<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER III</h2>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">When</span> I reached the Schloss Graben I stood a
moment to reconnoitre, and found myself in the
same still, cobble-paved road where I had met
Anna a few hours before. On my left rose the
high garden-walls overtopped by a web of bare interlacing
branches, and over that again the palace
windows and its mansard roof; on my right the
row of silent brown or red stone houses, well-to-do
and snugly private, with beaten iron bars to the
low windows and great scallop shells over the
doors. This was the house down the stone steps
of which my wife’s servant had come this morning,
and this was number ten. Of course! How clear
it was all becoming to me! I dashed the sweat
from my brow, for I had come like a lamplighter.
Then I tramped up the three steps and again
halted a second. How quiet the house was!</p>
<p>But I should soon put some bustle into it, I said
to myself, and smiled. I plied the knocker till the
sleeping echoes awoke, and I hung on the iron
rope of the bell till the shrill protest of the jingling
peal rang out into the street. There came other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
sounds from within as of a flutter in a dovecot.
Doors were opened and shut precipitately. A
window was thrown back above my head; there
was a vision of a white-capped face thrust forward
and withdrawn; and, indeed, like rabbits from a
warren, most, I believe, of the idle servants in the
street were popping out to see whence could proceed
such unholy clangour.</p>
<p>The door before me was at length cautiously and
slowly opened, and through the aperture the frightened,
rose-red face of a maid looked out at me.</p>
<p>I saw that I had been incautious, and therefore
addressed her with a suave mock courtesy. Indeed,
now that the actual moment had come I felt
stealing over me a very deadly calm.</p>
<p>“Forgive me,” said I, “my wench, for disturbing
you thus rudely. I see I have alarmed you.
These are, however, but old soldiers’ ways, which
I trust your good mistress will pardon to an old
friend. Your mistress is, if I mistake not, now
the doctor’s lady. But when I knew her she was
Fräulein Ottilie Pahlen.”</p>
<p>The girl’s mouth had, during this long speech,
which in my new mood came glibly enough to my
lips, become broadened into a grin. There are
very few girls in the Empire, I have been told, that
will not feel mollified towards a soldier.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Is your mistress within?” I pursued.</p>
<p>She dropped a curtsey, and after a comprehensive
glance over my person threw open the door.
Would the gentleman walk in? She brought me
through a brick-paved hall into a long low oak-panelled
room, all dark and yet all shining with
polish. It was very hot from a high china stove.</p>
<p>“What visitor shall I announce to the gracious
lady?” she asked, sidling towards me, and thrusting
her apple face as forward as she dared.</p>
<p>“I am so old a friend, in fact, I may say so
near a connection, that I should like to give your
gracious lady a pleasant surprise,” said I; “I will
not therefore give my name.” As a propitiatory
after-thought, I pinched the hard red cheek and
dropped a coin into her apron pocket. I tried to
make my smile very sweet, but it felt stiff upon
my lips. She, however, saw nought amiss, and
pattered out well content.</p>
<p>Then followed a few minutes’ waiting; all had
grown still again around me. Through the deep
recessed windows I looked forth into a little courtyard
with one bare tree. This, then, was the home
Ottilie had chosen instead of an English estate,
instead of Tollendhal, instead of all I could offer
her in courtly Vienna or great London! How she
must love this man! Or was it only the plebeian<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
instinct reasserting itself in spite of all?... The
Court doctor’s lady!</p>
<p>I heard a footfall on the bare-boarded stair, and
with a smile that was this time the natural expression
of the complicated bitterness of my soul, I
moved a few steps so as to place myself in the
best light.</p>
<p>My wife was, perhaps, still in ignorance of my
escape from death. Anna had not yet carried her
grievous news of the failure of their endeavours.
Indeed, this was evident from the general placidity
of the household, as well as the staid regularity of
the approaching steps. To witness her joy at the
discovery was sufficient revenge for the moment.
