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Rapid Fire
Jessica Andersen


MILLS & BOON

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Contents

Cast of Characters

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Epilogue

Coming Next Month

CAST OF CHARACTERS

Maya Cooper —Suspended from the Bear Claw Crime Lab, the psych specialist is alone in believing that a local philanthropist is responsible for the crime wave currently terrorizing Bear Claw City. Her only ally is a dangerous man from her past.


Thorne Coleridge —Some cops say he has “powers.” Others think he’s a brilliantly intuitive profiler. Thorne himself knows two things about the current case: one, Maya is the only woman who can save him from himself, and two, loving him could mean her death.


Wexton Henkes —The local legend stands accused of heinous crimes. How far will he go to protect himself?


Alissa Wyatt & Cassie Dumont —The other members of the Bear Claw Crime Lab try to protect Maya by shutting her out of the investigation.


Detectives Piedmont & Montoya —The partners have been openly hostile to the three women of the new crime lab.


Nevada Barnes —The museum murderer tries to cut a deal from prison. Can he be trusted?


Chief Parry —Bear Claw’s police chief is under huge pressure to catch the criminal mastermind. When a suspended cop becomes the fiend’s next target, will he bow to pressure and use her as bait?


Drew Wilson —When two police sketches help identify him as a suspect, he will do anything to avoid capture.

Prologue

He stood on a bluff overlooking green summer pastures and raised a pair of binoculars to his eyes as the morning sun climbed above the opposite ridgetop.

The target lay in the valley below, a jumble of Hollywood-false Western buildings and swirling bison herds. It would be so easy this time.

Almost too easy.

At the beginning, when he’d first conceived his revenge, he’d thought of himself as the planner. The cops had christened him the Mastermind, because he’d so carefully organized his strategy and found men to do his bidding. Bradford Croft had been pliable, with a fondness for young girls that had made him easy to direct. Nevada Barnes had been less malleable. More angry. More dangerous. But he, too, had his weaknesses.

Croft was dead now and Barnes was in jail, but the plan lived on. Divide and conquer.

Revenge. Retribution.

The Mastermind tightened his fingers on the binoculars as a school bus lumbered into view below, passing beneath a swinging sign that promised authentic Wild West entertainment.

Children spilled from the bus and their shrill, excited voices filtered up to his vantage point. Then the adults emerged, moving more slowly, thinking themselves safe. The Canyon Kidnapper was dead and the Museum Murderer—an epithet he blamed solely on the media—was in jail. The citizens of Bear Claw, Colorado, thought the danger was past.

They had no idea it was just beginning.

Chapter One

Wearing jeans and a fitted blue T-shirt on her lean, five-foot-nothing frame, with her dark hair tucked beneath a straw hat and a canvas bag slung over her shoulder, Maya Cooper looked every inch the tourist she’d intended to portray. But inside, she was all cop as she scanned the swept-clean brick roadway that ran down the center of the faux ghost town outside Bear Claw City.

Her training as a criminal profiler told her she was reaching, but her gut told her she was on to something.

She was positive the Chuckwagon Ranch was connected to the sick bastard who’d planned two separate violent crime sprees over the past six months.

Wexton Henkes, part owner of the theme park, was a Bear Claw legend. Born in the city and raised up through the school system, he’d taken his father’s one-room electronic repair shop and built it into an empire. Once he’d made his first million—or ten—he’d started giving back to the city that had brought him his success. He’d funded everything from civic projects and art revivals to nature conservation and the local sports teams. In short, he was a prince.

On the outside, at least. Inside, Maya was convinced he was something else entirely. He’d broken his own son’s arm three months earlier—nobody could tell her different—and he was poised to duck the abuse charges because he had money, power and influence.

Enough influence to get her in serious trouble the last time she’d gone after him.

“But not this time,” she said aloud, earning herself strange looks from the passing tourists.

The June morning was warm and bright, perfect for a family trip. The Wild West theme park was cut down the middle by Main Street, a wide brick causeway flanked with false-fronted buildings that had been painted to look like a saloon, a general store and a livery. Tourists streamed into and out of the buildings in a chaos of movement and sound that made it almost impossible to pick out individuals. On either side of the buildings, bison-dotted pastures stretched for miles, taking up most of the shallow, hill-bounded bowl of land.

