<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<h3>ENTER A LOVELORN HABERDASHER</h3>
<p>Baldpate Inn did not stand tiptoe on the misty mountain-top. Instead it
clung with grim determination to the side of Baldpate, about half-way
up, much as a city man clings to the running board of an open
street-car. This was the comparison Mr. Magee made, and even as he made
it he knew that atmospheric conditions rendered it questionable. For an
open street-car suggests summer and the ball park; Baldpate Inn, as it
shouldered darkly into Mr. Magee's ken, suggested winter at its most
wintry.</p>
<p>About the great black shape that was the inn, like arms, stretched broad
verandas. Mr. Magee remarked upon them to his companion.</p>
<p>"Those porches and balconies and things," he said, "will come in handy
in cooling the fevered brow of genius."</p>
<p>"There ain't much fever in this locality," the practical Quimby assured
him, "especially not in winter."</p>
<p>Silenced, Mr. Magee followed the lantern of Quimby over the snow to the
broad steps, and up to the great front door. There Magee produced from
beneath his coat an impressive key. Mr. Quimby made as though to assist,
but was waved aside.</p>
<p>"This is a ceremony," Mr. Magee told him, "some day Sunday newspaper
stories will be written about it. Baldpate Inn opening its doors to the
great American novel!"</p>
<p>He placed the key in the lock, turned it, and the door swung open. The
coldest blast of air Mr. Magee had even encountered swept out from the
dark interior. He shuddered, and wrapped his coat closer. He seemed to
see the white trail from Dawson City, the sled dogs straggling on with
the dwindling provisions, the fat Eskimo guide begging for gum-drops by
his side.</p>
<p>"Whew," he cried, "we've discovered another Pole!"</p>
<p>"It's stale air," remarked Quimby.</p>
<p>"You mean the Polar atmosphere," replied Magee. "Yes, it is pretty
stale. Jack London and Doctor Cook have worked it to death."</p>
<p>"I mean," said Quimby, "this air has been in here alone too long. It's
as stale as last week's newspaper. We couldn't heat it with a million
fires. We'll have to let in some warm air from outside first."</p>
<p>"Warm air—humph," remarked Mr. Magee. "Well, live and learn."</p>
<p>The two stood together in a great bare room. The rugs had been removed,
and such furniture as remained had huddled together, as if for warmth,
in the center of the floor. When they stepped forward, the sound of
their shoes on the hard wood seemed the boom that should wake the dead.</p>
<p>"This is the hotel office," explained Mr. Quimby.</p>
<p>At the left of the door was the clerk's desk; behind it loomed a great
safe, and a series of pigeon-holes for the mail of the guests. Opposite
the front door, a wide stairway led to a landing half-way up, where the
stairs were divorced and went to the right and left in search of the
floor above. Mr. Magee surveyed the stairway critically.</p>
<p>"A great place," he remarked, "to show off the talents of your
dressmaker, eh, Quimby? Can't you just see the stunning gowns coming
down that stair in state, and the young men below here agitated in their
bosoms?"</p>
<p>"No, I can't," said Mr. Quimby frankly.</p>
<p>"I can't either, to tell the truth," laughed Billy Magee. He turned up
his collar. "It's like picturing a summer girl sitting on an iceberg and
swinging her open-work hosiery over the edge. I don't suppose it's
necessary to register. I'll go right up and select my apartments."</p>
<p>It was upon a suite of rooms that bore the number seven on their door
that Mr. Magee's choice fell. A large parlor with a fireplace that a few
blazing logs would cheer, a bedroom whose bed was destitute of all save
mattress and springs, and a bathroom, comprised his kingdom. Here, too,
all the furniture was piled in the center of the rooms. After Quimby had
opened the windows, he began straightening the furniture about.</p>
<p>Mr. Magee inspected his apartment. The windows were all of the low
French variety, and opened out upon a broad snow-covered balcony which
was in reality the roof of the first floor veranda. On this balcony
Magee stood a moment, watching the trees on Baldpate wave their black
arms in the wind, and the lights of Upper Asquewan Falls wink knowingly
up at him. Then he came inside, and his investigations brought him,
presently to the tub in the bathroom.</p>
<p>"Fine," he cried, "a cold plunge in the morning before the daily
