CHAPTER
7: RECEPTION IN YORK
Copyright: Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, Edinburgh, October 2017
After
several days of tough riding across Northumbria, County Durham, and
North Yorkshire, Duncan Cotter, as was Sir Richard's adopted name,
cantered southwards from Thirsk while finalising his plans. He
approached the great city of York from the north-west by putting
Xanthos into a gallop along the old Roman road, past Grosvenor House,
the palatial home of the highly learned Lord Roderick and Lady
Margarita Silvereaglet.
Duncan
entered the ancient walled city through the gateway in the Bootham
Bar. That accomplished, he let Xanthos stroll at a leisurely pace
along High Petergate.
Duncan
was impressed by the handsome popinjays flaunting themselves outside
the Jorvik Tavern, and even more so by the pilgrims pouring through
the magnificent west doorway of York Minister like tiny toy dolls.
Upon deciding to attend Vespers in the daunting, white
minster, he headed first for the Shambles where the butchers and
their minions were feverishly selling their cuts and joints from
hooks and tables outside their shops and slaughterhouses.
“Where
may I buy supper, lassie?” Duncan asked a butcher's girl who was
hacking a carcase of beef with her cleaver while her master ripped
tripe from a sheep.
The
silly girl looked up and gave him an insolent stare.
“Cock
and Robin,” she slurped, pointing her grubby thumb towards a
narrow street of shops to the right.
Half-way
down the jam-packed Cock Lane, Duncan saw a brass cock and a silver
robin hanging from a wrought iron rail above an archway between a
tailor's shop and a pawnbroker's. Upon alighting from Xanthos, he
discerned that the archway led to a small, shady courtyard beyond.
When
Duncan entered the courtyard, he saw a lantern in a window on the far
side.
What
a novel place to hide a tavern, he thought, and after tethering
Xanthos to a post near the door, he cautiously entered the hostelry.
Duncan
was wearing his peasant's tunic, covered partly by his shabby woollen
shepherd's cloak, and he was quite dishevelled from his journey. He
didn't even think about changing into the smarter garments in his
travelling bag. Moreover, he was none too aware of the possible
influence of his new appearance and his Scottishness on others.
The
interior of the dimly lit tavern was by no means as well-furbished as
indicated by the sign outside. The floor was filthy with mud and
pieces of dropped food, there was a metal chamber pot and a large
cauldron in the corner under a shelf heaving with pewter tankards,
and four dusty beer barrels lined the wall.
A
grizzly fellow was sitting at one of the tables. He took one look at
Duncan, gulped down his beer, and left. Duncan sat down at the table
by the window and whistled to himself.
A
bulky woman emerged through the kitchen door, holding a ladle and a
rolling pin.
“Huh?”
she grunted.
“A
potage pie and some cheese, please,” said Duncan, putting three
pennies on the table, “and a tankard of your home-brewed ale, if
it's cool enough.”
The
woman stirred the contents of the cauldron with her ladle, threw out
a shrivelled mouse, and dipped a tankard into the ale. The tankard
was about three-quarters full of lukewarm fluid when she plonked it
onto Duncan's table and snatched the pennies. She gave Duncan a
furtive look, and retreated into the kitchen.
Ten
minutes later, the proprietor, a lean man with a goatish beard,
emerged through the same door. “Yer Scots?” he grunted.
“I'm
a shepherd from Linton in East-Lothian, Sir,” Duncan courteously
replied, “searching for honest work in this fair city.”
“Bullshit!”
snarled the proprietor, vanishing into the courtyard.
He
could be a Brummy from Brummagem, thought Duncan,
with a smile. They're always out for a cheap deal.
A
while later, the woman re-appeared with a bit of hard cheese and a
tiny pot-pie on a wooden board. The pot-pie wasn't hot and Duncan
wondered from the smell whether the potage had been mixed with
entrails. He consoled himself, after a mere nibble, by taking a gulp
of his insipid beer.
When
the proprietor returned, he was accompanied by two red-necked mates
who sat down opposite Duncan at his table and stared rudely at him.
The proprietor brought his friends mugs of malt wine, grimaced, and
left.
“That
yer horse outside?” asked the newcomer with warts on his eyebrows.
“Yes,
it is,” Duncan replied, civilly enough, “and he's been my
faithful steed for ten years and more.”
