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Table of Contents
About The Book
Present day
Cassie Simmons, a museum curator, is enthusiastic about solving mysteries from the past, and she has a personal interest in the history of the rumrunners who ferried illegal booze across the Detroit River during Prohibition. So when a cache of whisky labeled Bailey Brothers’ Best is unearthed during a local home renovation, Cassie hopes to find the answers she’s been searching for about the legendary family of bootleggers...
1918
Corporal Jeremiah Bailey of the 1st Canadian Tunnelling Company is tasked with planting mines in the tunnels beneath enemy trenches. After Jerry is badly wounded in an explosion, he finds himself in a Belgium field hospital under the care of Adele Savard, one of Canada’s nursing sisters, nicknamed “Bluebirds” for their blue gowns and white caps. As Jerry recovers, he forms a strong connection with Adele, who is from a place near his hometown of Windsor, along the Detroit River. In the midst of war, she’s a welcome reminder of home, and when Jerry is sent back to the front, he can only hope that he’ll see his bluebird again.
By war’s end, both Jerry and Adele return home to Windsor, scarred by the horrors of what they endured overseas. When they cross paths one day, they have a chance to start over. But the city is in the grip of Prohibition, which brings exciting opportunities as well as new dangerous conflicts that threaten to destroy everything they have fought for.
Pulled from the pages of history, Bluebird is a compelling, luminous novel about the strength of the human spirit and the power of love to call us home.
Excerpt
No. 1 Canadian Casualty Clearing Station, near Adinkerke, Belgium
Adele focused on the tips of her fingers, numb from being clamped around a metal surgical bowl for so long, then she shifted her attention to the wrists supporting them and silently demanded they stop shaking.
“Lieutenant?”
She held out the bowl. “I’m sorry, Dr. Bertrand.”
Tink. A tiny sound of victory as a metal fragment dropped in. Adele steeled herself, determined to remain still as stone. Dr. Bertrand’s use of her rank had that kind of effect. She’d never felt entirely deserving of the official title, but every one of the Canadian nurses had been given the same one upon enlisting. “Lieutenant Savard” gave Adele a perceived position of authority, which came in handy around some of the soldiers she tended.
Adele had never assisted with a trepanning before, an ancient procedure where a hole was cut into a patient’s skull to relieve pressure and gain access to any foreign matter lodged within. What was throwing her off wasn’t the sight of the poor man’s exposed brain or the blood. That rarely bothered Adele anymore. It was the exhaustion that rattled through her bones like a train. She’d been on her feet for sixteen hours today, eighteen yesterday. In between, she’d curled up in the nurses’ tent, grabbing a few hours of sleep before returning to duty. For the past ninety minutes, she’d been standing next to Dr. Bertrand, holding the bowl as he fished bits of shrapnel out of the soldier’s brain. She couldn’t understand how he managed to stay awake long enough to do it.
A boom sounded in the distance, and she shifted her weight. Stationed as they were so close to the French border, less than an hour from the busy port of Dunkirk, she was no stranger to the thunder of the big guns.
“That should…” Dr. Bertrand murmured, peering into the site.
Adele raised her chin, then let it drop. If she saw what Dr. Bertrand was doing, she would want to ask questions. He was a nice man, but he wouldn’t have the energy to operate on a man’s brain and answer a woman’s questions at the same time.
His dark brow creased with concentration. “No, wait. Magnet, please.”
Clutching the bowl in one hand, Adele passed the magnet to him with the other. A new blast jostled a lamp overhead, sprinkling the workspace with a light shower of dust, and Dr. Bertrand paused for a moment, waiting for it to settle, before returning his attention to the man on the table.
“Ah, there it is. I’d never have found it without the magnet.”
She saw his smile lift behind the cloth mask as he held up the forceps again, a tiny sliver of metal clamped between its tips. He dropped it into Adele’s bowl then stepped back so his surgical assistant could close the site.
Dr. Bertrand slid his mask beneath his chin and nodded at Adele. “Excellent job, Lieutenant. I think you’ve earned a good night’s sleep. I’ll see you in, what, four hours?”
She huffed a laugh, feeling the tension release as she lowered her aching arms. “Sounds about right.” Then, out of habit, she cast a worried glance at the patient, still unconscious.