Maya scanned the low ridgetops that flanked the road and saw nothing. A faint feeling of wrongness prickled at the nape of her neck, a familiar sense of being watched. Of being alone.

But damn it, she was alone. She’d been suspended from the Bear Claw Police Department pending an inquiry into the incident at the Henkes mansion three months earlier.

Anxiety pressed at her, echoing her heartbeat in the low-grade headache that had plagued her ever since she’d awoken in the Hawthorne Hospital with a knot on the back of her head and no memory of attacking Henkes in his own home.

But that was what she’d done. Or so they said.

What if they kicked her off the force? Maya’s throat closed at the thought. She was already on the outside of the Bear Claw City Police Department—BCCPD—looking in. Alissa Wyatt and Cassie Dumont, her best friends and coworkers within the start-up Forensics Department, had tried to include her in the gossip, but they were run ragged shouldering her work as well as their own.

The new three-woman forensics team was struggling to gain acceptance within the Bear Claw PD as it was. What if—

No, Maya told herself, she wouldn’t dwell on that. The previous night she’d finally decided it was time to stop with the futile attempts at self-hypnosis, the painful efforts to force some remembrance of that night at the Henkes mansion. It was no use. The memories were gone, and she had an ugly feeling she knew why.

She touched a hand to her throat, where her charm necklace held five bangles. There should have been six more, but she’d lost them to a mistake. To temptation.

Would she lose the remaining five charms as well?

What if she had to start over again?

“No,” she said aloud. “I’m stronger than that, and I’m damn well going to prove it. Starting now.”

As though on cue, her cell phone rang, a digital bleat that cracked through the background hum of tourism. Not expecting a call, Maya slapped open the unit and checked the number, but the ID was blocked.

Annoyed, she flipped the phone shut and dropped it in the front pocket of her canvas bag. These days most of her calls came from media hounds looking for quotes on the dismissal of the Henkes child-abuse trial, or supporters of Wexton Henkes himself calling to threaten her, somehow still believing the bastard had a solid shot at the upcoming Congressional election. She didn’t need to talk to either group.

Focused on her own special way of doing the job—more organic than straight detecting, more regimented than pure profiling—she followed the flow of tourists toward the livery building, which held a petting zoo.

She wanted to get a feel for the theme park and the man who’d bankrolled it.

Inside the building, rough-hewn boards and crooked center beams gave the sense of an old, rundown barn, though a closer look showed her that everything was neat and new, and painted to look old. The place was packed with excited children, along with adults wearing expressions that ranged from enthusiasm to exhaustion. Small goats and lambs wandered a straw-bedded center pen, begging for handfuls of pellets that could be bought from quarter-operated machines on the wall. Box stalls on either side were set up to hold larger animals, though only one was occupied, holding a shaggy bison that looked close to five feet tall at the shoulder and probably weighed in well over a thousand pounds. Its short, curved horns were dulled at the ends, but that did little to blunt the physical impact of the creature as it snorted and stomped in its enclosure.

Maya noted the people and animals, then turned her attention to the building. She wasn’t even sure what she was looking for. A sense of the place, maybe, or insight into the man who had financial ties not only to the ranch, but also to the state park where Alissa had found the kidnapped girls during the first crime wave, and to the Bear Claw Natural History Museum where Cassie had nearly lost her life in the second.

During her terrifying ordeal in the museum, Cassie had heard the computer-altered voice of a third man, one who called himself the planner.

He had promised more violence to come.

The members of the special BCCPD task force assembled to deal with the crimes had vowed to find the Mastermind before he could strike again, but their leads had fizzled out in the months since. They needed an accurate psychological profile of the criminal, but their quarry was too many things and none of them all at once. It was nearly impossible to separate his ego from the works of the men he’d coerced into executing the actual crimes, but Maya was damn sure going to try.

So what if she was off the case, off the force entirely? That didn’t stop her from being a cop. Didn’t stop her from wanting to prove that she wasn’t—

The phone rang again, startling her. Though the ID was still blocked, she stepped outside the petting zoo and answered it, planning to give the persistent journalist an earful. “Maya Cooper speaking. Who is this?”

