Sir Humphrey at Batch HallA Chapter by Peter MaughanHumphrey and Clem marry - and the struggle to survive begins.In
the following chapters Phineas Cook, off the houseboat the Cluny Belle, randy pulp-crime writer and a man who likes a drink, is helping out the
estate by acting as boatman for the new moonlight trip by punt on the river
business. It has long gone midnight before he and the first two customers for
the venture leave the village pub.
Chapter
Twenty
Phineas led the way down to
what he called the punting station, the bank astern of the paddler, where
Owain’s fourteen-foot Wyre fishing punt was tied up with the Belle’s
dinghy. He pulled the punt in, side on to the
bank, and held it steady while they climbed gingerly aboard, the boat moving
under them. “Mind the stick, m’dears,” he said,
referring to the punting pole resting lengthways on it. “Don’t want that
disappearing overboard.” The light from Adrian’s torch moved over
the craft and found the seat at the bow end, padded with purple cushions with
yellow piping and tassels from the Owens’ rowing skiff. “Park your bums,” Phineas said breezily,
climbing in after them. “That’s it, make yourselves at home.” He lit the storm lantern he’d placed
mid-boat, and turned the wick up, the white light flaring in the glass. He beamed at them over it. “What fun
this is!” “They’re supposed to be coloured,” Adrian
pointed out. Phineas muttered something about local
rags and misprints, and lit the second lamp, near the stern. And watched as the
glass started to blacken. “Perhaps it needs a new wick,” Suzanne
suggested. “Probably just needs trimming,” Adrian said
with off-hand authority, sitting back against the cushions with an arm around
her. Phineas coughed and waved away smoke
seeping from under the top of the glass. “No, Suzanne’s quite right - women often,
if not always, are. We’ll turn it off. Don’t want to risk a fire. The hull’s
got more tar on it than the MI. Well, we may have lost a lamp but we’re still
afloat, that is the main thing on the river - as indeed it is in life more generally. Comfortable?” “Emm ...” Suzanne murmured. The night smelt of summer and the river. A
tawny owl called again from Mawr Wood on the opposite bank, its drawn-out cry
drifting across the bat-hunted air. And high above the willows a yellow moon
sat, as fat as butter, in the shining dark with its face in the water, the
river running with its light midstream as if dissolving there. Under the trees
the shadows were black, deeper pools. “What is that?” Suzanne asked, ear cocked. “What, the owl?” Phineas said. “It’s an owl,
Suzanne.” “No, no, not that. Listen ...” “I can’t hear anything.” He peered down at the floor of the punt. “It’s not a sort of glug-glug sound, is
it? Oh, good,” he said, when told it wasn’t. “Well, it could be almost anything.
There’s a whole night shift beavering away on the banks. It could be
woodpigeons, seeing that it’s a full moon. They coo at it, thinking it’s a new
day. Then the silly birds have to do it all again in the morning. Or bats. Up
there, look. Out after a bite of supper. I’m too old now to hear them. It is a
well-known fact,” he pontificated, “that only the very young can pick up the
squealing of a Baubenton’s water bat. It’s a glass slipper which fits no one
much over the age of twenty,” he said, opening the cardboard box holding the
wine and glasses. Suzanne, nearer thirty, smiled in an
interested sort of way and said nothing. “Well, I can hear them, and I’m
thirty-two,” Adrian said, but Phineas wasn’t stopping for details. “It’s among the other things only the very
young can tune into. The sort of thing that some of us never stop hearing " or at any rate never stop listening
for.” “Is that supposed to mean anything?”
Adrian asked with a derisive laugh. “What, on a night like this? Certainly
not!” Phineas said, popping a cork on one of the two dry whites. He could not
bear to stint, and had added a second bottle out of own pocket to go with the one
included in the fee. “Actually, Phineas,” Suzanne said, “it’s
more like a whistling sound than squealing " there it is again.” “Otters,” Phineas said immediately.