After that the reckoning would be with—well,
with my successor.</p>
<p>Such was the state of my thoughts at the crucial
moment of my strange story.</p>
<p>I have said that I was calm, but during the little
pause that took place between the cessation of the
footsteps and the turning of the lock I could hear
the beating of my own heart like the measured
roar of a drum in battle.</p>
<p>Then was the door opened, and before me stood—-not
Ottilie, who had been my Ottilie, but the
other Ottilie, the Princess! She was advancing
upon me with the old well-remembered gracious<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
smile, when all at once she halted with much the
same terror-stricken look with which Anna earlier
in the day had recognised me, and clasped her
hands, crying:</p>
<p>“God be merciful to us, M. de Jennico!” and
seemed the next instant ready to burst into tears.</p>
<p>In the first confusion of my thoughts, in the
rage created by this eternal <i>quid pro quo</i>—that I
should ever find the lady-in-waiting when I wanted
the Princess, and the Princess when I wanted the
lady-in-waiting,—I might have been inclined to
think that Anna had after all spread her tidings,
and that my wife’s former mistress had come to her
aid at this awkward moment; but the surprise
and consternation on this woman’s countenance
were too genuine to have been counterfeit.</p>
<p>Whatever reason brought the Princess here I
was in no humour to inquire.</p>
<p>“I came to see my wife, Madam,” said I, “and
not to presume upon your Highness’s condescension.
I am determined to see my wife,” I insisted;
“that Ottilie Pahlen, who was your maid of honour,
and lived with me as my wife for a month, as
your Highness well knows, and who was in such
haste to wed this Court doctor of yours at the first
rumour of her husband’s death.”</p>
<p>I spoke in a very uncourtier-like rage. But she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span>
whom I addressed showed neither anger nor astonishment,
but sank into the nearest chair, a mere
heap of soft distressed womanhood, wringing her
plump dimpled hands, while tears of extraordinary
size suffused her eyes and overflowed upon her
cheeks.</p>
<p>At sight of this my heat fell away; I threw myself
on my knees beside her, and, all forgetful of
the distance between us, took one of her hands in
mine and poured forth an appeal.</p>
<p>“You were always kind to me; be kind now. I
must see my wife. I have been cruelly treated; I
am surrounded with enemies; be you my friend!”</p>
<p>She leant forward and looked at me earnestly
with swimming eyes.</p>
<p>“Is it possible,” she exclaimed—“is it possible,
M. de Jennico, that you have not found out yet?...
that you do not suspect?...”</p>
<p>Even as she spoke, and while I knelt looking
up at her, the scales fell from my eyes. I needed
no further word. I knew. How was it possible,
indeed, that I should not have known before?
I saw as in a flash that this comely burgher
woman was not, had never been, never could
have been, the Princess. I saw that the hand I
still unconsciously held bore marks of household
toil, that on the third finger glittered a new wedding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
ring. Then a thousand memories rushed
into my mind, a thousand confirmatory details.
Oh, blind—blind—blind that I had been—fool,
and worse than fool! The mystery of my
wife’s mocking smile; the secret that had so often
hung unspoken on her lips; her careless pretty
ways; the depth of her injured pride; and then
the manner in which she had been guarded from
me, the force employed against me, the secret
diplomatic attempts to free her, followed, on their
failure, by the relentless determination to do away
with me altogether! Before my reeling brain it
all rose into towering conviction—a joy, a sorrow,
both too keen for humanity to bear, seized upon
my weakened frame. I heard as if in the far distance
the words the woman near me was saying:</p>
<p>“It all began by a freak of her Highness, ...”
