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Synopsis
Mika Tanner has loved Bailey Morrell, a beautiful Healer, since childhood. But his duty as a Sentinel, a supernatural guardian of an ancient race, clashed with her rebellious spirit. Now a dangerous new anarchist group not only threatens life as they know it—but any chance of their being together again . . .
Contains mature themes.
Release date: March 10, 2015
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 384
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On the Hunt
Alexandra Ivy
Even with a magical dome of protection, it was tough to hide several thousand acres of land smack dab in the middle of the United States with two-dozen structures that included living quarters, workshops, garages, barns, and a school.
Of course, very few “norms” were allowed through the magical barriers to visit the central building that was constructed in the shape of a pentagon with an inner courtyard that was famed for its gardens. And those who were permitted to enter found themselves confined to the upper floor that was reserved for official offices and formal reception rooms, plus a small number of guest rooms if the visitors were expected to stay more than a few hours.
Only high-bloods were allowed into the nine lower levels that contained private quarters and secret labs that were dug deep into the earth.
And only Sentinels were allowed on the bottom floor that was reserved exclusively for their use.
With a central room that was dominated by a state-of-the-art computer system and heavy wooden furniture, it looked like something out of a James Bond movie.
Two walls were lined with monitors that were connected to dozens of satellites and surveillance equipment spread throughout the world. On another wall were several doors that were closed and monitored with motion and heat sensors. The weapons that they kept inside were not only lethal, but many were magically enhanced to create enormous damage.
Standing in the attached private office, the two Sentinels stood face-to-face.
At a distance, the warriors were remarkably similar.
Both had long, dark hair that framed narrow faces with copper-toned skin and eyes as black as polished ebony. Both had the lean, chiseled muscles of trained warriors. And both were wearing casual jeans and T-shirts that did nothing to disguise their lethal power.
A closer glance, however, revealed that Wolfe, the leader of the Sentinels, had a streak of white in his hair at his right temple and that his features had been hewn in the deserts of the Middle East.
Mika Tanner, on the other hand, shared the chiseled features of his Native American ancestors.
Over the years, his stark beauty had attracted the notice of women. A lot of women. But none had managed to capture his aloof attention.
Of course, his lack of interest only made them more determined to be the one to claim him.
Not that Mika noticed.
It wasn’t that he didn’t like women.
Hell, that was the problem.
In one spectacular case he’d loved a woman.
Deeply and irrevocably.
Now he was dedicated to his duty as a hunter Sentinel. Nothing was allowed to distract him.
Which was why he’d abruptly walked away from the pretty witch who’d been trying to convince him to join her for dinner the second the text from Wolfe had hit his phone.
Folding his arms over his chest, he studied Wolfe with a stoic curiosity.
“You wanted to see me?”
“Here.” Getting straight to the point, Wolfe shoved a file folder into Mika’s hand. The Tagos (leader of the Sentinels) was never big on chitchat.
Thank God.
Mika hated wasting his time with worthless small talk.
Opening the file, he stared down at the photo of a young man who looked to be in his early twenties with short brown hair and a face that was remarkable only for the fact it was so completely average. The type of face that would never stand out in a crowd.
He read the name at the bottom of the photo.
“Jacob Benson. Is the name supposed to mean something to me?”
“Until yesterday morning, he was an acolyte at the monastery in Louisiana,” Wolfe readily answered.
Mika lifted his gaze, not surprised to find that Wolfe’s expression was unreadable.
The older man rarely gave away his inner thoughts.
“And now?”
“He’s disappeared.”
Mika arched a brow, waiting for the rest of the story.
Even for Wolfe, that was vague.
“What happened?” he prompted.
The leader shrugged. “According to Brother Noland, the young man was a quiet, diligent student who’d never caused trouble until he unexpectedly snuck into the garage and stole one of the cars used by the monks.”
All Sentinels were trained by the monks, whether they were to become guardians or hunters. It was a tradition that had started in ancient times.
And while a few of the methods had changed to include the latest weapons and technology, the basics had remained the same throughout the centuries.
How to kill as swiftly and efficiently as possible.
“It’s not that uncommon for an acolyte to decide to go for a joyride,” Mika pointed out.
Boys would be boys regardless of their special powers.
And since Sentinels lived several hundred years, they were still considered juveniles until they reached their late thirties.
