<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>MARY FINDS GAY</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> day before Thanksgiving saw the Ware
family fully settled in their new home. The trunks
had been unpacked and their contents disposed of
to make the little cottage look as homelike as possible.
Even the preparations for their Thanksgiving
dinner were all made. They had been simplified
by Mrs. Barnaby's gift of a jar of mince-meat,
and the plump hen, which was to take the place of
a turkey, had been bought already dressed.</p>
<p>Now at only nine o'clock the morning work was
all done, and Mrs. Ware sat sewing on the south
gallery where Jack had wheeled himself into the
sunshine. Mary came and stood in the doorway.</p>
<p>"Things stay so clean here," she grumbled in a
laughing way. "I could do everything there is to
be done with one hand and not half try, and when
you all help we get through so fast it makes me
dizzy. Then there's nothing left to do but sit in
the sun and wait till time to get the next meal ready.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
I wish I hadn't been in such a hurry to put everything
in order. I wouldn't be so restless and idle
now. It makes me fidgety to have nothing to do."</p>
<p>"Take the basket and dishes back to the rectory,"
suggested Mrs. Ware, after Jack had proposed
several occupations to no purpose.</p>
<p>"But I've never met Mrs. Rochester yet," objected
Mary, "and it would be sort of awkward, going
in and introducing myself."</p>
<p>"No more awkward than it was for Mr. Rochester
to come here and introduce himself," said Jack.
"You can tell her for me that that charlotte russe
was perfection."</p>
<p>"I wonder what she is like," mused Mary, half
persuaded to go and see. "If I thought she'd be
approachable and easy to talk to—but—"</p>
<p>"Oh, you know she's all right," urged Jack, "or
she never would have been so good to a family of
strangers. I'll bet she's a dear, motherly old soul,
in a checked apron, with gray hair and a double
chin."</p>
<p>"Why, she couldn't be!" cried Mary. "Not and
be Mr. Rochester's wife. He doesn't look much
older than you do, and for all he's so dignified
there's something so boyish and likable about him
that I felt chummy with him right away."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, the things she cooked tasted as if she were
the kind of woman I said," persisted Jack, "and I
shall keep on thinking of her as that kind until it's
proved that my guess is wrong. I should think
that anybody with as much curiosity as you have
would go just to satisfy it."</p>
<p>"You mean you want yours satisfied," retorted
Mary. "Well, she'll do it herself in a few days.
She sent word that she'd call soon, so I believe that
I'll wait."</p>
<p>Coming out she stood leaning idly against one
of the gallery posts, a restless, dissatisfied little figure.
Then she strolled out to the front gate and
stood there awhile, looking down the deserted road.
Jack's gaze followed her sympathetically, and he
said to his mother in a low tone, "Poor little kid,
it's going to be a dull winter for her I'm afraid.
She was never cut out for solitude. She'd 'rather
dwell in the midst of alarms,' and this place isn't
much more diverting than a country graveyard."</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware's glance followed his, then she replied
confidently as she looked down to thread her needle,
"Oh, she'll soon adjust herself. She'll find something
that will not only keep her busy but will amuse
all the rest of us."</p>
<p>Jack picked up the magazine from which he had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
been reading aloud the evening before and resumed
the story, but he was conscious all the time of the
little figure at the gate, and saw her without seeming
to notice when she slipped around the corner of
the house presently to the back yard. Then he
looked up with a smile when he heard the creaking
of the windmill crank at the back of the house.</p>
<p>"She's stopping the wheel," said Mrs. Ware, "so
that she can climb to the top of the tower again. It
seems to have some sort of fascination for her."</p>
<p>Jack went on with his story, and Mary, perched
on her watch-tower, clung to the bar above and
looked down over the town. The currents of air
were stronger up at the height to which she had
climbed. Down below scarcely a breath was stirring,
but here a fresh breeze blew the hair into her
eyes and began to blow the discontent out of her
mind. Her wish that Jack could see the view was
followed instantly by the thought that he could
never, never have any other outlook than the one
the wheeled chair afforded.</p>
<p>"It's wicked of me to be discontented one single
minute," she thought remorsefully. "There I was
fussing right before him about having nothing to
do, when he'd give worlds just to be foot loose—to
climb up here and walk about the place. And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
he was so dear and considerate, never once reminded
me how much harder it is for him than me, and
that he has nothing else to look forward to as long
as he lives."</p>
<p>The yellow walls of the rectory gleamed through
the trees at the north end of the little hamlet,
reminding her of Jack's laughing wish to know what
Mrs. Rochester was like.</p>
<p>"It's as little as I can do to go and find out for
him," she thought, "even if he did ask it in a joke.