“I'll
give yer a copper piece for the poxy old ox,” said the one with the
slit nose. “Me and Frag are going to chop him up, ee bah gum, in my
uncle's slaughterhouse to sell off our hooks.”
Michty
me! lamented Duncan. They're both butchers from the Shambles,
“Thank
you for your kind offer,” he replied, shaking his head, “I regret
I have to respectfully decline it, as I still need a horse on which
to ride my errands.”
Frag's
eyes narrowed.
“Why're
yer 'ere, yer bloody pagan jock-a-nape?” he burbled. “Yer send
the wraiths of Wallace to pillage our towns, and yer kings haunt
Humbria and put our young un's in slave gangs to toil and heap dung
on your farmland. And still yer come down over the fucking damned
border. Don't they, Jip?”
The
blockhead's missing a shilling,
thought Duncan. Methinks I should humour him with a Christian
message.
Duncan
clasped his hands in friendship. “But I have travelled in peace,
expecting to share bread and salt with my welcomers, and planning to
live amicably in this Christian city.”
Jip
ground his teeth. “Yer must be a fugitive. With that horse yer'll
be a reiver. They should burn yer, quarter yer and hang yer at the
Tyburn in Knavesmire and then tar and feather yer for good measure.”
He's
not totally off the mark, realised Duncan, mopping his brow.
“Prithee,
kind Sir,” he protested. “I'm merely a simple shepherd, down on
his luck.”
Frag
and Jip stared pensively at Duncan for a full minute. He was
wondering what they'd say next when a huge, leathery imbecile from
the slaughterhouse suddenly burst in, wielding a hefty mallet around
his pot-shaped head.
“Hi
ho, Knut,” exclaimed Frag. “Here's a bit of shitty Highland grist
for your gander.”
“Hope
t'worms come and eat 'im up,” added Jip, with a snigger.
Knut
picked his snot and ate it, gave Duncan the once over, and grinned.
“Please
haul the heathen bugger outside before you beat the shit,” demanded
the skinny proprietor, stroking his pet rabbit.
Now
in fear of his life, Duncan leapt to his feet and went to draw
Vindicta from its scabbard as in times of old, but his proud
sword and its shining sheath were no longer there and his dagger was
out of reach.
Knut
chortled like an archbishop in an animalistic orgy and felled the
courageous Scot with a single blow of his mallet.
Without
further ado, the three evil shysters dragged Duncan feet first
through the door and beat him to pulp in the courtyard. Xanthos
reared high in the air, neighing frantically, only to be lanced in
his hind leg with lolodium, and hauled, part comatose, to the
slaughterhouse to be sliced for sale in many pieces in the Shambles
on the morrow.
While
Duncan was losing consciousness, Jip spat in his face and stamped on
his chest Thereupon, Frag ripped the leather money bag off Duncan's
waist belt and ran back to his miserly uncle, gloating with his
spoils. Knut laughed like the mute Manx maniac he was, and put in the
boot.
Duncan
regained a semblance of reality during the crisp early hours of the
morning. He'd been left for dead among the rotting pigeon carcases in
the gutter of Cock Lane, and he suffered from an extreme version of
the brain fog nebulosis cerebri caused by the blows to
his head from Knut the Manxman's murderous mallet. Moreover, Duncan's
body and limbs had turned to jelly during his pummelling by Frag and
Jip, and ached horrendously, bone upon bone, sinew by sinew.
“Hi
ho, dickie bird,” mumbled Duncan, as his face rolled into the
smelly remains of a spent starling. “Time to get
up...Jesus!...Yuck!”
Duncan
flapped around on the ground trying to regain his bearings, but
crashed onto his back in desperation. Twenty minutes later, he
contrived, after several vain attempts, to struggle to his feet.
Thereupon, he staggered, reeling all over the place, down Cock Lane
and towards carefree Newgate Market.
Meanwhile,
Samuel Hart of Bremen was stashing the shelves of his apothecary shop
on Pack and Saddle Street with a new selection of spices and herbs.
They'd been delivered the night before by a couple of Cistercian
monks from Jevaulx Abbey in the divinely beautiful Vale of Ure. The
monks had only just left for home after staying overnight in the
storage room, having indulged in the wine and the bread before
falling asleep.