“On his way out of the garage he hit one of the monks,” Wolfe said.
Shit. Mika scowled. “How bad?”
“He’s on the mend, but Jacob never stopped or even slowed to check on the man he’d injured.” Wolfe leaned against the corner of the desk. “His complete lack of concern is so out of character that the monks are certain something is wrong.”
“And no one has seen him since then?”
“No, they checked with his family and friends, but he hasn’t contacted any of them.”
Mika understood their concern if the acolyte was acting out of character, but there were a number of fairly obvious explanations for his impulsive behavior.
“What about a girlfriend?” He named the obvious. “When a young man is doing something idiotic, it can usually be traced to his belief that he’s in love.”
Wolfe sent him a wry smile. “You sound as if you have personal experience.”
A familiar ache twisted his gut at the memory of a young girl with white-gold curls and huge green eyes set in a heart-shaped face.
Bailey Morrell was a healer who’d stolen his heart when her parents had traveled to the reservation in Oklahoma to teach.
Odd, really.
The two couldn’t have been more different.
Where Mika was quiet and reserved, Bailey had possessed an infectious spirit and a joy for life that instantly captivated him. She’d been like a brilliant butterfly who’d fluttered into his life, dazzling him with her charm and generous heart.
Of course, it was those same qualities that had ripped them apart.
While Mika had gone to the monastery to be trained as a Sentinel, Bailey had traveled to Valhalla to hone her skills as a healer.
He’d thrived among the other warriors, perhaps for the first time in his life feeling as if he truly belonged. There was no need to disguise his superior powers or to feel as if he was a freak. The Sentinels became his family.
Bailey, on the other hand, had felt stifled by the rules demanded by her trainers. She’d inherited her parents’ disdain for authority and constantly rebelled by sneaking away to heal those high-bloods who were afraid to travel to Valhalla or were hiding from the authorities.
“Bailey’s strays” became a constant source of irritation to her teachers as well as the Mave, the powerful witch who was the ultimate ruler of Valhalla.
By the time Mika felt in the position to turn their passionate love affair into a more permanent arrangement, Bailey had reached the end of her patience.
Instead of putting down roots at Valhalla, the beautiful healer wanted him to turn his back on his duty to follow her into a life of constant travel and uncertainty.
Bailey might call it freedom, but he couldn’t walk away from the brothers who depended on him. Or the pledges he’d made to the monks.
So she’d left.
Without even saying good-bye.
Abruptly realizing that Wolfe was watching him with a knowing gaze, Mika cleared the lump from his throat.
“Don’t we all have a past?” he demanded.
“Touché.” Wolfe’s expression hardened, as if he had his own painful memories. “What happened to yours?”
Mika grimaced. “She refused to be caged.”
“I have no information on a girlfriend.” Wolfe abruptly turned the conversation back to the reason he’d called Mika to his office. “But that might be an angle for you to investigate.”
“Me?”
“I want you to track him.”
“Why?” Mika frowned. Without false modesty he knew he was the best tracker in Valhalla. It seemed a waste of his skills to send him on a chase for one boy who would more than likely return from his mysterious journey within a day or two. “He isn’t the first and he won’t be the last acolyte to run away, for whatever reason.”
“As I said, the Brother is convinced that there’s more going on here than just the disappearance of one student,” Wolfe said.
“What?”
“He doesn’t know, but I trust his judgment.” Wolfe’s voice warned that he wasn’t in the mood for a debate. Hell, the Tagos was never in the mood for debate. His word was law among the Sentinels. “We need to make sure that Jacob wasn’t forced or intimidated into leaving the monastery.”
Mika heaved a sigh. “Perfect.”
Wolfe arched a brow. “Did you have other plans?”
“Would it matter if I did?”
“Nope.”
Mika gave a short laugh. He liked the fact his leader was so predictable.
Besides, it’d been over a week since he’d last been on the hunt.
He had to remain active to keep his instincts sharp.
And to keep his thoughts occupied, a voice whispered in the back of his mind.
“I’ll leave after lunch. I assume you’ll have a guardian transport me?” he demanded, referring to the Sentinels who could travel from monastery to monastery through mystical pathways.
“Fane will meet you in the chapel.”