I ought to be willing to do anything in the world
he expresses a wish for, poor boy. There's little
enough here to amuse him."</p>
<p>A few minutes later, in her travelling suit and
hat, with Mrs. Rochester's basket on her arm, she
interrupted the reading on the gallery.</p>
<p>"I'm going to see your motherly friend," she
announced—"to find out if she is gray-haired and
double-chinned. Maybe I'll tell her how you
described her."</p>
<p>"Don't you dare," warned Jack, laughingly.
"I'll get even with you if you do."</p>
<p>"You've already done that on a dozen old
scores," answered Mary gaily. "Good-bye, my
friends and kinsmen dear! As the story books say,
'we shall see what we shall see.'"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>What she saw when she rang the bell at the
rectory was the exact opposite of the motherly
creature whom Jack had pictured; for Mrs.
Rochester, who came to the door herself, was tall
and slim and very young, with the delicate, spirituelle
kind of beauty that had always been plump
little Mary's greatest admiration and desire. One
part of Jack's guess was correct, however. She
wore a big checked apron, for she was making
cake, and she invited Mary into the dining-room
where the materials were all spread out on the
table.</p>
<p>With the girlish cordiality that had won her so
many friends even in unsociable Bauer, she made
Mary feel so much at home, that in a few moments
she was insisting on helping with the cake. It
seemed a matter of course that Mrs. Rochester
should hand her the egg-beater, and before the eggs
were whipped into a stiff white mountain of snow,
they were exchanging experiences like old friends.
Mrs. Rochester had found Bauer a lonely place too,
at first.</p>
<p>"Jack says there was some great mix-up made
when I alighted on this planet," said Mary. "I
should have dropped down some place where 'the
breaking waves dashed high on a stern and rock-bound<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
coast.' He says I wasn't meant for a quiet
fish-pond existence."</p>
<p>"I know," laughed her hostess. "You feel as
if you were bound into the wrong book. You'd
be perfectly satisfied to find yourself in one of
Scott's novels, in a jumble of knights and tourneys
and border wars, but you would be bored beyond
endurance to have to be one of the characters in
Jane Austen's stories."</p>
<p>"Oh, you <i>do</i> know," cried Mary eagerly, emphasizing
her pleasure with a harder bang of the egg-beater.
"You understand exactly. There's nothing
tamer than Miss Austen's stories. Why, there's
pages and pages taken up with just discussing the
weather and each other's health; and they do such
trivial, inane things and go around and around in
such a deadly monotonous circle that sometimes I've
been so out of patience with them that I wanted
to throw the book into a corner."</p>
<p>"But you never did throw it down," answered
Mrs. Rochester, "you read on to the end and in
spite of yourself you were interested in those same
commonplace happenings and conversations, just as
readers before you have been interested in them
and always will be as long as those books live. And
I'll tell you why. You read them to the end because<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
they are true pictures of the lives of average people.
