focus on extracting the meaning behind this recent shift in Beta’s status.

S
UBJECT ALPHA – Stefan Harper
.

STATUS:
Failed.
Termination order in effect.

Note: Sabine, I am perfectly capable of neutralizing the threat Subject Alpha poses. I have no emotional connection to my son. Thank you for your offer, but your assistance, while of course appreciated, is not necessary. Subject Alpha will be terminated.

SIGNED: Adam Harper.

END REPORT

T
he Veil Series
continues in Book #4 Drowning In The Dark, coming early 2015.

I
f you enjoyed
Darkest Before Dawn please take a few moments to leave a review on
Amazon by clicking here
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R
ead
on for an exclusive scene from Stefan’s point of view, and for an excerpt from Drowning In The Dark #4 The Veil series.

Darkest Before Dawn Stefan Bonus Scene

D
arkest Before Dawn Bonus Scene
– A snippet from the ‘lakehouse kitchen scene’ as told from Stefan’s point of view. Also available on The Veil Series website
here
.

S
he burns
. Every part of me, each infinitesimal molecule which binds demon to human, recoils, and yet I want… more. I watch. Time is a brittle frozen thing, captured and halted in my hands. I see through a gauze of ice and witness all that she is, all she will be. A halfling. As am I. Yet even half-a-thing holds power, moreso, for the passion with which it seeks its missing piece, its opposite. I reach out a hand, pushing against the blanket of heat, denying pain its purchase. Fear burns bright in her wide eyes. She sees demon, hardened by ice. I see her. Muse. My contradiction, my opposite. Even as the proximity of her repels, I seek her embrace. I touch her face, skip my fingers down her cheek. She hisses; turns away, but does not run. Her demon wants. So does she. These thoughts, they are wrong. These desires, they will distract. She will devastate. I know all of this, I see it all in her eyes, but still I cannot pull away. Ice seeks to smother her fire. My element surges, hungry and eager to quash her threat. Power feeds through me, combusting inside and rising, threatening to drown us both; to smother, to kill. I know its wants; I want the same. Demon. Human. Lost somewhere between. Pulled apart, stretched thin. I can devastate her. I see enemy. Fire to my ice. She is predator. So am I.

Motives sundered, I am motionless, captured as surely in indecision as I am in ice. I could–should kill her. Here, now, she is weakened, restrained. She thinks me incapable. In that, she is wrong. I am glacial. And yet, despite it all… her death would shatter me. Demon. Human. I am captured between, crushed, amalgamated. I could not hurt her. Would not. Despite everything, she warms the cold in me. Her fire melts my resolve and my ice quells her fear. Webs of ice lace from my touch and skitter across her cheek. She looks into me, sees me, all of me. Muse has always witnessed the truth of me. The warmth of her skin, the rapid beat of her heart; she grounds me, offers a clear path through the squall blanketing my thoughts. I realize, with conviction, I will protect her from all who seek to harm her, from the Prince of Greed, from the netherworld, from the Institute, from my father, from herself. I can protect her from everything… but me.

We are enemies. Opposites. An immovable object and an unstoppable force. I am afraid of my own desires. She sees the stark truth of me, looks into the eyes of winter, and braves the storm. She is more than I can possibly know, more than I can hope to avoid. This moment, the past, the future, all funnel to the now, and I see a glimpse of what is to come. I see blood on a blade of ice. I know how this ends. And she sees–with her dark fire-touched eyes–she sees it too.

Excerpt Chapter One

A
n exclusive look
at the first two chapters of ‘Drowning In The Dark’ Book 4 in The Veil Series, due early 2015.

D
emon claws sliced
into my waist, sending sparks of pain dancing up my right side and stealing a ragged cry from my lips. I twisted away, more instinct than thought, and cracked my fist across the demon’s brittle jaw. His face fractured like glass, which would have been a victory, had the shards of bone not pierced my knuckles. Jesus, it was like fighting barbed wire. I saw the right hook coming, his claws spread wide, and realized I may have underestimated my quarry and overestimated my current abilities. I ducked, snatched my dagger from its sheath at my ankle, and lunged upward, driving the blade deep into his gut. He grunted. My gaze met his opaque eyes. He grinned, slippery blue lips drawn back over jagged teeth. Hot blood spilled over my hand, but from the look of glee on his crumpled face, you’d think he’d won. I was missing something. His brittle laughter confirmed it.

