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Rogue: Chapter Seven

       Last updated: Thursday, August 4, 2011 20:12 EDT

 


 

    It was a bit chill but not bad. I found it rather refreshing, actually, and the evening damp was pleasant rather than the type that sucks the heat out of you. I turned and walked the other way, across the inlet she'd taken. There was no sidewalk, but there was a well-worn path through the grass along the verge, that occasionally dipped onto that lot, which was the rear of some commercial campus. That was good. Pedestrians weren't unexpected here.

    Just past there was the business park. I needed to get into his space before the cops did, accomplish either his execution or an intel sweep, and get out. For the former, exfil was less critical.

    My pocket phone had unit numbers on screen. Those were probable locations.

    Dressed as I was in a pullover shirt and slacks in gray, I wouldn't be out of place. Still, I was exposed and would have limited time before I did get questioned, and at the least asked to depart the area.

    This was an active evasion scenario. I could most likely get questioned safely, but once I did, I was done with the recon. So I'd be skulking around while pretending I wasn't.

    I could see two police cars from here, so they might be able to locate me if they had multispectra imaging. There was a rising fog from the well-watered growth, and some evergreens and local flat-leafed bushes that would disperse my image somewhat. I kept walking, and angled across the "park" aspect of the facility toward hard cover—other buildings.

    Shortly I slipped into visual shadow, then into real shadow, with building and treeline to mask my presence. I took a glance at the comm on its dimmest setting. Silver had eliminated one building, leaving four, and changed two. The new one was the one closest to me. I bet it wasn't the right one, but of course I would check it. I walked over the lumpy ground to it, then onto the pavement alongside.

    This one was officially vacant, which made it a worthwhile hide. There was a rear emergency exit. I gave good odds to it not being alarmed, and possibly not even locked. I was half right. The door moved slightly at a pull, and I slipped a flexitool in to shim the catch. It opened and nothing happened.

    Inside was dark, creepy and had some odd shadows from the windows, trees and distant lights. Some few bits of litter decorated the tiles, and it took seconds to determine it was well-vacant. I slid back out the way I'd come in.

    My choices were across the street or three doors down. Down was also vacant. Across was a recent rental for a packaging company. That fit his MO better, but the vacant was easier to check. Cops were closing in as fast as Silver and I, and I had to get results, not be safe. I decided to cross.

    A few buildings further down still had lights and vehicles. Some of them likely ran three shifts. This back end, though, was largely vacant, less modern and cheaper. Perfect for needs such as ours, but harder to be invisible in at the moment. I crossed at an angle away from my current position, and oblique to the next target. There was a car at each end of the street, and if they were paying attention at all they could see me even through the rising fog, but neither made a response. Either they didn't consider me worthwhile, or they had me under surveillance and were watching.

    I strode between two other buildings, the southern of which was occupied, and disappeared from their view again. I glanced for an update.

    Patrols on foot, it said. Yeah, there was that, and the risk of boobytraps if he wanted to protect something critical. That wouldn't be logical, since it would definitely trigger a response. However, he was plenty willing to kill, and depending on what he had hidden, he might.

    I'd just have to watch for triggers. To that end, I pulled on my own spectral glasses and looked for anything out of place. I started back north behind the building, toward the fence that separated me from the target. I'd have to clear that somehow.

    I paused frequently, in short halts that let me check around for police, under the guise of sorting messages on my phone. Tension built, but I felt calm and secure enough. The fence wouldn't be a problem. I could see a hole from here. Apparently, other travelers came through here, whether laborers or inquisitive youths I couldn't tell. The trodden and worn tear was big enough for me to climb through, though, the mesh crushed down enough to act as a step about a half meter up. That indicated regular traffic. The mesh they used for fences here was tough stuff.

    I looked around and through and down before I stepped. This would be a good place for a trap. Clear. I tested it with my foot, rose, over and down.

    That put me in the lot proper, and I could see a police car cruising slowly along, lights off, just a wraithlike outline in the street. They were very close, very cautious, and this was now a race.

    I sprinted across a drive and into the car's visual shadow, though there was little real shadow here. A light post stood between this and the next unit, throwing lengthy dark shapes. I hugged the building and stepped foot over foot along the wall. I dropped down below the frame of a window, and reached up to check it as I went past. Latched.