The majority of us have to put up with the humdrum,
no matter how much we long for the heroic,
and it's a good thing to read such books as 'Emma'
and 'Pride and Prejudice' every now and then, as
a sort of spirit-level. We're more satisfied to amble
along the road if everybody else drives a slow nag
too."</p>
<p>"I'm not," declared Mary. "I want to whizz
past everything in sight that is poky and slow. I
know it would be lots easier for me if I could only
make up my mind to the fact that nothing exciting
and important is ever going to happen to me, but
I can't break myself of the habit of expecting it.
I've felt that way as far back as I can remember.
I'm always looking for something grand and unexpected,
and every morning when I wake up it gives
me a sort of thrill to think, maybe it will come
to-day."</p>
<p>"Well, if you're going to stay in Bauer for awhile
you certainly do need another dose of 'Emma,'"
answered Mrs. Rochester, nodding to the shelves
in the adjoining library, where stood a well
thumbed edition of Miss Austen's works. "Take her
home with you, and any of the books you think<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>
your brother would like. We are glad to make our
library a circulating one."</p>
<p>Mary's face showed her pleasure quite as much
as her words, as she left her seat by the table to
slip into the great book-lined room and glance
around it.</p>
<p>"You've made up for one of my disappointments,"
she called back. "I had counted so much
on having the library in San Antonio to draw on
this winter, and this is even better, for I'm sure
that they haven't all these rare old prints and first
editions that I see here."</p>
<p>Her five minutes' call stretched into an hour,
when she found that Mrs. Rochester had been
brought up in Washington and had spent her school
days there. Then it stretched into two, for some
one drove in from the country with a carriage load
of autumn leaves, and Mary stayed to help arrange
them in the little church for the Thanksgiving service
next day. It was nearly noon when she finally
started home with several books under her arm,
her usual hopefulness and buoyancy of spirits quite
restored.</p>
<p>"Mamma and I can't both be away from Jack
at the same time," she said in response to Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
Rochester's invitation to attend the service next
day. "I want her to come. I've already had my
share of Thanksgiving. I've been thankful every
minute while I've been here that I discovered you.
It's been a beautiful morning."</p>
<p>"Come over often," urged Mrs. Rochester cordially.
"I can always find something for you to do,
and I'd love to have you come."</p>
<p>Mary's wave of the hand as she turned to latch
the gate at the end of the walk was answered by a
flutter of Mrs. Rochester's apron in the doorway,
and each went her way smiling over the recollection
of the other.</p>
<p>"She's a diverting little piece," Mrs. Rochester
reported to her husband at noon. "I laughed all
the time she was here."</p>
<p>"She's a darling," Mary reported at home, and
quoted her at intervals for several days.</p>
<p>"She's promised to take me with her sometime
when she drives out to call at the ranches. Nearly
all the members of St. Boniface are out-of-town
people, so they'll probably not call on us she says.
But she's coming as soon as she can get around to
it. I saw our name on a list she has hanging beside
her calendar. But there's nearly a week full of
things for her to do before she gets to us. I wish<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
that I had a list of duties and engagements that
would keep me going every minute, the way she
has to go."</p>
<p>"You can easily fill out a list that will keep you
busy for awhile," answered her mother. "While
you were gone Jack and I got to discussing dates,
and it was somewhat of a shock to find that Christmas
will be here so soon. One forgets the calendar
in this summer-like climate. Whatever we send
to Holland and Joyce must be started from here
in less than three weeks, and as our gifts must be
all home-made we cannot afford to lose any time
in beginning."</p>
<p>The problem of Christmas giving had always
been a knotty one in the Ware household, but it
was especially hard this year. Mary spent nearly
all afternoon making her list of names with the
accompanying list of gifts that seemed suitable for
each one. There were so many to whom she longed
to send little remembrances that the length of it
was appalling. Then she revised it, putting in one
column such people as Madam Chartley and Mrs.