“Time will tell,” he said. “These types of surgeries are so intricate. Even if he survives, we have to hope nothing critical was injured in the brain. Just keep a close eye on him.”
Adele untied her apron and deposited it in the laundry bin along with so many other pieces of bloody cloth, then left the main hospital tent, stepping into the early summer chill of night. The air carried a suggestion that rain was, once again, on its way. Behind her, the agonized howls of men and the concentrated voices of doctors and nurses faded away as the thuds of explosions travelled across the landscape beyond. Bursts of light blanched the distant battlefield, but Adele didn’t bother to stop and watch the spectacle. She’d seen it before. Besides, her vision was blurring around the edges with fatigue as she made her way through the endless maze of sheets and bandages drying on lines, then around temporary huts, buildings, and tents toward the nurses’ quarters.
No. 1 Canadian Casualty Clearing Station was more than a hospital, it was a village unto itself—a square mile of various structures surrounded the main hospital tent, all of which could be relocated depending on the proximity of the fighting. Since Adele had arrived three years ago, the clearing station had already moved to a few different spots between France and Belgium, always as close as possible to a railway so they could treat the injured men coming from the battlefields.
Inside her tent, Adele found Hazel and Minnie sound asleep, Minnie’s snores a soothing hum. Lillian wasn’t in her bed. She was likely still in the hospital tent, tending to some poor soul. Not one of the hundreds of Nursing Sisters who had come to Europe from Canada would ever leave a patient in need of medical care or a compassionate ear, and Lillian was no exception. It was in her blood to care for the broken and bruised, just as it was in Adele’s.
Before the war, Adele had been eager to see the world beyond her quiet town of Petite Côte on the Detroit River. When her mother had encouraged her and her sister, Marie, to attend nursing school in Toronto six years ago, Adele had jumped at the chance. Two years later, the war broke out, and a year after that, Adele told her mother that she was going to enlist with the Canadian Army Medical Corps. Marie was content to stay in Toronto, working in the hospital and hoping to get married at some point, but Adele wasn’t ready for that. She wanted more. Joining the Nursing Sisters as a qualified nurse was the only option for a Canadian woman wanting to serve overseas, and since officials had realized the demand for nurses would be far greater than what the Sisters could provide on their own, they had opened the application process to women who were not nuns. Her mother had pleaded with her not to go, but Adele had gently turned down every one of her arguments.
“I’m going for the country, Maman,” she said. “It’s my duty.”
It was only after she said she wanted to go to honour her father, who had died serving in the Boer War thirteen years earlier, that her mother admitted defeat. Guillaume, her mother’s second husband, and the man who had raised Marie and Adele as his own daughters, wholeheartedly approved of her plan, though his farewell hug felt tight with regret.
Out of the two thousand applications submitted that year, Adele was one of only seventy-five nurses chosen, and that was due to her exceptional nursing skills, citizenship, physical fitness, and high moral character. Maman couldn’t help but smile with teary pride the day Adele received her uniform. As soon as she put it on, anticipation had buzzed through Adele, all the way from the top of her stiff white veil to the hem of her official blue gown.
On the ship bound from Canada to England, Adele had met the three girls with whom she would soon be sharing a tent at a clearing station. Hazel and Lillian both hailed from New Brunswick, and Minnie was from Nova Scotia. What a relief to discover they were kindred spirits, and they all got along famously. As nurses, they would be in the war in the dual capacities of medical workers and caring women. They would be the first to greet wounded men coming off the trucks and trains from the Front, and their duties would include everything from cleaning and dressing wounds, dispensing medicine, delivering tetanus vaccines, and assisting in surgery and post-op care, to the often overlooked necessity of simply listening and comforting their patients. It wasn’t long before the soldiers came to affectionately call the nurses “Bluebirds” whenever they caught sight of their cheery blue uniforms.
Despite all her training, nothing could have prepared Adele for the front lines of war. It wasn’t just the horrible wounds from bullets, shrapnel, or fire. Men came in all conditions: delirious with trench fever they’d caught from hoards of lice, gasping for breath through pneumatic lungs, weak from dysentery, crippled by numb, gangrenous feet from living in fetid water with rats, and so much more. Adele had never imagined the horrors she would see, the gore she would handle, or the grief that would tear through her when another man died.
