From the author of Girlfriends and The Way It Is comes a no-holds-barred look at America's plastic surgery obsession through three heartrending, hilarious, and very real friends. . . Tight Brenda Harrison has never been a slave to vanity and was never too concerned about the ill effects time and motherhood have had on her thirty-something body. But when she suspects that her husband may be cheating on her, Brenda has second thoughts about growing old gracefully. . . Nora Perez has always enjoyed her life of late-night club-hopping, man-juggling, and just being fabulous. But as her fortieth birthday approaches, the men have started looking past her. Now Nora's booking an appointment with a plastic surgeon. . . Although Kamille Cooper is still in her twenties, she firmly believes there's no problem that a little nip-and-tuck can't fix. But Kamille's so insecure she'd Botox her elbows to get rid of the creases, and, thanks to an operating room mishap, her latest obsession just may be her last. . . Now three women are about to take a wild ride through plastic surgery seminars, Botox injections, aspirations of a Jennifer Lopez-derriere, and the endless quest for physical perfection. But along the way, they may just learn a few lessons about the real cost of plastic surgery and what it really means to be beautiful. Patrick Sanchez is a native Washingtonian, having grown up in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C. After enduring twelve years of Catholic school, Patrick attended George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, where he majored in psychology (with a minor in naps, The Price Is Right, and The Young and the Restless). Prior to his career as a novelist, Patrick worked as professional writer in sales and marketing for a managed healthcare company in Falls Church, Virginia.
Release date:
November 20, 2014
Publisher:
Strapless
Print pages:
352
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I feel lucky. There is something about these harsh winter mornings that always makes me feel lucky. I hear the wind swirling outside the window and felt the sting of the freezing air when I was out walking Helga before bed last night. But now, lying next to my husband (and Helga) under the warmth of my goose down duvet, hearing the heat click on yet again, I feel lucky—lucky to be in a nice warm comfortable home when it’s so bitter cold outside. The feeling won’t last; of that, I am sure. It’s hard to feel lucky when you suspect your husband is cheating on you . . . when you suspect your sixteen-year-old daughter is a lesbian . . . when there’s a defiant seventy-pound dog named Helga taking up so much room on your mattress that your ass is hanging off the side of the bed.
I look at the clock. It reads 5:27. I have three more minutes until the alarm will sound and decide to beat it to the punch and click it off before it has a chance to go off. I hate to be awoken by those stupid morning DJs jabbering about their weekend or some dumb story about their kids. What on earth makes radio producers think we want to hear about these people’s lives every morning? Why can’t they just play some music?
I sit up in bed really wanting a cigarette, but, since Jim quit smoking a few years ago, I’ve agreed to smoke only downstairs in the den by a cracked window. Can you believe that? In my own home I’ve been banished to one room to smoke my Marlboro Lights, like an addict or something. As I rustle from underneath the covers, Helga turns her head, her wet nose skimming my forearm, and offers me a snarl as if to say, “Can’t you exit the bed with less motion? I’m trying to sleep.” I hate that dog. Now don’t get me wrong: I don’t hate dogs in general. Growing up, I had a dachshund that I adored, and the neighbors have some sort of poodle-looking thing that’s sweet as pie. I love most dogs. It’s just Helga I hate. That bitch.
I shove my feet into my slippers and throw on my robe. I stop by the thermostat on the way downstairs and turn it up another notch or two. As I start the coffee maker, I have the same conversation I have with myself every morning: “Why on earth did I agree to move to Sterling?” I ask myself. “Because you wanted an affordable home with a yard and some space . . . and a decent school for Jodie,” I answer back. I do like it here—the newness of everything—the houses, the shopping centers . . . the relative lack of derelicts, but when I’m up at five-thirty in the morning, getting ready for my hour-and-a-half commute into the city, I begin to question living here. Sterling, Virginia is only thirty miles or so west of Washington, D.C., but, in rush-hour traffic and on a parking lot called Leesburg Pike, it may as well be a hundred.