“You don’t know me,” said an eerie, mechanized voice.

A jolt slapped through her. The distorted sound matched Cassie’s description of the Mastermind’s voice.

She swallowed and said, “Hello, Wexton. How’s the arm?”

She was sure of her suspect. She just had to convince the rest of the BCCPD.

Dead silence echoed over the digital airwaves. For a moment she thought he’d hung up. Then the mechanized voice returned. “You think you’re so smart, don’t you? Well, I’ve got a surprise for you.”

Maya’s fingers tightened on the cell phone. “What kind of surprise?”

The voice held a hint of metallic amusement when it said, “There’s a bomb hidden somewhere in the Chuckwagon Ranch. You have ten minutes to evacuate.”


“YOU WANT ME TO DO WHAT?” Thorne Coleridge stopped pacing the small office and stared at Bear Claw City’s Police Chief.

William Parry, grizzled and bulldogesque with his jowly face and sad eyes, leaned back in his desk chair. “Do you want the job or not?”

Thorne jammed his hands in the pockets of the navy wool slacks he’d worn as a concession to the interview. He’d gotten a quick trim of his short, sandy hair and donned a white oxford-cloth shirt, but had skipped the tie, figuring he should begin as he meant to go on.

The question echoed in his brain. Did he want the job? Did he want to get in at the ground level of a start-up forensics department? Hell, yes. Did he want to get out of the Wagon Ridge PD, where conversations stopped the moment he entered the room and the whispers began the moment he left? Hell, yes. That was why he’d jumped at the chance when his bosses in Wagon Ridge had asked if he would drive down to Bear Claw and help with an ongoing case. He needed a fresh start.

But he wasn’t sure he wanted to make that start at the expense of a colleague.

He resumed his pacing before he said, “Nobody told me I’d be replacing another psych specialist. I thought you were looking to fill a vacancy.”

“It can become a vacancy if you do your job. Hell, I’ll probably have to replace her either way.” But Parry’s frown drooped lower, cutting deeper lines in his sagging face. “The three women came with glowing references and wanted to work together. I was looking to upgrade my forensics team. It seemed like a match.”

“I take it things haven’t gone smoothly?”

Parry snorted. “You could say that. If it isn’t one thing with those three, it’s another. At first, they couldn’t manage to get along with the rest of the PD. They did their jobs well enough, but it was tense as hell. Then once all this trouble started, my crime scene expert and my evidence tech wound up snuggling with my best detective and my FBI liaison.” His expression darkened. “Hell, they wound up being targeted by the damn killer!”

“You can’t blame them for the criminal mind,” Thorne said, avoiding the touchy issue of interdepartmental romance. He didn’t need to go there. Not now.

Not ever again.

“True, but whether it’s their fault or not, things have been unsettled in the PD since they came on board.” The chief shifted in his chair. “Then add on this business with Wexton Henkes…” He trailed off, but his sour expression left no doubt that he’d had it with his crack team of investigators. “My so-called psych specialist accused Bear Claw’s biggest philanthropist of child abuse—against the sworn testimony of his wife and son, mind you—and then attacked him in his own home before she collapsed and remained unconscious for nearly three days.” Parry muttered a curse. “I just don’t think she’s an asset to the PD at this point. I’d like to replace her with someone more stable. More qualified.”

Thorne grimaced. Surely the rumors had traveled down to Bear Claw, stories of how he’d gone up into the mountains after cult leader Mason Falk, and how he’d been a changed man afterwards.

But maybe the chief figured that was a long time ago, and knew he’d proven himself since.

God knows he’d tried to.

He thought of the opportunity he was being offered. A fresh start, away from—

Well, just away.

Interest piqued, Thorne withdrew his hands from his pockets and sat in the padded chair facing the chief’s desk. He gestured toward the glass wall separating the chief’s office from the bulk of the Bear Claw PD, where cops worked in their cubes or hustled out on calls. “What about the others? Won’t they see me as just as much of an intruder? Hell, what about the women? They’re going to hate me if I break up their cozy little unit.”