In her early moments of despair, Nurse Johnson, their steely-eyed matron, had drawn Adele aside and gently told her there was an art to staying sane here, day after day, month after month, year after year: stay busy and stay focused on medicine. Don’t get too close to the men on a personal level. But as much as Adele tried to think of the patients as statistics rather than scared and suffering men, she couldn’t. She became a mother bird, comforting them and caring, even if she knew some of them were fated to die under her watch.
Would she have come if she’d known the devastation that awaited her? She’d asked herself that question many times over the last three years, wondering if she was as courageous as her family claimed. Her answer was always yes. Unequivocally yes. Despite everything she’d seen and done, she’d come back here if she was needed. As much as Adele hated everything about this place, it was exactly where she was supposed to be, and that knowledge never failed to boost her from whatever dark place enveloped her. That, and the loyal camaraderie between her and her friends.
After peeling off her tired uniform, Adele folded back the rough grey blanket on her bed and crawled beneath its scratchy fibres, too tired to even contemplate writing in her journal. There was no comfortable spot on her lumpy pillow, but it didn’t matter. A rock would have been just as welcoming. As she closed her eyes, she felt the slightest bounce on her cot, then the velvet touch of her new friend nuzzling in around her neck like a hot water bottle. The General, they called him. The tiny black kitten with startling green eyes had followed Minnie to the tent a week before and now graciously permitted all the girls to give him attention when he wasn’t busy batting an imagined toy. Minnie might claim him as hers, but he made the perfect end to Adele’s day.
It seemed she had just dropped into sleep when the door to their barracks swung open.
“Everybody up!”
Adele’s eyes felt glued shut, but she forced them open. Beside her, Minnie grumbled something about it being only five o’clock, but Nurse Johnson marched in and started tugging blankets down. Lillian hadn’t even returned from the previous night’s shift yet.
“It’s all hands on deck this morning,” Nurse Johnson announced.
Booms rolled in the distance, closer and faster than mere hours before. Adele heard rain pattering against the canvas walls, then the sharp orders of men. The girls dressed quickly, grabbing their capes on the way out. As they sprinted to the hospital, heads ducked in the freezing rain, they passed two ambulances hitched to filthy, defeated horses. The wet animals swayed at the front of the wagons, their heads hanging low, their hooves partially submerged in icy mud. The nurses stood to the side as a long line of stretchers carrying wounded men snaked out the backs of the ambulances and into the clearing station.
All that day, ambulances ferried soldiers from the Front to the hospital. They arrived soaked and shivering from the wind and rain, broken and bleeding from enemy machine-gun fire or shells, some crying, some silent from shock. Adele heard snatches of conversation from those who were conscious, some claiming the Allies had won the battle, others merely shaking their heads with frustration and defeat. Adele rushed to triage them, supporting men who could walk to a bed, directing stretcher-bearers for those who could not. She unwound bloodied bandages, cleaned and treated wounds as best as she could while the men waited for a doctor, then she wrapped them up again. The hours blended together in a rancid swamp of blood, tears, and exhaustion.
“Excuse me, Sister?” a voice called.
Adele had just finished a difficult débridement, clearing necrotic tissue from a case of gas gangrene on the inside of a man’s thigh, and she turned toward the speaker as she removed her rubber gloves. He was tall and dark-haired, and the fibres of his uniform were stiff with dried mud and blood, but she could see no obvious wounds.
“Are you injured, Corporal…?”
“Bailey. John Bailey. No, Sister. It’s not me.” He pointed at a man on a cot across the tent. “You see the fella there at the very end? Is he all right? Will he be all right?”
“I’m sorry. I really don’t know. I haven’t had a chance to go to him.”
“He’s my brother,” he said quietly. “Please help him.”
She’d heard that before. He’s my brother. He’s my friend. Those beautiful, terrible words tore men apart and scarred her every time.
“Why don’t you go sit with him? I’ll be right there.”
“Thank you,” he said, then took off like a bull toward his brother.
Adele paused to give her patient with the gas gangrene a reassuring touch, but he barely moved in acknowledgement, then she went for a fresh pair of gloves, a bucket of water, and a clean cloth from the trolley before making her way to her new charge.