struggle for immortality begins."</p>
<p>He turned the spigot. Nothing happened.</p>
<p>"I reckon," drawled Mr. Quimby from the bedroom, "you'll carry your cold
plunge up from the well back of the inn before you plunge into it. The
water's turned off. We can't take chances with busted pipes."</p>
<p>"Of course," replied Magee less blithely. His ardor was somewhat
dampened—a paradox—by the failure of the spigot to gush forth a
response. "There's nothing I'd enjoy more than carrying eight pails of
water up-stairs every morning to get up an appetite for—what? Oh, well,
the Lord will provide. If we propose to heat up the great American
outdoors, Quimby, I think it's time we had a fire."</p>
<p>Mr. Quimby went out without comment, and left Magee to light his first
candle in the dark. For a time he occupied himself with lighting a few
of the forty, and distributing them about the room. Soon Quimby came
back with kindling and logs, and subsequently a noisy fire roared in the
grate. Again Quimby retired, and returned with a generous armful of
bedding, which he threw upon the brass bed in the inner room. Then he
slowly closed and locked the windows, after which he came and looked
down with good-natured contempt at Mr. Magee, who sat in a chair before
the fire.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't wander round none," he advised. "You might fall down
something—or something. I been living in these parts, off and on, for
sixty years and more, and nothing like this ever came under my
observation before. Howsomever, I guess it's all right if Mr. Bentley
says so. I'll come up in the morning and see you down to the train."</p>
<p>"What train?" inquired Mr. Magee.</p>
<p>"Your train back to New York City," replied Mr. Quimby. "Don't try to
start back in the night. There ain't no train till morning."</p>
<p>"Ah, Quimby," laughed Mr. Magee, "you taunt me. You think I won't stick
it out. But I'll show you. I tell you, I'm hungry for solitude."</p>
<p>"That's all right," Mr. Quimby responded, "you can't make three square
meals a day off solitude."</p>
<p>"I'm desperate," said Magee. "Henry Cabot Lodge must come to me, I say,
with tears in his eyes. Ever see the senator that way? No? It isn't
going to be an easy job. I must put it over. I must go deep into the
hearts of men, up here, and write what I find. No more shots in the
night. Just the adventure of soul and soul. Do you see? By the way,
here's twenty dollars, your first week's pay as caretaker of a New York
Quixote."</p>
<p>"What's that?" asked Quimby.</p>
<p>"Quixote," explained Mr. Magee, "was a Spanish lad who was a little
confused in his mind, and went about the country putting up at summer
resorts in mid-winter."</p>
<p>"I'd expect it of a Spaniard," Quimby said. "Be careful of that fire.
I'll be up in the morning." He stowed away the bill Mr. Magee had given
him. "I guess nothing will interfere with your lonesomeness. Leastways,
I hope it won't. Good night."</p>
<p>Mr. Magee bade the man good night, and listened to the thump of his
boots, and the closing of the great front door. From his windows he
watched the caretaker move down the road without looking back, to
disappear at last in the white night.</p>
<p>Throwing off his great coat, Mr. Magee noisily attacked the fire. The
blaze flared red on his strong humorous mouth, in his smiling eyes.
Next, in the flickering half-light of suite seven, he distributed the
contents of his traveling-bags about. On the table he placed a number of
new magazines and a few books.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Magee sat down in the big leather chair before the fire, and
caught his breath. Here he was at last. The wild plan he and Hal Bentley
had cooked up in that Forty-fourth Street club had actually come to be.
"Seclusion," Magee had cried. "Bermuda," Bentley had suggested. "A
mixture of sea, hotel clerks, and honeymooners!" the seeker for solitude
had sneered. "Some winter place down South,"—from Bentley. "And a
flirtation lurking in every corner!"—from Magee. "A country town where
you don't know any one." "The easiest place in the world to get
acquainted. I must be alone, man! Alone!" "Baldpate Inn," Bentley had
cried in his idiom. "Why, Billy—Baldpate Inn at Christmas—it must be
old John H. Seclusion himself."</p>
<p>Yes, here he was. And here was the solitude he had come to find. Mr.
Magee looked nervously about, and the smile died out of his gray eyes.
