It was
with a mix of emotions but
primarily envy that Heather watched her sister stride ahead of her
across the
windswept open moor while chatting animatedly with the boy they’d met
only the
day before. Heather acknowledged that Fern was much the better looking
of the
two sisters—not just because she ascertained this herself but from the
repeated
observation that, given the choice, any boy in pursuit of a pretty girl
invariably gravitated towards Fern and not at all to Heather.
Even now,
several
days’ walk from their village in the West and loaded down with baggage,
it was
as if the sweat and exertion of their brisk trek over moorland, along
the river
banks and through the thick forest was suffered only by Heather—making
her seem
even more plain—while her sister was as fresh and pretty as she ever
was. Fern waved
her head to one side in her characteristic way so that her long brown
hair fell
over a bare shoulder while she smiled coquettishly at Fox, the young
man they’d
met the previous day at a village they passed through on their
pilgrimage to
the Great Temple of the Sun. How could someone of the same mother (but
almost
certainly of a different father) be so very unlike? While Heather was a
girl
whose bosom was less than ample, whose ankles were thick and whose face
was
flat and brutish, Fern had eyes that shone brightly even when the Sun
was
hidden behind clouds, a face that charmed every man who cast his eyes
on her,
and slender and shapely legs that prompted a man’s ardour as she strode
bare-foot
over the grass and moss. Even the seasonal brown tan of her skin seemed
so perfect
whereas Heather’s flesh tended towards only a freckly blistering as the
Sun inexorably
approached its annual zenith.
There were
others besides Heather, Fern and Fox in the company of pilgrims that
clambered up
the moor burdened down by the wares they’d brought along with them from
their homes
in the West. These pilgrims were on the same expedition, loaded down
with the
produce of their villages to exchange with that of others who were also
congregating from all across the land, from North, South and East as
well as
West, each and every one gathering with the intent to express gratitude
to the
Sun for his annual bounty and beneficence. It was principally to pay
respect to
the Sun that so many pilgrims massed at the Great Temple each year.
Such an
awe-inspiring and magnificent complex of shrines, of both stone and
wood, would
never have been raised merely to give people the opportunity to
socialise and
exchange wares. But opportunity it was and of which everyone took full
advantage.
Neither Heather
nor Fern had ever travelled before so far from their riverside village.
Already
there was much that was alien and mysterious about the world beyond.
They’d walked
across the Western lands, following a route marked out by tradition not
so much
to afford the shortest journey but to gather companions from other
villages on
the way. It fascinated Heather to discover how much custom and even
language
changed over distance. Those who lived furthest from Heather’s home
were the ones
most difficult to understand. But however diverse the accent and the
customs of
dress and habit the sisters encountered as they wandered from village
to
village, sharing in the bounty of field, forest and river, it was Fern
who
attracted the most attention and the one most likely to be fucked by
the
dashing young men with their youthfully spare beards and their reliably
excited
erections. And it was always Heather who’d sit cross-legged, bare limbs
and
bare breasts, but alone dining on the last few roasted bones of aurochs
or deer
that few others were still concerned to eat.
Even now, as
their company—swollen to five men and five women—marched onwards, it
was always
Fern the boys were eager to chat with and so keen to shoulder the
burden of her
deer-hide sack of tin and copper. Heather, meanwhile, had no one to
share the
weight of her baggage and had fewer fond memories of being fucked or
buggered
by the flickering flames of a great fire. She knew also that there was
little likelihood
of respite from the load she was carrying towards the Great Temple,
because on
her return she’d be weighed down with as much flint from the Eastern
chalk
lands as she could carry. It was a privilege indeed to be elected to
represent
her village at the Great Summer Gathering—an honour that might never be
offered
again—but Heather knew that it was only because her sister was so
favoured that
she was also on this pilgrimage, spared from labour in the field and
meadow for
two cycles of the summer Moon, to represent her village at the critical
moment
of the Sun’s highest elevation in the firmament.