“Otters, Suzanne. There’s a holt, a burrow, downstream a bit, on what’s called
Snails Eye Island, the home of a b***h otter and her cubs. She spends hours
whistling at them, telling them to do this, and not to do that, and to come in,
your tea’s ready, all that sort of thing. There’s no dog otter. The female of
the species treats the male appallingly,” he went on, making his way forward
with the bottle and two glasses. “She whistles the poor fellow up, lets him
have his way with her, and then shows him the door. Wham, bam, thank you, Dan,
as it were. A little fuel for the trip,” he said, pouring the wine. “I’ll leave
the bottle.” “What about you?” Suzanne said. Phineas held up a stern hand. “No. It’s very considerate of you, my dear
girl, but no. This, Suzanne, is where I hand the night over to you. It is now
yours. Yours and Andy’s alone.” “Adrian’s” Adrian said, more to himself. “The memories you will make together on
this river, my gift to you both.” “Ahhh!” Suzanne said. “That’s nice.
Isn’t that nice, Adrian?” Adrian opened his mouth to give his view
on it, but Phineas wasn’t stopping. “I must now,” he said, sweeping off his
boater, “leave the stage. I have, as it were, brought the curtain up, and must
now take my place behind the scenes. A mere pusher and puller of things, unseen
and unheard.” “Fat chance of that,” Adrian said. “Look,
do you think we could actually get started? At this rate " ” “Shhh!” Suzanne said. “Easy to see he’s got no competition in
the area,” Adrian muttered. “The oarsman to those memories you will
make. A steerer of dreams under the stars. A gondolier in the night.” Phineas took a bow to Suzanne’s applause,
and clapping his boater back on, exited to his place in the stern. He uncoupled the mooring chain from the
ring on the punting deck, and chucked it up on the bank, ready for their
return. And then tossed a pair of short oars after it. “Shan’t need those.” “What are they?” Adrian asked
suspiciously. “Paddles,” Phineas said. “For steering.
How’s the wine?” “Super!” Suzanne said. “That was my verdict. I sampled a bottle
earlier " on
your behalf, of course. Not the most expensive wine in the shop, I grant you,
but surprising good, I thought.” “You’ll be seeing pink elephants, the way
you drink.” Suzanne pulled away from him. “Adrian!
You’re so rude!” “I find life thirsty work, old man,”
Phineas said equably. “And besides, what have you got against pink elephants?” “Yes, they’re nice cuddly things,” Suzanne
said. “Not like some people I could name. Cheers, Phineas!” she cried gaily. “Happy days, old thing,” Phineas said,
poking at the bank with the punting pole.
Chapter
Twenty One
“Well, that’s all right then,”
Adrian said to her, as the boat started to bob away from the punting station.
“Because you’ll probably be seeing them yourself in the morning, the way you’ve
been throwing it back.” Suzanne glared at him, and finishing her
drink in one, thrust the glass at him. Adrian sighed heavily. He poured, and
then filled and drained his own. “Now look who’s talking about throwing it
back.” “When in Rome do as the Romans do,” he
said, echoing Suzanne earlier. “You can be so childish! Well, quite
frankly, Adrian, if you’re going to keep on like this, I don’t see any point in
our being here. In fact, I don’t see any point in continuing the holiday at
all. We might as well go straight back to London.” “Now, now, you chaps!” Phineas said,
jollying them along while pushing off before it went any further. If it came to
a refund, he wasn’t sure if there was anything left to refund. Standing on the punting deck, he was
turning the boat from the stern to face towards the opposite bank. He had to
cross the river to go up it, avoiding a low, tilting overhang of alders some
yards up on their side, and beyond that the wreckage of the PS Sabrina.
He had also to navigate the strong midstream current, a current which was even
stronger now, after the rain - as Owain had made a point of reminding him at
least twice that evening. Owain seemed to have a thing about that current,
chuntering on about it when giving him lessons on the right way to cross it as
if he, Phineas, had never been on the river before, as if he’d never used that
same current to give him a push when rowing back downriver in his dinghy. Just
because he’d be doing it with a punting pole instead of oars. Adrian was murmuring now in the shadows,
words for Suzanne’s ears only. Phineas was encouraged. Unless he was
threatening her with murder, and understandably didn’t want a witness to it, he
was making amends. And judging by her silence, she was perhaps willing to have
amends made. The fee, it seemed, or whatever was left of it, was safe. Standing as close to the water as he could
without falling in it, as Owain had taught him, he dropped the pole, skimming
the edge of the deck with it, and letting it fall under its own weight, sixteen
foot of polished spruce, between lightly ringed fingers. The Cluny wasn’t a particularly deep
river, which was why the shallow-draught vessels of the Cluny Steamboat Company
had been able to ply on it, and the pole touched bottom halfway down its
length. He lifted it clear of the water, the
varnished wood dripping light. He dropped it again and lifted, dropped
and lifted, pushing out steadily towards midstream. And doing so, if he did say so himself,
with remarkably smoothness. Apart from the odd time at school, messing
about on the Thames at Windsor, and the few lessons he’d had beforehand from
Owain, he had never really punted before. But there was no getting away from
it, he was a natural. This, he told himself, was punting as it was spoke. He felt as much connected to the river as
he was to the punt, as much below the surface as he was above it, an inhabitant
of some new dimension he’d found somewhere between the two. He glanced over at the couple in the bow.