Lee, to whom she decided to write letters—the
gayest, brightest greetings she could think of. Still
there were a goodly number left to provide with
gifts, no matter how simple, and she was busy till<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
bed-time measuring and figuring over the amount
of material she would need for each, and how much
it would cost. It had been decided that she should
go to San Antonio for a day to attend to the family
shopping.</p>
<p>"The trouble is," she sighed next morning, "it's
the simplest things that are always the hardest to
get. Don't you remember, in the story of Beauty
and the Beast, the father had no difficulty in buying
ropes of jewels and costly things for his oldest
daughters, but it almost cost him his life to get
the one common little white rose that his youngest
daughter so modestly asked for. I could do this
shopping in a few hours if I did not have to stop
to consider pennies, but there are several little
things that may take me all day to find. I'm sure
that that particular kind of narrow beading that I
need for Lloyd's present will prove to be the fatal
white rose. I can't make it without and there isn't
time to send back East for it."</p>
<p>"Maybe you'd better arrange to stay over night,"
suggested her mother, "and take two days to look
around for what you want. Of course you couldn't
go to a hotel alone, and it would be too expensive
even if you had company, but Mrs. Rochester might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
be able to recommend some private family who has
rooms for transients."</p>
<p>Mary caught at the idea so eagerly that had it
not been Thanksgiving Day and she feared to
intrude, she would have gone that very hour to
ask if the Rochesters knew of such a place. She
remembered that they were to have guests to dinner.
Fortunately for her peace of mind the rector and
his wife called for a few moments just before dusk.
Mrs. Rochester did know of a quiet inexpensive
place where she could spend the night, and then
and there slipped off her gloves to write a cordial
note of introduction.</p>
<p>It rained the Friday after Thanksgiving, but the
next day was fair, and Mary insisted on doing the
week's washing Saturday morning, and as much of
the ironing as she could accomplish in the afternoon,
in order to be able to start early Monday morning.
Several times she left her tubs to run into the house
and jot down some small items on her memorandum,
which she remembered would be indispensable in
making up their Christmas packages. Once she
thought of something in the night, when the barking
of a neighbor's dog awakened her.</p>
<p>If she had been alone in the room she would have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
lighted a candle and made a note of it. As it was
she was afraid to do so lest she waken her mother,
and afraid not to lest it should slip her mind before
morning. Finally she settled the difficulty by putting
her hand to her head and pulling out several
hairs which she twisted together and tied around
her finger.</p>
<p>"There!" she said to herself. "Hair will make
me think of herring, and then ring will make me
think of the little white celluloid rings that I must
get for those safety-pin holders."</p>
<p>Armed with Mrs. Rochester's letter she started
off gaily on the Monday morning train. It was not
due in the city till nearly ten, so she decided that
it would save time to go at once to the largest
department store, check her suit-case and wait until
shopping hours were over before going out to the
boarding-house which Mrs. Rochester had recommended.</p>
<p>She had thought San Antonio charming the first
time she saw it, but it seemed doubly so now that
she came back to it, as one familiar with its principal
streets and landmarks. The life, the color,
the holiday air of the crowds, the fête day atmosphere
of the old town itself, exhilarated her till
her cheeks glowed like roses, and several times,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
both on the street and in the stores, she caught herself
whistling half under her breath.</p>
<p>Although the usual Monday morning bargain
hunters were out in throngs, she found no trouble
in making her purchases. Everything seemed to
be in her favor this morning. The shop girls were
unusually responsive and helpful, showed her just
what she wanted or suggested something better
than she had thought of. Only once or twice did
the prices go above the limit she had set for them,
and several times they were lower. By quarter to
twelve she had checked off two thirds of the articles
on her list.</p>
<p>Elated by this success, she stood waiting at the
transfer desk for her change, looking around with
unabated interest. Suddenly her attention was
attracted to a girl in a brown tailor suit, standing
in the next aisle. Her back was turned towards
Mary, but there was something familiar looking in
the poise of the graceful head; something very
familiar looking in the puffs of soft auburn-bronze
hair held by amber combs, and arranged so becomingly
under the big brown hat.</p>
<p>Mary had been on the look-out all morning for
the girl whom Jack had recognized at the hotel as
Gay Melville. She might have missed her had Gay<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
been an ordinary blonde or brunette, but as Jack
said, there was no mistaking that glorious hair.
