Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha

From: Qosqo-Pacha

Lore
Born among the mist-wreathed terraces of Andean’s highlands, the Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha descends from the survivors of Turrath—the City of Shattered Terraces—whose ancestors once sought to command the mountains themselves. When the Rockfall buried their pride beneath stone and steam, a remnant line endured within the obsidian caverns of Peakhold, their veins glowing faintly with the echo of that catastrophe. Through centuries of disciplined craft and humility before the Sentinel Intayra, this lineage reshaped its purpose: to bind, not dominate, the living stone.
Today, members of Lineage 417 serve as architects, engineers, and guardians of ley-line stability across Andean’s terraced metropolises. They are sought after for their skill in forging equilibrium between magic and machinery, designing vast cliff-side cities whose steam-pulsing arteries breathe with mountain rhythm. A family proverb carved into their ancestral vault reads, “Stone remembers patience.”

Appearance
Avatars of this lineage bear a distinctive lattice of silver-blue bioluminescent veins tracing their arms and temples, said to mirror the ley-line scars left by the Rockfall. Their obsidian skin gleams with a subtle metallic sheen, and their eyes, often pale amber or molten gold, flicker like heated ore when channeling geomancy. Hair ranges from copper to bright platinum, commonly bound with silver Qosqo-Khipu cords etched in warning runes. Their attire favors layered stone-cloth and steam-woven fibers reinforced by miniature pressure vents—both ceremonial and practical for maintaining temperature balance in the thin air of high peaks.

Positives
Geomantic Precision: Advantage when manipulating or shaping stone, earth, or metal through magical or mechanical means.
Ley-Line Resonance: Gain intuitive awareness of nearby magical flows; advantage on checks involving stability of steam or magic devices.
Terrace Endurance: Natural acclimation to altitude, reducing exhaustion from labor or travel in mountain environments.
Cultural Memory: Access to ancestral recall through meditation, granting minor insight into ancient Andean architecture or forgotten rituals once per day.

Negatives
Rockfall Burden: Haunted by ancestral guilt; prolonged isolation or overuse of geomancy may trigger tremors of fatigue or disorientation.
Light Sensitivity: Direct sunlight causes visual strain without protective lenses, imposing disadvantage on perception in intense daylight.
Fragile Frame: Fine-boned physiology limits heavy armor use; over-encumbrance reduces mobility and dexterity.
Hubris Echo: When attempting large-scale magical shaping, must succeed a Will or Spirit check or risk ley-line backlash reminiscent of the Rockfall.

Tags
Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha, Obsidian-Skinned, Bioluminescent-Veined, Geomancy, Steamcraft, High-Altitude, Renaissance, Mountain-Born, Intayra-Faithful, Rockfall-Descendant, Architect-Lineage, Ley-Line-Sensitive, Stone-Memory, Steam-Age-Reclaimer, Reincarnated-Craftsman, Terraced-City Dweller, Tier 1 Apprentice, Geomancer, Steamwright, Terraced-City Engineer, Obsidian-Skin, Bioluminescent-Veins, Altitude-Adapted, Intayra-Faithful, Rockfall-Redeemer, Mind’s Eye Attuned, Renaissance Craftsperson, Steam-Magic Scholar, High-Magic Racial Avatar

Example Avatar: Sumaq Virrani of Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha

Name: Sumaq Virrani (“Brilliant Stone in Harmony”)
Lineage: 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
Homeland: Peakhold, Capital Megacity of Andean
Faith: Andeanism — Devotee of Intayra, Sentinel of Peaks and Prosperity


Tier: 1 (Apprentice Geomancer & Steamwright)

Stat Modifiers (Tier 1)
Strength: +1 (lean muscular build for climbing and crafting)
Dexterity: +2 (precise stone shaping, balance on terraces)
Constitution: +1 (endurance at altitude)
Intellect: +2 (trained engineer and ley-line scholar)
Wisdom: +1 (geomantic intuition, ancestral insight)
Charisma: –1 (stoic demeanor, prefers stone’s company over crowds)


Skills
Geomancy (Stonecraft): Proficient — can shape small stone sections, reinforce walls, or sculpt components for steam devices.
Steam Mechanics: Trained — understands pressure, gear balance, and safety seals in steam engines and constructs.
Climbing & Balance: Natural advantage — moves easily across terraces and cliff faces.
Ley-Line Perception: Innate — can sense disruptions or magical turbulence within 60 ft.
History (Andean Ruins): Learned — versed in tales of the Rockfall and Turrath’s downfall.
Meditation (Stone Memory): Unique racial discipline granting once-per-day insight into past craftsmanship or lost techniques.


