The colonel scoffed at her PT excuse — then she took off her coat and exposed a war wound | mission

The first crack of dawn hadn’t even broken when the scream of a bald eagle sliced through the sky over Fort Liberty, North Carolina—the kind of sound that made even seasoned soldiers straighten their backs, whether they wanted to or not. Captain Sarah Mitchell froze mid-stride. That fierce call echoed off the pine trees and barracks, sharp as a warning. It felt like the entire base—the heart of America’s military grit—was holding its breath.

The humidity pressed down like a warm, invisible hand as she adjusted her uniform. Everything looked perfect: boots shined like black mirrors, sleeves crisp enough to slice paper, hair pulled back into the regulation bun. Yet beneath the fabric, beneath the strong jaw and unblinking stare, a familiar tug of pain crawled through her left shoulder.

Six months.
That’s how long it had been since Afghanistan. Since the mission that carved new lines across her body and rewrote the path of her career.

Across the training field, soldiers clustered around the massive obstacle course—an unforgiving mix of rope climbs, walls, mud, sprints, and military-grade humiliation. The kind of course that separated the fit from the finished.

And standing in front of it, his shadow long and unmoving like a monument, was Colonel James Harrison.

Thirty years of service.
Zero tolerance for excuses.
Eyes like steel polished by war.

His gaze swept the crowd with clinical efficiency until it locked onto Sarah—and stayed. Long enough that she felt the weight of every injury she’d ever had. Long enough that her heartbeat ticked once—then again—too hard.

She swallowed. Whatever he was thinking, it wasn’t admiration.

“Attention!”
His voice shattered the air like breaking glass.

Dozens of soldiers snapped into formation with a resounding, “Yes, sir!”

Sarah echoed it, but the word “sir” snagged in her throat when he spoke again.

“Today’s PT test determines your readiness for the upcoming deployment.”
Afghanistan.

The name hit her with a quiet, devastating force. A place she thought she’d buried under physical therapy sessions, painkillers, and the steady insistence that she was “fine.”

She moved through warm-ups cautiously—testing motion, measuring pain, pretending not to. Her physical therapist’s warnings replayed through her mind like a stop sign she had no intention of obeying.

Don’t push too hard.
Don’t overload the nerve.
Don’t prove everyone right about your limitations.

A cluster of soldiers nearby were already whispering. In the military, weakness traveled faster than rumors. And an injury? That wasn’t just physical—it was social currency, a measure people used when deciding whether to trust you in the field.

“Mitchell!”
The colonel’s voice cracked across the grounds like a whip.

She jogged to him, every step tightening the knot in her gut.

“Sir,” she said, breath even, posture perfect.

He held a file—her file—and spoke loudly enough that the soldiers stretching behind them couldn’t help but listen.

“Says here you requested modified PT requirements due to a shoulder injury.”

A few heads angled subtly in her direction. Subtle only in the sense that no one outright pointed.

“Yes, sir. Temporary modifications recommended by the medical—”

“This isn’t a rehabilitation center,” he snapped. “It’s the U.S. Army preparing for combat. If you can’t handle a simple PT test, what makes you think you can handle a deployment?”

The words bit. Hard.
And not because they were cruel—but because they sounded too close to something she had already whispered to herself at three in the morning when sleep refused to come.

She steadied her voice.
“Sir, my injury does not affect my ability to lead or make tactical decisions.”

“Leadership begins with example,” he shot back. “How can you lead soldiers when your fitness is a question mark?”

His tone wasn’t angry anymore—it was worse. It was disappointed.

Something inside her twisted sharply.

“Sir… with respect…”
But respect didn’t matter. Not when he cut her off.

“You complete the test today at full standards, Captain. No modifications. Or you consider transfer to a non-deployment unit.”

The world seemed to tilt.
Transfer.
Desk life.
Goodbye to the career she built, bled for, lived for.

She locked her jaw.
“Permission to attempt full standards, sir.”

He studied her like she was a puzzle he didn’t trust but couldn’t quite throw out.
“Very well. But if you fail, the consequences will affect more than this test.”

When he turned to leave, Sarah’s pulse hammered like a drumline.

This was it.
No second chances.

As she moved to the starting line, soldiers watched her with a cocktail of curiosity, sympathy, and the kind of judgment only the uninjured ever felt justified making.