When the coffee’s done, I pour myself a cup, leave the machine on for Jim, take my java into the den, and settle into the lounge chair by the window. It’s one of those hideous La-Z-Boy recliners from the ’80s. It has a lever on the side and everything. I’d never have it in any other part of the house, but it’s comfortable, so I keep it around as my smoking chair. I crack the window a hint, strike the pack of Marlboro Lights against my palm, and pull out a cigarette. I ignite it with the gold-plated lighter Nora, my best friend and colleague, gave me for Christmas last year. She doesn’t smoke, but she’s one of the few people in my life who never pesters me about quitting. I take a drag off the cigarette—nothing like coffee and a cigarette first thing in the morning. If I could just get rid of mornings, I might actually be able to quit. I lean back in the chair and feel the draft of cold air coming through the crack in the window. I hate getting up so early, but once I’m actually out of bed and have my coffee and a cigarette burning in the ashtray on the windowsill, all is well with the world. At least it’s peaceful. Jim and Jodie won’t be up for another hour. This is my time—my time without Jim looking so lost trying to match a shirt with a pair of pants that I have to go over and help him, without Jodie badgering me about my smoking and rattling off something about the oppression of women in our country, without that damn dog barking nonstop out the front window.
As I inhale the cigarette for a second time, I think I hear Jim stumbling around upstairs, which is odd as he usually sleeps soundly until his alarm goes off at six-thirty. I picture him walking into the bathroom in his underwear, which probably has a tear (or two) in it somewhere, which reminds me that it’s about time I go through his underwear drawer and clear out all the ripped or stained items—Lord knows he’ll keep wearing whatever is in there, regardless of condition, until I do. On more than one occasion he’s put his leg through a tear in his drawers, thinking it was the leg hole, not noticed a thing, and gone ahead and put his pants on over the debilitated briefs.
I expect Jim’s especially tired this morning as he came in after midnight last night. He’s been working long hours lately—or so he says. At first I believed him. I didn’t have any reason not to. He’s been with his company for almost ten years and has always had to work the occasional late night or weekend, so it isn’t that unusual. But this is the only time that I can remember the late nights at work continuing for such a long stretch. It’s January now, and I seem to remember these ongoing late nights starting some time before Thanksgiving. I laugh to myself as I think of Jim having an affair. The idea just seems ridiculous. I can’t imagine there are women lining up to sleep with him. He’s not a bad-looking man, but he’s put on the pounds since we got married (as have I) more than fifteen years ago, has a small bald spot at the crown of his head, and God, how I wish he’d get those eyebrows trimmed. Like me, he’s thirty-six years old. Yes, we’re the same age. In fact, we were in the same class in high school. We’ve known each other since we were kids, but didn’t really start hanging out together until we were seniors at Robinson. Just before graduation we started dating and were sort of “on-again, off-again” after high school. I think we really were in love, but I’m not sure either one of us planned on marrying the other; however, it seemed like the thing to do when I found out I was pregnant during my sophomore year at George Mason University. We were so young and so stupid. “Oh, this one time without a condom? What will it really matter?” I remember one of us saying during one of our “on again” periods. I’m really not sure if it was me or him, but obviously it did matter. I should have been on the pill, but at the time, I was still living on my parents’ dime and their health insurance and couldn’t bear broaching the subject with them. I didn’t even tell them I was pregnant until after the wedding, although I’m sure they figured it out when I expressed the importance of making the wedding happen sooner rather than later. To this day neither my mother nor my father has said a word about Jodie being born only six months after our wedding, like she was a seven-pound preemie or something. Not a word! How ridiculous is that? Welcome to my world of Wasp dysfunction.
After a few more drags I smash the cigarette into the ashtray, shut the window, take a last sip of coffee, and head back upstairs to take a shower. I go through my morning ritual with easy efficiency—getting showered, dressed, and groomed in time to be out the door by six-thirty.
“Up, up, up!” I say in a chipper voice as I poke my head inside Jodie’s door on my way out of the house. “It’s six-thirty, sweetie. Get moving,” I prod. She looks so innocent first thing in the morning. At least when she’s first getting up she’s too tired to pontificate about vegetarianism or explain why we (as in me, her father, and all Americans) are personally responsible for all that ails the world. When I look at her first thing in the morning, struggling to wake up and get out of bed, I can still see the little girl in her. I miss that little girl.
“Okay,” she replies through her grogginess. “I’ll be up in a minute.”