and with the echo of them whirling as it were in
a mad dance through my brain to the sound of
thundering cataracts, a whirlpool of flame spreading
before my eyes, I fell with a crash, as it
seemed, into a yawning black abyss.</p>
<p>When I again came to myself the cold air was
blowing in upon me through the open casement,
and I was stretched full length on a hard floor,
in what seemed a perfect deluge of the very
strongest vinegar I have ever smelt. At one side<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
of me knelt my hostess, her healthy face blanched
almost beyond recognition. On the other, between
my wandering gaze and the window, swam the
visage of the maid, eyes and mouth as round as
horror could make them, but with cheeks the
ruddiness of which, it seemed, no emotion could
mitigate.</p>
<p>Both my kind attendants gave a cry as I opened
my eyes.</p>
<p>“He is recovering, Trude,” said Madam Lothner
(to call her now by her proper name).</p>
<p>“Ah! gracious lady,” answered the wench in
an unctuous tone of importance; “his face is
still as red as the beet I was pickling when I
heard you scream—would God the master were
here to bleed him. Shall I send into the town to
seek him?”</p>
<p>“God forbid!” cried her mistress, in a hasty
and peremptory tone. “No, I tell you, Trude, he
is recovering, and I have not been a doctor’s wife
these six weeks for nothing. The flush is fading
even as I look at him. See thee here, fetch me
some of the cordial water.”</p>
<p>I do not know how far her six weeks’ association
with the medical luminary, her husband, had
profited Madam Lothner. I have since been told
that her administration of cordial, immediately<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span>
upon such a blood stroke to the head as mine,
ought really to have finished me off. But as it
happened it did me a vast deal of good, and I
was soon able to shake off the giddiness, the
sickness, and the general confusion of my system.</p>
<p>With recovered wits it gradually became apparent
to me that while Madam Lothner continued
to ply me with every assistance she could think
of, regarding me with eyes in which shone most
kindly and womanly benevolence, her chief anxiety
nevertheless was to get rid of me with all possible
despatch.</p>
<p>But I was not likely to give up such an opportunity.
The chaos in my mind consequent upon
the unexpected revelation, and its disastrous physical
effect, was such as to render me no very coherent
inquisitor. Nevertheless, the determination
to learn all that this woman could tell me about
my wife rose predominant above the seething of
my thoughts.</p>
<p>Ottilie, my wife, was Ottilie the Princess after
all! I had felt the truth before it had been told
me. But whilst they removed an agonising supposition,
these struck me nevertheless as strange
unhomely tidings which opened fresh difficulties
in my path—difficulties the full import of which
were every second more strongly borne upon me.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
Ottilie the Princess!... Everything was changed,
and the relentless attitude of the Princess bore a
very different aspect to the mere resentment of
the injured wife. When my letters had been
flung back in my face, when I had been kidnapped
and expelled the country, it had been
then by her orders. She had sent to demand
the divorce. Who had set the bravo on my
track? By whose wish had my life been so
basely, so persistently, attempted? By hers—Ottilie,
the Princess? A Princess who had repented
of her freak, whose pride, whose reputation,
had suffered from the stigma of an unequal
match.</p>
<p>The man whose sword had twice passed through
my body had called out, “Ha! Ottilie!” Who
dare call on a Princess thus save her kinsman or—her
lover?</p>
<p>I felt the blood surge through me again, but
this time in my anger it brought a sense of
courage and strength. I interrupted Madam
Lothner as, with a joyful exclamation that I
was now quite restored, she was about to issue
an order for the summary fetching of a hired
coach.</p>
<p>“Let your maid go,” said I authoritatively, “but
not for a coach. I have yet much to say to you.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I was without pity for the distress this demand
occasioned, deaf to the hurried whisper:</p>
<p>“For pity’s sake, go now that you can. You are
in danger here. Think of yourself, if you will not
think of me!”</p>
<p>“I can think of but one person,” said I harshly.
“I have come a thousand miles to learn things
which I know you can tell me, and here I remain
until I have heard them. Any delay on your
side will only prolong the danger, since danger
there be.”</p>
<p>She looked up in tearful pleading, met my obstinate
gaze, and instantly submitted—a woman born
to be ruled.</p>
<p>“Go, Trude,” she said faintly, “and warn me if
you see your master coming. What will she think
of me?” sighed the poor lady as the door closed
upon an awe-struck but evidently suspicious Trude.