The chart at the end of the bed read Corporal Jeremiah Bailey, 1st Canadian Tunnelling Company. Facial lacerations, multiple fractured ribs. So these men were tunnellers. Members of the courageous breed who dug beneath the trenches, blocking and bombing the Germans. She’d never seen a tunneller before. Not a live one, anyway.
John was hovering over Jeremiah, gently trying to rouse him. The corporal’s face was wrapped in stained linen, so Adele got to work, peeling back the dirty bandages and cleaning the skin underneath. She didn’t want to touch the wrong place and accidentally do more harm, but she had to be thorough. The doctor would need the patient to be clean before he could help with anything. With forceps, she tugged at a piece of gauze, but it was stuck to dried blood. Jeremiah gasped and his eyes flitted open.
“I’m so sorry, Corporal Bailey,” she said, cutting the cloth free with scissors instead.
“Jerry?” John said.
Jeremiah’s eyes rolled to his brother. “I’m all right.”
The words rode on an exhalation, squeezed through motionless lips, husky and quiet, as if made with the least possible effort. But there would have been a great effort made, Adele knew.
“Jesus, Jerry,” John whispered.
She felt the cheek quiver slightly under her cloth in acknowledgement of the sentiment and felt a vague twinge of shame, listening in on such an intimate offering between the brothers. She focused on wringing out the cloth, darkening the water in her bucket to a dull copper brown.
After a few minutes, the left side of Jeremiah’s face was recognizable. It was bruised, and there was a small cut on his brow, but that was all. The damage must be on the other side.
“I’ll just switch spots with you, if you don’t mind,” she said to John.
Once in place, she pressed tentatively against the bandage covering the right side of Jeremiah’s face, feeling for the definition of bone. She’d seen jaws blown off before. The shock of that terrible wound had sent her behind the tent, retching the first and second times. She was more prepared now, but always nervous.
“I’ll be very careful, Corporal Bailey,” she promised, loosening the bandage with a syringe of warm water.
“Jerry. Just call him Jerry, would you? He’s Jerry. I’m John. We’re the Bailey brothers.”
“Of course.” But it was so hard to think of the men in here like that. To give them names and homes and families. It made it so much more difficult to say goodbye.
“Jerry,” she said gently, “I’m going to start under your chin and work my way up, all right?”
He looked at her through clear grey eyes the colour of winter storm clouds, then he blinked slowly before regarding his brother.
John laughed. “Nothing wrong with your vision, I see.”
Adele raised an eyebrow. “Did I miss something?”
“No, Sister,” John said, but she could tell what it was from the guilt in his expression.
It wasn’t the first time she’d heard these kinds of comments or felt the men’s lonely energy. She was aware of them watching her, thinking about her in ways they ought not to, but she didn’t really mind, especially after all they’d been through. There was no harm in their glances. If any of them got the least bit out of hand, all she had to do was touch her veil, and they’d leave off, and so she rarely corrected those who thought she was a nun anymore.
To her relief, Jerry’s jaw was whole. That left his cheek and temple, where the bandages were suffused with dark, almost black blood. Adele straightened, stretching her back, then went for fresh water. When she returned, she set her bucket down and looked at John.
“Would you mind putting your hand on his arm?” she asked. “The pain often makes them reach for the wound, and it will be much easier on him if I can get this done quickly.”
He placed his hand on Jerry’s forearm, but only rested it there. Maybe he didn’t understand.
“Hold tight,” she advised.
John shook his head, unconcerned. “He won’t move.”
She wanted to tell him that he had no idea, that she’d seen it a hundred times, but she didn’t feel like lecturing. How hard it must be to see his brother like this. She couldn’t imagine watching Marie suffer. It would be so much more difficult than being in pain herself, she thought.
Jerry’s eyes had closed, though she saw movement beneath. He let out a long breath, preparing himself, and she did the same.
She started slowly. The veins in Jerry’s neck pulsed with effort, but his brother was right. He didn’t cry out, and his hands never reached to stop her as she removed the gauze, revealing two very deep cuts. One carved a straight, horizontal line from beneath his ear and through his bristled cheek, so that she could see the bloodied white of his teeth. Miraculously, the damage had stopped beneath his nose, on his lip. The second laceration ran from almost the same spot under his ear and passed across the bridge of his nose, terrifyingly close beneath his eye.