Knowing the meeting was over, Mika turned to head out the door only to be halted when Wolfe cleared his throat. Swallowing a curse, he glanced over his shoulder.
“What?”
“When you do find the boy, leave the punishment to the monks.”
Mika stiffened, instantly offended. “I wouldn’t hurt a mere boy.”
“I know, but you can be . . .” Wolfe searched for the appropriate word. “Intimidating.”
“Me?”
“It’s all that stoic silence,” Wolfe informed him. “It makes people itchy.”
Mika shrugged. He knew what people whispered behind his back.
He was aloof.
Unapproachable.
A cold, unfeeling bastard.
He really didn’t give a shit.
“I speak when I have something to say.”
“Good.” Wolfe tossed him one of the disposable cell phones they always used when they were in the field. “Then you can call me when you find the boy.”
It was difficult to decide what was more aggravating.
The swarm of bugs that attacked without warning.
The goopy mud that clung to her shoes.
Or the air that was so thick with humidity that breathing was an Olympic sport.
August in the swamps of Louisiana was a lesson in endurance.
Still, there were bonuses to choosing the area for a temporary home, Bailey Morrell reminded herself as she ran her fingers through her short mop of blond curls that were already clinging to her damp skin.
It was isolated. Dangerous for humans. And best of all, a local witch had wrapped her small cabin and the surrounding grounds in a powerful layer of magic that meant no one could enter without her allowing them through.
A perfect place to set up her tiny clinic to help those high-bloods who preferred to avoid the more formal healers.
Like the young man standing beside her.
She frowned as she glanced at Jacob, no last name given.
As a healer she possessed the rare talent of being able to sense when a high-blood was injured or sick in the local vicinity. Which was what had led her from her cottage yesterday morning to discover Jacob staggering along the deserted road that ran next to the bayou.
She’d been horrified to see his battered and bruised body. Although he was still young and hadn’t yet received the tattoos that would offer him protection, he was a potential guardian Sentinel. Which meant that he could endure ten times the battering to his body than a normal human could.
For him to be so grievously injured meant he’d taken one hell of a beating.
Not that the acolyte would tell her what had happened.
And she hadn’t probed.
That was her mantra.
Live and let live.
Now, however, she couldn’t help but try to convince the boy he was making a mistake.
Despite her healing, he remained dangerously weak. He needed rest and plenty of good food to complete his recovery.
Gently smoothing the light brown hair from his forehead, she studied him with a worried gaze.
“Jacob, I don’t think you’re strong enough to leave,” she said in soft tones.
He grimaced, one eye swollen and his bottom lip split.
“I have to,” he muttered.
“If you’re worried about the monks, I could contact them and explain—”
“No.” Jacob grabbed her arm, his panic making him clutch her hard enough to bruise her pale skin. She winced, and Jacob instantly eased his grip, but his distress remained. “Please. I can’t face them. Not yet.”
Her lips flattened. Unlike those healers who worked for Valhalla, she wouldn’t force him back to the monastery.
“Where will you go?” she instead demanded.
“I have a . . .” He paused, his gaze shifting away in a gesture that warned he was about to lie. “Friend I can stay with.”
Her hand cupped his cheek, her healing power naturally flowing from her palm into his still-weak body.
“Jacob, if you’re in trouble you can tell me.”
He shuddered, his shoulders hunched. “I can’t,” he whispered so softly she barely caught the words.
“I swear that whatever you tell me won’t go any further, and I might be able to help,” she assured him.
“I—”
“Tell me,” she urged when his words trailed away.
He slowly squared his shoulders. “I have something I must do first.”
Bailey didn’t like the grim edge in his voice.
Was he planning to exact revenge on whoever had attacked him?
Reaching into the pocket of her denim shorts, she pulled out a crumpled business card that was printed with her cell number. She always kept them handy.
“Here’s my number,” she said, pressing the card into his hand. “You can call me day or night.”
He studied the card, the tension that hummed around him a tangible force.
“You’ll come for me?” he demanded, his voice low, intense.
A strange chill inched down Bailey’s spine as she lowered her hand. There was something going on with this young man.
But what?
“Always,” she promised.
Far from comforting the Sentinel, her words seemed to add to his distress.
“I have to go,” he muttered, taking a quick step forward.
“Jacob.” She halted his hurried retreat.