The shadows there had merged into one. That was more like it! That was what
they were supposed to be doing. A boy and girl in a punt in the
moonlight. That was what it was supposed to add up to. “You can’t beat the memories you gave
me. They’re sweet those memories you gave me,” he crooned, a gondolier in
the night. “Any more wine, Phineas?” Suzanne called
then. “Coming up,” he said cheerily. He shipped the pole, hoisting it in the
air with drill-like precision, before lowering it smartly on the punt, as if
following an old formality. Adrian, watching this, said, “I’d better
get it.” “No, no, no, you stay there. I’ll do it,
wearing my wardroom steward’s hat.” Tra-la-la-ing away, Phineas set about
pulling the cork on the second bottle of white, the punt idly drifting. Lightly tripping his way forward, as
nimble as a gondolier, he missed a step and his foot came down hard on the side
of the boat. “Oops! Point to starboard there, as my
friend the Commander would say.” Adrian grabbed for the gunnel that side,
the punt rocking, and Phineas laughed briefly and indulgently at the sight of a
landlubber with the wind up. “Where are we going?” Suzanne asked lazily
from the shadows, the punt moving through the water again, spreading ripples of
moonlight in its wake. “Where would you like to go?” Phineas
said. “Name it, and we’ll go there. Trailing stars.” And he wouldn’t be at all surprised at
that. On such a night as this he felt that anything was possible, anything
might happen. They scarcely intruded on its bright stillness, moving through it
with so little sound and effort that he might almost have been dreaming it, the
river murmuring and gurgling softly as it did many times in his sleep. A couple
of feeding mallards paddled, hissing, out of their path, and a swan, carrying
starched light on its wings, glided out to see what the vulgar fuss was about,
before making its stately way back to the shadows under the fronds of a weeping
willow. And the shining pole was dropped and
lifted, dropped and lifted again, breaking the water as quiet as a fish rising. He hardly felt he was doing any work
at all " as
if he had to do any work. He felt that the punt could carry on perfectly
well without him, could make its own way to wherever it was going. Languor and enchantment, that was the
essence, the very essence, of punting, he decided dreamily, and felt the
sudden bump and pull of the midstream current as the boat met it bow on.
Chapter
Twenty Two
He’d forgotten about the
midstream current. He was supposed to be crossing it at a 45 degrees angle, he
remembered, now it was too late. He was supposed to be gliding across it,
letting whatever the ruddy hell Owain had said do the work for him. What he wasn’t
supposed to be doing was the other thing Owain had said - the other
thing he remembered him saying - the thing he was doing now, because he couldn’t think
what else to do. Dancing about on the deck, pushing the pole in first
one side and then the other, the punt wallowing and swinging this way and
that. The night looked far more ordinary now
and, with the boat slowly but steadily being pulled downstream, increasingly
predictable. “I’ll get seasick in a minute,” Adrian
said. “Do you know anything about punting, old
man?” Phineas muttered tightly. “No,” Adrian had to admit, “as a matter of
fact I don’t.” “No, I thought not. Well, this is a
punting technique for traversing a strong midstream current. Get the angle
wrong and you’ll find yourself drifting downriver,” he puffed, quoting the
other thing he remembered Owain saying. “Aren’t we doing that already?” Adrian
asked a few moments later. “Aren’t we doing what?” Phineas
snapped. “Drifting downriver " if, that is, downriver’s that
way.” “Downriver is that way. But I can
assure you, Andy, that we are not drifting anywhere I do not want us to drift.
All right? That okay with you …?” “If you say so. And it’s Adrian. Not Andy.