Snatching up the proffered change, which the
cashier put through the cage window, she pushed
her way into the next aisle. The girl turned. The
big plumed hat drooped over her face, still Mary
recognized the delicate profile, the slight tilt of the
slender chin. It was an opportunity which she
could not afford to lose, and as the girl turned her
back again to receive a package held out to her by
a clerk, and started slowly to the door, Mary hurried
after her.</p>
<p>Almost breathless in her eagerness she exclaimed
impulsively, "I beg your pardon—but aren't you
<i>Gay</i>?"</p>
<p>There was an instant of freezing silence as the
eyes of the girl in brown swept Mary from head
to foot.</p>
<p>"Well, not particularly," was the indignant
reply.</p>
<p>The roll of her r's emphasized Mary's mistake.
It was evidently some stranger from the North
whom she had accosted. One glance into her full
face made Mary see how dire her mistake had been.
There was no resemblance whatever in that to Gay.
Wishing that she could drop out of sight through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
the floor, she hastily apologized and hurried out
into the street, her cheeks burning, as she smarted
under the recollection of the stranger's supercilious
glance.</p>
<p>"She needn't have been so snippy," Mary
thought. "<i>Any</i>body is liable to make such mistakes."</p>
<p>Not until she had crossed the street and was
stopped short by her own reflection in a mirror in
the show window opposite, did she realize how her
question might have sounded.</p>
<p>"Oh, she must have thought that I was asking
her if she wasn't <i>gay!</i> <i>Gay with a little g!</i>" she
gasped. "No wonder she looked at me so freezingly."</p>
<p>She was so perturbed by this discovery, that she
walked on, unmindful of the direction. When a
group of children crowded past her on the narrow
pavement, she turned into a side street to avoid
being jostled, and walked aimlessly for some distance.
It was the sight of a green kettle swinging
above a door which she was approaching that
brought her to herself with a start. Mrs. Rochester
had told her to stop at the Sign of the Green Kettle
for lunch, and had given her directions for finding
it. Here she had stumbled upon it unaware,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
just as the city bells were beginning to clang for
noon.</p>
<p>At the next glance her heart went to thumping so
hard that she could plainly hear it. There on the
step leading up to the door of the Green Kettle,
stood Gay Melville; the real Gay this time. There
was no shadow of doubt about it. As she looked,
Mary wondered how she ever could have mistaken
the other girl for her, although each had hair wonderfully
like the other.</p>
<p>This one carried a violin case. She had paused
on her way in to call back something to the girl
in the carriage, who had brought her down town.
And the girl in the carriage was Roberta—Roberta
of the boyish speech and coquettish eyelashes, whose
laughing question held the girl on the step long
enough for Mary to reach it too, and stand there
beside her while she gathered courage to speak.</p>
<p>It was the little pin thrust through Gay's tie
which finally brought the words trembling to Mary's
lips, for it was the Warwick Hall pin which only
its alumni might wear; those who had kept the
four years' tryst with all its requirements. It was
a mailed hand rising from a heart to grasp a spear,
the motto and the crest of Edryn.</p>
<p>All diffidence fled at that familiar sight, but this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
time Mary did not ask if the girl were gay. With
a gesture toward the pin she cried breathlessly,
"Oh, I know by <i>that</i> that you are Miss Melville.
<i>Aren't</i> you!" Gay after one look into the eager
gray eyes said quite as cordially, "And you're
Mary Ware! I had a letter from Betty Lewis
this very morning telling me to be sure to find
you."</p>
<p>She gave a quick glance at the chatelaine watch
she wore. "I haven't a minute to stop—I'm to
play an obligato for the great prima donna, Madame
de Martel, and she has a beast of a temper which
she lets loose if a person is one second late at rehearsal.