The whistle blew.
And she launched forward.

The first obstacle hit her immediately—pull-ups.
The kind that required pure, unfiltered upper-body strength.

Her shoulder protested instantly under the cold metal bar.
Pull-up one: fine.
Two: tolerable.
Three: a needle of pain dancing down her arm.
Seven: a tremor in her left arm that felt like betrayal.
Ten: a miracle carried on grit alone.

She dropped from the bar, chest heaving, arm throbbing.
But she moved on.

Next: the rope climb.
Twenty feet straight up.
Thick hemp that scraped her palms as she climbed using technique drilled into her since basic training.

Halfway up, her left arm failed. Not weakened—failed.
She hung suspended by her right hand, boots scrambling for traction.

Voices below gasped. Someone whispered her name like a warning.

But Sarah wasn’t falling. Not today.
She shifted weight, found a rhythm between leg strength and right-arm power, and made it to the top.

She rang the bell, the sharp clang echoing across the field like a victory cry.

Wall climb.
Sprint sections.
Balance tests.
Her body screamed. Her shoulder threatened mutiny.

But her endurance?
Untouched.
She passed soldier after soldier in the sprint sections, proving that not all injuries were equal—not all scars were losses.

Then came the traverse wall.
Twenty feet long.
All upper-body.
All pain.
All risk.

She gripped the first handhold—pain shot down her arm.
Second—her fingers trembled.
Third—her left shoulder felt like it might tear away entirely.

Halfway through, sweat dripped into her eyes.
Three-quarters through, disaster struck.

Her left hand slipped.
Her boot brushed the ground—a technical fail.
A few soldiers winced in empathy.
But she didn’t quit.

She finished the wall anyway, using mostly her right arm, fueled by pure rage, pride, and survival instinct.

At the end, she dropped to her feet, chest burning, shoulder numb and aching.

Colonel Harrison approached.
Face unreadable.
Voice quiet.
“Captain Mitchell—walk with me.”

Her heart braced for the blow.
Failure.
Transfer.
End of the line.

But inside his office, something entirely unexpected happened.

He apologized.
A U.S. Army colonel apologized.

Then he slid her medical reports across the desk and recited details she’d never heard—seven pieces of shrapnel removed, more embedded during the mission, the medics’ notes stating she stayed conscious through the evacuation and provided covering fire.

“You didn’t just complete a mission,” he said. “You saved lives. Including the extraction crew.”

The world felt suddenly quieter.
As if someone had turned down the static that filled her mind for months.

He shared his own story—his own combat injury, his own recovery, the years of learning to compensate for a leg that medical experts once swore would never support him again.

“I projected my fears onto you,” he admitted. “What you showed today wasn’t weakness. It was adaptation. Determination. The kind of resilience we pray every soldier has—but few ever prove.”

Then he delivered the sentence she least expected in her wildest thoughts:

“You’re approved for deployment.”

And before she could breathe—

“I’m recommending you for promotion to Major. And I want you as my operations officer.”

The world shifted again, but this time upward—like catching an elevator you thought you’d missed.

Hours later, walking across the base toward the barracks, sunlight warming her hair, she caught the looks from fellow soldiers. Some congratulatory. Some stunned. Some quietly respectful in the way soldiers express awe without saying it aloud.

She didn’t pay them much attention.
Her mind had already moved ahead—past the pain, past the doubt, past the ghosts of Afghanistan.

She felt whole again.
Not because the injury was gone—far from it.

But because she finally controlled the story it told.

In her room, she began packing for deployment.
Boots, fatigues, photos, journals, patches, a few small comforts from home.

Her shoulder ached steadily—a reminder of what she’d survived.
A reminder of what she could still do.

As she folded her uniforms, she realized something painfully simple and beautifully profound:

The war had changed her body.
But it had sharpened her spirit.

And in the quiet heat of a North Carolina morning—just another day in America, just another soldier packing for a foreign battlefield—Captain soon-to-be-Major Sarah Mitchell felt something she hadn’t felt in months.

Strength.
Purpose.
Forward momentum.

She wasn’t the same woman she’d been before the blast.
But she wasn’t meant to be.

She was something new.
Something forged under pressure.
Something unbreakable.

And Afghanistan—round two—would see exactly what that meant.