This wasn’t a
privilege of blood alone. In her village, as with all the villages in
the West,
only the mother’s bloodline mattered. All else was as one under the
watchful
eye of the Sun, his wayward partner the Moon, and their many companions
the
Stars, whose constellations guide the fortunes of all men and women and
the
beasts of field, forest and sea. Although Heather envied her beautiful
and charming
sister, she’d been chosen because there was no one in the world she
loved more
than Fern, including all the boys who’d fucked her only after rolling
off her
sister’s exhausted body. And Fern loved her too. Theirs was a pure love
where
sexual intimacy was no more appropriate than it would be with one’s
mother or
with one’s dog or goat. It was like the love they felt towards the Sun
and the
Moon and the Stars who they worshipped and which also gave comfort in
the
bleakest and hungriest days of winter, gave purpose to every waking
moment and
solace in the hours of sleep. So ardent was the sisters’ love for one
another that
when Fern was elected to make the great spiritual journey far to the
East, it
was only natural that Heather should be her companion.
It was fortunate
that there had been no step of their journey during which the sisters
were
unaccompanied. There were great evils in the world. Bears and wolves
and lynx
and aurochs for sure, but also malevolent spirits that lurked in the
darkness
of the night forests and prowled across the moors. But when a company
of men
and women, mostly young but also some who were old, wizened and
balding, strode
together singing songs of praise to the celestial bodies and emboldened
by the
righteousness and joy of their shared faith, what possible harm could
the evil
spirits cause? And it ensured as well that any predator, however
fierce, kept a
prudent distance knowing that the pilgrims were armed with flint-tipped
spears
and knives that would send them scampering back to their dens with
their tails
between their legs and bloody gashes across their hides.
“Look ahead!”
said Hog, one of the men in their company. “Smoke! And lots of it.
Surely, that
must be the site of the Great Temple.”
“What else
could it be?” remarked Lynx, the oldest man in their company whose
beard was as
bushy as his head was bald.
“It could be a
forest fire,” warned Gorse, a woman of intermediate years. “I saw one
once when
I was but a child. It was fearsome and destructive, even though our
village
feasted for many days on the flesh of the aurochs and boar that had
perished in
the flames.”
“It can only be
friendly fire,” said Lynx. “See how many plumes there are. A forest
fire is one
great black cloud of menace. These can only be the fires on which deer
is roasting
on spits and pilgrims are gathered together in honour of the Sun.”
And so it was
as Heather and her companions discovered for sure when they’d ascended
the
higher slopes of the moor and could see stretched ahead of them a wide
vista of
fires each attended by a company of pilgrims. There were many more
people from
villages across the known world than Heather believed could ever exist.
Amongst
the blazing fires and the attendant pilgrims was more shelter than
could be
found in any village. And this was in the form of countless scattered
wooden,
stone and earthen huts scattered about the plain and roughly the same
number of
paces apart. These had been constructed over many generations by the
multitude of
pilgrims who’d assembled, foreswearing conflict and war, caring not
that in
later years other pilgrims they’d never know, who might speak a tongue
they
couldn’t understand, from hills and valleys far far away would take
advantage
of the product of their labour to shelter from the wind, the rain and
the
midday Sun.
“What do we do
now?” asked Nettle, another girl in the company much the same age as
Heather
but still more attractive to the men than Heather could ever be.
“We seek a
shelter for our own use and build a fire beside it,” said Lynx. “And if
all the
shelters are taken then we approach a company of pilgrims who’ve
arrived before
us and implore them to allow us to share their shelter. That is how
it’s done
here and how it’s always been done. We are all as one under the same
Sun and we
are gathered for the same cause and in the same spirit.”
“And that,”
said Gorse, although it didn’t need to be said, “is to pay homage to
the Sun
and beseech him to provide for our village and for all villages in the
West…”
“And beyond,”
said Fern excitedly, who was as generous as ever in sharing whatever
bounty she
had.
“And beyond,”
echoed Lynx piously.
The company
were fortunate to easily find a shelter to claim as their own for the
duration
of the Festival of the Sun. Although many pilgrims had already arrived
from the
North, the East and mostly the South, there were many more still to
come and
many of the shelters, unoccupied since the previous Summer solstice (or
perhaps
the less well attended Winter solstice), were still available. Lynx
ensured
that, before they settled down to prepare a fire and feast on the game
they’d earlier
caught, the company should repair the shelter and, as custom dictated,
add to
the collection of baubles and decorations already on display.