For the first time misgivings smote him. Might one not have too much of
a good thing? A silence like that of the tomb had descended. He recalled
stories of men who went mad from loneliness. What place lonelier than
this? The wind howled along the balcony. It rattled the windows. Outside
his door lay a great black cave—in summer gay with men and maids—now
like Crusoe's island before the old man landed.</p>
<p>"Alone, alone, all, all alone," quoted Mr. Magee. "If I can't think here
it will be because I'm not equipped with the apparatus. I will. I'll
show the gloomy old critics! I wonder what's doing in New York?"</p>
<p>New York! Mr. Magee looked at his watch. Eight o'clock. The great street
was ablaze. The crowds were parading from the restaurants to the
theaters. The electric signs were pasting lurid legends on a long
suffering sky; the taxis were spraying throats with gasoline; the
traffic cop at Broadway and Forty-second Street was madly earning his
pay. Mr. Magee got up and walked the floor. New York!</p>
<p>Probably the telephone in his rooms was jangling, vainly calling forth
to sport with Amaryllis in the shade of the rubber trees Billy
Magee—Billy Magee who sat alone in the silence on Baldpate Mountain.
Few knew of his departure. This was the night of that stupid attempt at
theatricals at the Plaza; stupid in itself but gay, almost giddy, since
Helen Faulkner was to be there. This was the night of the dinner to
Carey at the club. This was the night—of many diverting things.</p>
<p>Mr. Magee picked up a magazine. He wondered how they read, in the old
days, by candlelight. He wondered if they would have found his own
stories worth the strain on the eyes. And he also wondered if absolute
solitude was quite the thing necessary to the composition of the novel
that should forever silence those who sneered at his ability.</p>
<p>Absolute solitude! Only the crackle of the fire, the roar of the wind,
and the ticking of his watch bore him company. He strode to the window
and looked down at the few dim lights that proclaimed the existence of
Upper Asquewan Falls. Somewhere, down there, was the Commercial House.
Somewhere the girl who had wept so bitterly in that gloomy little
waiting-room. She was only three miles away, and the thought cheered Mr.
Magee. After all, he was not on a desert island.</p>
<p>And yet—he was alone, intensely, almost painfully, alone. Alone in a
vast moaning house that must be his only home until he could go back to
the gay city with his masterpiece. What a masterpiece! As though with a
surgeon's knife it would lay bare the hearts of men. No tricks of plot,
no—</p>
<p>Mr. Magee paused. For sharply in the silence the bell of his room
telephone rang out.</p>
<p>He stood for a moment gazing in wonder, his heart beating swiftly, his
eyes upon the instrument on the wall. It was a house phone; he knew that
it could only be rung from the switchboard in the hall below. "I'm going
mad already," he remarked, and took down the receiver.</p>
<p>A blur of talk, an electric muttering, a click, and all was still.</p>
<p>Mr. Magee opened the door and stepped out into the shadows. He heard a
voice below. Noiselessly he crept to the landing, and gazed down into
the office. A young man sat at the telephone switchboard; Mr. Magee
could see in the dim light of a solitary candle that he was a person of
rather hilarious raiment. The candle stood on the top of the safe, and
the door of the latter swung open. Sinking down on the steps in the
dark, Mr. Magee waited.</p>
<p>"Hello," the young man was saying, "how do you work this thing, anyhow?
I've tried every peg but the right one. Hello—hello! I want long
distance—Reuton. 2876 West—Mr. Andy Rutter. Will you get him for me,
sister?"</p>
<p>Another wait—a long one—ensued. The candle sputtered. The young man
fidgeted in his chair. At last he spoke again:</p>
<p>"Hello! Andy? Is that you, Andy? What's the good word? As quiet as the
tomb of Napoleon. Shall I close up shop? Sure. What next? Oh, see here,
Andy, I'd die up here. Did you ever hit a place like this in winter? I
can't—I—oh, well, if he says so. Yes. I could do that. But no longer.
I couldn't stand it long. Tell him that. Tell him everything's O. K.