Afghanistan smells like hot dust and jet fuel, like burned coffee and dry metal. The first thing that hits Sarah as she steps off the transport plane isn’t the heat—it’s the sound. A constant roar of rotors, engines, shouted orders, and distant thunder that isn’t weather at all.

This isn’t a memory anymore.
This is round two.

Her boots touch the tarmac at Bagram Airfield, and for a heartbeat, her body hesitates. Somewhere deep inside, her muscles remember the last time she was here—or somewhere like here—the last time her world blew sideways.

Her shoulder tenses, as if expecting shrapnel that isn’t coming. Not today.

“Welcome back to paradise,” a staff sergeant mutters behind her, adjusting his pack. An American flag snaps sharply in the dry wind, brilliant red-white-blue against a sky so bright it almost hurts.

Sarah takes a breath, feels the air burn slightly on the way in, and steps forward.

She is not here as a survivor this time.
She is here as the operations officer.

Hours later, inside a fortified operations building lined with screens, maps, and enough blinking lights to rival a small tech startup, she stands at the center of a new universe. Laptops hum. Radios crackle with clipped English and local accents. A giant map of the region dominates the wall, with colored pins marking routes, villages, friendly positions, and potential trouble spots.

Colonel Harrison stands at the head of the room, the familiar intensity in his eyes now mixed with something else: trust.

“Listen up,” he says to the assembled officers and senior NCOs. “This is Major-select Mitchell.”

The subtle promotion acknowledgment hangs in the air. Some eyes widen just a bit. Others narrow.

“She’s my new operations officer,” he continues. “Her word on mission planning is my word. Clear?”

A chorus of “Yes, sir” follows, but Sarah can feel the undercurrent. A few sideways looks. A flicker of skepticism. People talk. Soldiers gossip. Somewhere between North Carolina and Afghanistan, her PT test and medical file have already traveled faster than any plane.

She keeps her face neutral.
Her shoulder aches in the air-conditioned chill, but she keeps her posture straight.

Later, as the briefing breaks up, a wiry infantry captain with sunburned cheeks and a sharp jawline approaches her. His name tape reads RILEY.

“Ma’am,” he says, respectful but cautious. “Heard you’re coming off a pretty serious injury.”

Straight to it. No warm-up. That’s the Army for you.

She meets his gaze. “Heard you’re running the primary strike company out here. We all survive something.”

For a second, he looks like he’s deciding whether to push further. Then a corner of his mouth tugs up. Not quite a smile. More like acknowledgment.

“Yes, ma’am,” he says. “We do.”

That night, she can’t sleep.

The base quiets down, but never fully. There’s always a low hum—generators, distant engines, the muffled thump of helicopters coming and going like restless birds. She lies on her bunk, the faint rattle of the air conditioning unit filling the darkened room, her left shoulder pulsing with a dull, steady ache.

Outside her window, she can see the faint outline of the mountains. Dark, jagged silhouettes against the sky. The same kind of terrain where everything changed months ago.

She closes her eyes—and sees Martinez.

His weight on her shoulders.
The explosions.
The soil shaking.
The helicopter blades churning the air, promising salvation with every rotation.

But this time, the memory doesn’t crush her. It’s there, sharp and real, but it doesn’t own her.

She breathes.
In.
Out.
We’re going back. But this time, I’m not just a player on the board. I’m the one moving the pieces.

The next morning, she pulls on her uniform with the smooth muscle memory of years. The patch on her shoulder feels heavier now, not because of fabric, but because of responsibility.

By 0700, she’s in the ops center. Coffee in hand. Eyes on the screens.

The first major test comes faster than she expects.

“Ma’am,” a young intel specialist says, swiveling toward her from a bank of monitors. “We’ve got new drone footage near Highway RED-7. Possible IED emplacement along a route used by our supply convoys.”

IED.
She hates that acronym more than any other in the English language.

“Show me,” she says.

On the screen, grainy overhead footage plays. A dusty road winds through the landscape like a faded scar. A few silhouettes move near the shoulder of the road, half-hidden by the angle and the distance. They look like shadows poking at the earth.

Her jaw tightens.

“Any patrols scheduled along that route?”

“Yes, ma’am. Charlie Company resupply leaves in four hours. Same road.”

Of course it does.