Physical Attributes
Age: 28 years (young adult, mid-career artisan)
Height: 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight: 148 lb (67 kg)
Build: Compact and wiry; obsidian-like skin with faint terraced patterning and luminous silver veins that brighten when using geomancy.
Eyes: Pale gold with vertical pupils, glowing in dim light.
Hair: Metallic copper streaked with silver threads, bound in two long Qosqo-Khipu braids.
Speed: 30 ft ground movement; 20 ft climb speed on rough or carved stone surfaces.


Motivation / Character Drive
Sumaq Virrani was born beneath the shadow of the Grand Peakshrine, raised hearing the Rockfall ballads that warn against arrogance. Her life’s ambition is to redeem her lineage by perfecting harmonic resonance forging—a lost technique believed to stabilize ley-lines while powering steam constructs safely. She dreams of creating a “living forge” that hums with the balanced heartbeat of Intayra’s mountain spirit. Her cautious brilliance borders on obsession: she measures every pulse of a machine against the rhythm of her own veins.

In quiet moments, Sumaq kneels by terraced edges, pressing her claw-tipped fingers into the stone to “listen” for its breath. Each project is both prayer and penance—to rebuild the trust between stone and soul that her ancestors once shattered.

Gear Set for Sumaq Virrani, Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
(All items are Tier 1 and non-weapon; each enhances her role as a geomantic engineer and ley-line stabilizer within Andean’s steam-powered renaissance.)


1. Chest Slot – “Stoneheart Cuirass 973 of the Balanced Pulse
Forged from volcanic alloy and woven with geomantic fiber, this cuirass channels the steady rhythm of mountain ley lines through embedded pulse-crystals. When worn, faint silver light ripples across the torso like a breathing stone pattern.
Effects: +1 Constitution; resistance to concussive and falling damage; minor regeneration (+1 HP per hour in contact with natural rock). Once per day, wearer may stabilize unstable ley flow within 15 ft.
Lore: Crafted by the Matriarch-Smiths of Peakhold after the Rockfall to teach patience through endurance.
Tags: Armor, Geomancy, Stability, Steam-Forged, Resonant Crystal, Tier 1, Defensive, Andean Craft.


2. Arm Slot – “Bracers 421 of the Whispering Veins
Obsidian-plated bracers lined with copper threads that hum softly when nearby stone or machinery moves. The sound guides artisans in synchronizing their breathing and tool rhythm with the mountain’s vibrations.
Effects: +2 to crafting and engineering checks involving stone or metal; once per day can sense hidden hollows or faults within 30 ft; grants tremor awareness (detects movement through solid ground).
Lore: Inspired by the ancient Qosqo-Khipu braids that recorded the pulse of the peaks, these bracers help artisans “hear” the stone’s intent.
Tags: Arm Gear, Vibration Sense, Craft Enhancement, Steamcraft, Sensory Aid, Tier 1.


3. Head Slot – “Helm 556 of the Ley-Threaded Sight
A slim circlet of etched brass and polished obsidian lenses shaped like mountain petals. When activated, faint ley-light outlines flow across the wearer’s vision, mapping magical currents in glowing filigree.
Effects: +1 Intellect; advantage on perception or investigation of magical or structural patterns; detect ley-line disruptions or active enchantments within 20 ft once per hour.
Lore: Designed by the scholars of the Grand Peakshrine to prevent another Rockfall by granting early vision of ley imbalance.
Tags: Headgear, Insight, Detection, Geomantic Vision, Steam-Lens Device, Tier 1, Safety Apparatus.