“They’re coming, half blood,” he growled around his fangs.

“Yeah, I got the memo. The princes are coming, blah blah. Tell me something I don’t know.”

His hand shot out like a viper strike. I yanked the blade from his gut, recoiled from his scalpel-like claws, and arched away, but my balance wobbled. Overreaching, I staggered. My stomach flip-flopped. Fear churned my gut. The big grin on his bony face morphed into a hideous, toothy snarl. He lunged and slammed his not-so-lightweight body into me. My back hit the alley dirt, knocking the breath out of my lungs. This would be one of those times when calling the fire would solve my misbehaving demon problem. I could kill him in an instant. A flicker of a thought was all it would take. But I wouldn’t stop there. The alley would look nice draped in fire. That overflowing dumpster back there would go up like the 4
th
of July. The buildings would catch next. My fire would lick the sky, devour the neighborhood, and gobble up every living thing in the immediate vicinity. Insane laughter bubbled through my thoughts.

The demon coiled his hands around my throat. His legs straddled me. I took a swipe at his arm with my blade. His skin peeled apart, blood dribbled, but he didn’t loosen his grip. I sliced again, while my lungs burned. His grip on my throat tightened. My vision clouded. The edges of his half-broken face blurred. My demon snarled inside my mind and rattled her mental bars.
Let me out…
she urged.
Let me play. We will make short work of this beast. We are destruction. We taste his death. Ashes in the air. Let us devour.
It was pretty crowded in my head. Next, my personal parasite spilled his poison into my veins. His darkness polluted my limbs, stoking my thirst for fire. I couldn’t hold out much longer. The fire would come. My demon would break the reins of my control, and this time, I might not come back. This could be it: the very last time I held the reins of my control. Was it over so soon? Would I lose my battle in this alley?

Demon spittle dribbled onto my face. My head lolled to one side. Among the fog of impending unconsciousness, a dark figure walked toward me. I didn’t need to see clearly to know him. His element flooded ahead of him. Heat. A terrible, breath-stealing, skin-crawling heat. Fire without the flames. The demon with his hands around my throat jerked his head up. His chokehold vanished as foreign words spilled from his lips. He scrambled off me, but stayed kneeling, skinny shoulders hunched.

Akil’s image shimmered behind a veil of heat-haze. The air around his body rippled and strummed. He wore a double-breasted overcoat over his trademark suit, as though he might actually suffer from the cold on this chilly Boston evening. Only Akil could stalk back-alleys and still look like he’d stepped off the pages of GQ magazine.

As my demon attacker mumbled and growled in an ancient and exotic language, I concentrated on filling my lungs with air, ignoring the odors of mildew, fish, and urine. The air tasted pretty sweet to my oxygen-starved lungs.

“Return to the netherworld,” Akil ordered, his tone level and direct. He didn’t expect to be disobeyed. He stopped in front of the prostrate demon, handsome face perfectly neutral.

“It won’t do any good, sire. They come. There is nothing there but death.”

Akil’s dark eyes flicked to me. I wiggled my fingers at him. It was all I could muster.

“Perhaps you misheard because I’m certain you didn’t just deny a direct order from your prince.” A smile flirted across Akil’s lips, and fire brimmed the irises in his otherwise hazel eyes.

“No, sire.” The demon ducked his head.

“Good.” Akil flicked his fingers, and a ribbon of light rippled open beside him.
The veil.
“Be on your way.”

“Now? B-But…”

Akil plucked the demon off his knees and shoved him through the twitching slither of light. The veil stitched itself closed moments later, and Akil turned to me. “Before you say a word about not needing my help, I observed your altercation for several minutes before intervening. Had it gone on any longer, I’m quite certain you would be dead.”

“Dead is such a strong word.” My voice came out littered with scratches and hitches, dashing my attempt at bravado. I rolled onto my side, wincing as the wound in my side flared, and climbed to my feet. Akil watched me stagger and right myself. He knew better than to help me.