“Have a good day, sweetie,” I say and head down the hall, knowing that Jim will make sure she’s up and moving before he heads downstairs. It’s not much, but I at least like to have some form of contact with my daughter before I leave the house. I hate the idea of her getting up in the morning and her mother just being gone. Otherwise, I’d just let Jim nudge her out of bed every morning. Lucky for him, he works fairly close to home in Reston, Virginia and doesn’t have to leave as early for work as I do. “Love you,” I add before I head down the stairs, grab a bottle of water and a banana (breakfast) to have on the way to work, and walk out into the January cold to really start my day.
“Oh, come on and go with me, Brenda. I don’t want to have to go alone and sit in a room with a bunch of crusty old hags looking to have their chins lifted and their soggy breasts heaped up to their shoulders,” Nora blurts out at me from across my desk.
“Nora, what on earth am I going to do at a seminar about plastic surgery? I’m a wife and mother. My days of trying to turn heads are long over . . . not that I ever did anyway.”
“Just come for some moral support. You can help me decide if I really want to go through with this.”
“I’ve already told you my thoughts. You don’t need to have anything done. You’re beautiful,” I say and mean it. She is beautiful. Maybe not as beautiful as she was when she was twenty-five, but she’s still one of the most attractive women I know.
“I’m not so sure about that. I was looking in the mirror this morning, and I was thinking ‘Maybe forty isn’t too early for a full facelift.’ And maybe cheek implants wouldn’t be such a bad idea.”
“Nora. . . .” I’m about to protest her detailed ambitions when Jill Hancock, our boss, pokes her head into my office. “Yes, we should get on that right away,” I say to Nora, trying to sound as if we are discussing business instead face lifts and boob jobs.
“Nora?” Jill asks, taking a couple steps into my office. “How’s the Verizon presentation going?”
I quickly shut my Web browser so Jill won’t see my bank account up on the screen if she gets too close to my desk. I was trying to balance my checkbook before Nora stopped in to say hello, and Jill doesn’t take kindly to employees using our Internet access for personal use.
“Good . . . great,” Nora replies, and from the look on her face I can tell that it is not going “good” or “great.”
“Okay. Make sure I get a draft to review by the end of the day.”
“Sure,” Nora says. She watches Jill nod at her and then head back to her office. She gives Jill a few seconds to make her way down the hall. “Shit, shit,” she mutters. “What Verizon presentation?”
“The one Jill assigned to you last week at the staff meeting.”
“What? Why didn’t you remind me? You know I never pay attention during those meetings. And I really start zoning when she begins talking about her stupid baby.”
“Nora, she gave birth to her first child three months ago. Of course she’s going to talk about him.”
“Why? When I got a new cat last year, I didn’t yack about it to everyone . . . people and their stupid kids.”
“Oh yeah. A cat. A baby. I can see the similarity,” I reply, doing a weighing gesture with my hands.
“And I’m so tired of everyone complimenting her on how good she looks,” Nora sighs. Nora doesn’t like anyone being complimented other than herself.
“She does look good. It’s only been three months, and she’s so thin. Who would know she just had a baby?”
“Look at her stretched out vagina, and I bet you’ll know she just had a baby.”
“I think I’ll pass, but thanks,” I say, grimacing.
“Well I’m up shit’s creek,” Nora says, getting up from her chair. “Jill wants to see a draft of the Verizon presentation today, and I haven’t even started on it.”
“Don’t worry about it. I’ll e-mail you a presentation I did for Citigroup last month. Just replace Citigroup with Verizon, take out the financial services industry stuff, and add some crap about telecom. It shouldn’t take you more than an hour.”
“Perfect! Thanks so much,” Nora says. “I guess I’d better get back to my desk and get started on it then. Can you send it now?”
“Sure.”
“Now come on and go with me to the seminar, Chica,” she adds. “We can grab dinner afterward—girls’ night out.”
“All right, but let me make sure Jim isn’t working late that night. I hate for Jodie to eat dinner alone. What time should I be ready to go?”
“It starts at seven-thirty, so we should head over there about seven.”
“Hmm . . . what does one wear to a plastic surgery seminar?”
“I don’t think there’s a dress code for learning about nose jobs and vaginal rejuvenation.”
“Vaginal rejuvenation? Eew!”
“Hey, don’t knock it. It may be you on the operating table one day getting your coochie all tightened up.”