She calls up the convoy chart, checks timing, route, escort team, potential alternates. Years of training click into place. The pain in her shoulder fades into the background noise of her awareness.

“Get Captain Riley in here,” she says.

Minutes later, he strides in, helmet tucked under one arm, vest already strapped on like he’s ready for anything, any time.

“You pulled my run?” he asks, glancing at the paused drone footage. “Looks like a normal day in the neighborhood.”

“Normal days don’t have locals scraping the side of the road in the exact spot we drive through,” she says. “We’re altering your route. You’re going to cut north for three klicks, then rejoin west of this point.”

He studies the map.
“That adds time. Fuel.”

“It avoids losing half your trucks in a single blast,” she replies evenly. “You’ll hit this village on the detour—” she taps the map “—and yes, I know it’s not ideal terrain. But it’s better than driving into a trap on a predictable highway.”

Riley glances at the colonel’s office door—closed, but within range.

“You checked this with the boss?”

“Yes,” Harrison says, appearing in the doorway as if summoned by skepticism alone. “And I agree with her assessment. Execute the revised plan, Captain.”

Riley hesitates only a second before nodding.
“Yes, sir.”

He turns back to Sarah.
“If this works out,” he says quietly, “I owe you coffee.”

She gives a faint shrug with her right shoulder. “I drink it strong.”

He leaves.

Hours crawl by in the ops center. Screens update. Radio traffic flows in bursts of clipped urgency.

Sarah stands near the main comms station, listening. Her hands rest lightly on the desk, her left shoulder reminding her with every heartbeat that no matter how far she comes, some things don’t simply disappear.

“Convoy One, this is Hammer Base,” the radio operator calls. “Status check.”

Static crackles. Then:
“This is Convoy One. We’re passing Phase Line Bravo. New route’s a little tight, but we’re moving.”

“Any contact?” Sarah asks softly.

The operator relays the question. The reply comes back after a tense pause.
“Negative contact so far. Locals watching us, but that’s Tuesday.”

Another hour.
Another request for an update.
Sarah tracks their progress on the map, her pen tapping lightly near the village she routed them through.

Finally:
“Hammer Base, this is Convoy One. We’re rejoining the main road west of your marked hazard. And… you’re not going to believe this.”

Her heart stutters.
“Say again?” the operator prompts.

“Drone just picked up a detonation on the original road. Big one. Right where we would’ve been if we’d stayed on schedule. Someone’s very unhappy their party just got cancelled.”

The room goes completely silent.

Sarah exhales slowly. The noise of the ops center surges back: keyboards clicking, chairs shifting, someone muttering a quiet “damn.”

Colonel Harrison meets her eyes from across the room, gives a slight nod—small, but packed with approval.

When the convoy returns safely, Captain Riley appears at the door of the ops center, helmet under his arm again, dust streaking his uniform.

He walks up to her, holds out a steaming cup.

“Strong, like you said,” he offers. “And for the record? You can mess with my routes anytime you want.”

She accepts the cup with her good hand, a ghost of a smile tugging at her lips.

“Let’s just avoid calling it ‘messing with’ in any official report,” she says.

Word spreads.

Not about the coffee.
About the fact that the new operations officer saw danger in a grainy feed that others might have dismissed. About how she routed a convoy away from something they didn’t even know was waiting for them. About how, like it or not, she just saved lives.

It doesn’t erase the whispers about her injury. It doesn’t rewrite the scars. But it changes the tone.

Days turn into weeks.
Missions stack up like files on a cluttered desk.

Every day, there’s something. A patrol needing overwatch. A village negotiation. A night operation requiring timing precise enough to make a surgeon jealous.

Sarah lives in the ops center now, hours measured not by clocks but by radio calls and drone shadows overhead. She studies patterns—the way certain routes invite trouble, the way particular clusters of buildings always seem to go dark right before something bad happens nearby.

Her shoulder pain is like background static. Always there. Never quite enough to stop her. Sometimes it spikes, like when she has to reach suddenly or brace herself over a map for too long. But she has learned to shift her stance, use her right arm more, adjust.

Adapt.
Overcome.

One afternoon, the colonel calls her into his office.

He gestures toward the chair across from his desk, just like before back at Fort Liberty.

“How are you holding up, Major?” he asks. This time, the rank sounds natural.

“Busy, sir,” she replies. “But that’s the job.”