“Nice coat. Do you always kick demon ass dressed like an Italian supermodel?” I brushed loose dirt from my jeans and tee. When I caught sight of the bloom of blood and the warm metallic scent of it hit me, I gulped back a knot of fear. It
had
been too close.

Akil blinked into existence right in front of me. His heat wrapped me in a quilt-like embrace. I attempted to deny how his warmth soothed my rattled body and mind, but it was a losing battle. Exhausted, battered, bruised, and bleeding, I was in no condition to argue with him. I’d not seen him in weeks—not officially—but I knew he’d been on the streets, eager to kick any wayward demons back to the netherworld, or hell as it was fondly referred to. According to Akil, Boston was his city, and nobody would take it from him, not an influx of demons, and certainly not the other princes. I wasn’t entirely surprised to see him. I’d had my suspicions he’d been watching me from afar.

He hooked a finger under my chin and tilted my head up. “Why did you allow that demon to best you?”

I fluttered my eyes closed, the disappointment on his face too much. “I’m afraid.”

“Of what? Not him.”

“Damien.” My parasite. I opened my eyes in time to catch Akil’s glare narrowing. “He constantly pulls on my control. And my demon… She’s impatient. She whispers to me the whole time. If I let her go, Akil, I’m afraid I might not come back.” I’d lost control a few weeks ago, almost killing an angry mob and nearly tearing Akil’s arm off in the process. He’d stopped me from doing both, but it had been too close for comfort.

He drew his hand back. Our gazes locked for a few seconds before he dipped his lower, over my lips, my chest, to where his fingers peeled the sticky hem of my top away from my waist. “You know how to remove the soul-lock. I’m sure you don’t need me to say it again.”

Right, by letting Akil dig him out. I’d been thinking about it every night when I woke screaming, drenched in cold sweat, body aching and mind shattered beneath a flood of revolting images—Damien’s memories. Yeah, I’d thought about it a lot while drowning myself in whiskey. Damien was killing me as sure as if he was standing over my shoulder, driving a dagger into my back. I needed Akil’s help. I was losing this battle. I’d been losing it since the beginning. And I didn’t have much time left.

“Could he ever come back?” I asked quietly. “The part of him that’s in me, could it ever become solid again, flesh and blood real?”

Akil searched my face, delaying, until he finally gave me the truth. “Yes. There is a way. But you need not concern yourself with it. Without your consent, it could never happen.” I gulped back the burn of disgust. I wanted my owner out, gone for good. I’d have gladly cut him out with a rusted razor blade if I could. “You cannot continue like this, Muse.” Akil’s deft fingers probed my side, drawing a hiss from my lips. “If you refuse to summon your demon, you will likely die the next time you find yourself in harm’s way. I may not always be here to save you.”

I bowed my head, simultaneously resting my forehead against his chest while he pressed his hand over the wounds and fizzled heat through my flesh. “I think… maybe… I guess...” I sighed. “You’re right. I have to do something. I’m ready.” His body tensed, and his hand over the wound stilled. “You need to take him out of me, Akil. Please. I can’t live like this anymore.”

He laced his fingers into my hair and tipped my head back. I could have fought him, but what was the point? We both knew this had to happen eventually. He didn’t look as happy as I thought he would. He studied me, his sculpted face marred by suspicion.

“I expected you to, y’know, gloat or something. You’ve wanted this since he soul-locked me.”

“Much longer, actually. But I–”

His teeth snapped together, and he jerked, as though struck, then shoved me away from him. I almost fell over my own feet trying to stay upright. Stumbling against the wall, I spluttered a curse. “What the hell?”

He’d spun around and faced the mouth of the alley, his back to me. I saw them then, six black-clad men and women, assault rifles raised and trained on Akil as they closed in. Laser dots bounced around on his back. I searched the roofline and spotted the snipers above us. Worse, more special-ops jogged in from my left behind Akil. And I recognized one instantly. Ryder led the smaller team, rifle shouldered and aimed at Akil’s back.

“Shit, Akil, get out of here.” I shoved off the wall and strode into the line of fire, exuding a confidence I didn’t have. “Don’t do this, Ryder.” I called over the sound of hammering boots on asphalt. Akil would kill them all.