“How did this happen?” she asked. “It looks like shrapnel. Weren’t you underground?”
“We were, but Germans broke through, set off a camouflet,” John said, sagging slightly. “That’s how they got in.”
“Germans were in your tunnel?”
“They dig their own, and our paths can cross. Sometimes it works in our favour. Not this time.”
“Aren’t those tunnels quite narrow?”
“Yes, ma’am. About three or four feet wide, maybe five feet from the floor to ceiling. The hard part is knowing in the dark who you’re standing beside. You don’t want to kill the wrong man.”
“How can you tell who’s who?”
He tapped his shoulder with one hand. “The Germans have epaulettes on their uniforms. We don’t. We feel for them.”
Adele stopped, speechless. In her mind she saw the men in the murky blackness underground, fumbling desperately for that extra bit of fabric on the shoulders of the enemy’s coats.
A huff of air escaped Jerry’s nose, and she turned her attention back to him.
“I didn’t find out until after we killed the Germans that Jerry’d been hit by the blast,” John went on. “He’d been thrown back, but the shrapnel caught him on the way. He was buried when I got to him.”
She shouldn’t have asked. Somehow, out of necessity, she’d hardened herself to the things she saw in the hospital day in and day out, but hearing how the wounds before her had been inflicted made them so real.
“Thank God you found him,” she whispered as she wrung her cloth out one last time.
Considering the extreme damage, the pain resulting from her tender touch should have been practically unbearable, and yet Jerry hadn’t flinched. She hoped there wasn’t nerve damage.
“The doctor will be by soon to stitch you up. He’s very good, but you will have a scar, I’m afraid.”
“Too bad, Jerry. Like I’ve always said, you’ll never be as handsome as me.”
“Some ladies like scars,” Adele teased.
John’s low-throated laugh filled the hushed room. Jerry closed his eyes, and she thought maybe he was smiling inside.
“I gotta get back,” John said eventually.
Jerry stiffened. Adele saw the pull between them as if it were a rope drawn tight. John clearly wanted to embrace his brother but settled for a light pat on the shoulder, then Jerry lifted a hand and his brother clasped it.
“Don’t worry. I’ll be careful,” John said, then he turned to Adele. “Look after him, all right?”
“I will,” she promised.
Jerry watched John until he disappeared, a sparkle of tears at the corners of his eyes.
“It’s okay, Jerry,” she said. “You’re safe. I’ll take care of you.”
But later, as she gave him morphine in preparation for his surgery and his eyelids grew heavy with the drug, a terrible thought came to Adele. If only Jerry had been hurt more severely. If he had lost a limb or more of his face, they’d send him home. If he recovered from this wound, he’d be back at the Front with his brother in short order, facing death once more.
Reading Group Guide
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1. The novel follows Adele Savard, a World War I Nursing Sister working at a Clearing Station in war-torn Belgium. Had you known about the history of the Bluebirds before this book?
2. The Bluebirds were in the war in a dual capacity as medical workers and caring citizens. What are some examples of how Adele fulfills these duties? And what does the need for compassion as much as medical training reveal about the nature of war? Consider the fact that Adele— and many nurses—had no idea of what they would see overseas.
3. The horrors of trench warfare are often discussed in relation to World War I. In Bluebird, the author shines a light on tunnel warfare by having Jerry and John Bailey serve as tunnellers, digging beneath the trenches and setting mines. Were you aware of tunnellers and their function in the war? What are some of the dangers they faced as they waged war below the battlefields that perhaps the soldiers in the trenches did not?
4. Both Adele and Jerry’s fathers served in the Boer War, but the Great War was the first war to be fought on the global stage. In its wake, nearly everyone suffers from shell shock, or PTSD. Discuss how the scale of the death and devastation haunts the characters after peace is reached.
5. Similarly, how is personal trauma a theme in the novel? Consider what each generation of the Bailey family endures, including Cassie in the present day. How do love and family help heal these wounds? And what does this tell us about the strength of the human spirit?
6. Matthew tells Cassie that “these days we live in the ‘now’ so much that we kind of forget the world was full of stories long before we came along.” How do the past and present storylines intersect over the course of the novel? What does this technique highlight about the legacy of history for both the personal and the public record?