“Nora!” I reprimand. “This is a place of business.” I feel my face starting to blush. Nora and I have been great friends since she joined the company two years ago, but I still haven’t gotten used to her mouth, which has been known to curse like a wet hen. I’m your quintessential Wasp, born and raised in Fairfax County, an upper-middle-class and generally white (at least back when I was a kid) suburb of Washington, D.C. Nora Perez, on the other hand, is a New York Puerto Rican (a “Nuyorican” I think I heard her call herself a time or two) and grew up in the Bronx. For the longest time I thought she had a Spanish accent. It was months after I met her that I realized it wasn’t so much a Spanish accent as a New York/Bronx thing she has going on. Her accent sounds kind of harsh to me—the way she says Noo Yawk instead of New York, or tawk instead of talk, or hahd instead of hard. Her voice, and often her choice of words, do not match the way she looks. She’s very petite and quite beautiful with soft features. When you see her, looking demure in one of her lavender pantsuits or silk blouses with perfectly styled hair, you expect her to be very lady-like and maybe even speak in a refined southern accent. Instead she talks to you about “getting your coochie all tightened up.”
Nora and I are worlds apart, but for some reason we hit it off. We are both graphic artists for Saunders and Kraff, a national consulting firm headquartered in D.C. Our jobs mostly consist of developing marketing materials and presentations for the sales vice-presidents, who travel around the country selling all sorts of worthless consulting services to major corporations and government agencies. We regularly work on presentations selling Saunders and Kraff’s ability to assist companies in “re-engineering” their operations, or instituting “change management” or “total quality management.” Whatever trumped-up buzz word we use, it all translates to the same thing: let Saunders and Kraff come into your organization, charge you barrels of money, and, after a few cursory meetings with each of your departments, hand select masses of employees for you to lay off.
I had been with the company for a few years before Nora was brought in to replace one of my former co-workers, who went to lunch one day and simply never came back. We were introduced on her first day, but it wasn’t until we were both in a meeting presenting some of our latest work to Jack Turner, one of the leading sales vice-presidents, that we started to have any real interaction. I showcased two presentations I had developed for him for Microsoft and 3M. I had worked with Jack several times and already knew what he liked, so he only had some minor edits for me to make to the presentations. Nora also presented her work to Jack—a presentation for a new Internet company called LifeByDesign, which apparently was a Web site that provided some kind of on-line life-coaching sort of nonsense. As Nora went over the PowerPoint slides with Jack, I could see her annoyance growing as he critiqued each one and made numerous edits to her work. He kept nit-picking at little things like the fonts she had chosen (Jack only liked Times New Roman), the colors (Jack liked red), and the overall organization of the presentation. With every criticism, I could hear the irritation growing in Nora’s voice. She’d respond every now and then with “okay, no problem,” or “sure,” or “yes, of course,” but there was an edge in her tone, and this thing she did with her eyes, that made it clear Jack was royally getting on her nerves. After going over the more detailed edits, Jack got into this whole thing about how LifeByDesign was a new cutting-edge company, and he really wanted the presentation to be innovative and “sexy.”
“Okay. I can add some stock photos of young beautiful people with martinis or something,” Nora said.
“Yeah,” Jack replied. “And give the presentation a sexy title.”
I could see it in Nora’s eyes—sexy title? Huh? “How about Saunders and Kraff: Taking LifeByDesign to the Next Level?” she offered.
“No, not sexy enough. I want it to be hip and catchy.”
“How about Saunders and Kraff: We got the Magic Stick!” I’m sure Nora was joking, but Jack took her seriously.
“No, still not sexy enough. I really want to knock their socks off.”
“Hmm,” Nora said, pausing for effect, her exasperation really showing. “We could always just call it Cunt. Would that be sexy enough?”
I’m certain my mouth dropped to the floor as soon as the c-word had escaped her lips. I’m not sure I’d ever heard that word said out loud before and certainly not by a woman. I felt compelled to look away from Nora and Jack even though I wanted to watch—like when you’re a kid, and your friend is about to get a spanking. I was sure Jack was going to fire her on the spot. He wasn’t her direct supervisor but, still, I was sure he was going to fire her right then and there. But he didn’t. He just widened his eyes, trying to hide his own shock and laughed. “Not that sexy,” he said. It was shortly after the c-word incident that he and Nora started sleeping together. Their affair didn’t last—none of Nora’s affairs do. As with most men, Nora tired of him and gave him the boot after a few weeks.