Of course, I realise I’m the wrong sex, but you might at least try and get my
name right, seeing as I’m a paying customer.” But Phineas was no longer listening. The river there was a mixture of stone and
mud. And he had found the mud, the pole going in a clear couple of feet,
judging by what was left his end of it. He had driven it down hard out of
nothing but sheer frustrated temper, and now the mud had it. And it wasn’t
letting go. “Are you all right, Phineas?” Suzanne
asked, concerned curiosity in her voice. He had turned his back on them and was
surreptitiously trying to tug it free, his shoulders heaving as if laughing, or
sobbing. “Yes, yes, I’m fine,” he said testily.
“Thank you for asking!” “We’re stuck,” Adrian told her. “We’re
stuck on something. What are we stuck on?” “We are not stuck on anything.” Phineas
had tried for amused exasperation, a professional dealing with a fretful
amateur, but he was almost grunting with the strain, sweat leaking from under
his boater. He was about to let the mud have it, about
to act on the other piece of advice he remembered Owain giving him - if in
trouble, hang on to the punt and not the pole. When it came free, suddenly. He staggered back with it, and then
lurched forward to avoid toppling into the boat, lifting it like a pole vaulter
and driving it into the river again, to stop himself going overboard. He hit
stone this time and pushed violently on it, past caring what happened. The punt, thrust free of the current,
bobbed gently into a stretch of slack water. Phineas rested on his pole, puffing and
blowing, taking his hat off to wipe at the sweat. “That’s always the trickiest bit - that cross
current,” he told them, shaking his head over it. “Even without all the rain
we’ve had recently, it’s been the undoing of a few good watermen in the past, I
can tell you. It’s famous for it. All calm on the surface, but underneath -
phew, watch out!” Just like some women he could name, he thought. “Well done, Phineas!” Suzanne said. “I thought we were about to capsize,”
Adrian said, his tone suggesting that in his opinion they were lucky not to. Phineas sighed. “My dear fellow,” he began with heavy
patience. “My dear good fellow, you can hole a punt. You can set fire to a
punt. You can take an axe to a punt. You can blow a punt out of the water. But
what you cannot - absolutely
cannot do, is to capsize one. It simply can’t be done. Its proportions
should tell you that. It’s impossible to overturn, not in the normal way
of things. That’s the reason of course,” he added on a more matey note, with
the danger now past, “why it’s the ideal craft for a bit of you-know-what.” “No, I don’t know what,” Adrian said
perversely. Suzanne gave him a dig with her elbow.
“You could have fooled me!” “Suzanne!” “Don’t you Suzanne me, you little devil.
Cheers, Phineas!” she cried. “Cheers, m’dears,” Phineas said, poling on
upstream, and wondering if there was anything else he should be remembering to
do, or not to do. There was a tinkle of bottle and glasses,
and silence from the bow end. And then Suzanne said, “In fact, Adrian, I
sometimes feel that’s all I’m good for.” “Now, you know that’s not true.” “Do I? Do I, Adrian?” “It’s just the drink talking. You know
perfectly well " ” Adrian glanced over at the stern
and lowered his voice. But Phineas wasn’t interested in what he
had to say " he’d heard it all before, whatever it was.
He’d said it himself enough times. Besides, it was nothing to do with him, what
did he know? He was only the driver. And anyway, he had a bit of company
himself now, a sheep up on one of the fields tracking him between the trees,
before giving up on the idea that his appearance meant food. It was one of
Vernon Watkins’s fields, the grass stiffened like frost with moonlight, the
sheep out on it as still as stones. Until Phineas stirred them up. Vernon, he knew, had had a late lambing,
and, as usual, a good crop of them. It was a well-known fact that Vernon had
the randiest ram in the valley. Pan, his name was, and once he had started he
didn’t stop until he’d run out of ewes.