Samuel
also mixed some of the Anglo-Saxon recipes listed in Bald's
Leechbook. He'd just prepared a slimy batch of bullock's gall,
which was excellent for curing infected eyelashes of their follicles
and for ridding the body of all sorts of bugs, though the recipients
stunk for days afterwards.
Samuel
sold anything else in the shop that could turn a profit: trinkets,
bright scarves, bones of the Saints, Irish whiskey distilled in
County Cork, and toy storks from Oldenburg.
Samuel's
father had taught him the ways of the world while he was growing up
in the Free City of Bremen. Now aged twenty-eight, Samuel was
confident in himself, having also grown a touch more fond of the
crucifix which hung limply around his neck.
Samuel's
fourteen year old brother Jonathan came blinking down the stairs, his
shirt twisted around his neck and his trousers reeking of stale
sweat. He hid his eyes behind his hands, and danced his jig around
the shop.
“I'll
eat an apple to break my fast today, dear brother,”he yelped, “if
I cannot find a fish.”
“Don't
forget to deliver the bags of spice to the physicians in St.
Leonard's, kleiner Schmuchkopf,” said Samuel, with a
stern look, “and give my good tidings to Brother Alfonso
Fernández.”
Handsome
Jonathan ran to the corner and hid his face in the cobwebs. “Not
Brother Fernández! He has a face like a poltergeist.”
Samuel
chuckled at that witticism. “And after that, guard the shop. I have
to visit Lady Silvereaglet in Grosvenor House with another potion for
her dear husband's indigestion.”
“Yes,
dear brother, seven bags full, brother dear. Seven, seven,
seven,....”
'Tis
one of the many faceted ways
and spectra of the Ashkenazim, Samuel once again
deliberated. Such spectra, while rare, were well
understood by King Solomon's high priest,
as I remember from the scrolls. I can see my
Jonathan in our Great Uncle Joseph. All
praise to Yahweh!
Galenorides
of the Mycenae called Jonathan's talent 'Apomonoménos
eaftós', meaning 'isolated self',
though that's only according to my bubbe, and
she sometimes burbles like a vampire cat.
Mercy!
Mercy! Jonathan and I must keep thoughts of our proud ancestry
well hidden within the deepest recesses of our minds, lest the King's
men come and tear us to shreds. Methinks such thoughts should not
even be thought. Should they discover our hidden secret then all
parts of us will be surely tortured and dead.
A
few hours later, Duncan found himself floundering onto the side of
the Castle Mound, without recognising that Clifford's Tower even
existed as it rose high in the air above him. That eternally cursed
tower was where the entire Jewish community of York met their
wretched deaths in AD 1190, when the rioters 'acted without any
scruple of Christian conscientiousness'.
Samuel
Hart was well aware that Edward Longshanks, a malignant, narcissistic
king, had in 1290 signed the Edict of Expulsion which
summarily expelled all the, long-since much-persecuted, Jews from the
Kingdom of England. During the following decades of Plantagenet rule
any foreign wretch suspected of being a Jew faced immediate torture
and an ignominious death, and Samuel and Jonathan lived in continuous
fear of that fate.
Few
of the inebriates and hermits whose bodies congregated on and around
the grassy mound felt any sympathy for the many unfortunates of
differing religious or political persuasion who'd died within the
tower over the years. In verity, they felt very little emotion at
all. When Duncan rolled over, he found himself grappling with an
inert, rank-scented creature. He put his head on its chest, snorted,
and fell back into incongruous, head-splitting sleep.
During
the late afternoon, Samuel Hart sent his gifted brother Jonathan on
an errand to Common Hall to collect a payment from a city official
for his herbal medicine for gout. Jonathan was walking back along the
banks of the Ouse, imagining that the bishop's barge was a shipload
of Vikings with crimson faces, golden swords and round purple
shields, when he accidentally bumped into the pretty Sylvia de
Gasgogne, who was not quite as colourful, red, green, and blue, as
she looked.
To
Jonathan's grave disappointment, Sylvia was accompanied by her older
brother Percival de Gasgogne, a motley-minded braggart if ever there
was one. Jonathan sunk to his knees and covered his eyes, imagining
that eighteen year old Percival would disappear in a puff of yellow
dust.
“You're
looking dapper in your freshly washed tunic today, Jonathan,” said
Sylvia, puckering her slanted lips. “Will you be attending the
Masque of the Faerie Queen in the Abbey gardens tomorrow?”