I think I was still sitting there in shock when Jack and Nora finally wrapped up, and he left the conference room.
“What a pompous ass,” she said to me after he had walked out, looking for me to agree. I did think that Jack was a pompous ass, but I just smiled at her and started collecting my things.
“I bet he’s got a dick the size of my little finger,” she added, making a fist and sticking out her pinky. I smiled at her again. What was I supposed to say? I grew up in a prudish Episcopalian home. I don’t talk about the size of men’s . . . well . . . you know, and I certainly don’t use the c-word. I allow myself the occasional “bitch” and say “crap” all the time, and every now and then a “shit” escapes from my mouth, but that’s as far I take it.
I let out a quick laugh, and I think my face went red—the first of many times (many, many times) that Nora would make me blush. She loved doing it the first time, and she still loves doing it now.
“Guess I should go get started on these edits,” she said.
“Yeah, me too, but think I’ll go smoke a cigarette first.”
“You smoke?” Nora asked, a look of surprise coming across her face—I’d seen the look many times before. People are always surprised to learn that I smoke. For whatever reason, I seem to give off a “goody-two-shoes” vibe and have some sort of motherly aura about me. People don’t expect someone like me to smoke. I think that’s why I started in the first place—to try and give myself some sort of an edge. Even in high school other students saw me as prudish and uptight. Not that I wasn’t popular—I was. I had lots of friends and was sort of the mother hen of my class. Everyone came to me with their problems and looked up to me. It was just that I was never someone other people thought of as sexy or hip. And I guess it didn’t help that I spent half of my student life in crewneck sweaters and those turtlenecks with the little kelly green whales on them that were so big in the ’80s. One day when I was a junior at Robinson, I got fed up with my girl-next-door image and bummed a cigarette off my friend, Stacia, and have been a smoker ever since. In the end, nothing else about me changed. I was still considered prudish and uptight, only now I had a nicotine addiction on top of it.
“Yeah, bad habit,” I said.
“We all have them. If it wasn’t smoking, it’d just be something else.”
“So what’s yours?” I asked.
“Men,” Nora answered with conviction. And boy, would I find out how true her response was.
“Hi, sweetie. How was school?” I say as I come through the door. It’s about seven-thirty, and I’m tired from a long day at work and the lengthy drive home. Jodie’s sitting on the sofa watching a Xena: Warrior Princess episode, one I’m sure she’s seen a few dozen times. She owns the entire DVD collection and always seems to have one of them running on the TV. I wish she wouldn’t watch that show so much. I tried to view it with her once (I’m desperate to share something in common with her), but I couldn’t get into it—all the scantily clad women attacking Ancient Greek warriors and mythical creatures. It just seemed like nonsense to me.
“Fine,” she says, barely acknowledging my presence in the room.
“Can you turn that off?” I say. “I don’t like you watching all that violence.” And I don’t like her watching all that violence, but the real reason I want it off is because it makes me uncomfortable. I read something in Entertainment Weekly about how the show is filled with lesbian sub-text, and how Xena and Gabrielle are actually lovers. I even happened upon Jodie pausing a scene where they were bathing together in a river. The whole thing just creeps me out. I can’t explain exactly why—I’m not homophobic or anything, but her watching that kind of stuff just gets under my skin.
“It’s almost over,” she replies.
“What’s it matter? You’ve seen them all a hundred times.”
“Jesus!” she yells at me all of a sudden. “I’m just watching the damn TV.” She clicks the television off with the remote and stomps out of the room and up the steps.
Oh, just great, I think to myself. She’s in one of her moods. I never know with her—some days I get home, and she’s reasonably pleasant, and others days she spits fire at me for no apparent reason. She recently turned sixteen and, for the past few years, we just haven’t been able to relate to each other very well. We seem to have nothing in common. I hadn’t planned on getting pregnant so many years ago, and it was quite a distressing experience at the time, but as my pregnancy progressed, I started to look forward to becoming a mother, and I was especially thrilled when I found out I was having a little girl. I envisioned pink satin dresses, curls, and imaginary tea parties. I thought about how much fun it would be to have a shopping partner when she grew up, to do each other’s hair and make-up, to send her off to homecoming dances in pretty gowns that’d we pick out together at the mall. I hadn’t anticipated a little girl who preferred baseballs to dolls, and a teenager who refused to wear dresses under any circumstances and harassed me until I finally relented and let her sign up for the all women’s basketball league.