But I must take time to say one thing if
she wipes me off the face of the earth for it. The
girls' letters have made me wild to know you. At
what hotel can I find you? I'll call this very
day."</p>
<p>"We've taken a cottage in Bauer," Mary
answered hastily. "I came down on a little shopping
expedition, and am on my way in here for
luncheon."</p>
<p>The heavy chords of a piano accompaniment
rolled threateningly through the music rooms up-stairs,
and Gay shrugged her shoulders impatiently.
"Do be a long time over it," she begged as she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
turned towards the stairs. "I'll get through as
quickly as possible and hurry back for another word
with you."</p>
<p>Mary watched her out of sight before starting
into the dining-room of the Green Kettle, and then
deliberately pinched herself to make sure that she
was awake. It was a good hard nip, which hurt,
and smiling to herself because it proved that she
was not dreaming, she sat down at a table near
the window to gloat over the fact that one of her
best dreams had come true at last. She had met
Gay Melville.</p>
<p>The lunch was a good one, but it would have
made no difference to Mary what was put before
her that day. Anything would have been nectar
and ambrosia served to the accompaniment of the
music overhead. A chorus of cherubim and seraphim
could not have left her more uplifted.
Madame de Martel might have the temper of a
beast at times, but she had a voice of rare sweetness
and power, and the knowledge that it was Gay's
violin pouring out that tremulous, tender, heartbreaking
obligato, enhanced Mary's enjoyment of
every note.</p>
<p>The rehearsal was a short one. All that the
famous visiting singer wanted was to make sure,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
since her own accompanists had failed her, that the
local ones were satisfactory. It came to an end
just as Mary began her dessert, and almost instantly
it seemed Gay was at her elbow, and seating herself
in the chair beside her.</p>
<p>"Isn't it a shame I haven't more than two
minutes to stay," she began. "This is like having
Warwick Hall and Lloydsboro Valley rolled into
one, to find somebody who loves them both as much
as I do. I could talk a week without stopping about
each place, and ask a thousand questions, but I'm
due at a luncheon out on Government Hill by the
time the next car can put me there. Immediately
after that is over we're all going to the polo tournament.
All during rehearsal I kept trying to think
of some way I could arrange to see you, and there's
only one. You've simply got to come home with
me to stay all night. Go on and finish your shopping,
and I'll come down for you after the tournament
and meet you anywhere you say."</p>
<p>The invitation, as cordial as it was sudden, was
gladly accepted and Gay exclaimed, "Oh, I'm so
delighted to think I've found you at last! You've
no idea how often you were quoted the summer I
was in the Valley. Lloyd and Betty and the old
Colonel and Dr. Alex Shelby were always saying<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
'as little Mary Ware says.' I feel as if I'd known
you from babyhood up."</p>
<p>"And I know all about your past," laughed Mary.
She was about to mention several incidents to prove
her claim, when Gay stopped her by a glance at the
clock and the question: "Wouldn't you like to
see the dress parade at the Post this evening?
Most people do, and it's well worth seeing."</p>
<p>Would she <i>like</i> it! Mary's beaming face
answered the question before her usually ready
tongue found a word, and Gay smiled as she hastily
drew on her gloves and picked up her violin case.</p>
<p>"I'd like to keep you all to myself to-night," she
said, "but I do want you to meet some of the people
that Kitty Walton liked best when she visited me
last year. I'll pick up Roberta and Lieutenant Boglin
to take dinner with us if I can get them. They're
always so nice to my Warwick Hall friends. They
were both wild about Kitty. Well, at quarter to
five, then, I'll meet you—where?"</p>
<p>Finally the glove counter at Joske's was agreed
upon as a meeting place, and with a friendly pat on
the shoulder in passing, Gay hurried away to keep
her engagement. Smiling blissfully after her, Mary
whispered to herself with one of her old childish
wriggles of pleasure, "And <i>Bogey</i>, too."</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span></p>
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