7. When Adele and Jerry return home to Windsor, they find a city changed by the dawn of Prohibition. How do the losses they faced in the war and the subsequent Spanish Flu affect the choices they make in this dazzling—and sometimes dangerous—new era? How have their values changed? What are they willing to risk in order to feel alive again? And what aren’t they?
8. The Roaring Twenties boasted increased freedoms for women and men, a burgeoning of wealth and finance, and a general questioning of traditions. What are some examples of how the characters embrace these changes? Is there a difference between those who went to war and those who did not?
9. Comparing Adele and Marie, discuss the opportunities and expectations for women of the 1920s. How do marriage, children, and work shape their lives? And what do they desire for themselves deep down?
10. Marie is an avid supporter of the Temperance movement at the beginning of the novel. What is her reasoning? Do you think there is any merit in her position? Why does she later change her mind?
11. Al Capone said, “Prohibition has made nothing but trouble,” and Adele says that Prohibition is a failure. What evidence do they have? Do you agree?
12. When Jerry and John find their father’s distilling recipe, they decide to go into the whisky business, even though it’s illegal. How do they rationalize their actions? Do you think Jerry and John are in business for the same reasons?
13. Discuss the theme of survivor’s guilt. Which characters experience this and why? How do the characters try to redeem themselves?
14. Sibling relationships are at the very heart of this novel. Discuss the dynamics between Adele and Marie, and those between Jerry and John. How do the events of the book test those bonds?
15. Compare the brotherhood between Jerry and John with that of Ernie and Frank. How does loss affect who the men become?
16. The rivalry between Ernie and Jerry goes deeper than business, but knowing the formative event that shaped them, did you have greater sympathy for Ernie? Which actions can be chalked up to the heated turf wars of the day and which are rooted in personal hurt?
17. How does the ending in the past storyline bring the characters full circle? How are the themes of sacrifice, redemption, and compassion at play in that closing scene?
18. Discuss the symbolism of tunnels—and what they hide. How does the act of digging and uncovering take on different meanings in both the past and the present?
19. Consider the title, Bluebird. What do you think the bluebird represents?
Enhance Your Book Club
1. If you’re curious about the history of the Nursing Sisters in Canada, check out the Veterans Affairs Canada website here: https:// www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/those-who-served/women-veterans/nursing-sisters
2. To find out more about Prohibition across Canada, visit The Canadian Encyclopedia: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/prohibition
3. For a detailed look at rum-running in Windsor—including the famous names and places—read this article in the Windsor Star: https://windsorstar.com/life/from-the-vault-prohibition
4. The Amputations Association of the Great War, which came to be known as War Amps, started in 1918 in British Columbia. Find out more here: https://waramps.ca/about-us/history/
5. The little-known story of the Black sleeping car porters, all of whom were called “George,” is just one detail in the struggle for Black labour rights on Canada’s railways. Read more about this important chapter in history here: https://humanrights.ca/story/sleeping-car-porters
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster (July 6, 2022)
- Length: 352 pages
- ISBN13: 9781982156657
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Raves and Reviews
“From the battlefields of World War I to Prohibition-era Canada, Bluebird swept me away. Once again, Genevieve Graham writes brilliantly about how the past impacts the present. This meticulously researched page-turner will keep you reading into the night.”
— JANET SKESLIEN CHARLES, New York Times bestselling author of The Paris Library
“Full of wartime heroics, rollicking rumrunners, and star-crossed lovers, Bluebird has it all. But most of all, it is full of compassion for the men and women who served in the first global conflict facing our world. No one writes Canadian historical fiction with more heart than Genevieve Graham, and this pure and ennobling tale is exactly what our own hearts need now.”
— NATALIE JENNER, internationally bestselling author of The Jane Austen Society
“From the battlefields of war-torn France to the speakeasies of Canada’s prohibition-flaunting towns, Bluebird weaves a compelling, emotional story of love, second chances, and sacrifice. Genevieve Graham is uniquely talented at bringing history to light with characters who stay with you long after the last page. Bluebird is why I never miss a new Genevieve Graham book!”
— JULIA KELLY, internationally bestselling author of The Last Garden in England
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