The stone
shelter that Lynx had chosen was as solid as any building in her own
village
but it had obviously not been built as a permanent residence. There was
space
to sleep but nowhere to store domestic fowl or dogs and no surfaces on
which to
prepare food, nor even a hole in the roof for smoke from an indoor fire
to
escape. But, as in every home in Heather’s village, there was space
reserved
for a shrine to the Sun, and it was to this that the two sisters
bestowed a
clay figurine of the Sacred Mother, the spirit of fecundity and
prosperity. The
two sisters kissed the holy image and then, with due respect, took
turns to press
it against the crotch in order to bless it with the scent of womanhood.
They
then placed it in the little space left between the other tributes
already
placed at the shrine. And these were strange and diverse.
There was a
necklace made from mussel shells. There was a clay figurine of what
resembled a
beaver. There was a wooden carving of a deer’s head and antlers. There
were
many precious stones—including flint, tin, pebbles, ammonites and
fossil
wood—together with feathers, bear’s claws, viper’s fangs and shrivelled
toadstools. There were so many different ways that the various people
under the
one Sun honoured the mother and father of all creation.
The sisters
enjoyed their best night’s sleep since they’d left home, stretched out
on the
bare dry ground in the flickering glow of the fire they’d helped
prepare, limbs
entwined with their fellows and hardly much space between them for even
Fern to
fuck. And on the following morning Heather and her sister were granted
permission
to explore the environs of the Great Temple of the Sun towards which
they’d travelled
so far. It exceeded anything that Heather had ever imagined. Not only
were
there so many people, far more than Heather could count however many
notches
she made in the sand, but scattered all around the complex were many
splendid sacred
tombs and temples whose purpose remained mysterious to the sisters. But
it was
towards the Great Temple at the heart of a concentric ring of pilgrims’
settlements that the girls’ gaze was drawn. This was a massive edifice
of towering
wooden poles and massive stone obelisks within ring after ring of ever
increasing
magnificence, culminating in a final inner circle built so high that
only the
tallest trees could exceed its height. This splendour was further
enhanced by
the fact that there were no trees growing freely in any direction for
many
paces, although a generous supply of timber had been piled high on the
outskirts of the settlement so that pilgrims could build their fires.
And so
neatly were they sliced that they must have been felled by axes with
the
sharpest flint edges that had ever been knapped.
The pilgrims
were so various in appearance that Heather was initially startled and
even
shocked by what she saw. Only those from the West were attired in the
same style
as herself, that is, in deer-hide smocks that covered the torso from
below the
arms to the top of the thigh but barely hid the groin. The bare legs,
arms and
shoulders of the Westerners with which Heather was familiar wasn’t at
all
typical of the attire of other pilgrims. Some were completely naked
(but surely
only for the summer months), but nudity could never shock Heather as
most
people in her village wore clothes only when the Sun shone least warmly
or, as
at the moment, when venturing beyond the tribal territory. There were
some who
were bare chested, but wore skirts almost to the ankles. There were
some who
wore strange attire that enclosed all the leg and groin. There were
some who
sported headdresses or had feathers, twigs and even pebbles knotted
into their
hair. But the priests of the Sun, whose role it was to preside over the
ceremony to celebrate the annual zenith of the Sun were the ones most
outlandishly attired.
The priesthood
of the Sun were held in high esteem throughout all the land. Only they
could reside
all year round in the vicinity of the Great Temple, which they equipped
and
tended. And it was they who ensured that the sacred rites of the Solar
and Lunar
Calendars were correctly observed. The priesthood was represented by
both men
and women, although custom dictated that women held the most senior
positions, thereby
reflecting the significance of motherhood and fertility in the Sun’s
domain.
The priests were elected from the company of shamans who lived in
villages throughout
all the land. A new priest was appointed only when an existing one had
died
and, according to custom, only on rare occasion from the priest’s child
or kin.
Both male and female priests wore resplendent headdresses, most often
made from
the skulls of aurochs, boar, bear or deer, adorned with as wild an
array of
feathers or antlers as could be found. The rest of their dress varied
from
priest to priest but was generally colourful and wild, and mostly
assembled from
the fur of wolf, lynx, bear and beaver. The genitals and bosom were
generally
uncovered (at least in the summer) to make apparent whether the priest
was a
woman or a man, as the priest’s sex was significant in the lovemaking
that
usually followed the climax of the festivities.