4. Leg Slot – “Greaves 288 of the Terraced Step
Layered stone-cloth and bronze-jointed greaves embossed with spiral terraces. Miniature pressure vents release faint bursts of steam, cushioning each stride.
Effects: +5 ft movement speed; reduces fatigue from climbing or long travel; allows silent movement over stone surfaces once per day for 10 minutes.
Lore: Named for the sacred terraces of Qosqo-Suma, these greaves mimic the balanced step of a terrace-builder—steady, deliberate, unyielding.
Tags: Leg Armor, Mobility, Endurance, Steam-Vent, Terrain Adaptability, Tier 1, Geomantic Traveler.


Together, these four relics form a functional artisan’s harness embodying Intayra’s balance—resilience of stone, perception of ley, sensitivity of craft, and measured movement through the world.

Weapons of Sumaq Virrani, Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
(All three weapons are forged within Andean’s high-magic, steam-industrial renaissance. Each blends geomancy, alchemy, and steamcraft, reflecting the dual artistry and restraint of Intayra’s faithful. All are uniquely numbered for her lineage’s craftsmanship records.)


1. “Steamforged Staff 882 of the Resonant Vein
Type: Two-handed Focus/Bludgeon (Primary Weapon)
Forged from obsidian-veined basalt bound by copper coils, this staff thrums like a mountain heartbeat. Tiny vents along its shaft release shimmering threads of steam that pulse in rhythm with nearby ley lines.
Effects:
– +2 to spellcasting or geomancy checks involving stone, earth, or heat.
– Once per short cycle, may channel a Resonant Pulse—a concussive blast of heat and vibration in a 10-ft cone (1d8 sonic/fire damage, pushes targets 5 ft).
– When planted in stone, staff stabilizes local ley currents within 10 ft for 1 minute.
Lore: Created by the House of the Breathing Forge, these staves act as both conductor and guardian—used to “tune” the living heart of mountains after the Rockfall.
Tags: Staff, Steamcraft, Geomancy, Resonant Focus, Andean Make, Tier 1, Elemental, Supportive, Artisan Weapon.


2. “Hammer 312 of the Shaping Echo
Type: One-handed War-Tool (Melee / Utility)
A compact hybrid between forge hammer and chisel-head maul, its edge inlaid with silver runes that hum when striking stone or metal. Each blow leaves behind faint harmonic residue, preserving structural balance instead of shattering it.
Effects:
– +1 Strength for striking or crafting rolls.
– Deals 1d6 blunt or 1d4 sonic damage (user’s choice per strike).
– Once per day, may “Harmonize” an object—repairing cracks or fractures in stone or metal by expending 10 mana or equivalent energy.
Lore: Symbol of patience and redemption among the descendants of Turrath. It is said each swing should echo in harmony with the user’s heartbeat or risk imbalance and fracture.
Tags: Hammer, Hybrid Tool, Repair Focus, Geomantic Resonance, Steam-Era Craft, Tier 1, Artisan Combatant, Construct-Friendly.


3. “Stone-Pulse Pistol 047 of the Veinbreaker
Type: Short-Range Alchemical Firearm (Sidearm)
A handheld device of bronze and blackened obsidian tubing, powered by a miniature steam capsule and compressed crystalline dust. When triggered, it emits a burst of kinetic vibration—the same energy that shapes Andean’s terraces.
Effects:
– Range 40 ft; deals 1d8 force damage on impact.
– Once per rest, can release a Shatter Pulse, a concussive shot that fractures brittle terrain or destabilizes small constructs (DC 13 Fortitude save or collapse/prone).
– Excessive use risks “Ley-Overdraw”: a roll of 1 on attack ruptures pressure valve (self 1d4 fire damage).
Lore: Designed for geomancers working in hazardous quarries, later refined by the royal guard. Its sound—a deep, resonant thud—mirrors the quake of a distant peak.
Tags: Firearm, Alchemical, Steam-Powered, Force Damage, Engineering Weapon, Tier 1, Precision, Andean Defense, Tool-Weapon Hybrid.


Together, they manifest the Qosqo-Pacha principle of harmony between creation and defense—each strike, pulse, and blast echoing the balance of Intayra’s living mountains.

Apparatuses of Sumaq Virrani, Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
(These non-weapon utility tools reflect Andean craftsmanship—part alchemical, part mechanical, designed to aid construction, geomancy, and exploration across Saṃsāra’s highlands.)