    Then I was past, and into the alcove of the emergency exit. It had a code pad, a scanner, a handle and a key box for admittance.

    That suggested an approach. I held my breath and listened. Car engine, a faint hum over the delicate rumble of traffic a kilometer away, which brought back memories of the distant sound of destroyed Minneapolis as I'd departed it on Earth, after inflicting ten million casualties. A flush ran through my brain and guts, and I shook it off. The now mattered. The past was gone.

    I tapped a message to Silver. Need emergency response override code for building. If she could get me that, I'd be inside with much better chance of silence. Randall wouldn't want alarm bells any more than I would, though I'd expect it would instantly light on a board. But, would the police be told at once, or would the fire team be sent first? I should have a few minutes. He might have alarms of his own, or boobytraps, but those would be silent, hopefully.

    I'd set the buzzer and felt it tingle. Silver had replied, and yes, she had a code. I reached up, tapped it into the pad except for the last letter, then stood as far back as I could. I was almost out of the alcove, stretched out a finger and tapped, and swung around to the outside fast.

    There was a puff, and I saw and smelled a bare whiff of gas. I held my breath and counted ten, leaned far along the wall for a deep draft of fresh, damp air, then swung back around and through the haze, pulled the door and slipped inside. I had seconds to clear this building before the police came in.

    Inside the entryway was clear. Doors ahead on each side were open. Beyond them the space opened into the main bay, with offices far up front. I saw no indication of sonar sensors, nor of any frequency of laser, nor of IR. A passive thermal sensor was possible, but awkward. With hyperaware senses I heard and felt nothing, so I stepped forward while drawing weapons and leaned into the left side room, left arm presented ready to block with knife, pistol refused in the right.

    Sleeping pad, blankets on the floor. Small box of clothes. Dark curtains pinned in place. It was vacant of people and tools, so I ducked, twirled and went for the other room.

    Tools. Boxes. Clothing. Printer for ID. Pocket coordinate machine on a table. Cut scraps of several materials in a box in one corner. No Randall. I swept and cleared and checked under a cabinet to be sure, then pocketed the pistol and went for evidence. No comm, no coder, no high tech tools, but I did grab a handful of scraps and pocket them, along with a sheet that might be an invoice, though he should have burned that if so. It was worth the checking.

    A buzz of message tingled me. I took a quick glance. It read, Incoming.

    That's when I heard the front door being worked.

    I assumed front and rear entrance, coordinated.

    I made it back across to the sleeping room, quickly determined nothing was of note, and leaned to glance behind the curtain. I couldn't see anyone holding an overwatch, so they had men front and rear but I could clear the window.

    I Boosted.

    They yanked the outer door and jumped through. I had a long, leisurely second to reach through the curtain, pop the latch, place my fingers on the window lip, and snap my arm. The pressure tossed it open a good fifteen centimeters, I flicked it with the other hand, stepped up, out and down, pulled to reclose it, turned and ran as I heard them rustle and shift into the room I'd just vacated. I cleared the drive, hopped the hole in the fence, and moved for more shadow.

    The area was quickly filling with a lot of cops, and someone would question me at length if they saw me now. I had what I hoped was good intel, figured he would be leaving system, and had to plan ahead for that. He wouldn't rush. He'd arrange three routes if he could, switch between at least two of them and possibly improv another.

    I slipped out through bushes and was behind this entire row of buildings, on the broad verge to a main road. I kept the growth as visual blocks. I shifted around and zigged back north, slipped aside, then again. It was something I'd learned early in my training, and it was fun as well as useful, the tension adding spice. I dropped down, duckwalked around one, and kept easing back, watching the arc in front and periodically behind.

    In a couple of minutes I was free, crouching through a shallow drain cut on the east side, just a landscaping feature, not really a ditch. Once on the sidewalk I stood and walked as if I belonged. I clicked my phone and called Silver.

    "East side, bushes, heading north on walk. Come get me."

    "Rog."

    Pedestrians weren't common in this area, but I was dressed like a laborer returning from work, and believable in context. Ordinarily, no one would have given me a glance. With the heightened security, though, I got tagged.

    I saw the lights shift in the mist, knew it was a car, and clicked the phone again.

    "Yes?"

