Naruto: The Chosen Undead-Chapter 148 - no.147 Dark Souls

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Chapter 148 - no.147 Dark Souls

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Chapter 147 The Price of Power

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Naruto didn't even have time to celebrate.

The moment the dragon's soul dissipated, his body reminded him violently that he was not okay.

His left arm had gone numb.

At first, he thought it was just exhaustion. But then he saw them. Whitish-blue crystals had erupted from his forearm, shoulder, and even between his fingers. They were jagged growths that looked like splinters of soul energy frozen mid-detachment. Each one pulsed faintly, glowing like shattered ice under moonlight.

"Shit," he muttered, voice strained as a clone rushed to his side.

"Hold still," the clone said, kneeling beside him. "This is gonna suck."

And it did.

The first shard came out with a wet crunch, tearing through muscle like a barbed hook. Blood spurted. Naruto clenched his teeth so hard he felt his jaw tremble. The clone didn't wait as he ripped one after another from the meat of his bicep, from the soft skin between his fingers, even from beneath his nail beds. Each removal left a small hole; some narrow, others deep and jagged. The pain was like frostbite and electrocution all at once... numbing, but still capable of making his vision blacken at the edges.

Naruto panted, sweat dripping from his brow. "Never... doing that again... without gloves."

"Yeah, I'm not even you and I feel violated," the clone said dryly before holding up a talisman.

Golden light surged.

The Heal miracle washed over him, soothing the torn flesh, knitting together muscle, mending bone. The pain eased... but didn't vanish. Even as the holes closed, a strange stiffness lingered.

Naruto flexed his fingers experimentally. The motion was sluggish, like the nerves weren't sure they existed anymore. His skin felt stretched, almost fake—like paper that had been soaked then dried too fast. He shook the arm out, jerking it up and down. The tingling remained.

"When I did this with Beatrice," he muttered, frowning at the hand that had just nearly exploded, "her catalyst didn't blow up. My arm didn't end up looking like a cursed popsicle."

Clearly, he still had a long way to go.

The technique was incredible, but it wasn't something he could rely on in the middle of a fight. Too long to set up. Too draining. Too risky.

"And now I know it literally eats my arm from the inside out," he muttered.

But the payoff... Naruto glanced across the ravine where the Undead Dragon had once been. If that blast had hit someone like Zabuza, he would be gone. That thought alone made Naruto grin through the pain.

"Definitely a trump card," he whispered. "But more like a 'hope I survive using it' card."

He turned his attention back to his loot, trying to distract himself from the lingering ache.

First up: the Astora Straight Sword.

It was nearly a mirror of Oscar's blade—sleek silver guard, polished steel, engraved filigree along the fuller, and that faint, telltale hum of divinity clinging to its edge. But... it wasn't his master's.

Naruto could feel it. Whoever had carried this one hadn't shaped it with the same soul. It wasn't his sword.

Still...

He slid it into his inventory with a nod.

"Nice to have a spare."

Next up was the Dragon Crest Shield.

[Item: Dragon Crest Shield]

[Description: Shield of a nameless knight, likely a high-ranked knight of Astora. One of the enchanted blue shields. The Dragon Crest Shield greatly reduces fire damage.]

Naruto lifted it from the inventory, holding it up so the sun could hit its surface. The polished blue gleam shimmered like still water, casting faint ripples of light across his arm.

He flipped it over, inspecting the craftsmanship with a slow, thoughtful hum.

It was nearly identical to Oscar's Crest Shield in size and shape—same Astoran steelwork, same reinforced rim. But where Oscar's bore the proud lion of Astora, this one carried a different mark. A dragon, etched in fluid, curling lines, wings spread and mouth open in a silent roar.

"Different houses?" he muttered aloud. "Or maybe a different order of knights?"

He didn't have enough history to be sure, but it made sense.

Whatever the truth, the shield's enchantment was unmistakable. Even without testing it, Naruto could feel the heat resistance woven into its frame. The way the air around it dulled slightly, as though warding off invisible embers.

"Fireproof. Definitely keeping that."

He slid it into his inventory and turned to the real prize—the thing he'd been itching to examine ever since he had seen the Undead Dragon.

The Dragon Scale.