“But no matter, better that just now than the
truth. Now, sir, for God’s sake, what is it you
would have of me?”</p>
<p>“Let me go back,” said I, “to the beginning.
When I married ... my wife at Tollendhal, she
was then, for a freak as you say, acting the lady-in-waiting,
while you assumed her rôle of Princess?”</p>
<p>“It is so,” said Madam Lothner, “but I never<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
knew till the deed was accomplished to what length
her Highness had chosen to push her folly. I
could not then attempt to interfere or advise, still
less could I be the person to send tidings to the
Court.”</p>
<p>“So?” said I, as she paused.</p>
<p>“So,” said she, “in great fear and trembling, I
deemed it best to obey her Highness’s strict command,
and await events at the Castle of Schreckendorf,
still in my assumed part.”</p>
<p>“But when my wife returned to you,” I said,
and my voice shook, “returned to you in a peasant’s
cart,—oh, I know all about it, Madam, I
know that I drove her forth through the most
insensate pride that ever lost soul its paradise,—when
she returned, the truth must have already
been known?”</p>
<p>“Ach, yes,” murmured the sentimental Saxon,
her eyes watering with very sympathy at the sight
of my bitter self-reproach. “Yes, it was because
of rumours which had already reached the residence
(from your friends in England, I believe),
that his Serene Highness the Duke sent in such
haste to recall us. He would not come himself
for fear of giving weight to the scandal. But
it was her Highness who chose to confirm the
report.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“How?” cried I eagerly.</p>
<p>“Why, sir,” answered the doctor’s lady, flowing
on not unwillingly in her soft guttural, though
visibly perturbed nevertheless, and now and again
anxiously alive to any sound without—“why, sir,
her Highness having returned to Schreckendorf
before the arrival of the ladies and gentlemen
from Lausitz, and being, it seemed, determined”—here
she hesitated and glanced at me timidly—“determined
not to return to Tollendhal ever again,
her Highness might easily, had she wished, have
denied the whole story. And indeed,” continued
the speaker with a shrewdness I would not have
given her credit for, “had she so behaved it
would have best pleased her relations. But she
was not so made.”</p>
<p>“Ah, no indeed,” said I, “her pride would not
stoop to that.”</p>
<p>“You are right,” said Madam Lothner, with a
sigh, “she is very proud. She was calm and
seemed to have quite made up her mind. ’I will
give no explanation to any one,’ she said to me,
’and I recognise in no one the right to question
me. But my father shall know that I am married,
and that I am separated from my husband for ever.
I am not the first woman of my rank on whom
such a fate has fallen.’ That was her attitude.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And here the good creature broke forth as if in
spite of herself with passionate expostulation.</p>
<p>“Ah, M. de Jennico, but she suffered! Oh, if
you would atone, leave her now, leave her at least
in peace! You have brought enough sorrow already
into her life. Ach! I do not know how it
has been between you; but now that she thinks
you dead, for God’s sake let it be!”</p>
<p>“By Heaven, Madam,” cried I, half mad, I believe,
between pain, remorse, and fury, “these are
strange counsels! Do you forget that we are man
and wife, and this by her own doing? But truly
I need not be surprised, for you do not hesitate
before crime at the Court of Lausitz, and if murder
be so lightly condoned, sure it is that bigamy
must seem a very peccadillo.”</p>
<p>Madam Lothner stared at me with startled eyes
and dropping jaw.</p>
<p>“Murder,” she whispered, “M. de Jennico!
what terrible thing do you say?”</p>
<p>Then she put her hand to her head, ejaculating:
“True, it was the Margrave himself who brought
us news of your death on his return from England.
