#oc: ogash gor giknirh
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ansu-gurleht · 5 months ago
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ogash probably still exists too but he’s probably pretty different. might not even be a mad scientist anymore. and the events of ogash’s fire and flame can’t happen for a couple reasons. 1) they happen after 4e201, so therefore after 3e634, and 2) the red year never happened
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vosh-rakh · 5 years ago
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ogash’s fire and faith, p1
NOTE: i’ve edited the ending of this fic slightly bc i’m going to be continuing it in a slightly different direction soon. i’ll leave the original cut material struck-through for posterity’s sake.
- - - - -
The researchers were guided to the ruins by a Redoran they had hired, not only for his knowledge of the landscape, but also for protection from the wildlife of Vvardenfell. They were three rather scrawny individuals who had devoted their lives to academia rather than any practical pursuits: Ogash, who despite being an orc was short and frail; Caromascius, a portly imperial whose sagging arm betrayed his innocence with the sword they’d been given as protection (but the grip on his flask of Daggerfall wine betrayed anything but innocence); and Falion, their Aldmeri “friend,” which actually meant “supervisor,” whose mastery of magic was mostly limited to spells of convenience and comfort rather than defense. 
The Redoran’s name was Samhreth. Falion had immediately whispered to his two companions once out of the dunmer’s earshot, “What a horrid dunmeri name.” 
“I’ve heard worse,” said Caromascius, after a swift swig from his flask. “I’m just going to call him Sam. You know, like from Samuel. You elf fellas have ‘Samuel,’ right?”
“No,” Falion said, his voice dripping with the usual contempt, “us ‘elf fellows’ do not use such a hideous half-mer name.” He paused for a moment, then conceded, “But it is preferable to ‘Sanhereth,’ or whatever the savage called himself.”
Ogash did not need bother wonder what Falion and Caromascius thought of his own orcish name. Falion had remarked upon it as soon as they were introduced. Caromascius had feigned sympathy for Ogash, but laughed at Falion’s comment regardless, saying with a pat on the orc’s back, “He’s not wrong, you know.”
Ogash did not know, but had learned long ago to not bother arguing the point.
- - - - -
They had almost arrived at the tunnel entrance supposedly leading to the ancient dwemeri citadel Kherakah. According to the first era maps, it was once located here, in the shadow of Red Mountain, but in the years since the eruption of 1E668 it could not be found. But it was Ogash who suggested that the more recent eruptions of Red Mountain may have revealed a network of old flow tubes in the volcanic stone that could lead to the fabled city. He supported these claims with evidence from recent geological surveys as well as explorations of the subterranean networks by returning dunmer exiled by the Red Year, and took them to the Board of the Imperial Historical Society. It had taken some convincing, supported by his colleague Caromascius, as well as his own slowly developing powers of persuasion, but the Board eventually granted his request to send an exploratory mission to the site.
On one condition: Ogash and Caromascius will be the ones to go, overseen by one of the Society’s Dominion watchdogs.
On the trip from the mainland to Vvardenfell, Caromascius whispered to Ogash between heaving over the side of the ship, that the Board likely thought it a suicide mission. “They’re probably just tired of us - you - asking for all this dwarf nonsense. They expect us to find nothing and die while we’re here.”
“But why send Falion with us?” Ogash tried to look away from Caromascius, himself fairly seasick. “They must have some faith in us, to send us with a Dominion agent.” 
“They probably expect me to die, too,” groaned the altmer from behind them. “I think they want to replace me, anyway. They refuse to admit my value.” He pushed Caromascius out of the way and leaned over the edge of the ship himself. Ogash sat down with his back against the railing and shut his eyes tightly, trying to drown out the commotion of the ship and its crew, as well as the anxiety - and eager anticipation - that grew as they drew closer to Red Mountain on the horizon.
- - - - -
“Here,” growls Samhreth in his ash-choked voice, typical of the dunmer of the island. He points his three charges towards a slightly sunken part of a nearby ashmound. “Wizard. Blow away the ash.”
Falion, obviously miffed at being bossed around, steps forward to cast a spell. He stiffly recites some incantation and gestures with his hand, directing the wind to pick up the intrusive ash and uncover the hole beneath. It works, but then the wind returns to its natural direction, throwing all the ash on Samhreth, Ogash, and Caromascius. Samhreth merely covers his eyes with his forearm, not unfamiliar with ashstorms. Ogash and Caromascius, on the other hand, both had their mouths open, panting from the long journey uphill through the uneven footing of the ashlands. They both set to hacking and coughing. Falion turns back and for a moment almost looks like he might apologize. But he simply says to everyone, “There.”