    "Hey, lovey, I'm on my way home now. It was a long night, eh? Lots of customers." I kept an eye on the lights' approach, and knew the car was stopping.

    She said, "How long are you going to be? Any stops?"

    "No, I should be home on the bus." I heard the door, turned slowly enough to not be any kind of threat, and said, "Oh, wait, there's a connie needs to talk about summin. Lemme call back, okay, lovey?"

    "Okay," she said, and we cut.

    That should give her enough lead to come bail me.

    The cop kept fair distance. While he wasn't handling his stunner, he looked very ready.

    He said, "Good evenin', sir. May I see your ID, please?"

    "Surely," I agreed, and slid it out of my pocket. "Is summin up?"

    "Nothin' serious," he lied, "I just need to verify people in the area due to an investigation."

    "Oh, right, then," I agreed. My accent wasn't perfect, so I kept my answers short.

    Of course the card was fake, and made so it scanned FAULT. The question was, would he accept that? Laborer with a work pack, not the suspect. I shouldn't look a lot like the me they wanted, given what they had. I didn't fit Randall's assumed description.

    Then he said, "Sir, I'm reading a fault on this ID. You are also in an investigation area, and it's quite late. Where are you coming from?"

    "Work," I said.

    "Work where?"

    I hadn't had time to develop a cover, of course, so I had to bluff. "Garden Estates. I just hired on in the kitchen."

    Of course he pinged that, queried the employee list, and found no one matching both my name and description.

    "Sir, please step over and place your hands on the hood of my car."

    I could take him easily, but it would be more discreet to go along. Their lockup couldn't be that bad, and it would hide my motives behind something less obvious, perhaps petty theft.

    I placed my hands on the roof of the vehicle, and let him pat me down. I didn't immobilize him. I wouldn't have been able to. My hands cramped slightly as a neural field gripped them in place. I knew how to break from that, but that would be tantamount to violently resisting arrest, and this scene would not get smaller.

    I did say, "Phone in the right front pocket, folding knife in left."

    He replied, "Thank you, sir." He carefully relieved me of those.

    Another vehicle rolled up, and two more constables got out. They were all rather polite, a bit aloof, and reasonably professional, other than the fact they didn't treat me as a dangerous threat. Maybe I'm paranoid, or maybe it's my experience. I was being courteous, so they were decent back to me. Well enough.

    They went through my jacket and the pack, found technical tools and the pistol. That got their attention in a big way. They focused on it, rather than the intel cracking stuff, which should have been far more interesting under the circumstances. Or maybe they wanted to deal with easy charges first.

    "So what is your purpose in being here with a pistol, sir?" he asked as he drew my arms down and cuffed them behind me.

    "I should probably wait for an attorney to discuss that, sir," I replied.

    "Are you sure? That means a ride to Processin'."

    "I'm sure."

    "Very well. Sit down carefully on the kerb here, please."

    I did so. It was chill, slightly damp and a bit gritty.

    Nothing happened for several minutes, and I presumed Silver had gotten well clear. They chattered on comm, without mentioning her, or pursuit, or anything in the area. It was just me. So she could continue pursuit primarily, and work on release for me second.

    Eventually, a van came. It was an unremarkable egg without insignia. It pulled up right in front of where I sat. The officer lifted me to my feet by one elbow and faced me against the back of the van. I kept spatial awareness up for threats, but didn't try to glance around. As long as it was peaceful, I'd play by the rules.

    The driver was my height, male, light brown hair. He slapped a pair of binders above the existing pair. The arresting constable thumbed his pair off.

    The driver asked, "No statement?"

    "None. Possessions here."

    "Understood." He then patted me down himself. I approved. That was pretty good procedure.

    He thumbed the door, it opened, and he assisted me up into one side of the rear.

    "Watch your head on the roof," he said.

    Inside was a featureless metal block, with howling air conditioning and bright lights. A claustrophobe would turn into a gibbering nut in about ten seconds. The driver took an interminable time, and I couldn't track direction or distance enough to matter. Believing that hands behind the back is a dangerous position should there be an accident or "accident," I maneuvered my hands in front of me, by dint of athletic flexibility. I rolled, arched, got them past my buttocks and stepped through.

    It's a good thing I didn't need to relieve myself. The vehicle looked designed to be sluiced out, but there was nothing one could use for facilities.