“They’ll deal,” the chief said bluntly, though Thorne caught a flicker of doubt in his eyes. “Alissa Wyatt is the crime scene analyst. Does sketches, too. She’s engaged to Detective Tucker McDermott, Homicide. Make friends with Tucker and she’ll tolerate you. Cassie Dumont is our evidence tech. She paired off with Seth Varitek, an FBI evidence specialist out of the Boulder office. She’ll be tougher, and won’t care whether you make nice with Seth or not. If I were you, I’d just stay out of her way while you work this case.” The chief leaned forward in his chair and pinned Thorne with a no-nonsense look. “Here’s the deal. I’m putting you on the Mastermind task force. We need a solid profile and a new direction, and we need it yesterday, before this bastard attacks my city again. Consider this case your job interview. You fit in here and help us catch the Mastermind, and the job’s yours.”

Thorne nodded as a stir of anticipation drowned out most of his doubts. “I’ll need copies of the case files, all the notes your investigators have amassed on the Canyon Kidnappings and the Museum Murders, everything that pertains to the Mastermind.”

“The computer files and hard copies are waiting for you downstairs in the forensics department offices. You’ll have to share with Alissa and Cassie, I’m afraid, but maybe that’s for the best. It’ll let you three get used to each other.” The chief stood and extended his hand, indicating that the interview—such as it had been—was over. “I expect interesting things from you, Coleridge. Don’t let me down.”

As Thorne stood and shook with the man who would be—at least temporarily—his new superior, he saw the knowledge in Parry’s eyes and heard the emphasis on the word interesting. That was enough to tell him that the chief had heard the rumors about his so-called talents, after all. Maybe that explained why he’d called Wagon Ridge and asked for Thorne personally.

Yeah, that was it, he decided. The chief was hoping he’d provide a miracle.

Too bad he’d have to disappoint.

“I’ll do my best police work,” he said carefully.

The chief paused, then nodded. “You do that.”

It wasn’t until Thorne turned for the door that he saw the commotion outside, heard the muted shouts in the bullpen. Adrenaline spurted. “What the hell?”

A woman yanked open the door before he could reach for it. Medium height with honey-blond hair pulled into a ponytail beneath a BCCPD ball cap, she had deep blue eyes that were wide with stress, though she kept her voice professionally level when she said, “He’s back. We just had a bomb threat phoned in to that bison park outside the city. Computerized voice and all.”

“The Mastermind phoned here?” the chief demanded, already shrugging into his jacket.

The woman shook her head. “Worse. He called Maya’s cell.”

The chief repeated the name like a curse, but the word froze Thorne to his core.

“Maya?” he said, and something must have leaked into his voice because the woman and Chief Parry both turned to him.

“Maya Cooper,” the chief said. “The psych specialist that you’re re—that you’re subbing for while she’s on suspension.”

The sudden darkening of the woman’s eyes told Thorne the chief’s slip hadn’t gone unnoticed. She glared at Parry, then at Thorne, but said only, “I’m out of here. We’ve got a bomb to find and a scene to process. Everything else will have to wait.”

She slammed the door behind her, making the glass shudder.

The chief paused with his hand on the knob and turned to Thorne. “That was Alissa, the friendlier of your two new coworkers. Sounds like you’re going to have problems.”

“I can handle it,” Thorne said carefully, but the chief had no idea how right he was in predicting a problem.

It wasn’t Alissa he was worried about, though.

It was Maya.

Chapter Two

“Everybody stay calm. It’s all under control.” Though her heart pounded in her chest, Maya pitched her voice low as the crowd of tourists she’d collected in the parking lot outside the ranch edged toward panic. “The police will be here soon to check on the possibility,” she stressed the last word, though in her mind there was no doubt the Mastermind had been deadly serious, “that there’s a problem.”

The tourists and ranch employees milled in a bare area beyond the parking lot, shifting restlessly as though they had ceased to be single individuals and become a combined entity, a spooky, nervous mob that could stampede at any moment.

Maya strained to hear the sound of approaching sirens even as she raised her hands. “Please stay calm. It’ll just be a few more minutes.”

A few minutes until the Bear Claw cops arrived. A few minutes until the bomb detonated, minutes that ticked down on the digital display of her wristwatch.

The explosive could be in any one of the buildings. Or it could be in one of the cars. Even in the big yellow school bus parked in the corner of the lot, Maya thought with a faint shudder as the numbers clicked down from five minutes to four.