He grudgingly halted. “Yes?”
“Sometimes it’s hard to know what’s right or wrong,” she told him in soft tones. “Listen to your heart.”
He gave a sad sigh. “That’s what I’m doing.”
Without giving her the opportunity to respond, Jacob stepped through the magical barrier and swiftly disappeared in the thick foliage.
Bailey stood there for a long moment, her heart troubled.
She wished she could do more, but she wasn’t going to force Jacob to stay.
He was old enough to make his own decisions.
Finally accepting Jacob wasn’t going to have a change of heart and return, Bailey headed toward the nearby town to replenish the food she’d used during her patient’s short visit.
Although calling Gilford a town was being extremely generous.
There was nothing beyond a dozen houses and handful of shops that were huddled near the vast monastery. The monks and their students were remarkably self-sufficient, but they did hire a few local workers.
And, of course, there were those hardy souls who called the swamps home. They depended on the stores in Gilford when they were in need of supplies.
Two hours later she was done with her shopping and had stopped by the home of a local witch who had become a friend since Bailey had arrived in the area several months before.
Walking back to her cottage along the narrow path, she was skirting the treacherous edge of a bog when the sound of a male voice filled the air.
“Bonjour, Bailey.”
Pressing a hand to her racing heart, she whirled around to glare at the man who was standing only a few feet away.
For a brief second Bailey was staring at an exact replica of herself.
The same untidy halo of pale curls. The same heart-shaped face. The same slender figure that was casually dressed in white cotton shorts and a red halter-top.
Only the eyes were different.
While hers were a clear mint green, the creature standing in front of her had eyes of pure white that glowed with a frightening power.
“Boggs.” She gave a shake of her head. “You startled me.”
There was a shimmer before her image was replaced by a pale, hairless man who stood nearly six feet tall. His features looked as if they’d only been half-formed, giving him the creepy appearance of a larva while his thin body was covered by a heavy robe.
The eyes remained white even as the power faded, revealing he was completely blind.
Not that Boggs needed his eyes to see.
As a doppelgänger he was capable of sensing another person’s essence, allowing him to take their shape for a limited period of time.
He also had the ability to touch an object to have it “whisper” to him. She wasn’t sure what that meant beyond the fact he would have a glimpse into the past or the future, or even the present. And that he couldn’t control what he could hear.
Needless to say, his odd appearance and strange talents didn’t make him particularly popular. Not even among the high-bloods who took weird to a new level.
Bailey, however, enjoyed his sporadic visits to the swamps.
Like her, Boggs had never found a place at Valhalla. They were both outsiders who enjoyed a life without rules and expectations.
Free spirits.
“Did you miss me?” the doppelgänger demanded.
She gave a toss of her silvery curls. “I missed beating the pants off you at chess.”
Something that might have been humor twisted the half-formed features.
“You don’t need to use chess to get my pants off, pet.”
She shook her head. “Don’t start,” she warned. She knew Boggs was just teasing, but she didn’t flirt.
Not with anyone.
Not since . . .
She slammed the door on the treacherous thought.
Nope. She was soooo not going there.
“A pity,” he murmured.
She reached into one of her bags and pulled out an apple, tossing it in Boggs’s direction.
Despite being blind, he easily grabbed the fruit out of the air and took a bite.
“Have you been out saving the world?” she asked. The doppelgänger claimed that he’d recently given information to end a threat by a crazed necromancer.
He shrugged. “Always.”
“So what brings you here?”
Boggs took time to finish the apple before he tossed the core toward the thick line of cypress trees.
“I’ve missed your companionship,” he said, his fingers smoothing down the front of his robe as he seemed to search for the appropriate words. “And—”
“No,” Bailey sharply interrupted, abruptly sensing he was about to share a vision. It wasn’t that she was morally opposed to psychics and clairvoyants. They often prevented tragedies for high-bloods. But she preferred to live her life without a safety net. “I’ve told you. No sneak peeks into the future. I like to be surprised.”
Boggs made a sound of annoyance, clearly desperate to warn her. “You must take great care, Bailey.”
“Boggs—”
“One that you trust will betray you,” he said in a rush.
Bailey slapped her hands over her ears. “Stop.”
Boggs held up his slender hands in a gesture of defeat. “So stubborn,” he muttered.