It was in the English papers. I feared I know
not what, but this—this—God save us!”</p>
<p>I looked at her in fresh bewilderment. She
was as one seized by overwhelming terror. I felt<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
that her emotion had its origin in causes still
unknown to me.</p>
<p>“And who is the Margrave?” I cried quickly.</p>
<p>She lowered her voice to the barest breath of
sound, and glanced fearfully over her shoulder as
if afraid of eavesdroppers even in this retired
room.</p>
<p>“Prince Eugen, as they call him,” she said,
“one of her Highness’s cousins. He has, I do not
quite know how, hopes of sovereignty in Poland,
and they were to have been married: it was her
father’s wish, and it is so still.”</p>
<p>I sprang up with an imprecation, but the lady
almost flung herself upon me, and clapped her
hand over my mouth.</p>
<p>“In the name of God,” she said, “be still, or
you will ruin us! My husband is his most devoted
adherent. In this house he rules, and we bow to
the earth before him.”</p>
<p>I sank back into my seat, docile, in spite of myself,
impressed by the strength of her fear. New
trains of revelations crowded upon me. Eugen of
Liegnitz-Rothenburg—Rothenburg—Ville-Rouge—I
saw it all!</p>
<p>She went on, bringing her mouth close to my
ear:</p>
<p>“The Princess hated him, and indeed he has<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span>
grown into a strange and terrifying man, so oddly
impulsive, cruel, wilful, vindictive. He always
professed to love the Princess, but I cannot but
think that it was the love of taming—he would
dearly love to break her, just as he loves to
break the proudest-spirited horse. His grey eye
makes me grow cold. As I said, from a child
she hated him, and it was for that—having seen
one whom she thought she could love....” Here
she paused, and glanced at me, and hesitated.</p>
<p>It was for that. I remembered. She had told
me of the unhappy fate that threatened “the
Princess” that evening when we met under the
fir-trees to decide upon my crazy match, and when,
as I had deemed, she had fooled me to the top of
my bent. She had spoken in tones of scathing
contempt and hatred of some cavalier. And now?
Suddenly gripped by the old devil of doubt and
jealousy, I cried out, “And now, after all, the fate
of being wedded to an obscure gentleman seems
to her more dreadful than that of sharing her
place with her cousin, and the peculiar qualities
of the hated relative have been very usefully employed
in ridding her of the inconvenient husband?
Oh, Madam, of course you know your Court of
Lausitz, and I think I begin to see your drift:
you think, in your amiability, that it would be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
preferable to see your mistress bigamously united,
than that she should legitimise her position by yet
another and more successful attempt at assassination.”</p>
<p>“I fail to understand you, sir,” drawing back
from me, nevertheless, with a glance of mistrust
and indignation.</p>
<p>“I will be plain,” said I: “when the Princess,
who is my wife, left me,—I will own I bear some
blame, but then I had been strangely played with,—she
had doubtless already begun to repent what
you call her freak. When I followed her and
implored her forgiveness,—you yourself know all
about it, Madam, for you must have acted under
her orders,—she flung back my letters, through
your agency, with a contemptuous denial of any
knowledge of such a person as M. de Jennico.
When I wrote to her, her whom I believed to
bear your name, a pleading, abject letter, for
I was still but a poor loving fool, her only
answer was to have me seized and driven from
the country like a criminal. Later on, when I
refused to be a party to her petition for divorce,
she thought, no doubt, she had given me chances
enough, and this time she deputed the noble
bully, her cousin, to manage the matter in his
own fashion. My life was attempted five times,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
Madam. And when it all failed,—your Prince
Eugen, you tell me, he was in England, and there
was a certain great bulky Chevalier de Ville-Rouge,
who particularly sought my acquaintance—’tis
he, is it not?—your Prince Eugen honoured
me by seeking a duello, and by running his
august sword through my common body, and that
more often, be it said, than custom sanctions in
honourable encounters. I was given for dead.