Once the orc and imperial have mostly evacuated the ash from their throats, they step forward to appraise the unearthed opening. “Looks tight,” Caromascius remarks. He glances down at his rotundity. “I don’t think I could make it.”
“I refuse to crawl through a dirty hole in the ground,” Falion says, covering his face with his ornate Summerset silk scarf.
“Fine,” Samhreth says. He turns to Ogash. “Orc. You will fit. I will lead the way through the tunnels, and you follow.” He reaches into his pack to retrieve something. “Altmer. Human. Come.”
Falion and Caromascius approach Samhreth. “Hold out your hands,” he says, something hidden in his palms. The two comply, but yank back their hands after Samhreth quickly pricks their fingers. 
“‘Talos, Sam!” cries Caromascius. “What in Oblivion was that for?”
Falion casts Caromascius a scathing look. The imperial realizes his mistake and shrugs, smiling meekly. “A joke, of course, I was caught off guard is all.” But Falion has already forgotten in favor of sucking on his bleeding finger.
Samhreth slaps Falion’s hand from his face. “Stop. Need that.” He produces a stack of sixteen scrolls. “This is why I charge so much. Telvanni charge a fortune for these.”
Falion squints his eyes to divine what the daedric on the scrolls implies. But Ogash has already figured it out. “Mark and Recall?” Samhreth nods.
Falion’s face contorts in shock again. “Those magics are outlawed, by the Levitation Act -”
“- by the Mage’s Guild,” Ogash interrupts, “over two hundred years ago. They’re not around to enforce it anymore.”
The Redoran has already begun to stamp scrolls with blood, taking drops from himself and Ogash as well. “There,” Samhreth says after he’s done distributing them appropriately. “We use the first Mark now.” The three oblige, Falion begrudgingly so. 
To Caromascius and Falion, the dunmer continues, “Use the second - not the first - Recall after about ten minutes, once we get inside and use your second Marks. The scroll won’t work at all if we haven’t used the Mark yet, so just try again a few minutes later.” Samhreth gets down to begin crawling inside the tunnel. “We’ll use the first Recall to leave when you are all done. Understood?” The three nod, and Ogash matches Samhreth’s movement, ready to follow him. “Good. See you on the other side.”
- - - - -
The tunnel is dark, but the two manage it well enough, most mer having eyes that adjust well to darkness. Yet another reason Caromascius likely could not have followed, even if he could have fit in the hole to begin with.
After what Ogash feels must have been hours, but knew was only a few minutes, of scraping his knees and elbows on the rough porous rocks that line these veins of the mountain, he sees a faint light peeking from in front of Samhreth, growing as they continue forward. Finally they climb out of a wall into an ancient room.
It is dimly lit by the strange tubes of light the dwemer used for illumination. The walls are carved from stone, banded with brass braces decorated with what Ogash recognized as the dwemeris script. The room hums with the strange steam power of the dwarves, singing from the pipes and machines that litter the room. Not all seem to be functioning, and some pipes look burst, but whatever system they see seems to have been cleverly designed with redundancies and failsafes, keeping parts of the mechanism running even despite these flaws.
As soon as they plant their feet on the plate metal floor, both Ogash and Samhreth set to coughing from the dust kicked up. 
“Worse than the” - cough - “Three-damned” - cough - “ash,” Samhreth says.
Once they compose themselves, Ogash responds, “This dust hasn’t been disturbed in thousands of years - likely not since the dwemer vanished.” He slowly approaches and places a hand on some thrumming floor-to-ceiling machine, before jerking his head back towards Samhreth. “That means there’s no automatons here.”
“That’s a relief,” the dunmer responds, having just finished using Farion and Caromascius’s other Marks and stepping away. “Tell the truth, not sure I could have protected you from a centurion or spider.” He gestures at his sword. “Useless on a metal beast, you know.”
Before Ogash could properly express his dissatisfaction with the comment, Caromascius appeared in the room with a pop. He immediately empties his stomach on the floor.
“Oh, for the love of …” Ogash looks away from the mess but gestures vaguely at Caromascius. “All over everything?”
Caromascius pants as he wipes his mouth. “Wait until it’s your turn. You’ll do the same. Damn teleportation.”
“Wait, where’s Falion?”
“Oh, haha. The idiot.” Caromascius takes a big glug from his flask. “Used the wrong Recall. Just teleported a few feet away.”