“Yes,
I will,” blurted Jonathan, struggling to his feet. “I hope that I
can dance the Carole of the Tree of Life with you.”
Percival
chuckled and chortled. “That carole's not in this masque. Perhaps
you would prefer to dance the Jig of the Night Wolves… with
me.”
The
expression of exaggerated horror on Jonathan's face fully emphasised
what he thought about that.
“I
would simply love to dance with you,” said Sylvia, with a glint in
her bright brown eyes, “but don't forget to change your filthy,
green stockings. My papa, Baron Sheridan will be there with the other
civic leaders, and mama too. Please try to not to fall head over
heels, and keep your dirty hands off my new dress!”
Percival
leered at plump Jonathan, and gave him the wink. “He'd fall rump
over breast, given the opportunity.”
“Begone,
ugly Cyclops!” shrieked Jonathan, in a fluster. “Your scales are
as black as a beetle's and your nose is as red as a fox's.”
Percival
eyed Jonathan up further, and grinned. “Methinks he's possessed by
a disorder of the mind which congeals his brain.”
That
put Jonathan totally on his guard. “No disorder! I am God's own
creation.”
“That
does you credit,” said Sylvia, more kindly. “Methinks we should
pray together in St. Crux this Sunday.”
But
Jonathan was already hotfooting it for home. The memory of Sylvia's
petite figure and silver-tinted, blonde hair remained transfixed in
his eclectic mind.
The
following day, a toothless, one-eyed hag called Drag guided Duncan,
swaying to and fro, over Castle Mills bridge on the River Foss and
onto a pathway beyond the city walls which led towards the open
countryside down the eastern bank of the Ouse.
If
Drag and Duncan had retained more of their sense of smell then they
would have savoured a mighty stench when they reached the three ash
trees. This was where many of the citizens of York came in the carts
to dump their refuse in one big heap.
The
street and river-wise Drag scavenged through the refuse heap for bits
of food, which she gobbled noisily. She gave Duncan a piece of
rotting fish, which he slowly devoured before crawling back to the
heap on his hands and knees and dozily searching for more.
Meanwhile,
Samuel Hart sold a fragment of the femur of Saint George to a
gullible pilgrim from Bedford, and asked Jonathan to bring more
pieces of blue quartz from the storage room.
“They
look bright red and green and black to me,” enthused Jonathan,
rotating like a chain dancer as he rushed and dithered, hither and
thither.
“We
need to talk, dear brother,” said Samuel, when Jonathan finally
calmed down. “It's time to start planning your studies at the
University of Oxford. Lord Silvereaglet has agreed to recommend you,
and Lady Margarita believes, in her devotions, that Merton College is
most suitable for your disposition.”
“I'm
scared of the mob squad,” gasped Jonathan, covering his eyes. “The
other students would verily bully me too much.”
“But
I'll be able to find you a quiet, calming room by the Chapel of St.
Mary and St. John, where you'll be able to study to your heart's
content.”
“Only
if I can read Natural Philosophy and the Law since those ideas
already spring into my red-hot head.”
“I
will travel with you to Oxford in July, dear brother. Your education
is, as ever, close to my own heart.”
Thank
goodness I can afford to pay Jonathan's expenses from our
family's treasure chest, mused Samuel. That was
why we returned from Bremen pretending to be worthy
Christians five years ago. How clever it was of me to unearth
the treasure from under the gravestone in Lincoln where it had been
hidden by my ancestor Ezekiel Hart. That was in
1266 when the disinherited knights attacked the
synagogue on Steep Hill and burned the records
registering debts. Poor Ezekiel was expelled to Flanders during
1290, another 'annus horribilis' if ever there was one,
and now Jonathan and I are, it seems, the only Jews in
the whole of hell-damned England for our pains.
[Author's
Note: The attack on the synagogue in Lincoln is well-documented.
See, for example,
Encyclopaedia
Judaica
http://www.geschichteinchronologie.com/eu/GB/EncJud_juden-in-Lincoln-ENGL.html]
For
Duncan, days turned into weeks, and weeks into months while he
scarcely retrieved any consciousness of who he was and what he was
about. He scavenged up and down the east bank of the Ouse, surviving
the cold and icy spells by wrapping his heavy coat tightly around him
while he slept in the ditches and the stanks. He occasionally begged
for alms with crafty Drag, though with scant success even when they
staggered as far as Common Hall.