He pulled it free, cradling it in both hands. It was massive, easily half the size of his torso and incredibly heavy to the point the scale could work as a shield. Its surface was textured with fine, natural ridges, a greenish-bronze sheen shimmering faintly beneath its scarred exterior.

It was beautiful.

[Item: Dragon Scale]

[Description: Dragon scale for reinforcing dragon weapons. Peeled from an ancient dragon. A dragon is inseparable from its scales, and the transcendent apostles, who seek the perpetuity of the ancient dragons, have crossed the very end of the earth to seek this invaluable treasure.]

Naruto's brow lifted as he read the message. "Reinforce dragon weapons, huh..."

His eyes flicked to the Drake Sword strapped to his side, lips tugging into a grin. Now that was exciting. The sword was already a powerhouse. If he could make it stronger? That was a game-changer. But it wasn't the upgrade that truly caught his attention.

Transcendent apostles who seek the perpetuity of the ancient dragons.

Naruto turned the scale over again in his hands, more slowly this time. The phrase echoed in his mind like an itch he couldn't scratch.

His eyes gleamed with curiosity. Was there a way to gain their power? His thoughts ran wild. What would it mean to become like a dragon? Immense power? Wings? Fire? Immortality?

Transformation?

He chuckled at the image in his head—a version of himself towering above his enemies, wings spread, eyes glowing like molten gold. People would run. Gato would panic. And yeah... it'd be cool as hell.

Naruto hummed, sliding the scale back into his inventory as he began making his way toward the spiral path leading back to Rickert.

But beneath that excitement, a question lingered: What would the power of the dragons actually cost?

Because in Lordran, everything had a price. And for those who sought the power of perpetuity of dragons... the price was always higher than they realized.

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Naruto suddenly popped his head through the tiny upper window of Rickert's cell, grinning wide. "Boo!"

Rickert jolted with a start, nearly knocking over his tools. "What in the?!"

Naruto laughed, dropping down from above with an acrobatic flip, landing with a proud smirk. "Man, you should've seen your face!"

"How did you even get up there?"

"Oh, a master prankster never reveals his secrets," Naruto said with a cheeky finger-wag.

"Fine. Keep your secrets," Rickert muttered, brushing off his sleeves. "I'll figure it out eventually."

"Great. While you're solving that mystery, I've got a real one for you. Can you reinforce a dragon weapon?"

Rickert raised an eyebrow, arms folding. "Well, as the best smith in Vinheim... yes, I can. If you've got a dragon weapon and a dragon scale, I can forge them together... but considering how rare those are..."

He stopped mid-sentence. Because Naruto had casually placed the Drake Sword on the windowsill. Then, with no ceremony whatsoever, he began forcing a massive, bronze-gleaming Dragon Scale in after it, grunting with effort.

Rickert stared at the absurdity. "...How?"

Naruto, still wrangling the scale through the tight space, answered without missing a beat. "Cut off the tail of a Hellkite Wyvern for the sword. Got the scale from an Undead Dragon in the valley up above."

"You... you went to the Valley of Drakes?"

"Yup," Naruto grunted. "Oh, and there's this weird, nasty cave nearby that smells like old feet."

"That would be Blighttown. One of the entrances, at least."

Naruto blinked. "Oh. That's where the second Bell of Awakening is."

Rickert gave a solemn nod.

Naruto let out a long, groaning sigh. "So the second bell is in a giant, stinking cave system full of disease, decay, and probably things that bite."

"Technically, it's more of an underground city," Rickert corrected.

Naruto made a face. "How many underground cities are there in this hellhole?"

"More than you'd expect. That's just how Lordran works. The gods live above. Everyone else gets shoved deeper. The lower your status, the deeper you go into dirt, into ruins... and if you go low enough, you'll find the Abyss."

Naruto muttered, "Cheerful place, huh?"

"Depends on your perspective," Rickert said with a half-smile.

"Alright, back on track. Dragon scale upgrade?"

Rickert turned, already reaching for his tools. "Yeah. That'll cost you ten thousand souls."

"Please tell me that was a joke."

"I'm not joking. To reinforce a dragon weapon with a scale, I need to melt the scale down to liquid form—magma-hot. Then I wrap it around the blade, forge it again, and rebind the magic inside it. To do that..."