Lambing took no time at all when Pan was on the job. “I’m a well-endowed ram and I got where
I am by performing my act right on cue. When it’s time for a tup, I just
line ‘em all up, and shout volunteers? Ewe, ewe and ewe,” he sang, giving
it a Gilbert & Sullivan air, and finishing to a chorus of bleating from a
growing audience of ewes and lambs. Encouraged, he had just started on Old
Macdonald had a Farm, a party of one his end of the punt, when Adrian,
after a couple of tries, got through to him. “That’s better! Thank you " we’re trying to
talk here ...” “I don’t think there’s any more to talk
about,” Suzanne said. “I thought this trip might help clear the air. It hasn’t. I
still don’t know where I stand.” That was something else Phineas had heard
before, only last week, from his girlfriend, Sally. He felt a stab of contrition at the
thought of her, and rested on his pole to consider it, while the couple bickered
on in the bow. His trouble, he told himself, was that he
didn’t know when he was well off. Most men would have stopped there, once a
smasher like Sally came into their lives. Sorry, they’d have said, the
position’s now taken. But not him. Oh no! He had a golden bird, as it were,
like Sally in the hand, and had to go beating the bushes for more. He didn’t
deserve her. She’d been right in her suspicions about
the woman with the fishing shop in Kingham. Her childish " as he’d described them then " references to flies and tackle all
too near the mark. He admitted that now, owned up to it. And resolved there and
then that from now on things would be very different. He felt better already. “Andy " Andy,” he said, passing it on, “we,
the male of the species, can be absolute rotters!” “Speak for yourself,” Adrian said,
breaking off his muttered discussion with Suzanne. “It behoves us to play up and play the
game,” Phineas announced, sharing with him the view from his new-found moral
heights. “And to play that game, Andy, with a straight bat on a level wicket.
We should remember,” he further advised him, quoting at least one of his
ex-wives, “that in every relationship there are two people.” “That’s very true,” Suzanne agreed. “In
tandem together. Both going the same way.” “Well, if you’re on a tandem,” Adrian
couldn’t resist pointing out, “you have to go the same way.” Phineas ignored it. “Love " love, Andy, is
a bicycle made for two.” “Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer do,”
Adrian sang, not at all cheerfully. “Shhh!” Suzanne hissed. “Well " what rot! And he knows it,” he said, jabbing a finger at Phineas. “It’s all flannel.” But Phineas was elsewhere, firing on
Sheepsnout and a new perspective. “The male should bring to a relationship
maturity, responsibility and commitment,” he went on, addressing the air and counting out the requirements with a finger. “He should be prepared to shoulder his
share of the work involved, as well as the fun " and the, you-know-what,” he added,
glancing sharply at Adrian, his tone suggesting that not only did he find the
expression objectionable, but that it was Adrian who
had first used it. “Peddling up the hills of that
relationship together, as well as free-wheeling down them in the good times
with the wind in one’s hair.” “Sounds like a shampoo ad,” Adrian said. “Oh, be quiet, Adrian!” Suzanne said,
flapping a hand at him. “Phineas,” she said solemnly, “I think
that’s very wise. And beautifully put.” “Pl " ease!”
Adrian said. “I don’t
expect you to understand, Adrian.” “It’s from the heart, Suzanne,” Phineas
said. “A lesson learned at last.” And he couldn’t wait to tell Sally. “It’s something you could do with thinking
about,” she told Adrian. “What! For God’s sake " what a load of
…!” “Is it? Is it, Adrian?” she asked, and
laughed bitterly. “Well " well, in that case, maybe you’d prefer him
sitting with you, instead of me.” “Maybe I would " but not for the reasons you think. It might
surprise you to know, Adrian, that some men are capable of feelings above their
belts.” Adrian shot to his feet. “Right! That’s
it! Come on, then, Phineas,” he said, on
his way to the stern, rocking the punt in his haste to get there, “you can take
my place. You can talk rubbish to her while I do the punting.” “Now, don’t be silly,” Phineas said, “there’s
a good chap.” “Nothing silly about it. You heard her. So
come on, hand over the pole, or whatever it’s called.” “Bit of a tiff, that’s all. She didn’t
mean it.” “Oh, yes she did!” Suzanne said with
emphasis. “I don’t want him sitting with him. Now or at any other time. As far
as I’m concerned that’s it. It’s finished.” “Just what I was thinking,” Adrian said to
her. “Off you go,” he added to Phineas. “Now - ” “Come on, Phineas, leave him to it,”
Suzanne said. “Come and keep me company.” Phineas held on to the pole, his eyes
darting between the two. “It’s not my punt,” he said then, as if in
appeal. “Even if I wanted to, I’ve no authority to.” “Oh, well,” Suzanne said, “if you don’t want
to. ” “It’s not that. I didn’t mean that, it’s
just " ” “You’re not going anywhere, are you,”
Adrian pointed out. “You’ll still be here, technically in charge of the vessel,
won’t you.” “You’ve been drinking,” Phineas said,
coming up with another objection. “I’ve been drinking?” Adrian
snorted a laugh. “You don’t know how to punt,” Phineas said
then. “Well, I couldn’t make a worse job of it
than you. I doubt we’ve gone more than twenty yards since we started. Just tell
me the basics, that’s all you need do. I’m a quick study.” Phineas stared at him. “Come on, Phineas,” Suzanne called softly,
her eyes beckoning from beyond the single light, where she waited in a bed of
shadows. Phineas thrust the pole at him. “Well, what do I have to do?” Adrian
asked, Phineas already on his way to the bow, the punt rocking again. “What? Oh, nothing to it, old man.