After I hear Jodie’s door slam, I grab the stack of mail on the table and start leafing through it while Helga sits at my feet waiting for me to make my way to the pantry and scoop her a cup of dog food. She’s such an odd-looking dog. Her mother was a Cocker Spaniel, but no one knows what breed her father was, as the Cocker apparently got knocked up one day after she’d managed to slide herself under her owner’s chain link fence. From the looks of Helga, I’d guess her father was a black lab or some other large black dog.
The entire pile of mail turns out to be junk, and I toss every single piece in the garbage. Helga follows me to the kitchen, and I pour some food in her dish. I used to try to pet her when I came through the door, but she always backed away and, a few times, she even tried to bite me. Helga and I really only interact two times a day. She allows me to feed her when I get home from work, and she allows me to take her out for her evening walks. You would think, considering we have a fenced yard, that we could just let her out the back door, and she would do her business and come back inside. But the little princess refuses to do anything but scratch at the door if we put her outside by herself. She insists on being on a leash with one of us attached to it.
Jim, Jodie, and I picked Helga out from a litter of puppies shortly after she was born, but we couldn’t actually take her home until she was eight weeks old. When she finally hit her eight-week mark, I was traveling with one of the sales reps in Michigan, and Jim and Jodie went to pick her up without me. She had been alone in the house with the two of them for almost a week when I came back from Michigan, and you would have thought I was the secret police trying to break into the house the day I came home. I thought it’d be such fun to come home to a new puppy, but instead, Helga saw me as the “other woman” trying to make the moves on her man. She wouldn’t stop barking and baring her teeth at me. She actually snapped at me when I tried to get into my own bed with her and Jim my first night back. And even now, three years later, she still looks at me with an “Aren’t you gone yet?” kind of look. Of course, she’s all sweet and wonderful to Jim and sometimes, when she’s lying next to him on the sofa and he’s stroking her fur, I swear that dog is gloating at me—looking at me like I’m pathetic, like she’s got my man. Jim and Jodie had been calling her Millie when they first brought her home, but, the more she ignored me and snapped at me, the more I wanted to give her a name I didn’t like. I narrowed it down to Mildred or Helga and finally decided I disliked the name Helga more. I kept referring to her as Helga and, eventually, it just caught on with the rest of the family.
I start flipping through some menus we keep in a file folder by the phone, trying to decide if we should order in or go out for dinner. Unfortunately, I rarely have the time or energy to cook, so most nights we either get delivery or go out to eat. Jim can barely fry an egg and, although I’m fairly adept in the kitchen, I simply would rather spend a little extra cash then lose the time it takes to shop for food, cook it, and clean up after a meal. I used to do it back with Jodie was young and I was a stay-at-home mother, but honestly, I can only think of a handful of times in the recent past that I cooked a meal for my family. I’m thinking of ordering Chinese when I hear Jim come through the front door. Helga immediately abandons her food and rushes toward him.
“Hi precious!” Jim says with zeal to Helga as she dances at his feet and wags her tail. “Hey,” he says to me with much less enthusiasm. “How’s it going?”
“Good,” I respond. “Did you pick up the cookies for me?” Jim works near this wonderful little bakery, and my boss just got back from maternity leave, so I asked him to pick up a selection of cookies for me to take into the office tomorrow and sort of welcome her back.
“Yeah . . . well, not exactly. The bakery was closed when I got out of the office. I stopped in the convenience store next door and got these.” He hands me a plastic bag.
I open it up and take a look. “Chips Ahoy!? You got a bag of Chips Ahoy?”
“Is that a problem?”
“Yes! It’s a problem. I can’t take my boss a bag of Chips Ahoy as a welcome back gift.”
“Why not? They’re good. You said you wanted cookies.”
“I meant cookies from a bakery . . . in a nice white box with gold ribbon,” I say with a sigh. I’m trying not to be mad. I know Jim doesn’t know any better. To him, a cookie is a cookie whether it’s from 7-Eleven or Neiman Marcus. Jim’s a pretty simple guy, and sometimes he just doesn’t ge. . .
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