Naruto finished Rickert's words for him with a sigh. "You need to burn souls to strengthen the flame."

"Exactly," Rickert nodded. "You could try doing it on your own, sure... but it'll still cost you ten thousand souls."

"Okay, fine. Let's do it."

"Splendid." Rickert turned and opened a heavy iron cupboard. Inside, nestled within a cage of silver runes, was something Naruto hadn't seen before: an ember that glowed faintly blue, cold light rippling off it like the surface of an icy lake. It pulsed with restrained power entirely unlike the orangish ember Andre used, whose heat could be felt from across a forge.

"That's a Vinheim ember, isn't it?"

Rickert gave a pleased hum. "Good eye. I'd love to show you the difference. Andre's flame burns hot. Ours... does not. Vinheim flames are cold. Controlled. Magical. Like the spells we weave into the world."

Naruto pulled out the Astoran ember from his own inventory, a warm flicker of orange heat cradled in a compact, brass container—a gift from Andre, after he taught Naruto how to reinforce weapons himself. The contrast between the two embers was clear even before they touched the forge.

One was passion. The other, precision.

Naruto held up a ten-thousand-soul drop and, with a flick, cast it into the waiting blue ember. The forge flared to life. Cold flames surged with an eerie shimmer, casting a spectral glow across the chamber as the soul was devoured.

Rickert muttered a quick incantation, then took up the Drake Sword and the Dragon Scale. He laid them both on the anvil before gingerly lowering the scale into the forge.

It hissed.

Then bubbled.

The scale began to melt, not in fire, but in light—glowing blue magma pooling like liquid steel infused with magic. Then Rickert gripped the Drake Sword in tongs and, with practiced precision, plunged it into the molten scale.

And something strange happened.

Veins began to ripple through the liquified scale, spidering up the length of the blade like the soul of the dragon was clawing its way into the metal. The air vibrated with power, and Naruto stepped back instinctively as the forge roared with unnatural sound.

Finally, Rickert quenched it.

With a hiss and billow of steam, he pulled the reforged sword free.

The blade had changed. Its surface now bore a more rough, stone-like texture. It wasn't just stronger. It felt... awake.

Naruto stepped forward, gingerly taking it in his hand.

He felt it. A flicker. A trace. The same draconic aura he had felt during his soul vision, the awe and pressure of the Everlasting Dragon. This wasn't the same overwhelming force, but the residue of it clung to the weapon like dust to old bones.

"...Whoa," Naruto breathed.

"That was harder than I expected. Anything else you need?"

"Yeah, actually," Naruto said, looking up. "What's the difference between an Astoran blacksmith and a Vinheim one? Aside from temperature and, you know, cage placement."

Rickert chuckled. "Skill aside, it mostly comes down to embers, what types we're trained to handle for ascension. Andre can create standard weapon ascension. Me? I do magic."

"Magic ascension?!"

Rickert gave a smug smile. "If you've got green titanite, I can ascend that massive black Zweihander of yours into a magic weapon. Vinheim style."

Naruto groaned. "Green titanite again? Seriously? I need it for divine weapons, and now magic too? And of course I don't have any..."

Rickert rummaged through his box and held up a single, moss-green shard, glinting with latent energy. "I do."

Naruto raised a brow. "Alright, what's your price?"

Rickert didn't answer right away. He stared down at the green titanite shard in his hand for a long, quiet moment before finally speaking, voice lower than usual. "Just... come back once in a while," he said softly. "Talk to me. Even if it's just nonsense."

"That's it?"

Rickert chuckled, but it wasn't his usual humor. It sounded hollow. "I know it's pathetic," he murmured, eyes still fixed on the shard. "But you spend enough time in a cage, and even the sound of your own voice starts to feel like a stranger's. The world keeps turning out there. Up there. But down here, I'm stuck. And sometimes, I wonder if I'm even real anymore."

Naruto stayed quiet, unsure of what to say.

"So yeah. You want a deal? That's mine. Just a little conversation now and then. It keeps me from slipping. Keeps the silence from winning."