    In the Freehold, if you actually commit an infraction worthy of response, City Safety will arrive with lots of weapons and escort you peacefully to Citizens' Court. Put up a fight and you're likely to be dead. They transport you in the back of a car, and very few people resist. The Citizen sorts things out and schedules hearing dates, etc, and you're released. If you are really brained out or vicious, you could be detained with a shock collar. I'd studied detention on various planets and nations, so I found this entire industry of specially made vehicles, restraints, doc programs, all fascinating.

    Twice we stopped, sat for several minutes, and then someone was shoved in alongside. One man in his fifties, one in his twenties of mixed genes. We didn't talk. I presumed there were others in the other half of the vehicle.

    Believe it or not, one of the big things for me was trusting the driver. I'd frequently traveled in ships, aircraft, boats, locked in and having to rely on someone else for my life. It was always either by contracted choice or with a fellow soldier I had commonality of background in and could trust. This was merely a ground vehicle, but manual only and subject to collision. The odds were remote, but they bothered me.

    When we arrived downtown, we were marched out into a stark, lit bay. I expected to be hassled about the cuffs, now in front of me, but no mention was made. So why the insistence that cuffs be behind your back? An elderly lady there was presented as detained for domestic violence was not cuffed due to her age, yet she obviously had been accused of violence, so why wasn't she?

    What a bizarre proceeding was to follow. These constables and officers were theoretically part of the same organization, but seemed to follow some strange, Kafka-esque plan detached from reality.

    We were slowly processed in, thoroughly and not uncomfortably searched, and stuffed into a holding tank. The only toilet was in clear view of everyone, male, female, prisoner, employee, whatever. My experience made this no issue, but I'm sure for many it would be demeaning and embarrassing. I couldn't decide if that was its purpose, or if it was just lack of concern.

    After being biometrically IDed, we were led to another holding cell. I asked about contact and was told, "You won't see a phone for the next four to six hours."

    That was interesting. They had mine, and complete control of me. It still didn't seem repressive or dangerous, but what harm is there in allowing someone to communicate? Presumably the idea is to process them into either detention or release, allow the legal process to commence. All this takes time and money, and I can't figure out how further communication is bad for that.

    This was an experience few tourists get. I kept notes. No, I don't recommend it.

    My guess is the toilets in the holding cell have never been cleaned. I doubt they can be—when is it empty? There was no furniture, just concrete and block walls and shelves. It

    was crowded at 2300, it was elbow to nose by 0600. It was cold. It stank.

    Leftover food sacks littered the place. This was good, as the brown paper could be used as insulation to stop one from freezing to the floor. Ones with sandwiches still in and mashed flat could be used as pillows. The leftover sandwich bags made handy cups to get drinking water from the sinks over the toilets, centimeter thick in grey slime mold. I recalled tricks from my military survival training, which I never thought I'd use domestically. If you pull your arms inside your shirt, you maintain body heat. Sleep as much as possible. Save small things like toilet paper for later use. Talk little, and try to help others. I gave some of my hoarded brown paper to a man with no shirt who had to be suffering from hypothermia on that floor.

    No one seemed disposed to trouble. In fact, everyone in the cell was very polite. Those

    who had to sit on top of the wall over the toilets because of lack of space would courteously look

    away while you used them. I could handle that, but I imagine most of the locals would not find it at all pleasant, being more body shy than Freeholders, and no one likes to be watched eliminating. It's instinctive. One is rather helpless at that moment.

    At 0600 local they brought us breakfast. The guards handed it out personally to ensure that every prisoner had a meal. This must be procedure, as they clearly didn't care. Breakfast was fake ham on soggy bread with stale cheese, and a cut up apple, with a bag of sterilized, sour-tasting milk. To drink the milk, you must chew off the corner of the bag. I saw one poor derelict, filthy and hungry, eating leftover food that had fallen around the toilets. Clearly, this man needed a hospital, not a cell. Some few had sketchy bandages from fights. One man who kept demanding his medication had apparently been there for eight hours already. He was obnoxious, either from desperation, or from needing help. Still, if he had medication, he should have been taken elsewhere. He wasn't exactly built like a boxer.

    At about 1000, I was finally taken upstairs to the regular cellblock. It had steel bunks, and we each took a thin but functional mattress with us. I actually had no idea what time it was. There were no clocks anywhere and the guards literally would not give us the time of day.