He studies her. “I’ve been watching the way you run this place. You see connections others miss. You’re not just checking boxes—you’re anticipating what could go wrong.”

“That’s what you hired me for,” she says lightly.

“Don’t undersell it. The last rotation lost two convoys on that highway in three months. You’ve kept ours clear so far.”

She doesn’t look away. “So far doesn’t mean forever, sir. The other side gets a vote too.”

He smiles faintly. “True. Which is why I want your take on this.”

He spreads out a file on the desk—photos, coordinates, reports. A small village nestled in a valley. A suspected local facilitator. A planned joint patrol with local security forces.

“We’ve been getting conflicting reports,” he says. “Some intel says this guy is supplying equipment for roadside devices. Other sources say he’s more of a fence—keeps his head down, tries to survive.”

Sarah scans the documents. Something in the pattern bothers her. Not the obvious details—the subtle ones.

“No outward support,” she murmurs, mostly to herself. “No sudden change in lifestyle. No new vehicles. No new construction. He’s not spending big. If he’s making profit off anything dangerous, he’s hiding it extremely well.”

“Or funneling it,” Harrison says.

“Maybe,” she concedes. “But the patrol you’re planning? It’s heavy. Full show of force. If he’s neutral or just trying to stay alive, this might push him toward the other side out of fear alone.”

“Recommendation?”

She taps the photo. “Go in lighter first. A smaller team. Bring the civil affairs unit. Medical outreach if possible. Show presence, but not threat. See how the village responds. Then we decide how hard to lean.”

The colonel leans back, considering. “You’re putting a lot of faith in subtlety for a place that doesn’t always play subtle.”

“With respect, sir,” she replies quietly, “we can’t bomb our way into long-term stability. Not every answer is brute strength.”

He watches her for a moment, then nods.
“All right. We’ll do it your way.”

Later, she wonders if she’ll regret that.

The patrol goes out at dawn two days later—sun barely over the mountains, sky painted soft pink and gold, the kind of beauty that feels almost rude in a war zone.

Captain Riley leads the joint team: local security forces, a couple of medics, civil affairs officers, and his own troops.

In the ops center, Sarah tracks their movement on the digital map, listening to the occasional bursts of radio chatter.

“Entering the village,” Riley reports. “Kids watching from doorways. No one scattering, that’s something.”

“Remember,” she says into the mic, “we’re here to gather information, not to make enemies.”

“Yes, ma’am. I left my megaphone at home.”

Minutes stretch. She watches icons move through the cramped layout of the village. She pictures narrow alleyways, low houses, dusty courtyards.

Then the first hiccup.

“Ma’am,” the intel specialist says quietly, “we’re getting side activity—small cluster of signatures moving along the ridge east of the village. No weapons visible from drone height, but the movement is deliberate.”

“It could be watchers,” someone suggests. “Or just locals.”

Sarah looks at the overhead feed. The area isn’t typically used as a path. The movement is too coordinated, too controlled.

“Riley,” she says into the mic. “Be advised, possible observers on the eastern ridge. Do not escalate. Just be aware.”

“Copy that,” he replies. “We’re wrapping up the meet with the local leader now. So far, he’s more nervous than hostile.”

Another minute. Two.

Then everything tilts.

“Ma’am,” the drone operator says suddenly, fingers flying over controls, “we’ve got armed personnel moving from the ridge toward the village. Looks like they’re trying to position themselves between our patrol and the main road.”

Instantly, the room tightens.

Sarah’s mind moves faster than her racing heart. This is exactly the situation she dreaded—someone deciding to test whether this softer approach is weakness.

“Riley,” she says, voice sharp now. “Do not head straight back the way you came.”

“Kind of unavoidable, ma’am. There’s one road out.”

She stares at the screen. One road, yes—but not the only route. Not if you’re willing to get uncomfortable.

“Listen to me,” she says. “There’s a dry creek bed on the north end of the village—marked on your map as Route Blue-Three but probably doesn’t look like much in person. It’s uneven, tight, and your vehicles will hate you for it, but it’ll pull you away from their current path.”

Silence for a beat, then:
“Found it on the map,” he says. “Didn’t look very inviting.”

“Good,” she says. “The path that looks easy is the one they want you on.”

She relays the new route to the rest of the team, coordinates flying back and forth like code in motion.