“Stupid n’wah. Good thing he didn’t use the other one, then,” Samhreth says. “Would’ve been stuck down here.”
Caromascius comes up for air from another pull of wine and tugs at his shirt. “Just me, Sam, or is it real hot in here?”
“We’re pretty deep in the volcano, Caro,” Ogash says.
“Yeah, I guess.” He wipes some sweat from his forehead. “Well, let’s get this over with. Lead the way, Oggy.”
- - - - - 
After about an hour of exploring, they enter the next room in their exploration, but by the time Ogash reaches up to cover his eyes, it was too late. “Shit.” One of those tubes of dim yellow light was flickering fast and rhythmically, casting the room into darkness and then light over and over again every second. He could feel it in his head, sucking the weight from his bones and placing it all behind his eyes. Even in the darkness behind his eyelids the world spins like a top.
He knows it’s too late, but he tries to run away from it and this damn room anyway. 
“Ogg! Where you going?” Caromascius calls after him.
“Gotta … go,” Ogash says, but his lips feel so soft he’s sure nobody heard him.
He’s out of the room now, so he opens his eyes. But the darkness lingers a moment before evaporating too slowly to the edges of his vision, not quite going completely away. The open-eyed blackness scares him and he screams. He hears the footsteps behind him, the Redoran and Caromascius, he supposes. 
It’s coming and he’s running through this ancient maze of pipes and machines but there’s nothing he can do, and he is afraid. He tries to hold his eyes open as wide as he can, but the darkness is closing in and not stopping. He trips on something he can’t see, and on his way down he catches a glimpse of something coming alive in the corner. But then his head hits the floor with a thunk and he is gone.
- - - - -
He opens his eyes and he sees a corpse.
He stares, unknowing, for a moment. But then he becomes Someone again, and he recoils from the sight. It is Samhreth, covered in blood, his sword in his hand, useless in the end.
He sits up and backs away from the body. Every muscle in his body screams to him but he is too shocked to listen. His chest rises and falls erratically, and a forbidden thought reminds him that breathing is a luxury not afforded to all, and he wishes he didn’t have it.
He squeezes his eyes shut and clutches his head. He feels warm wetness and pulls his hand down to peek. It is shiny with blood, blood like Samhreth’s, but his own. He gently probes his own head and finds the wound near the back. His eyes accidentally catch the small patch of blood on the metal floor near where he woke, and he begins to remember.
Ogash’s body groans with pain, and forces his throat to do the same. But the moan becomes a whimper as his eyes catch a glimpse of Samhreth again. Suddenly he can barely see again and almost panics before realizing it is not the blackness - it is tears. 
Then he hears the clacking of metal on metal in a six-footed gait and covers his mouth, smearing blood on his face. The tears roll down his cheeks and mingle with the blood as he tries so hard to still his breathing, even his heartbeat. The bloodstained brass spider strolls through the room, neatly stepping over Samhreth’s corpse, and moving on without noticing Ogash.
When he feels safe, he finally inhales a broken sob. He weeps for a moment, his entire body shaking, before the ache suffusing his bones brings him back to his mind. 
Why didn’t it kill me earlier, when it killed Samhreth? he thinks. The only answer he can come up with is that it didn’t see a need to kill such a frail thing convulsing on the floor.
It was the best answer he could come up with, so his mind shifted to the task at hand. I need to get out of here. He forces himself to crawl over to Samhreth and search for the Recall scrolls. He tries to not look at the killing wounds, but he sees them anyway and nearly loses his fortitude again. 
He finds the scrolls, but they are soaked in blood. Unusable. Useless, just like that sword. 
He didn’t fancy his odds trying to find his way back through the tunnels by himself. Without the scroll, he was trapped here, with that murderous mechanical spider. He collapses over top of the dead dunmer, sobbing.
Then he remembers: Caromascius. Where is he?
Ogash pushes himself away from Samhreth and tries to stand. He almost falls over in his first attempt, but manages to rise to his feet, despite his sore, shaky legs. He starts to shamble towards the door opposite where the spider went, which he recognizes now as the way he came in during his mad dash to escape his seizure. Caromascius has to be that way. Maybe he made it out.
(Ogash wanted to believe that was possible, but he knew it couldn’t be.)
He slowly makes his way from chamber to chamber, clutching his throbbing head, and wanting to clutch his entire body to make the extensive pain go away. On the bright side, his head has finally finished clearing up. On the dark side, he stops dead in his tracks when he sees Caromascius.