“Let’s get in the cars and get out of here,” a man’s voice called, and others shouted agreement.

“I’m sorry, that’s not an option.” Maya glanced to her right and left, where two terrified-looking ranch employees were helping her keep the group in check now that the initial rush to get people the hell out of the ranch had passed. The three of them were holding the line, but the crowd could turn at a moment’s notice.

Maya had studied mob mentality. She’d been in situations like this before.

But back then, she’d had a badge and a weapon, and street cops backing her up.

“Why not?” shouted the same voice, irritated now. “And who put you in charge?”

She glared in the direction of the heckler. “I’m a member of the Bear Claw Creek Police Department, which puts me in charge.”

She didn’t give her name, because it had already been splashed too loudly in the media, and she didn’t give her rank or show her badge, because she’d been stripped of both until Internal Affairs finished looking into the Henkes incident, a process that had been stalled several times by red tape she could only assume came from Henkes’s supporters within the force.

Three minutes, thirty seconds.

She tried not to think about her first impressions of the theme park, how a sniper could sit up on the low ridge of hills nearby and fire down into the crowd she had assembled in a too-convenient knot. But what other choice did she have? She’d needed to get them the hell out of the park, and the vehicles weren’t an option.

Three minutes.

Then she heard sirens in the distance, approaching rapidly.

“Thank God,” Maya whispered to herself, knowing she couldn’t say it aloud, couldn’t let the crowd know she was worried.

They needed her to be strong, to keep the peace.

Precious seconds ticked by as the Bear Claw cops pulled in, led by Alissa and Cassie, riding with Tucker in his he-man truck. The chief’s car followed moments later. The sight of her friends loosened the tight band around Maya’s heart, even as the suspicious looks she got from the other arriving officers made her feel worse.

Uniforms ranged out around the rapidly quieting crowd. As the tension subsided a degree, a youngish cop jogged over to Maya and said, “We’ll take it from here, ma’am. The chief would like a word with you.”

She tried not to wince at the “ma’am,” which served only to underscore her status as not-quite-a-cop. But there wasn’t time for regrets, not while her wristwatch clicked down past two minutes thirty seconds.

She hastened to the knot of cops gathered near the chief’s car just as two vans and a box truck arrived in a cloud of dust, bearing John Sawyer, the leader of the Bear Claw Bomb Squad, along with his team of experts.

“He said I had ten minutes,” she told the group. “We’ve got two-thirty left, give or take. The park is cleared of people, but there’s a petting zoo in the livery building and close to three hundred head of bison pastured right behind the buildings.”

“Not much we can do about that now,” Chief Parry said pragmatically, but his grizzled, careworn face settled into deeper lines at the prospect of bloodshed, human or otherwise. When Sawyer joined the group, the chief quickly updated him. The two put their heads together to rough out a plan, which gave Maya a moment to glance at the others.

Alissa’s honey-blond hair was tied back in a ponytail and stuffed under a navy BCCPD ball cap, while Cassie’s straight, nearly white-blond hair was shorter now, cut near her shoulders. Tucker stood just behind Alissa and off to one side, shoulders stiff and protective. A wolf guarding his mate. Knowing that the task force had remained active even after the capture of Nevada Barnes three months earlier, Maya was faintly surprised by the absence of Special Agent Seth Varitek. Cassie’s nemesis-turned-lover had been loaned to the task force for help with the evidence work, but perhaps he was off on another case.

In Varitek’s place, a stranger stood at the edge of the group, part of the conversation but apart from the center of it. He was maybe a shade over six feet tall, lean but muscular. He wore navy pants and a crisp white shirt at odds with the heavy boots on his feet. His close-cropped sandy hair was standard military, as was his stiff-backed posture, and she sensed him studying her from behind his dark sunglasses.

She felt a shimmer of familiarity. A cold crawl moved across her shoulders and up her neck to gather at the base of her skull.

Who was this guy?

Her watch beeped to indicate sixty seconds left in the countdown. Thirty.

In silent accord, the cops turned toward the Chuckwagon Ranch as the seconds bled away. There was no way they could search the entire place in time. They didn’t even know where to begin.