Naruto walked up to the bars, crouched beside the cell window, and gave him a small, sincere smile. "Rickert, you're not pathetic. You're just human. And you've been more than helpful. So yeah... I'll come back. Promise."

For a moment, Rickert just stared at him. Then he sniffed and gave a sharp, sarcastic sigh. "Well, that's bloody embarrassing," he muttered, straightening up and quickly wiping at the corner of one eye. "You show a little emotion and suddenly you're the tragic Vinheim shut-in. Might as well start writing poetry on the walls."

Naruto snorted. "Want me to bring you a notebook next time?"

"Please do," Rickert deadpanned. "And maybe a mirror, so I can look deep into my soul while I work."

"Deal. Now how about that weapon?"

Rickert rolled up his sleeves with exaggerated flair, mood shifting like a coin flip. "Right. Let's turn your oversized can-opener into the most magical death stick this side of Anor Londo. Hand over that Zweihander, friend."

Naruto grinned, excitement buzzing in his chest as he handed over the Zweihander.

But then he paused.

His fingers lingered on the hilt for just a second longer. He remembered the blast. The shattered catalyst. The crystalline veins in his arm. That strange, beautiful destruction he had barely survived.

"Rickert," he said suddenly, pulling the sword back before the smith could reach it. "What exactly is a magic weapon?"

"Hrm. That's a good question."

Rickert tapped a finger to his chin. "To put it simply... it's like giving your soul something to hit the world with. A spell turned permanent. Think of it like... condensing your will into steel."

Naruto's eyes narrowed, the words echoing in his mind. Giving your soul something to hit the world with. If that was true... and if soul magic could mix with chakra...

"I could amplify it," Naruto murmured.

"Sorry?"

Naruto waved him off. "Nothing. Just thinking."

His gaze dropped to the Zweihander again. He didn't want to lose his favorite weapon. "...Let's make something else instead," he said.

"Something smaller?"

Naruto nodded, pulling a hand axe from his inventory—the crude, iron weapon he'd started with back in his pyromancer class. The thing had seen better days, but it had history.

"This one."

"That's your backup?"

Naruto smirked. "More like a test subject."

"Well, it'll need to be reinforced first," Rickert said, pointing to the axe's chipped edge and worn hilt.

Naruto didn't argue. He reached into his pouch and produced ten titanite shards, laying them across the windowsill like poker chips.

Rickert whistled low.

Several hours passed.

By the time Rickert handed the weapon back, it looked nothing like the worn tool it had been. Now, it was blackened steel, with a deep sapphire-blue vein running through the blade like lightning trapped in iron. When Naruto held it, the vein pulsed faintly beneath his touch.

He felt the energy stir within it. It felt like an extension of his soul.

"Alright..." he muttered, more to himself than Rickert.

He poured a stream of chakra into the handle. The blue vein sparked, and then glowed white-hot.

Naruto grinned. "Okay. That's good."

CRACK.

The axe head detonated with a sharp bang.

Naruto's eyes widened as he dropped the smoking handle and dove out of the way. Fragments of metal slammed into the stone wall behind him, and Rickert vanished in a panic beneath the workbench in his cell.

Silence.

"...You alive?" Rickert called, peeking up with wide eyes.

"Yeah," Naruto groaned, brushing dust from his shoulders. "Just lost some hearing. Again."

He walked over to the scattered debris, squinting at the fragments. Something shimmered between the broken shards. A crystalline lump—small, jagged, and faintly pulsing with energy.

"Rickert," he asked, holding it up, "any idea what this is?"

The blacksmith stared at it for a long time. Then he inhaled sharply. "That's... that's crystallized soul," he muttered. "Hrm... I didn't think it was real."

"What do you mean?"

"In Vinheim," Rickert said slowly, "there were always whispers. Old theories passed around like ghost stories. That if your soul could press hard enough against reality, it could become so dense, so absolute, that it would crystallize. Like frozen light. A moment of will turned solid."

Naruto stared at the fragment. And it clicked. His soul cannon. That spiraling beam of destruction. It hadn't been just an amplified spell. It was the final form of Soul Arrow—by allowing the soul to press against reality via chakra.