He is lying there, his head propped up against the wall, his hands clamped over his stomach. Ogash thinks he is dead, but as he approaches Caromascius opens his eyes. “Ogash,” he sputters, “you’re … alive. How? Where is …” He goes into a coughing fit. Ogash kneels down next to his friend. “The elf?”
Ogash tries to speak but his throat is tight and dry, his tongue fluttering in vain. Instead he just shakes his head at Caromascius.
“I … told you. Suicide ... mission.” He smiles faintly, but blood drips from his lips and sets him to coughing again. 
Ogash shuts his eyes for a moment. He massages his throat as he tries to speak. “Pack?” he rasps.
“What?” Caromascius manages to get the word out before continuing to cough. He answers by shifting his eyes to his left. Ogash looks in that direction and spots it, unbloodied, sitting next to the sword Caromascius had brought with them. He crawls towards it and rummages through it. All the notes and recovered dwemer documents are here, right where they should be. 
Caromascius says, “We didn’t bring any … potions. Remember?”
Ogash looks back to Caromascius. “Yes. I know.” He stands, his weakened body buckling under the weight of the bag. In one hand he grasps a scroll. In the other, the sword.
“Oggy?” Caromascius says, his eyes closed. “The scrolls. Falion could … maybe heal us.”
Ogash stands over Caromascius. “I’m sorry,” he says. “You couldn’t have made it.”
The imperial opens his eyes and only sees the sword as it slides into his throat. His hands reach up, grasping for air, letting blood from his stomach gush up. He convulses for a minute before falling still, his eyes empty.
- - - - -
Ogash returns to the surface with a pop, his knees and stomach giving out, the latter emptying into the ash. Whether it was because of the seizure, a reaction to the gore he had seen, or simply from teleporting, he did not know, or think important to know.
“Ogash! Ogash?” It occurred to Ogash, once he finished, that Falion must have been speaking to him the entire time. “What happened? You’re covered in blood! Where’s Caromascius and the dunmer?”
“Dead,” Ogash says after wiping his mouth. “Automaton killed them. I barely got out with my life.”
“By Auri-el’s beard …” Falion tentatively reaches out to Ogash to help him up, but Ogash waves him off. 
“Just. Give me a minute.” He tries to erase the sight of Samhreth’s body and all of Caromascius’ blood from his mind, but he can’t make it go away.
Eventually Ogash lets Falion carry the pack as they make their way in the direction of the closest settlement. Falion even has the decency to not ask too many prying questions about what happened under the mountain.
Ogash knows he will have to explain everything to the Board once they get back to the Imperial City. But he will have time to come up with the story while they travel home. 
The sailing from Vvardenfell to the mainland is so quiet. Despite himself, Ogash appreciates it.
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ansu-gurleht · 6 months ago
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i was just thinking, “gee why don’t i have a cool oc with a prosthetic or mechanical limb or something” but i do. remember when ogash got his arm lopped off by hla-eix (or daabush i forget)? he uses a normal prosthetic for a while before getting a dwemer magic/mechanical one made for him. ogash unfortunately belongs to kind of a dead plot line at this point tho, but i might try to resurrect him for 3e634. orsinium could get involved in the whole skyrim vs redoran thing
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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hey sometimes your hyperfixation just so happens to involve uncovering the profane secrets of a lost civilization, working with the secret service to protect and supply your shady underground project, and making ill-fated deals with forgotten gods that could potentially put the fate of the whole world in jeopardy
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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diagna: becomes a numidium and starts fucking with time
hla-eix, playing uno or some shit with the rest of the dragonfam: oh god dammit somebody’s beating up dad again. should we bother this time
daro’zirr: nah
daabush: draw four BITCH, and UNO
uuloril: fuck you!!!!!!!
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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Ogash reads like the antagonist at the end of a mages guild questline
he basically fucking is, except he fucks everything up so royally by being so good at what he does that it’s more like a main quest level threat
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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don’t remember if i ever mentioned it here or not back when i first came up with this stuff, but the majority of “the plan” revolved around using diagna as a new “heart of lorkhan”/mantella
in case you don’t know, diagna was a yokudan god, specifically one of the earliest known avatars of the hoonding, which is basically like a shezzarine, to the point that i think they’re literally the same thing. he was a big deal for a while, and became a god in his own right, but then the yokudans/redguards just moved on, leaving diagna behind as just a minor power spirit of the dragontail mountains.