On the overhead feed, she watches the armed group accelerate, angling toward where they expect the patrol to return.

Then she watches Riley’s team slip north instead, cutting through the creek bed, slower but shielded by terrain.

The armed cluster slows, confused. Adjusts. Too late.

The patrol reaches the outskirts, reconnects with their own support vehicles, and moves out before the would-be attackers can get in position.

No shots.
No casualties.
Just frustration on one side and a quiet, humming relief on the other.

In the ops center, someone mutters, “They keep missing us by minutes.”

“That’s the idea,” Sarah says softly.

Later, when Riley comes back in, dustier than before, he drops into the chair near her console.

“You ever gonna tell me how you see this stuff before it happens?” he asks.

“I don’t see the future,” she says. “I just remember the past very clearly.”

He glances at her shoulder. “Still giving you trouble?”

“Always,” she answers, not bothering to lie.

“And yet here we are,” he says. “Walking out of things we might not walk out of otherwise.”

There’s a moment of quiet between them, filled with all the things they don’t say—like how everything can flip in a second. How every safe patrol is borrowed time. How no matter how smart you are, you can’t control everything.

One night, weeks later, the base goes on high alert.
Incoming.

Not a drill this time.
Sirens wail. Loudspeakers bark instructions in English and a second language that blends into the chaos.

Sarah ducks instinctively, not because she’s afraid, but because her body remembers what it’s like to be too slow. She feels the rumble, hears distant impacts—more sound than detail, more force than image.

In the ops center, systems jump to red. Emergency protocols take over. She moves between screens, checking accountability lists, confirming unit locations, verifying that patrols are under cover.

A flash of pain tears down her shoulder when she jerks a cable too quickly, but she swallows it. She doesn’t have time to indulge the hurt.

“Status on all forward teams?” she demands.

Reports stream in. All present. Minor damage on the outer wall. No fatalities.

She finally exhales.

Later, when the noise fades and the base settles into the uneasy quiet that always follows excitement, Colonel Harrison finds her still at her station, eyes tired, hand pressed unconsciously against her shoulder for a moment before she realizes she’s doing it.

“You should rest,” he says.

“So should you,” she counters.

He chuckles, then sobers. “You know, Mitchell… there was a time in my life when I thought being injured made me half a soldier.”

“I know the feeling,” she says.

“I was wrong,” he says simply. “It made me twice the leader. It forced me to think more, rely less on brute force. To ask myself what the mission really needed instead of what my ego wanted.”

She looks at him. “And now?”

“Now I’ve got an ops officer who embodies that lesson better than I ever did,” he answers. “And I’m just trying not to get in her way.”

She laughs softly, a quick, surprised sound in the dim, humming room.

As the rotation days march forward, her name starts appearing in places she doesn’t expect—commendation drafts, situation reports sent up the chain, quiet mentions from other units asking, “Who’s this Major Mitchell running ops at that base?”

She shrugs off the administrative attention where she can. That’s not why she’s here.

But late one evening, when she finally gets back to her small room, dusty and exhausted, she catches her reflection in the narrow mirror above the sink.

Same face.
Same eyes.
Same scar peeking faintly where her T-shirt collar slides off her shoulder.

Different woman.

Not because Afghanistan broke her.
Because she refused to stay broken.

She sits on the edge of the bunk, loosens her boot laces slowly, working around the stiffness in her muscles. The sounds of the base filter in: murmured conversations, a distant laugh, the ever-present hum of generators, and somewhere out there, the echo of a helicopter crossing the sky.

Her shoulder throbs in rhythm with her heartbeat. She knows it will never truly stop.

But she also knows something else now, deeper than doubt, stronger than fear:

She is still here.
Still serving.
Still leading.

The war left its mark on her body.
But it also carved out a new kind of strength she never would have found otherwise.

As she lies back on the thin mattress, staring at the ceiling, the desert wind presses against the building, carrying with it the grit of a place that never fully goes quiet.

Tomorrow there will be another mission.
Another risk.
Another decision that could tilt lives one way or another.

And when the radios crackle and the maps light up and someone says, “Ma’am, what do we do?”

Major Sarah Mitchell will be ready.

Not because she’s unscarred.
But because she is living proof that sometimes the strongest warriors are the ones who had every reason to quit—and chose to stand up anyway.

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