As the days
passed, Heather observed more and more pilgrims arrive. Generally,
those from
the North were the ones dressed most in defence against inclement
weather,
while the Southerners were the ones most often naked. As she’d learnt
as a
young girl, the further south you went, the nearer you approached the
Sun. And
it was known that beyond the Southern Sea there was another land where
although
the Sun shone more fiercely it was accorded less veneration and where,
consequently,
there was much strife and warfare. And this, more than anything else,
was what
the shared ceremony of the Festival of the Sun guarded against and
which gave
the lands north of the Southern Sea such stability and prosperity.
It wasn’t long
until all the available shelters had been taken even while yet still
more
pilgrims were arriving, tired and exhausted after their long trek
across hills,
moors, valleys and even rivers to reach the Great Temple. Heather
observed these
sometimes outlandishly attired pilgrims warily, conflicted between her
natural suspicion
of strangers and her knowledge that the right and proper way to
celebrate the
Sun’s undiscriminating bounty was to be equally generous to all born
under the
one Sun. But when people dressed so peculiarly and spoke in ways that
was
barely intelligible, generosity came less naturally to her.
“Do you mind if
we share your shelter?” asked one of these newer arrivals in a barely
comprehensible
confusion of long vowels and nasal consonants. “We have travelled many
days,
have forded great rivers, ascended high mountains and sheltered in dark
forests
as rainstorms have beat upon our heads.”
“Gladly,” said
Lynx, who due to his advanced years, long beard and evident baldness
had become
the spokesperson for Heather’s company. “We extend to you our
generosity as the
Sun has extended his to us, without favour and without hesitation.”
“Thank you
kindly,” said the strange man, who Heather was soon to learn was called
Wolverine. “We return your favour and kindness with the bounty of a
freshly
slain aurochs for our mutual feasting.”
Aurochs was the
most prized of all meat, more so than deer, fowl or boar, so Heather
and the
rest of the Westerners were more than delighted to welcome Wolverine’s
company.
And a hardy band they were too. They’d come from the far North close by
a sea
that stretched both North and West, where lived pine martens, reindeer,
wolverines and other exotic beasts, and where the winters were so harsh
that
there were more days of snow than days without. But, as Lynx reminded
Heather
and Fern and the others, the Festival of the Sun was an occasion when
no
difference was made between those blessed by the warmer Sun in the
South and
West and those less fortunate from the North.
Not only were
the Northerners strange of tongue, there were other peculiar
differences
between them and the Westerners. Despite the warmth of summer, they
were
attired almost as Heather and Fern might be in winter, although the fur
was of
a lighter weight, which hid from sight almost all their arms and legs.
The
men’s beards were thick and dark brown and the hair was plaited. The
women’s
faces were obscured not only by long bushy hair but by feathers and fur
knotted
into the locks. Their feet and ankles were shod by leather and tough
hide. And when
they huddled together around the fire, tearing out hot flesh and offal
from the
aurochs roasting on the flames, the Northerners were reserved: intent
more on consumption
and less on conversation.
As the evening
wore on and the freshly nourished Westerners relaxed in intimate sport
with one
another—Fern as always at the centre of the action, but Gorse and
Nettle also
enjoying attention—Heather resigned herself as ever to be the one the
men resorted
to from need only rather than desire. As a result, she had more
opportunity than
the others to study the Northerners. And no greater contrast could
there be.
While Heather’s company were naked and carnally engaged, the
Northerners sat
together fully clothed, hardly exchanging a word, warming themselves by
the
fire and bashfully averting their eyes from the lovemaking opposite.
And in amongst a
company of generally much older men and women gathered round the fire,
was but one
boy of about Heather’s age who sat slightly to one side and entertained
himself
by poking the flames with a stick.
What the heck,
thought Heather. We are all one under the Sun. So, although she was
mindful of
the difficulties of communication and of the greater likelihood of
finding
sexual satisfaction in her own company, she sidled over towards the
young man
and addressed him boldly.
“Hello,” she
said slowly and precisely. “My name is Heather. What is your name?”
The boy seemed
startled, shocked even, at being addressed. “Name?” he exclaimed.
“Mine is
Heather,” she repeated. “What are you known as?”
“My name is
Marten,”
said the boy just as slowly and carefully. “And you are…?”
“Heather.”
“Like the
plants that grow?”
“Yes. And my
sister is called Fern.”