Duncan
retained strange, distant memories of being refused entry to St.
Leonard's Hospital by the snooty Brother Alfonso because he was
Scottish riff raff, of being thrown out of the Minster, while praying
for mercy at the High Altar, because he hadn't paid his groat, of
being ejected from the Roman baths for stinking too much, and of
being kicked in the bollocks by a sheriff's officer because he didn't
move quickly enough.
However,
Duncan's mind was largely blank, as blank as a john mule.
On
St. Florentius's Day in April, Duncan was begging for alms with Drag
on the grassy river bank by Common Hall, when the petite, spiteful
Sylvia and the sarcastic Percival de Gasgogne wandered up.
“Alas,
poor beggar,” said Sylvia, flicking her eyelashes, “you are so
poor. I must take you home with me, so that I a purple coat can weave
for thee.”
“When?”
grunted Duncan.
“Bitch!”
shrieked Drag, catching the flow.
“That's
no way to speak to a fine lady,” said Percival, squeezing his
rumbling belly. “I will invite a sheriff's officer to cut out your
serpentine tongue, wretched mumblecrust that you are.”
“Sard
to you!” howled Drag. “Knobs and all.”
Unimpressed
by the excessively foul language, the clean-limbed Percival gave the
unfortunate Drag a hearty kick. She fell into the water, gurgled, and
struggled to keep afloat.
“Devil's
flotsam!” she raged, flailing her arms.
At
that very moment, the pear-shaped Lord of Fulford sailed jauntily by
in his skiff. One of the oars struck Drag in her head, and the
wretched woman disappeared under the waters of the Ouse never to be
seen alive again.
Duncan
blinked, and stared vacantly into space.
“How
wondrous to have met you, handsome knight,” cooed Sylvia,
unperturbed, as she and Percival left. “If fortune permits, we will
meet again at the Midsummer Ball.”
Duncan
was still staring into space when the loony lad Jonathan Hart
wandered up.
“How
fare thee, my fine fellow?” said Jonathan, with a broad grin.
“Methinks you need a good Samaritan for a friend. Unfortunately,
I'm a Saxon from Bremen with a coat of many colours, as you can well
see from my red and purple eyes.”
“Ale!”
gasped Duncan.
“Here,
drink from my flask,” said Samuel Hart, walking up.
Duncan
peered upwards while taking a mighty gulp. “You're Him!”
And
Samuel, with his trim beard, did possess a passing resemblance to
Christ himself.
“You're
welcome, my good man,” he replied, as the dreaded de Burgogne
siblings drifted off. “and which of God's talents did He bless you
with?”
An
orange light seared through Duncan's head. “Marmelada!” he
blurted.
“Marmelada?”
exclaimed Samuel, in amusement. “What sort of witch's potion is
that?”
Duncan
made a grab for his waist pouch. It was still there even though his
leather money bag was long gone. He fumbled when he delved into the
pouch, and drew two parchments out together. One was his recipe for
marmelada, and the other was the signed and sealed
accreditation of Duncan Cotter's birth in Linton.
Samuel
perused both of the documents cautiously. “You're an interesting
person, Duncan Cotter. Why don't you come with us to our shop for a
bowl of soup before we put you on your way? We could talk about your
marmelada quince further together today.”
“Marmaduke's
marmalade,” growled Duncan, as a vision of the enormous Brother
Marmaduke Wartle appeared before his left eye, eating a huge hunk of
bread.
“And
I'll be able to show you my fossil of a fish,” said zany Jonathan,
stepping on his own foot.
When
the Hart brothers served Duncan a bowl of parsnip soup in the storage
room behind their shop, they also mixed some St. John's Wort
in a tumbler of milk as a remedy for his foggy head.
“It's
also called Fuge Demonum,” said Samuel, “since it drives
the Devil away.”
“We're
celebrated apothecaries with robes of many colours,” announced
Jonathan, with aplomb, “and skilled in the arts of medicine and the
secrets of the East.”
Duncan
blinked as if he almost understood.
“I
like this recipe for marmelada,” said Samuel. “But I'd
prefer to chop up and boil whole oranges marinated with Madeira wine
and spice them with honey. The quince paste should be even richer to
the palate than Brother Marmaduke's and the oranges will be more
efficiently disposed of.”