“Yeah, I’ve been told that,” she admitted wryly. More times than she wanted to acknowledge. “Do you want to join me for dinner?”
“Not tonight,” Boggs said, his hand reaching out to lightly touch a curl that rested against her cheek. “Take care, pet. Danger stalks you.”
With his unwelcome warning delivered, Boggs stepped back, and with his usual love for drama, he spread his arms and simply disappeared.
Bailey gave a shake of her head.
As far as she knew, Boggs was the only high-blood who could actually perform that little trick.
Even the guardian Sentinels who could use their magic to travel in a blink of an eye had to use copper posts that transported them from one monastery to another.
None of them could just . . . poof.
Shifting the bags of groceries in her arms, she continued around the bog, her feet sinking into the mossy ground as she at last caught sight of her small cottage, which was nearly lost in the gathering shadows.
She’d stayed in town longer than she’d intended, she abruptly realized.
Being a high-blood meant that she was harder to kill than a normal human, but she didn’t possess the same strength as a Sentinel. There were plenty of things that crept through the swamp at night that could hurt her.
She picked up her pace, frowning as a strange prickle of alarm raced through her.
What was wrong with her?
It was one thing to be sensible enough to avoid unnecessary danger, and another to suddenly feel as if she were being stalked.
“Get a grip, Bailey,” she muttered, beneath her breath. “It’s only because of Boggs and his creepy warnings. . . .”
Her words trailed away as she heard a distinct rustle in the underbrush.
The wind?
An animal?
A ghost?
She shivered, judging the distance between herself and the cottage.
Too far to make it beyond the barrier if she was actually being hunted.
Turning, she continued to back toward the protective shield while scanning for any hidden intruders.
“Who’s there?” she called out, her voice not entirely steady. “Show yourself.”
Nothing moved beyond a startled squirrel that darted into a patch of milkweed, and the stirring of the thick Spanish moss as a sluggish breeze wound its way through the trees.
Okay. She was being ridiculous.
There was nothing but bugs and gators and . . .
An arm abruptly wrapped around her from behind, jerking her against a rock-hard body.
Bailey dropped the grocery bags to the ground, her lips parting to scream. Before she could make a sound, however, a hand was pressed over her mouth, stifling her cry of fear.
“Gotcha,” a male voice whispered in her ear.
She sucked in a shocked breath, her heart coming to a perfect, painful halt.
Shit. She recognized that voice.
“Mika.”
Mika’s lips twisted in a wry smile. He hadn’t missed the dismay in Bailey’s muffled voice.
Of course, to be fair, he hadn’t been overjoyed when he followed the trail into the swamp and caught the sweet scent of jasmine.
The delicate fragrance might have been native to this particular area of the swamp. And even if it wasn’t, there could always be some random woman wearing perfume.
There were a dozen explanations. But he knew the truth.
The scent didn’t come from a plant or a bottle.
It was a unique, intoxicating aroma that could only belong to Bailey Morrell.
Damn.
He’d nearly turned on his heel and walked away.
Ten years ago, this female had ripped out his heart and stomped on it. Did he really want to endure some awkward reunion that was bound to end with yet another night of pacing the floor?
Hell no.
But then the realization of where they were had penetrated his shock.
Barely aware he was moving, he’d tracked the scent through the thick bogs until he reached a small clearing.
There.
His heart slammed with painful recognition.
Nothing had changed.
The curls that were so pale they looked silver in the gathering shadows remained a riotous, untamed halo around her head. Her pretty heart-shaped face with the wide, mint green eyes and slightly uptilted nose still gave her the image of a charming urchin. And her body remained as slender and perfectly curved as the last time he’d seen her.
A dangerous brew of regret and lust and yearning churned through him, but it was the overriding anger at the knowledge she was waltzing through the swamp as if nothing could hurt her that won top billing on his emotional meter.
Now, with his arm wrapped around her and his hand pressed against her mouth, he continued to whisper directly in her ear.
“Hello, Bailey.” He smiled as he felt her shiver. It wasn’t fear. It was the same combustible awareness that was searing through him. “It’s been a long time.”
For a gut-wrenching second Mika sensed the beautiful healer soften in his arms, her back pressed intimately against his chest as his hand rested on the flat plane of her stomach, which was left bare by the indecently skimpy halter-top.