Couldn’t be simpler. Just push downwards and backwards with the pole, at a sort
of angle, you know, to get it going again, and then lift it and drop it again,
and then " well, just push away. And for extra speed,
bend your knees into the down stroke. That’s
all there is to it. Have fun. Oh, and if you do get stuck, remember to hang on to
the punt and not the stick,” he added, on his way past the single lantern,
moths fluttering around its light, leaving Adrian muttering to himself, going
over his instructions on the punting deck. “Now what is this all about? Mmm?”
he said, parking himself next to Suzanne, and patting her hand. “How am I doing then?” Adrian asked
complacently awhile later. “Fine, Andy, you’re doing fine,” Phineas
said, preoccupied. As the same sex as Adrian, he was learning just what a swine
he was, holding Suzanne’s hand and murmuring sympathetically now and then. “Yes, well, it’s not exactly difficult, is
it,” Adrian said on a laugh. “I mean, it would be hard to find a more basic
form of propulsion.” “No, you’re doing splendidly, Andy,
splendidly. Couldn’t do better myself,” Phineas muttered, gazing at Suzanne. Even her teeth shone, gleaming moistly in
the reflected light as she smiled at him. She smiled at him, and he smiled at
her, and before he knew what was happening it had happened. They had kissed. And if the earth didn’t move, then the
punt did, rolling, unnoticed, under them. “Soon got that sorted,” Adrian said then.
The punt and got that the midstream current had suddenly met again and he
wasn’t sure how it had happened, but after splashing about with the pole,
trying to use it as a rudder to steer with, he found himself facing what he was
sure was the other way. Up or down river, what did it matter? He’d got out of
trouble midstream in half the time it had taken Phineas - and he was
supposed to be the professional. He sank the pole again with a scornful
laugh in Phineas’s direction. Not that Phineas noticed. Phineas was
lost, to Sally and the new perspective, drowning in Suzanne, and going down for
the third time, the third, lingering kiss, their embrace increasingly heated
and desperate with murmured endearments between more kisses. Adrian was also enjoying himself. He had
really started to motor now, as he thought of it, the current doing most of the
work for him. He didn’t understand why they hadn’t set off downriver in the
first place. He was using the current instead of fighting it, going with the
flow. After that it was just a question of rhythm and balance. He was beginning to suspect that, despite
his boasting, Phineas hadn’t a clue. He wondered, at this speed, and given that
they were going the right way, how long it would take them to get to
Shrewsbury. They were fairly bowling along, Adrian bending his knees and pushing away.
Past the houseboats and Snails Eye Island, and a sleeping Batch Magna, while
his passengers grew more passionate in the shadows. Running under the moon and the ruined
castle on the hill, punting on down to the water meadows, past Magna and Lower
Rea, Leech Meadow, Pistol and Prill Leasow, to where the fall of swollen water
over Prill Weir ahead of them was like a storm wind gathering in the trees.
© 2013 Peter MaughanAuthor's Note
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Added on January 2, 2013 Last Updated on January 2, 2013 Tags: Batch Magna, American baronet, Batch Hall, river, houseboats, eccentrics AuthorPeter MaughanShrewsbury, The Welsh Marches, United KingdomAboutI'm an ex-actor, fringe theatre director and script writer, married and living in the Welsh Marches, the borderland between England and Wales, and the backdrop to a series of books I'm writing, the Ba.. more..Writing
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