214 lines
9.6 KiB
TeX
214 lines
9.6 KiB
TeX
\chapter{13}
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Almost half of the day was spent in a state of shock between speechless horror,
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bewildered disbelief,
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and anger.
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Ten days?
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Apparently he laid there in a fever for \textit{ten days} without noticing it?
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Other than that it was hard for him to believe it,
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he just didn't \textit{want} to.
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The consequences would have been too frightening.
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Just like before,
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Andrew was convinced that his father would try anything to find him.
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Surely he had already started the largest manhunt the country had ever seen,
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and he wouldn't rest until his people had overturned every stone,
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searched every lake,
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looked in every well,
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and grilled every applicable previously arrested wannabe-criminal for any information.
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But ten days was an unbelievably long time.
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Of course Andrew had never been the subject of a manhunt,
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but he wasn't the first person to disappear,
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and he had followed other manhunts on the news:
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Hundreds of policemen and thousands of volunteers that searched woods and marshes,
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supported by airplanes,
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helicopters,
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and sometimes even fighter jets that would scan the ground below them with thermal cameras and all sorts of other technical equipment.
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Regrettably, he also knew that the longer the undertaking took,
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the less likely it was that they would be successful.
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Missing people were mostly found quickly
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--- or not at all.
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Most of the missing people that weren't found within the first couple of hours or days would only be found after weeks or sometimes months;
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Buried in the woods and found by people walking by or in a plastic bag that got caught in the dam of a sewage treatment plant.
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It took some effort for Andrew to reign in his rampaging fantasy.
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In the end he was still alive,
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and with some luck it could stay that way.
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But not here.
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He just couldn't imagine that his father would give up before he hadn't found him
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--- or held the definitive proof that he was dead in his hands.
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Andrew didn't want it,
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but the thought created a reality in his head that he would have loved to deny:
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The men in the black outfits that had collected the wreckage of the Cessna and loaded it into the helicopters that had landed on the plaza.
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Maybe they \textit{had} convinced his father of his death a long time ago,
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and instead of a search party he was standing in front of an open grave with an empty coffin in it,
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just like they did in some symbolic burials.
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Maybe he was already dead and this was hell,
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or at least the purgatory where he would spend the next six hundred thousand years or at least until Judgement Day.
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Just that as far as he knew he had not done anything bad enough to deserve this.
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The sound of naked feet on a hard stone floor tore him out of his sullen contemplations.
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He looked up and noticed that Katt had come in and was slowly approaching him with an almost shy smile.
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He returned it,
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even though it was more out of relief that it wasn't her sister,
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but not \textit{just} for that reason.
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Ratt had come in two or three times and he was happy when she left every time.
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He didn't have anything against the rat-girl;
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It was quite the opposite.
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Once you got used to the way she looked she was kinda cute in her own way.
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But she was also a complete pain in the neck:
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Her character had inherited a healthy amount of the non-human parts of her heritage.
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``How are you doing?", asked Katt.
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Andrew shrugged.
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Katt wasn't just making conversation, he knew that much.
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She was actually worried about him.
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``How am I supposed to be doing?''
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Katt slowly got closer and stood still two steps away from him.
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Andrew could see how hard she was debating what to say.
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Eventually she shrugged her shoulders and made an awkward hand movement behind her,
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towards the exit.
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``I have water duty'', she said hesitantly.
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``Do you want to come with?''
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What ever \textit{water duty} was.
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Andrew shrugged,
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letting the motion seamlessly transform into a nod and standing up.
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He had sat here half a day and felt bad for himself;
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maybe it would be good if he got some fresh air and let the bleak thoughts blow away with the wind.
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``Why not?''
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Katt looked at him questioning for another moment,
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but then she nodded and went outside,
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Andrew following close behind her.
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The sun was shining down so brightly from the cloudless sky that he was forced to close his eyes and raised his hand over his face.
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It was very warm, almost hot,
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and there was not even the slightest breeze.
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Andrew let a moment pass for his eyes to adjust to the change in light conditions,
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then motioned to Katt with a nod that she should keep going.
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She motioned to the left,
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but went in the opposite direction out of the same movement.
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Two steps away from the door an unorganized row of old metal canisters,
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rusty and big enough to hold at least twenty liters each.
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They were similar to the containers that held the \textit{firewater}
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that Katt used to protect the safe place.