“Your sister.
The pretty girl?”
“Yes,” sighed
Heather resignedly. “My sister Fern. The pretty girl.”
Nevertheless,
despite this halting start and the fact that both Heather and Marten
often had
to repeat themselves to be understood, their conversation became
relatively animated.
It was fascinating to Heather to learn about the many differences
between
Marten’s home in the far distant North and her own home to the West. It
was a
novel experience to describe her daily customs and local habitat to
someone who
knew them so little. Marten’s home, however, was in a range of hills
and fells
with peaks much higher than those in the West where roamed reindeer,
ptarmigan
and wolf. And in amongst these hills were many lakes and babbling
brooks.
However, whereas Heather’s life was settled in one place where
villagers tended
crops and cared for goats, fowl and a few tethered aurochs and boar,
Marten’s
tribe led a roving life, as they followed herds of aurochs or goat up
hills and
across dales, with the constant company of their dogs and always with a
spear
in hand to fell any deer or boar they should encounter. The Northerners
were
experts in building temporary shelters from stones and slabs of shale
which
they might find on their wandering and which might still stand
unperturbed when
their travels next took them to the same valley or hilltop.
“Is it very
cold in winter?” asked Heather
sympathetically.
Marten seemed
puzzled by the question. “Yes, of course,” he said. “But we stay out of
the
snow and the biting cold. The winter is when we rest in a cave where it
is
never very cold and we live off the grains, nuts and salted meat we’ve
hoarded
for the months when it is hardest to forage and hunt.”
Heather was
sure that Marten was a fine young man, although all she could see of
him was
his face, which was only lightly bearded, and his hands which continued
to nervously
play with the stick he used to poke the fire. But out of politeness, if
nothing
else (after all she hardly knew him), she placed her hand on Marten’s
groin and
squeezed what she fancied was his penis under the aurochs-hide gown.
She
certainly didn’t expect his sudden and panicked response.
He immediately
leapt
up, looking guiltily around him at his family, who were mostly now
dozing
together, still fully dressed, and brushed down his crotch as if a wasp
had
stung him.
“What are you
doing!” he exclaimed rather than enquired.
“I was just
being friendly,” said Heather who was as alarmed at Marten’s response
as he’d
been at her polite gesture.
“It’s not our
way in the North,” said Marten who warily positioned himself out of
reach of
Heather’s probing hand.
Although
Heather and he continued to talk for a while longer, the air of growing
intimacy between them had dissipated and so it was with relief that
Heather
returned to the company of her sister and companions who had now
amassed inside
the stone shelter. As Heather gratefully received the few last dry
humps from
Fox who’d exhausted all his semen on Fern, Gorse and Nettle, she
ruefully
contrasted the offhand attitude that Western men had towards sex with
the more earnest
one held by the Northerners.
The following
day, Fern and Heather were again out together to admire the Great
Temple whose
magnificence they both agreed could never be surpassed. How could a
building
ever be larger or more splendid? The legends of how the great stones
that were
the Great Temple’s foundations were transported from the mountainous
lands
across the Great Western Channel had been recounted many times and
never ceased
to amaze the two sisters. Such dedication. Such effort. And such an
honour to
have been one of those who’d volunteered for such a holy duty.
But Fern and
Heather weren’t the only ones admiring the Great Temple from a vantage
point.
“Hey!”
exclaimed Fern excitedly pointing towards a nearby hillock. “Look over
there.
Isn’t that the Northern boy you were chatting to last night? And I
notice that he’s
been staring at us rather more than he’s been admiring the Great
Temple… And
look, now he’s pretending not to have noticed us. I do believe he’s
taken a
liking to my bare legs. Perhaps he doesn’t see many bare legs where he
comes
from…”
“Or much else,”
remarked Heather grumpily.
“I’m sure he
really likes you, sis,” said Fern. “Look at how he keeps looking at
you…”
“You know it’s
not me he’s looking at,” said Heather.
“Oh rubbish!”
said Fern. She waved towards Marten and shouted “Coo-ee! Hello! We’re
over
here.”
Marten couldn’t
really pretend not to have heard, but after almost perfunctorily waving
back to
acknowledge Fern from where he was, he then abruptly stood up from
where he’d
been crouching and strode off.