1. “Ley-Compass 590 of the Silent Spiral
Type: Geomantic Survey Apparatus (Handheld Tool)
A folding bronze and quartz instrument resembling a hybrid compass and astrolabe, its central crystal suspended in a lattice of etched rings engraved with Pacha-Qosqo glyphs. When activated, thin silver filaments extend outward like the veins of a leaf, vibrating toward nearby ley-line intersections.
Effects:
– Detects the presence and direction of ley lines, mineral concentrations, or unstable geomantic nodes within 200 ft.
– Once per day can project a 3-D topographic holograph of the terrain within 1 mile, showing steam-vent activity and ley-flow strength.
– Grants +2 to navigation, surveying, or magical construction checks requiring alignment to natural energy flows.
Lore: Developed after the Rockfall to prevent future catastrophes, every Andean geomancer apprentice receives a Ley-Compass as their “first listening stone.” The Silent Spiral’s model number marks the 590th refinement by Peakhold’s Grand Peakshrine engineers.
Tags: Apparatus, Detection, Mapping, Geomancy, Engineering, Fieldwork, Andean Craft, Tier 1, Precision Instrument.


2. “Steam-Stabilizer 204 of the Breathing Forge
Type: Portable Refinement & Repair Device (Back-mounted or Ground-set Tool)
Constructed from layered brass shells and obsidian plates, this cylindrical pack exhales steady plumes of cool vapor through carved terrace vents. When anchored to the ground and connected by copper conduits, it equalizes pressure and magic flow for surrounding machinery or constructs.
Effects:
– Regulates unstable steam lines and prevents explosions or magical overload within 30 ft radius for 10 minutes.
– Restores 1d6 HP to damaged steam constructs or re-calibrates magical devices once per long cycle.
– Can siphon excess ley energy and store it as condensed “Stone-Breath” fuel for powering tools or short-term defensive barriers.
Lore: Designed by the artisans of the Breathing Forge guild, these stabilizers are vital for high-altitude workshops where pressure differentials can cripple machines. Sumaq modified hers with bioluminescent tubing that flashes in rhythm with her pulse—allowing her to diagnose ley stress by sight alone.
Tags: Apparatus, Steamcraft, Repair, Stabilization, Workshop Aid, Portable Forge, Ley-Flow Regulator, Tier 1, Industrial Utility.


Together, Ley-Compass 590 and Steam-Stabilizer 204 define Sumaq Virrani’s role as a field engineer and geomantic artisan—one tool to listen to the living mountain, and one to steady its breath.

Personal Record of Sumaq Virrani of Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
Filed in the Artisan Guild Archive of Peakhold, Grand Peakshrine Division


Identity Summary

Full Name: Sumaq Virrani of Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
Race: Qosqo-Pacha (Andean Highborn Geomantic Lineage)
Tier: 1 – Apprentice Steamwright and Stonegrower
Homeland: Peakhold (Qosqo-Suma Metropolis, Andean)
Faith: Andeanism – Devotee of Intayra, Sentinel of Peaks and Prosperity
Languages: Pacha-Qosqo (native, fluent); Ghassulic (trade level); Zaf-Khet (basic scholarly); Common Saṃsāran (Standard Dialect)
Affiliations: Guild of Steamwrights and Stonegrowers (Peakhold Chapter), Apprentice Circle of the Breathing Forge, Ministry of Ley Maintenance (Andean Council Subdivision)


Early Life and Education

Sumaq Virrani was born in the terraced lower quarter of Peakhold, the daughter of a journeyman ley-surveyor and a record-scribe of the Khipu Archives. Her childhood was marked by the hum of steam channels and the ever-present light of the Grand Peakshrine crest. Like all Qosqo-Pacha youth, she attended compulsory apprenticeship schooling from age 6 through 15, studying the Laws of Balance, Principles of Steam Transmission, and First Geomantic Resonance.

Her aptitude for harmonic calculation—matching pressure, pitch, and ley pulse—was discovered during a school experiment where she stabilized a cracked altar valve using improvised stone dust and a prayer rhythm. She was subsequently sponsored by the Stonegrowers’ Guild to attend the Academy of Terraced Arts, a prestigious high-altitude college specializing in magical engineering and ritual geometry.