Yes. All right. Well, good night, Andy."</p>
<p>He turned away from the switchboard, and as he did so Mr. Magee walked
calmly down the stairs toward him. With a cry the young man ran to the
safe, threw a package inside, and swung shut the door. He turned the
knob of the safe several times; then he faced Mr. Magee. The latter saw
something glitter in his hand.</p>
<p>"Good evening," remarked Mr. Magee pleasantly.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?" cried the youth wildly.</p>
<p>"I live here," Mr. Magee assured him. "Won't you come up to my
room—it's right at the head of the stairs. I have a fire, you know."</p>
<p>Back into the young man's lean hawk-like face crept the assurance that
belonged with the gay attire he wore. He dropped the revolver into his
pocket, and smiled a sneering smile.</p>
<p>"You gave me a turn," he said. "Of course you live here. Are any of the
other guests about? And who won the tennis match to-day?"</p>
<p>"You are facetious." Mr. Magee smiled too. "So much the better. A lively
companion is the very sort I should have ordered to-night. Come
up-stairs."</p>
<p>The young man looked suspiciously about, his thin nose seemingly
scenting plots. He nodded, and picked up the candle. "All right," he
said. "But I'll have to ask you to go first. You know the way." His
right hand sought the pocket into which the revolver had fallen.</p>
<p>"You honor my poor and drafty house," said Mr. Magee. "This way."</p>
<p>He mounted the stairs. After him followed the youth of flashy
habiliments, looking fearfully about him as he went. He seemed surprised
that they came to Magee's room without incident. Inside, Mr. Magee drew
up an easy chair before the fire, and offered his guest a cigar.</p>
<p>"You must be cold," he said. "Sit here. 'A bad night, stranger' as they
remark in stories."</p>
<p>"You've said it," replied the young man, accepting the cigar. "Thanks."
He walked to the door leading into the hall and opened it about a foot.
"I'm afraid," he explained jocosely, "we'll get to talking, and miss the
breakfast bell." He dropped into the chair, and lighted his cigar at a
candle end. "Say, you never can tell, can you? Climbing up old Baldpate
I thought to myself, that hotel certainly makes the Sahara Desert look
like a cozy corner. And here you are, as snug and comfortable and at
home as if you were in a Harlem flat. You never can tell. And what now?
The story of my life?"</p>
<p>"You might relate," Mr. Magee told him, "that portion of it that has led
you trespassing on a gentleman seeking seclusion at Baldpate Inn."</p>
<p>The stranger looked at Mr. Magee. He had an eye that not only looked,
but weighed, estimated, and classified. Mr. Magee met it smilingly.</p>
<p>"Trespassing, eh?" said the young man. "Far be it from me to quarrel
with a man who smokes as good cigars as you do—but there's something I
haven't quite doped out. That is—who's trespassing, me or you?"</p>
<p>"My right here," said Mr. Magee, "is indisputable."</p>
<p>"It's a big word," replied the other, "but you can tack it to my right
here, and tell no lie. We can't dispute, so let's drop the matter. With
that settled, I'm encouraged to pour out the story of why you see me
here to-night, far from the madding crowd. Have you a stray tear? You'll
need it. It's a sad touching story, concerned with haberdashery and a
trusting heart, and a fair woman—fair, but, oh, how false!"</p>
<p>"Proceed," laughed Mr. Magee. "I'm an admirer of the vivid imagination.
Don't curb yours, I beg of you."</p>
<p>"It's all straight," said the other in a hurt tone. "Every word true. My
name is Joseph Bland. My profession, until love entered my life, was
that of haberdasher and outfitter. In the city of Reuton, fifty miles
from here, I taught the Beau Brummels of the thoroughfares what was
doing in London in the necktie line. I sold them coats with padded
shoulders, and collars high and awe inspiring. I was happy, twisting a
piece of silk over my hand to show them how it would look on their
heaving bosoms. And then—she came."</p>
<p>Mr. Bland puffed on his cigar.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, "Arabella sparkled on the horizon of my life. When I
have been here in the quiet for about two centuries, maybe I can do
justice to her beauty. I won't attempt to describe her now. I loved
her—madly. She said I made a hit with her. I spent on her the profits
of my haberdashery. I whispered—marriage. She didn't scream. I had my
wedding necktie picked out from the samples of a drummer from Troy." He
paused and looked at Mr. Magee. "Have you ever stood, poised, on that
brink?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Never," replied Magee. "But go on. Your story attracts me, strangely."</p>
<p>"From here on—the tear I spoke of, please. There flashed on the scene a
man she had known and loved in Jersey City. I said flashed. He did—just
that. A swell dresser—say, he had John Drew beat by two mauve neckties
and a purple frock coat. I had a haberdashery back of me. No use. He
out-dressed me. I saw that Arabella's love for me was waning. With his
chamois-gloved hands that new guy fanned the ancient flame."</p>
<p>He paused. Emotion—or the smoke of the cigar—choked him.</p>
<p>"Let's make the short story shorter," he said. "She threw me down. In my
haberdashery I thought it over. I was blue, bitter. I resolved on a
dreadful step. In the night I wrote her a letter, and carried it down to
the box and posted it. Life without Arabella, said the letter, was
Shakespeare with Hamlet left out. It hinted at the river, carbolic acid,
revolvers. Yes, I posted it. And then—"</p>
<p>"And then," urged Mr. Magee.</p>
<p>Mr. Bland felt tenderly of the horseshoe pin in his purple tie.</p>
<p>"This is just between us," he said. "At that point the trouble began. It
came from my being naturally a very brave man. I could have died—easy.