“Not very
friendly, is he?” remarked Fern. “And I quite fancied a Northern cock
inside
me. Do you think Northerners fuck differently to us Westerners?”
“I don’t think
they fuck at all,” said Heather peevishly.
She was quite
annoyed at Marten, even though she was used to being treated as the
girl who a
boy fucked only if he had to. There was surely a difference between a
respectful reluctance to fuck and outright rejection. But the
Northerners were
an odd sort. They didn’t seem to talk much. And the men and women
seemed
strangely distant from one another. In fact, during the night’s
slumbers,
Heather noticed that all the women slept huddled together and the men
slept
apart. And it wasn’t that they were expressing a preference for
intimacy with
partners of the same sex, because there was no intimacy on display at
all.
In the evening
when the Northerners and Westerners shared a more meagre diet of
squirrel,
songbird and snake, Heather again had the opportunity to chat to
Marten. As
before he was amiable but strangely reserved, although there was so
much of
fascination and wonder in their conversation. Heather might not be
eager to live
in a cooler clime, but she wondered what it would be like to live in a
rugged
terrain where there was so much winter snow. And Marten was fascinated
by
Heather’s account of a coast that was never more than half a day’s walk
from
her village where you could see puffins, Great Auks and seals. He was
especially captivated by Heather’s tale of having seen a whale in the
distance
from a high cliff top.
“I thought such
leviathans were fantasies,” he said. “Just fantasies that mothers tell
children
to get them to sleep…”
“They’re real,”
said Heather. “I know, because I’ve seen one. And not just the once.”
“So there must
also be dragons, goblins and demons,” remarked Marten.
There was a
pause in the conversation while Marten mused on the mysteries of
creation,
while Heather wondered at his scepticism about such well attested
phenomena.
And then she
remarked: “Why didn’t you talk to us today?”
“Sorry…”
“We called to
you and you waved back to us and then you walked off. Why was that?”
“Because you
were with your sister,” Marten said.
Now it was
Heather’s turn to be puzzled. “Is it because you want to fuck my sister
that
you didn’t talk to us?” she asked.
Marten visibly
blushed, which endeared him to Heather more than anything he’d ever
said or
done before. “No, it wasn’t that. It wasn’t that at all.”
“But you do
want to fuck Fern, don’t you?
Everyone wants to fuck her. You must want to stick your cock inside
her…”
“No. No,” said
Marten. “It’s nothing like that.”
“You admit that
my sister is very pretty, don’t you?”
“Well, of
course I do.”
“So what’s the
problem?”
“It’s not that
your sister isn’t pretty, and of course she is…”
“Well, then…”
“It’s that it’s
you
that I prefer.”
Heather wasn’t
sure she heard right. “Me?”
“Of course.
Fern is pretty but it’s you who I would much prefer to give my heart
to.”
“I don’t
understand,” said Heather. “Wouldn’t you much prefer to fuck a pretty
girl than
someone like me?”
“In the North,
we don’t make love to every woman we meet,” explained Marten. “We
choose our
partners carefully and there are many factors we take into account. If
you want
to live with one woman for the whole of your life there are other
things to consider
than just how pretty they are…”
“Like what?”
“I don’t know.
How well you get on with them. How much you enjoy their company. It
isn’t just
about sex.”
“Isn’t it?”
“Not in the
North it isn’t.”
And so Heather
came to understand that there were other unsuspected differences
between
Northerners and Westerners. And chief amongst these was that in the
North a man
and a woman made a sacred vow to one another and didn’t share partners
with
everyone and anyone, that there was a close bond between a man and a
woman which
ensured that the children knew who their father was as much as they did
their
mother and that only on the death of one partner did a man or a woman
seek
another.
Bizarre it
might sound, but Heather could see the value in such a peculiar state
of
affairs and it confirmed to her what she already knew that under one
Sun there
were many differences of people and culture. And she also knew
instantly that
much as she loved her sister and enjoyed the sexual freedoms of the
West, she
could also happily exchange them for a lifetime’s commitment to one man.
“Would you like
me to return with you to the North?” Heather asked Marten.
Again he looked
startled. “That’s not normally the sort of thing that a woman asks a
man in the
North.”
“But is it what
you want? Do you want me to live with you in a partnership of just the
two of
us?”
“Only if you
want to.”
“Yes, of
course,” said Heather. “Yes. I do.”
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