Jonathan
nodded inanely, in apparent agreement. “I'll purchase a bag of
oranges and several pots of honey in the market at crack of dawn when
I collect the seven remedies for the purple and yellow pox from the
Scarlet Witch of Sandal Magna, and her lovely maid in purple ermine
with black and orange striped eyes.”
“Good,
and there are several bottles of Madeira in a crate in the cellar. I
do believe that we can afford to pay Duncan a commission of three
small loaves of bread for the first hundred jars of marmelada
we sell. Is that a fair exchange, Duncan?”
“Ya!”
grunted Duncan, slurping his soup.
Samuel
threw up his feet and relaxed. “Have you only recently travelled
here from the Lothians, Duncan?”
“Ya,”
grunted Duncan, rubbing his eyes.
“And
where did you live in Scotland?”
“Derr...mansion.”
“What!”
exclaimed Jonathan, collapsing into laughter. “He's the Lord of the
Macdonalds!”
“Cottage,”
grunted Duncan. “Me shepherd.”
“I
understand now,” said Samuel, smiling politely, “and did you live
near this House of the Holy Trinity in Roxburgheshire which Brother
Marmaduke mentions in his document?”
“Soutra,”
grunted Duncan, rolling his eyes.
“So
you lived on the Soutra Hill? Do you have anything else to say for
yourself, my fine fellow?”
“Derr...er...
Lilium Medicinae.”
“Amazing!
But I'm sure you don't know the name of the author of those wondrous
documents.”
An
image of Friar Francis Philpott appeared before Duncan's right eye
waving his fists in encouragement.
“Le
professeur Bernard de Gordon of Montpellier,” burbled the
brain-afflicted fellow.
“What!!
Only a gentleman and a scholar should possess such knowledge. Whereby
do you understand medicine?”
“Derr...herb
garden.”
“Which
herb garden?”
“St.
Clotilde's, of course.”
“Methinks
he's the High Priest of Fife,” chuckled Jonathan. “Beware, or
he'll cast spells upon us.”
Samuel
wiped his brow. “Methinks we should invite Duncan Cotter to stay
the night so that we can understand him better. Please be so good as
to fill the bath in the outhouse with hot water. It will be good to
see the clean side of him.”
An
hour or so later, handsome Jonathan came into the shop flashing his
dark eyelashes and looking most confused.
“Duncan
has a coat of arms tattooed low on his back and close to his flaming
orange posterior, dear brother,” explained the strangely
imaginative youth, squeezing his ears, “with colourful depictions
of a crazy dormouse and a wild-eyed hedgehog. And the name Horatio P.
is inscribed by God Almighty beneath the crest. Maybe the P stands
for Pelicanfalconforth.”
Samuel
scratched his chin. “We'll need to ask Horatio, or Duncan as he
calls himself, about that later.”
“How
much later? When will we ask him to leave?”
“Our
Brother in Christ has been sent to us by the mystical Yahweh and the
living Baal in their almighty unison, dear Jonathan. We must take
care of him.”
“I
will lay him a straw mattress in the outhouse,” replied Jonathan,
rubbing his rumbling tummy. “May Gabriel, in purple plumes and his
shining silver armour, defend the guest right as he wields the mighty
Sword of the Tree of Life.”
That
night the Rabbi of Dene appeared once again in Duncan's dreams.
“Shalom, my son. The good Arab you met in Gowkshill is no Elijah,
but his prophecies are turning out to be partly correct.”
“Shalom
Rabbi, my teacher,” replied a voice. “In what way is the
soothsayer once again correct?”
“You
have been saved from the streets by two Jews, who are living secret
lives. Listen to them, and you will build your life afresh.”
“But
what of Ishmael's other prophesies?” asked the voice. “Will the
Levites and Benjaminites visit me in Gibeah?”
“Not
that, my son, but methinks you could be visited in your bed by
several Jews of various shapes and sizes. Be kind to them, and Yahweh
will be kind to you too.”
“Perchance
they will beget me children,” said the voice.
“Methinks
it could be more complicated than that,” said the rabbi, with a wry
smile, as he vanished in a puff of multi-coloured smoke.
BACK TO CONTENTS
CHAPTER 8
BACK TO CONTENTS
CHAPTER 8
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