As the final few seconds ran down on the digital display, Chief Parry nodded to Maya. “Good work getting everyone out. They’re safe, thanks to you.”

It was the first time he’d spoken to her since he’d taken her badge. The recognition warmed her, but she said, “I was just doing my job.”

Then the time ran out. Her watch beeped the end of the promised ten minutes. They braced for an explosion.

Nothing happened.

Seconds ticked by. Then minutes. Still nothing.

Maya’s brain sped up. Her thoughts quickened to a blur, but it was Sawyer who said, “Think it’s another dud?”

During the Museum Murder investigation, Cassie’s house had been rigged with a gas leak and a detonator that hadn’t triggered. Sawyer later determined that it had never been intended to blow. It’d been a fake, designed to confuse them. Scare them.

Could this be the same?

“It would fit with the Mastermind’s pattern,” Maya said quietly. “Hell, there might not even be a device. He probably got off on phoning in a threat and watching us scramble.”

She told herself not to be ashamed by the false alarm. There was no way she could have known, no way she could have chanced ignoring the call.

But still, she squirmed at the sidelong glances of her former coworkers and the stranger in the dark glasses.

Sawyer gestured to his team. “We’ll suit up and search the property to make sure. It’ll take a few hours.”

“With all due respect,” Maya said, “I’d suggest you check the vehicles first. The tourists are pretty edgy to leave.”

“With all due respect,” the chief said, “you should go with them. The media will be here any minute. If they catch wind that you’re involved with this bomb scare, the next thing we know, it’ll be splashed across the six o’clock news. Suspended cop receives bomb tip. Film at eleven. Hell, they’ll want to know why you received the call. Is it because you’re the last Forensics Department cop to be targeted? Or maybe it’s completely unrelated. Maybe this is about the Henkes trial next week. Lord knows, you’ve ticked off more than a few people with that.”

His words dug at Maya’s suspicions, at the places she hadn’t yet managed to armor. “That would make it completely related,” she snapped. “Why do you think I was here in the first place? Henkes is—”

“He’s right,” Alissa interrupted, though her voice was laced with apology when she said, “You should go. Leave your cell phone with us for analysis. Tucker and I will swing by your place later to get a full statement.”

Ouch. Maya fought the wince, crossed her arms and nodded tightly. “Of course. I’m sorry.” She forced the words through a throat gone tight with resentment.

Was this what she’d been reduced to? Waiting at home for her friends to drop by with a crumb of information?

When nobody argued, she swallowed the anger and pushed through the group. Her path brought her between Alissa and the stranger.

Alissa touched Maya’s arm and mouthed, “I’m sorry. We’ll talk later.”

The stranger just looked down at her through his shaded lenses with an intensity that set off warning bells.

Maya had the wild, uncharacteristic urge to reach up and pull those glasses down so she could see his eyes. But wild urges were self-destructive. She knew that much from experience. So she sniffed and pushed past him, bumping his arm with hers to let him know she wasn’t intimidated.

Damned if he didn’t flinch.


THE FLASH CAME THE MOMENT she touched him.

Blood. Death. Violence. Heat. Thorne held himself rigid and weathered the sensations, which were part memory, part anticipation. He gritted his teeth and forced himself not to show the whiplash of mental flame, of pain.

Hell, he thought when she was gone and the images faded, what was that?

It was a stupid question. He knew precisely what it had been. But why here? Why now? It had been years since his last vision, years since the doctors had assured him the flashes were nothing more than random synapse firings, courtesy of the drugs he’d been given during his captivity on Mason Falk’s mountain.

Years since he’d blocked the images, which had often come too close to prescience for his comfort.

He rubbed the place on his arm that she’d touched, where the contact had arced through the fabric of his shirt and punched him in the gut with the flash.

Or had that been nothing more than memory of their brief history?

She hadn’t recognized him. He shouldn’t have been surprised, given how much he’d changed since his brief stint teaching at the High Top Bluff Police Academy. His hair had been long then, and he’d been weak from the aftereffects of his captivity. Twitchy from the post-traumatic stress. He’d taken his first drink at ten each morning, and spaced five more whiskeys out through the day, staying sober enough to teach his classes, buzzed enough to avoid the memories. The visions.

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HarperCollins

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