    No sooner had we got in there, however, a curse-screaming, obnoxious woman guard told us she was turning the phones off until we cleaned up the mess left by the last occupants, of whom only three were still present. I resented being held incommunicado, I resented not being asked first, before being given an ultimatum-I'd be glad to clean it for the sake of cleaning it, and to have anything to do for a little while. Most of the rest of my cellmates felt the same way, the sole exception being a screaming, cursing 22 year old admitted drug dealer.

    We picked up the trash and swept and mopped in short order, and I recognized other military veterans from their cleaning style. The drug dealer spent the time calling the guard every unimaginative name in the book, while boasting of his prowess in acquiring stolen property.

    In response, the guard shouted that she was leaving the phone off to teach us a lesson. What lesson? That this punk was an idiot? We all knew that. Was she hoping we'd attack him so she could gas a few of us? We offered no hassle or resistance at any point. She initiated hostilities.

    We all took care of the man with the artificial leg. Everyone was careful of the toilets and toilet paper, as we all knew we'd have to use them eventually. Leftover food was shared with new arrivals. The prisoners, with perhaps two exceptions of sixty, were polite, courteous, and addressed all guards as "Sir" and "Ma'am."

    The guards ignored every request, either without comment, with "I'll see," or with, "that's not my job." Taking care of prisoners? Not their job. Just signing papers. We were all there for a reason, right?

    At noon, they brought lunch. Fake ham on soggy bread with corn ships and nasty chocolate chip cookies. Some analog of fruit punch in a bag, chew off the corner to drink, just like last time. That's two sandwiches, an apple, two ounces of corn chips and twelve ounces of liquid in twelve hours. Barely enough to keep someone from curling up with pangs, especially in the cold. One experienced inmate offered to swap his sandwich for another drink. He got no takers. The sandwiches were that bad. I choked it down in small nibbles and made it last. This was literally a low-grade version of the capture training I'd had, and would have bordered on war crimes if done against POWs.

    At 1330 there was a court call. My name was called, last on the list, while I was using the toilet. I finished, ran to get my mattress (it has to leave the cell with you) while my cellmates yelled at the guard, "Sir, there's one more bloke coming, please wait a moment."

    He slammed the gate in my face.

    I said, "Sir, I'm your last person."

    "I'll come back for you," he said, back to me. He didn't even have the guts to look me in the face while lying to me. He lied to me, in uniform, wearing a badge that he'd taken an oath for. As a veteran, I downgraded this guy to "scum" in my rating.

    Every time the guard came back for someone, I'd politely ask him, "Sir, I missed my thirteen thirty call. When is the next one?"

    The responses varied from totally ignoring me, to telling me "Soon," to telling me, "I don't have a file on you." Clearly, he did. He'd called my name. He was continually lying to me.

    As a professional, he was not.

    I finally called Silver around 1600, with a hefty five pound charge to her phone. I told her I'd likely be there another day, and she said, "The Department says court runs until twenty-one." I wasn't hopeful. It might run until 2100, but the regulars were sure no one got called after 1600.

    More prisoners came in, and there were no more mattresses. Another exchange took place, and in perfect Nazi or Stalinist fashion, the departing prisoners were required to remove the mattresses from the cell, even though there were those inside who had none. Repeated requests of, "Sir, we need some mattresses," were met with the standard, "Soon," but no mattresses. They were left outside the bars as a taunt. I couldn't have set it up better myself as a means to psychologically break people. Except they weren't interrogating anyone for intel, had laws against it, and was from sheer idiocy rather than intent. It amused and disgusted me. It didn't intimidate me.

    After shift change, we had two other guards, one young man, and a slender elderly lady with curly hair. These two people deserve thanks, promotions, and praise from the city, because they acted and treated us like human beings. They were genuinely embarrassed by the petty bullies around them, kept apologizing for them, and did their best to help us.

    Let me reiterate: they did their jobs as required. That was unusual and worthy of note.

    On missed court calls, they took names and made inquiries. They got no answers, but they did ask. A man who needed his medication, who had previously been told that the medics were "gone for the day," was scheduled for sick call. They gave us the time. They explained procedures. They got us mattresses. They were treated exactly as they treated us-politely, and every request complied with without hassle.