The brave thing was to live. To go on, day after day, devoid of
Arabella—say, that took courage. I wanted to try it. I'm a courageous
man, as I say."</p>
<p>"You seem so," Mr. Magee agreed.</p>
<p>"Lion-hearted," assented Mr. Bland. "I determined to show my nerve, and
live. But there was my letter to Arabella. I feared she wouldn't
appreciate my bravery—women are dull sometimes. It came to me maybe she
would be hurt if I didn't keep my word, and die. So I had to—disappear.
I had a friend mixed up in affairs at Baldpate. No, I can't give his
name. I told him my story. He was impressed by my spirit, as you have
been. He gave me a key he had—the key of the door opening from the east
veranda into the dining-room. So I came up here. I came here to be
alone, to forgive and forget, to be forgot. And maybe to plan a new
haberdashery in distant parts."</p>
<p>"Was it your wedding necktie," asked Mr. Magee, "that you threw into the
safe when you saw me coming?"</p>
<p>"No," replied Mr. Bland, sighing deeply. "A package of letters, written
to me by Arabella at various times. I want to forget 'em. If I kept them
on hand, I might look at them from time to time. My great courage might
give way—you might find my body on the stairs. That's why I hid them."</p>
<p>Mr. Magee laughed, and stretched forth his hand.</p>
<p>"Believe me," he said, "your touching confidence in me will not be
betrayed. I congratulate you on your narrative power. You want my story.
Why am I here? I am not sure that it is worthy to follow yours. But it
has its good points—as I have thought it out."</p>
<p>He went over to the table, and picked up a popular novel upon which his
gaze had rested while the haberdasher spun his fabric of love and gloom.
On the cover was a picture of a very dashing maiden.</p>
<p>"Do you see that girl?" he asked. "She is beautiful, is she not? Even
Arabella, in her most splendid moments, could get a few points from her,
I fancy. Perhaps you are not familiar with the important part such a
picture plays in the success of a novel to-day. The truth is, however,
that the noble art of fiction writing has come to lean more and more
heavily on its illustrators. The mere words that go with the pictures
grow less important every day. There are dozens of distinguished
novelists in the country at this moment who might be haberdashers if it
weren't for the long, lean, haughty ladies who are scattered tastefully
through their works."</p>
<p>Mr. Bland stirred uneasily.</p>
<p>"I can see you are at a loss to know what my search for seclusion and
privacy has to do with all this," continued Mr. Magee. "I am an artist.