A moan lodged in his throat, a brutal need that he hadn’t felt for ten long years clenching his body.
He desperately wanted to bury his face in the satin halo of jasmine-scented curls while his hand slid beneath the teeny-tiny top to cup the soft swell of her breast.
But before he could give in to the madness, Bailey was suddenly squirming against him, grabbing his wrist to tug his fingers from her mouth.
“Let me go,” she commanded.
Instantly Mika released his arm, stepping back to watch as Bailey spun around to study him with a wary frown.
She should be worried, he acknowledged, folding his arms over his chest.
The realization that she was so lacking in concern for her own safety was enough to make him nuts.
“What are you doing here?” he abruptly demanded.
Her lips thinned. “I live here.”
His narrowed glare shifted toward the cottage. “Alone?”
“None of your business,” she snapped.
It really, really wasn’t, but that didn’t stop the urgent need to know.
“It’s a simple question.” His voice was carefully stripped of emotion and his expression unreadable.
“Yes, I live alone.” She impatiently brushed a silvery curl from her cheek. “Satisfied?”
He ignored the flare of vicious pleasure at the confession. The days when he had the right to consider this female as his were in the past.
Instead, he concentrated on the confirmation she was indeed living in this isolated space without protection.
“Not nearly,” he growled. “You’ve always been impetuous and bullheaded.”
Her brows snapped together. “Hey—”
“But to choose to live alone in the middle of the swamp is stupidly reckless even for you,” he continued in grim tones.
“Great.” With a glare that could strip paint off a wall, she turned to head toward the cottage. “A real pleasure to see you again, Mika.”
Shit. He was going about this all wrong.
As usual.
Being a Sentinel meant that he was a natural leader who made snap decisions and expected others to follow his orders.
This female, on the other hand, had a perpetual allergy to any hint of authority.
Oil and water.
“Bailey.”
She halted to glance over her shoulder. “We’ve had this conversation. I’m not interested in going through it again.”
He moved until he was standing directly in front of her. “It bothers you that I’m worried about you?”
She met his steady gaze, her hands on her hips. She was half his size and quarter of his weight, but she never backed down from anyone.
Not ever.
“It bothers me that you think I can’t be trusted to make my own decisions for my life,” she said.
He grimaced, shoving his hand through his dark hair, which he’d left loose to fall past his shoulders. She had a point, but dammit . . . he better than anyone knew that this woman too often allowed her heart to lead her head.
Her unwavering belief in the goodness of others might be a large part of her charm, but it left her far too vulnerable.
“All I’ve ever wanted was for you to be happy,” he said gruffly.
“As long as I followed your rules.”
He heaved a deep sigh. Yep. She was right. They’d been over this waaay too many times.
He should walk away and leave her in peace.
Already the icy composure he used to protect himself was forming hairline fractures. Enough time with Bailey and it would shatter into a thousand pieces.
But his size twelve boots refused to obey.
In fact, they took a renegade step forward, bringing him close enough to reach out and brush his fingers through her satin curls.
“I assume you choose to live here so you can keep your strays hidden from Valhalla?” he murmured.
She stiffened, but made no effort to pull from his light touch.
“It’s peaceful.”
His lips twisted. This volatile female spread chaos wherever she went.
“You’ve never sought peace.”
“We all change as we get older.”
“I wish that was true,” he husked, his fingers compulsively moving to brush over her flushed cheek.
She sucked in a startled breath, something that might have been yearning darkening her eyes.
“Mika,” she breathed.
Desire jolted through him.
God. It’d been so long.
He’d almost forgotten the scorching thrill of satisfaction when she trembled beneath his light touch.
“Your skin is still as soft as silk,” he murmured.
She licked her lips. “Mika.”
He stepped closer, breathing deep of her sweet jasmine scent.
“I’ve missed you, little one.”
She jerked, as if his soft words had caught her off guard.
“No, you haven’t.”
He cupped her cheek in his palm, studying her with a frown. “You’re a psychic now?”
She held his gaze. “If you missed me, you would have contacted me.”
He blinked. Was she kidding? He’d been busy preparing their wedding when she’d packed her bags and left Valhalla without so much as a good-bye.
“You disappeared.”
A blush stained her pale cheeks. “You’re the best tra
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