    Eventually I was called for interrogation.

    "Scholl! Is Scholl here?"

    "That's me," I called loudly, and stood from my rack.

    "Follow me."

    I was prepared for a lot of shouting, some shoving, threats, food deprivation, low-key harassment, which was illegal but probably SOP. No, I was not impressed by the detention facility.

    I was pleasantly surprised.

    The guard led me through a dingy corridor, locking us through gates via the control center, to a room, directed me in and closed the door. I could see one camera, deduced where the others must be, and assumed they were recording already. Two floods lit the seats enough for visibility without being excessive. This seemed to be legit. I took the one facing the door. It was hard but adequately shaped, and fixed to the floor.

    A few moments later, a man in his Caledonian thirties walked in and sat down. He wore a badge on his shirt.

    "Good evening, sir. I'm Investigator Mead. May I have your name, please?"

    "Andrew Scholl," I said, making us both liars. He already had that ID, of course.

    A sealed, transparent evidence box appeared in a window on one wall, illuminated and secure.

    "So where'd you get this gun?" he asked.

    I gave the only reply I could. "I brought it in my luggage."

    "The number says it was stolen here."

    I shrugged. "I brought it in my luggage."

    He sighed and looked annoyed.

    "I'm trying to help you," he said. "I know you're a Freeholder. Have you military ID? If you do, we can clear any weapon charges and just return it to the owner."

    Technically, that was illegal. They did do favors for military, though. He was lying about the latter. They'd chop it up for "analysis."

    "No," I said.

    He looked me up and down. He knew I was military, and was probably starting to figure I was clandestine. That could be problematic.

    "Sir…"

    I stayed uncommunicative. "Sorry."

    A beep on his phone caught his attention.

    "It seems bail's been posted." He sighed again. "You'll be given a sheet with reporting instructions and bonding rules. You must obey them, and may not leave the system in the meantime. We'll see you in court."

    "Very well, sir. Good day," I said. I waited until he indicated I should stand and leave.

    I wasn't released, though. I was shoved back into the cage. I figured out afterward it was just bureaucratic idiocy. At the time, it seemed like a clumsy interrogation technique.

    At 1800, we were brought dinner. You guessed it-fake ham and soggy bread with stale cheese and corn chips and nasty cookies and orange juice. The man trying to exchange his sandwich for a drink had no luck again.

    I stayed with my form. I ate leftover chips to keep up my strength, poured a bag of water to keep myself hydrated. Nodded to conversation but said nothing. Stayed with my bunk so my mattress wouldn't be stolen, though no one seemed disposed to fight.

    About 22 hours, some fool who had smuggled marijuana and matches in past their search lit up. The guards made no attempt to find out whom, they simply shut off the phone again.

    People who had been brought in at the same time I had, just now getting up to the cell after 22 hours, came in and had no way to call.

    They still had no way to call when I left at midnight.

    Someone called my name again, on a list, and I was first at the bars, having moved my mattress to a front bunk during an earlier lull. I lied and said I didn't have a mattress, so someone else would have the use of it.

    We were marched downstairs, lined up, processed out in ten minutes. I was never actually told that my charges were dropped. We weren't actually told we were being processed out until another prisoner asked and was answered. They scanned me again, loaded a bag with my possessions minus the gun, the glasses, invoice and the coding tools, but I did have the pocket knife, phone and pieces I'd picked up. A bored overweight woman handed me the bag through a grille and said, "Don't open that until you're outside."

    They opened the locked steel door, told me to go up to the first floor and through the door. I did so, and was in the lobby of the police department. No warning, no nothing. Through that door and out of our hair, you. To be fair, the guards on this last leg were fairly decent, probably because they knew we were being released.

    Even though I'd known I was safe, seeing Silver was a great relief. I was pretty fatigued, too. There wasn't much time for that, though.

    Once we were outside and in the car I fished the sliver out of the bag.

    "Chameleon," I said.

    "Novaja Rossia," she said, that fast.

    "Good. Does that help?"

    "It will. Right now we need to follow up. I think they've cordoned him."

    "Oh? Do tell."

    She shrugged. "Activity, radio traffic, some media presence."

    "Ah, hell, we don't need a circus."

    I was emotionally beat and physically wiped out, but we had a job to do.


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