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She took two of the containers that were apparently empty and Andrew followed her and did the same.
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Katt doubtfully furrowed her brow.
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``Are you sure?'', she asked.
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``What?''
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``The canisters get pretty heavy when they're full''
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, answered Katt.
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``Doy you think you've recovered enough to be able to do that?''
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``I guess we'll see'', Andrew answered.
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Even though he knew that Katt only meant well,
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they bothered him again.
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Mostly because she was probably right.
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He felt everything but refreshed and as a matter of fact he already felt the weight of the two \textit{empty} canisters.
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But of course he was too proud to accept Katt's almost unnoticeable offer and only to only entertain himself with one canister.
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Instead he added in an obviously spiteful tone:
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``Bull said I need to work if I want to eat.''
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``He didn't say that you have to overexert yourself'', answered Katt,
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but left it at a shrug and turned around.
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Andrew was finally smart enough not to continue the senseless discussion,
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but to shut up instead.
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In the bright daylight the ruined city made a maybe not friendly,
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but at least less creepy impression.
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The ruins were the same as they were before,
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immense black skeletons that looked like they had never housed anyone.
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The left side of the plaza was blocked by piles of rubble that nobody had seemed to put in the effort to move,
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and even though Katt had said there were at least one hundred members in the tribe,
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most of the buildings seemed to be empty.
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Only a hand full of the doors had the grey rags that Katt and her sister used as curtains.
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Almost nobody from the tribe was currently able to be seen,
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which Andrew wasn't too sad about.
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On the other side of the large plaza some kids were playing,
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but Andrew decided he didn't want to look at them too closely.
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Even if he had gotten a taste of the tribe through Ratt, Liz, and the others,
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he felt it would be better to get to know the rest of the menagerie in homeopathic doses.
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Shortly before they left the plaza,
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Andrew stopped and looked around him.
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On the roof of the house next to where Katt and her sister lived a fire was still burning.
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It was too bright to really see the flames,
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but Andrew could see the column of oily black smoke that went almost completely vertical in the unmoving air,
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before it dissolved into the air thirty or forty meters up.
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He blinked questioningly.
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``She'll have her child today'', answered Katt,
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who had noticed his facial expression.
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``At the latest tomorrow.''
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``You always light a bonfire when one of you expects a child?''
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``Is it not like that where you're from?'', asked Katt blankly.
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Andrew laughed.
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``No.
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Our tribes are \dots a little bigger than yours.''
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``That much bigger?''
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Andrew nodded.
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``How many?'', asked Katt.
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Andrew thought about it for a moment,
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then he made a sweeping motion around himself with the empty canister.
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``Imagine this whole city were full of humans.
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A whole family would live in each room.''
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Katt's eyes widened.
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``I don't believe you.''
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``And then imagine it was a hundred times as big'', Andrew continued.
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``And there were a hundred of those cities.''
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Katt stared at him further in bewilderment and in her eyes a fear appeared that Andrew didn't understand at first.
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She laughed, but it sounded nervous and not real.
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``You're pulling my leg'', she said.
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``No tribe can get that big.
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What would they all eat?''
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Andrew mentally warned himself to be careful.
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It might not matter to him if Katt believed him or not,
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but maybe the danger was that she \textit{would} believe him.
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Maybe he wasn't the only one that needed the truth in homeopathic doses.
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``Yeah, you are probably right'', he said ambiguously and made motions to continue walking.
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She looked at him for a moment longer with such hopelessness and bewilderment that Andrew almost regretted his own words.
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As they kept walking Andrew mentally warned himself again to be much more careful with what he said.
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He really should be thinking about every word he says very carefully.
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They left the plaza and stepped on to a street that was mostly blocked by rubble and other debris.
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It continued straight for a good one and a half or two kilometers.
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The houses,
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even though they were destroyed,
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were still so tall that they held most of the sunlight back;
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At the floor of the brick ravine it was not only darker,
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but also noticeably cooler than on the big plaza where the tribe lived.
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only a small stripe on the left lay in the sun,
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but Katt avoided walking there,
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instead opting to march along the other side even though they were constantly forced to climb over frequent boulders and other rubble.
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Andrew was wondering why she was doing that,
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but he figured that Katt would know what she was doing and followed her without complaints.
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He also passed on asking how far they had to go.
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With two full water canisters the way back would be torture.
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While he was closely following Katt he took the time to really look around himself.
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