At age 17, during her final apprenticeship examination, Sumaq successfully mapped a live ley flux under Mount Turrana using a handmade Ley-Compass prototype. This feat earned her provisional status as a Journeyman of Ley Maintenance, though she chose to continue as an apprentice artisan to perfect her process rather than accept premature promotion.


Professional History

Age 18 – 22: Apprenticeship at the Breathing Forge
Trained under Master Kuna Tirn of the Breathing Forge Guild, Sumaq specialized in harmonic pressure equalization for mountain steam systems. She assisted in rebuilding the geothermal conduits of the southern terraces following a minor eruption. During this term, she co-authored the workshop manual “On the Respiration of Stone: Pulse and Pressure in Layered Terraces.”

Age 23 – 25: Field Engineer for the Ministry of Ley Maintenance
Assigned to monitor unstable ley currents beneath the Anti-Suyu Bridge Network. Her team’s work prevented a structural failure that could have severed trade routes for a quarter of the island. She developed the Steam-Stabilizer 204 of the Breathing Forge, a portable regulator later adopted for use in all high-risk mining sectors.

Age 25 – 27: Consultant for the Archive of Rockfall Remembrance
Selected to study resonance echoes within the ruins of Turrath—the City of Shattered Terraces. Her careful mapping of the surviving ley imprints contributed to modern understanding of overharvest backlash. She is credited with uncovering and restoring one intact altar lens engraved with the original Rockfall Covenant.

Age 28 (Present): Independent Geomantic Surveyor and Instructor
Now operates as a freelance architect-engineer, offering structural and magical calibration services across Andean’s megacities. She teaches at the Guild’s night academies, training new apprentices to “hear the stone” rather than command it.

Her private research focuses on Harmonic Resonance Forging—a synthesis of ley-stabilization and steam modulation intended to create perpetual, self-balancing constructs. Preliminary experiments suggest reduced ley decay rates by 8 percent in confined environments.


Personal Characteristics

Temperament: Reserved, methodical, introspective; speaks in measured tones echoing her lineage’s mantra, “Stone remembers patience.”
Beliefs: Deeply faithful to Intayra yet skeptical of institutional excess; interprets prosperity as sustained balance, not expansion.
Habits: Meditates by tapping terrace stones three times before entering new work sites; records dream fragments in Khipu-knots each dawn.
Social Standing: Respected artisan of mid-rank; known for humility and refusal to claim sole credit for collaborative designs.


Skills and Certifications

Ley-Line Cartography (Guild-Certified, Peakhold Council Seal)
Steam Engine Calibration (Breathing Forge Rank III Technician)
Structural Geomancy & Earth-Pulse Chanting (Stonegrower’s Chamber License Tier 1)
Khipu Data Inscription & Translation (Academy of Terraced Arts Graduate Record)
Alchemy of Stone Dust Compounds (Auxiliary Certificate in Industrial Alchemy)


Motivations and Long-Term Goals

Sumaq Virrani seeks to heal the metaphysical “scars” left by the Rockfall—not only in the mountains but in Andean society’s collective memory. Her vision is to develop Living Terraces, self-tuning structures that resonate with the earth’s pulse, providing eternal stability to future generations of Qosqo-Pacha.

In her journal she writes:
“If the mountain breathes and the forge listens, perhaps the world itself may rest.”


Social and Relational Record — Sumaq Virrani of Lineage 417 of the Qosqo-Pacha
Filed within the Civic Harmony Ledger of Peakhold’s Southern Terraces, annotated by the Stonegrowers’ Guild Archivist Tuma Rehn.


Community Relationships

Sumaq Virrani is regarded by her neighbors and fellow artisans as a grounding presence — dependable, disciplined, and quietly compassionate. Within the bustling terraces of Peakhold, where steam vents breathe and crystal conduits hum, her workshop doubles as a gathering place for young apprentices who seek guidance or refuge from the noise of industrial life.

She routinely participates in the weekly Peakharvest, acting as assistant geomancer at the Grand Peakshrine’s western altar, maintaining ley-line flow during communal stone-shaping rituals. The older citizens praise her for her humility: she listens more than she speaks, recording grievances in Khipu script and forwarding them to municipal overseers.