“Get outtah the way, Muse,” Ryder barked. “We will shoot through you.”

Akil’s element lashed outward, surging past me and rushing toward Ryder’s group. “Dammit, Ryder, you wanna be responsible for more deaths?”

“Ain’t gonna happen.” His men were closing fast. It would be a bloodbath. Five in his group, a couple on the roof, six approaching Akil from the front. It wouldn’t be enough. A hundred wouldn’t be enough. What the hell was Ryder thinking?

Akil’s element spluttered beneath my feet. I felt it choke and gasped, spinning around to see Akil drop to one knee and brace himself against the ground, head bowed. Heat throbbed around him, beating the air in relentless waves. He should have been upright, smug and confident – at the worst, he could have called his true form Mammon – but something was very wrong. “Akil?”

The Enforcers gathered around him. His shoulders rose and fell as he breathed hard, but he made no move to attack them or protect himself. A deep inhuman-growl rumbled through him. He snapped his head up and scored a few Enforcers with his powerful glare, but it only seemed to make them more determined. They closed ranks, moving tighter.

I stole a few steps closer when Ryder grabbed my arm and pulled me to him. “Stay away if you know what’s good for you.” He shoved me back, fierce determination making his glare hard and cold.

“Ryder, he’ll kill all of you. Are you insane?” Akil might be down now, but it was likely a trap. He was probably hoping to lure them in so he could catch them together. I strode forward. “Let him go before it’s too late.” I didn’t want to see anyone hurt, especially Ryder. We’d had our differences, but he didn’t deserve to screw it up like this. “You can’t capture a Prince of Hell. Ryder, please, c’mon… before he brings Mammon…” My words trailed off as Akil’s gaze found me. Lips pulled back in a snarl, eyes bright with amber, he glared at me, accusations burning in his gaze. What? Did he think I had something to do with this? “Akil… Don’t hurt them. Let them go.” Another growl rumbled through him.

“He’s not going anywhere, Muse.” Ryder raised his rifle, aimed, and pulled the trigger. The sharp crack bounced around the alley. Akil took the hit in the shoulder. He spun around, his body moving liquid fast, but it wasn’t enough. They opened fire. The deafening noise of gunfire drowned out my shriek of alarm. I sprang forward, only for Ryder to grab me and shove me into the arms of three of his crew. I kicked, yanked, writhed, and bucked, but the goons held fast.

When the gunfire ceased – a horrible unearthly quiet settled over the alley. The smell of hot metal, and acrid gun smoke burned my nostrils and laced my throat. Ragged breaths sawed out of me. I couldn’t tear my gaze from the group huddled around a pool of blood. He couldn’t be dead. Could he? Why hadn’t he fought? Why didn’t he summon Mammon? He’d once told me seven hundred Enforcers wouldn’t be enough to take him down.

The crowd of special-ops parted. My knees buckled. Akil lay on his side, shredded clothes dark with blood. His glassy gaze stared into the middle-distance, seeing nothing. Blood dribbled from his parted lips. This couldn’t be. My demon surged forward, driving a growl ahead of her and out of me.

Ryder turned to me. “Don’t even think of bringing her to the party, Muse.” He thumbed over his shoulder at the snipers above. I saw them and followed their aim to see the red fireflies dancing on my chest. “Unless you want your demon packed away for another day.”

He glanced back, smiled, and nodded. “Job well done, everyone. Bag him, and let’s get outtah here.”

“You killed him,” I snarled, battling with the terrible desire to spill fire into my veins and burn everyone in the alley—turn them to ash and dance with their remains in the breeze. It was insane, but that didn’t make the thought any less appealing. “He was helping us drive the demons back.” I clamped my teeth together, hissing each breath between them even as I felt my fangs lengthen. “Why do this?”

Ryder finally looked at me, and saw me—not another demon getting in his way, but me, once his friend. “Look,” he lowered his voice, “he ain’t dead. He’s just chock-full of PC-Thirty-Four and a bit beaten up. He’ll be pissed, for sure, but he won’t be able to do a damn thing about it.”

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