For years I have drawn these lovely ladies who make fiction salable to
the masses. Many a novelist owes his motor-car and his country house to
my brush. Two months ago, I determined to give up illustration forever,
and devote my time to painting. I turned my back on the novelists. Can
you imagine what happened?"</p>
<p>"My imagination's a little tired," apologized Mr. Bland.</p>
<p>"Never mind. I'll tell you. The leading authors whose work I had so long
illustrated saw ruin staring them in the face. They came to me, on their
knees, figuratively. They begged. They pleaded. They hid in the
vestibule of my flat. I should say, my studio. They even came up in my
dumb-waiter, having bribed the janitor. They wouldn't take no for an
answer. In order to escape them and their really pitiful pleadings, I
had to flee. I happened to have a friend involved in the management of
Baldpate Inn. I am not at liberty to give his name. He gave me a key. So
here I am. I rely on you to keep my secret. If you perceive a novelist
in the distance, lose no time in warning me."</p>
<p>Mr. Magee paused, chuckling inwardly. He stood looking down at the
lovelorn haberdasher. The latter got to his feet, and solemnly took
Magee's hand.</p>
<p>"I—I—oh, well, you've got me beat a mile, old man," he said.</p>
<p>"You don't mean to say—" began the hurt Magee.</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all right," Mr. Bland assured him. "I believe every word of
it. It's all as real as the haberdashery to me. I'll keep my eye peeled
for novelists. What gets me is, when you boil our two fly-by-night
stories down, I've come here to be alone. You want to be alone. We can't
be alone here together. One of us must clear out."</p>
<p>"Nonsense," answered Billy Magee. "I'll be glad to have you here. Stay
as long as you like."</p>
<p>The haberdasher looked Mr. Magee fully in the eye, and the latter was
startled by the hostility he saw in the other's face.</p>
<p>"The point is," said Mr. Bland, "I don't want you here. Why? Maybe
because you recall beautiful dames—on book covers—and in that way,
Arabella. Maybe—but what's the use? I put it simply. I got to be
alone—alone on Baldpate Mountain. I won't put you out to-night—"</p>
<p>"See here, my friend," cried Mr. Magee, "your grief has turned your
head. You won't put me out to-night, or to-morrow. I'm here to stay.
You're welcome to do the same, if you like. But you stay—with me. I
know you are a man of courage—but it would take at least ten men of
courage to put me out of Baldpate Inn."</p>
<p>They stood eying each other for a moment. Bland's thin lips twisted into
a sneer. "We'll see," he said. "We'll settle all that in the morning."
His tone took on a more friendly aspect "I'm going to pick out a downy
couch in one of these rooms," he said, "and lay me down to sleep. Say, I
could greet a blanket like a long-lost friend."</p>
<p>Mr. Magee proffered some of the covers that Quimby had given him, and
accompanied Mr. Bland to suite ten, across the hall. He explained the
matter of "stale air", and assisted in the opening of windows. The
conversation was mostly facetious, and Mr. Bland's last remark concerned
the fickleness of woman. With a brisk good night, Mr. Magee returned to
number seven.</p>
<p>But he made no move toward the chilly brass bed in the inner room.
Instead he sat a long time by the fire. He reflected on the events of
his first few hours in that supposedly uninhabited solitude where he was
to be alone with his thoughts. He pondered the way and manner of the
flippant young man who posed as a lovelorn haberdasher, and under whose
flippancy there was certainly an air of hostility. Who was Andy Rutter,
down in Reuton? What did the young man mean when he asked if he should
"close up shop"? Who was the "he" from whom came the orders? and most
important of all, what was in the package now resting in the great safe?</p>
<p>Mr. Magee smiled. Was this the stuff of which solitude was made? He
recalled the ludicrous literary tale he had invented to balance the
moving fiction of Arabella, and his smile grew broader. His imagination,
at least, was in a healthy state. He looked at his watch. A quarter of
twelve. Probably they were having supper at the Plaza now, and Helen
Faulkner was listening to the banalities of young Williams. He settled
in his seat to think of Miss Faulkner. He thought of her for ten
seconds; then stepped to the window.</p>
<p>The moon had risen, and the snowy roofs of Upper Asquewan Falls sparkled
in the lime-light of the heavens. Under one of those roofs was the girl
of the station—weeping no more, he hoped. Certainly she had eyes that
held even the least susceptible—to which class Mr. Magee prided himself
he belonged. He wished he might see her again; might talk to her without
interruption from that impossible "mamma."</p>
<p>Mr. Magee turned back into the room. His fire was but red glowing ashes.
He threw off his dressing-gown, and began to unlace his shoes.</p>
<p>"There <i>has</i> been too much crude melodrama in my novels," he reflected.
"It's so easy to write. But I'm going to get away from all that up here.
I'm going—"</p>
<p>Mr. Magee paused, with one shoe poised in his hand. For from below came
the sharp crack of a pistol, followed by the crash of breaking glass.</p>
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