Among the artisans of the Breathing Forge Guild, she occupies a middle rank but commands high respect for her refusal to exploit lesser workers. When payment is distributed for public works, she insists on fair compensation across tiers. This attitude, though admired, sometimes draws quiet criticism from overseers who prefer hierarchy over harmony.

Sumaq’s reputation has made her a mediator in disputes between steamwrights and clergy, balancing the spiritual mandates of Andeanism with the pragmatic realities of industry. Her community calls her “the Still Vein,” meaning one who calms turbulent flows.


Family Relationships

Mother — Ilyna Virrani, Archivist of the Grand Khipu Vault
Ilyna remains alive at 132 years, her bioluminescent veins faded but her memory intact. She serves as family matriarch and lineage chronicler. Though proud of Sumaq’s achievements, she quietly mourns her daughter’s decision to decline a prestigious ministry post, believing it denied their family higher visibility within the matrilineal council. Despite these tensions, affection endures: they exchange encoded Khipu letters weekly, often debating the ethics of progress versus preservation.

Father — Kharu Tenall, Retired Ley-Surveyor
Kharu lives in the lower terraces, tending geothermal vents as a caretaker. He taught Sumaq to “hear the mountain breathe” — a lesson she cites in nearly every public lecture. Their bond is affectionate but distant in practice; both prefer silence to conversation. When reunited during festivals, they exchange long, wordless embraces that glow faintly with synchronized bioluminescence.

Siblings and Kin
Sumaq has one younger sibling, Mali Virrani, age 24, a flight engineer working on griffon-drawn airships. Mali idolizes Sumaq’s intellect but envies her calmness, their playful rivalry expressed through mechanical challenges — one forging stability on the ground, the other mastering motion in the skies.

Extended kin, including aunts and cousins, serve across Andean’s bureaucracy. The family holds minor nobility status within the Qosqo-Pacha hierarchy, tracing descent to survivors of Turrath’s Rockfall. Their lineage motto, “Prosperity from Patience,” adorns their household crest carved above their workshop gate.


Friendships and Personal Bonds

Sumaq maintains a modest circle of companions centered on professional trust rather than leisure.

Tira Nulven — A fellow apprentice during her Breathing Forge training, now a licensed Stonegrower. Tira’s exuberant personality contrasts Sumaq’s restraint; the two balance each other in fieldwork, Tira improvising while Sumaq calculates. Their bond borders on sisterhood, strengthened by surviving a partial ley-breach incident together.

Arven Kel, an Isekai-born scholar from a drowned world, collaborates with her on harmonic forging theory. Their relationship is intellectual but deeply empathetic: he translates foreign metallurgy into Pacha-Qosqo principles, while she teaches him patience. Rumors in the guild suggest quiet affection, but both deny distractions from research.

Master Kuna Tirn, her mentor at the Breathing Forge, now aged and semi-retired, considers Sumaq his “last true echo.” She visits weekly to deliver food, repair his stabilizers, and record his fading memories for archival transcription — a duty she performs without ceremony, calling it “repaying the forge that shaped me.”

Community Apprentices
Dozens of young apprentices regard Sumaq as a surrogate elder sibling. She instructs them without hierarchy, often saying, “The terrace rises by the stones beneath it.” Many of these students later gain work under her recommendations, creating a quiet network of loyalty across the guild system.


Public Standing and Influence

In civic matters, Sumaq Virrani’s name appears frequently in Ley Maintenance Council reports as a stabilizing agent. She is invited to serve on advisory boards during crises involving terrain instability or industrial overharvest. Despite holding no noble title beyond her lineage status, her presence in deliberations carries moral weight — her calm speech and mastery of Andean proverbs evoke reverence even among senior ministers.

Common citizens describe her as “solid as the mountain, soft as the mist,” a compliment meaning she brings stability without arrogance. Festivals often feature her as a judge for stone-shaping contests, where her fairness and serene demeanor inspire apprentices from distant valleys to journey to Peakhold for guidance.


Personal Reflections on Relationships

In her private journal, one entry reads:
“A terrace stands because each stone leans upon another. The mountain teaches us community not through law, but through weight. I am but one stone, and I must learn where to lean.”

This philosophy guides every interaction — family, friend, or stranger — turning each connection into a structural harmony that sustains her identity as both artisan and avatar of Intayra’s patient growth.


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