if the captured soul of a known shezzarine (wulfharth) was able to serve as a suitable power source for a numidium, then ogash theorized that diagna could be used similarly.
they just got a bit more than they bargained for, bc what really happened was they basically turned diagna directly into a numidium. and unlike a numidium or akulakhan, a god you can control, diagna was a free agent, and a vindictive one at that. so you can see the problem
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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what ws Ogash trying to achieve?
uhhhh not sure. i don’t remember if i ever really decided for sure. like it’s entirely possible it was a sort of “only asked if i could, not if i should” type scenario.
maybe he wanted to bring back the dwemer? failing that, to make the orcs the new dwemer, and orsinium the new dwemereth. he was the chief tonal architect of orsinium, after all, and i recall considering making him something like kagrenac incarnate - a “kagrenarine” if you will, with all the fun “kagrenac is watching and she is disappointed” shenanigans you’d expect
but yeah, i think he was mostly just fascinated by it all, and devoted himself completely to learning more about the dwemer and tonal architecture and anumidium theory. but at some point it becamd less “oh cool the king of my home nation wants to support my research and ideas” and more “oh so the king is using me to develop an orcish numidium to take over the iliac bay” and eventually “diagna is using both of us to give himself limitless power to take vengeance on the world that abandoned him”
by the time he realized any of this it was way too late to do anything, so he just kinda went along with it. not to downplay his agency or responsibility in any of it, but it’s a very complex situation not limited just to his lofty ideals
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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the gimmick of his boss fight is that he's so bad at physical combat and has such a glass jaw that he basically goes down in one hit but the snag is GETTING close enough to smack him. That's the really hard part
all you really need is earplugs so you can’t hear the worst of the tones, and a decent right hook. guy doesn’t even know normal magic and at this point he’s too old to be able to run far. just watch out for his tonal architecture is all
but he’s the fakeout final boss. you still gotta beat the forgotten god he accidentally empowered into being nigh omnipotent
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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i’m thinking about timelines. by the time ogash’s whole diagna plan starts to come to fruition, it’s likely that daro’zirr and daabush are either really old or really dead. ‘zirr is like early 20s during the alduin fiasco and daabush is late 20s/early 30s. the diagna stuff happens in like, 4e250. pretty sure khajiit and orc lifespans are more akin to those of humans than of elves
like uuloril will be going on 150 by then, but he’s an altmer, so it’s child’s play. eix will be about 250, which is also fine since she’s a mabrigash and steals youth from rich assholes
gus is 80 by the time of the alduin fiasco, and zaibi is (un)dead on arrival, and her reanimation is tied to gus being alive
basically like, out of the dragonborns, the only ones still around to contest ogash and diagna would be the most and least effective dragonborns (eix and uuloril respectively), and despite her mabrigash stuff age is starting to catch up with eix.
basically, aside from shikammu-under-mnemoli, there aren’t any new heroes up to the task of challenging diagna
....yet
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ansu-gurleht · 2 years ago
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i like that ogash, who had likely never been exposed to death before, one day had a seizure, saw a dead body, then killed a man like it was nothing
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ansu-gurleht · 5 years ago
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ogash is what would happen if somebody who was VERY competent accidentally ended the world by being TOO competent
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ansu-gurleht · 2 years ago
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i also want to give kedraloth a prosthetic, just bc. i’m making him in heroforge rn and there’s some interesting prosthetic options. if i give him a fully mechanical prosthetic then i might consider making him an acquaintance of ogash
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ansu-gurleht · 2 years ago
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although to be completely fair i’m kind of eyeballing the entire “travel time” process in my morrowind fics. ku getting lost in the ascadian isles and likely circumnavigating it? sure, that takes about a day. ku and rabinna going from hla oad to balmora? an afternoon, why not. ogash and falion traversing the ashen wastes of the former bitter coast and west gash? damn near a week. the red year made vvardenfell bigger ig
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ansu-gurleht · 3 years ago
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i don’t think i really have any fat ocs :( i think ogash and daabush are a bit pudgy. maybe uuloril is fat. fat elves baby
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ansu-gurleht · 3 years ago
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like hla-eix has more dunmer features than argonian, but it’s really just a coincidence that her “mother” mother was a dunmer and passed down more traits. qismehti is in a similar position, being more or less a redguard with a slightly bulkier build and greyish skin. ogash now that i think about it is the same way, mostly taking after his orcish mother other than his somewhat diminutive stature from his goblin father. i s2g i didn’t do any of this on purpose
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