No wonder! It seems to be the sport of hell to
keep me alive. I can scarce think it is the will
of Heaven.”</p>
<p>Madam Lothner had followed my tirade with
what appeared the most conflicting sentiments:
blank astonishment, horror, indignation. It was
the last, however, that predominated. Her countenance
became suffused with crimson; her blue
eyes flashed a fire I had not deemed them capable
of harbouring; she forgot the precautions she herself
had so strenuously enjoined.</p>
<p>“And do you dare, sir,” cried she, “accuse my
mistress of these things—you, whom she loved?
You knew her as your wife for four weeks, and
yet you know her so little as to believe her plotting
your death! Those letters, sir, you speak of,
she never received, nor did I, nor did she nor I
ever hear of your presence in this land. ’Tis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
true that after you had left,—for <i>you</i> left her
first, remember,—after well-nigh a year without
tidings of you, she did herself send to you to
request the annulment of the marriage. It was
<i>to free you</i> because she believed you repented of it,
and she felt she had entrapped you into it. And
when, sir, you refused, she had hope again in her
heart, for she loved you. And she suffered persecution
on your account, and was kept and watched
like a state prisoner—she that had always lived
for the free air, and for her own way. They were
cruel to her, and put dreadful pressure upon her
that she should make her appeal alone to the
Pope. But she held firm, and bore it all in silence,
and lived surrounded by spies, her old friends and
old servants banished from her sight, until the
news came that you were dead. Then ... ah,
then, she mourned as never a woman mourned
yet for her first and only love! As to marriage—what
dreadful things have you been saying?
Her Highness will never marry again. She will
be faithful as long as she lives to you, whom she
believes dead. And God forbid it should be otherwise,
for Prince Eugen would wed her from no
love, I believe, but solely to punish her for resisting
him so long, to break her to his will at last,
and triumph over her. Oh, no, she would never<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
wed again! You must believe me, for I have been
with her through it all, and though she would
mock me and laugh at me once, she turned to
me afterwards as to her only friend——Get up,
M. de Jennico, get up! Ach Gott! what a coil
this is! My good sir, get up; think if the doctor
were to come in! Ach Gott! what is that you
say? Nay, I have been a fool, and this is the
worst of all. My poor friend, there is no room for
happiness here!”</p>
<p>For I had fallen at her feet again, and was
covering her hand with kisses, blessing her with
tears, I believe, for the happiness of this moment.</p>
<p>She ended, good soul, by weeping with me, or
rather, over the pity of the joy that was doomed,
as she thought, to such brief duration.</p>
<p>“Oh, you are mad, you are mad!” she said, as
I poured forth I know not what extravagant plans.
Ottilie loved me, cried I in the depths of my exultant
soul: what could be difficult now? “You
are mad! Have you not yet learned your lesson?
Do you not understand that they will never, <i>never</i>
let you have her? Go back to your home, sir,
and if you love her never let her know you are
still alive, for if they heard it here, God knows
what she would be put to bear; and if she knew
they had tried to murder you, it would kill her.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span>
I tell you, sir, a Court is a dreadful place, and
Prince Eugen, you know what he is, and his
Serene Highness himself, he is hard as the stones
of the street. You have seen what they have
done—no law can reach them! They will not
fail again. And if a second scandal——” she
paused, hesitated, shuddered, then bending over
to me she whispered, half inarticulately, “if a
second scandal came to pass, who knows what
forfeit she might not have to pay!”</p>
<p>But I rose, clasped her two hands, and looked into
her eyes with all the bold joy that filled my heart.</p>
<p>“My kind friend,” I said, “you cannot frighten
me now. Keep you but our secret, and you will
yet see your mistress happy.” I wrung her hands,
and hurried to the door, as eager now to be gone
as I had been to enter. I must act, and act at
once, and there was much to do.</p>
<p>She followed me, lamenting and entreating, to
the steps, where stood faithful Trude, with garments
blown about in the cold wind. But, as I
turned to take a last farewell, my hostess caught
me by the sleeve.</p>
<p>“Keep close,” she said, “keep close; and if you
are hurt, if you are ill——” she hesitated a second,
then leaned forward and breathed into my ear,
“do not send for the Court doctor.”</p>
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