"I guess that explains the catalyst and axe," he said. "They weren't breaking. I was overclocking them." He sat back, his hand still cradling the shard. "Beatrice pulled it off. No explosions. No backlash. Just pure control."

Rickert raised a brow. "Beatrice?"

Naruto took a moment before telling the man about his adventures in the Darkroot Garden, Beatrice, chakra, and the combination of the two systems.

Rickert fell silent for a long moment. Then he pressed a hand to his mouth, thinking. "Listen to me, Naruto," he said finally, his voice low. "A word of advice from a friend."

Naruto's eyes met his, sensing the shift in tone.

"Don't show that off," Rickert said. "Not to strangers. Not to allies. Not unless you absolutely have to. You're walking around with something no one in Lordran understands. And that means they'll want to understand it. Or worse... control it."

Naruto felt the truth in those words. "But how bad could it be?" he asked quietly. "Hypothetically?"

Rickert exhaled, his gaze drifting toward the far wall. "Hypothetically? The worst case would be... Seath."

Naruto blinked. "Seath the Scaleless?"

Rickert nodded grimly. "The albino dragon. Creator of soul magic. There are... rumors. That he has experimented on humans. Kidnapped them. Twisted them. Trying to force his knowledge into flesh."

Naruto felt a chill crawl up his spine.

"Someone like that," Rickert said, "if they saw you use chakra... they'd tear you apart just to study what made you different."

Naruto looked down at the crystal shard in his palm, his reflection fractured in its surface. He had a long way to go. And if he wanted to stand against beings like Seath... he'd have to walk that road carefully. He tightened his grip and nodded. "Thanks, Rickert."

"Just keep your head on out there, yeah? I'd rather not lose the only decent conversation I've had in years."

Naruto grinned. "Deal."

Rickert sat hunched over on his bench, his gaze drifting far past the rusted bars of his cage and toward the mist-veiled New Londo below. The bluish light reflecting off the sunken city made the ruins look almost peaceful... if you didn't know what lived under them.

"You know," Rickert murmured, "I'm still shocked that you met the real Witch Beatrice."

"She's a hero, right?"

"Indeed. One of the last true ones. She was born here, when New Londo was still a city. Not just ruins and ghosts."

"She lived here?" Naruto asked, glancing back over the ledge. His gaze traced the rooftops sunken beneath the black waters.

"She did," Rickert confirmed. "They say she was a prodigy. Raised among the sorcerers in this very city. But she didn't stay. Left as a young girl. Wandered the world on her own. Never joined any coven or court. Just a rogue witch with a sharp tongue and a sharper mind."

Naruto let that image sit in his head for a moment—Beatrice, wandering alone, wrapped in that quiet dignity of hers, her staff on her back, her chin held high.

"So... what happened?" he asked quietly. "To New Londo, I mean."

Rickert exhaled slowly. "No one really knows. Not even the gods speak of it. Something... ancient. Some say it rose from the Abyss itself. When the darkness came, the city was lost. But before the waters swallowed it, Beatrice came back."

Naruto's breath hitched slightly.

"She came back?" he echoed.

"She fought it," Rickert said. "Alone. No army. No Firelink support. Just her, standing against whatever hell had taken root beneath the city. And she held the line long enough for the city to be drowned—to keep the corruption from spreading to the surface. That's what made her a legend. That sacrifice."

Naruto didn't respond right away.

He just stared.

Down at the flooded ruins. At the quiet, distant rooftops rising from the Abyss like tombstones. At the stagnant black water that hid whatever final fight she had faced.

A tear slid down his cheek before he even realized it.

Bittersweet.

That was the word. He had wondered what had happened to her.

And now he knew.

She died saving her home.

There was pain, yes. A quiet ache that throbbed behind his eyes. But there was pride too. And awe. A part of him wanted to cry harder, while another part simply sat taller. Because of course that's how she went.

"She meant a lot to you, didn't she?" Rickert asked, voice soft and nonjudgmental.

Naruto wiped the tear away with the back of his hand, still staring ahead. His voice came slowly, like the words were surfacing from someplace deeper than usual. "Beatrice and I didn't talk much," Naruto said. "We fought together once. Just once. Against the Moonlight Butterfly."

He exhaled through his nose, the memory still sharp in his mind.

"No stories. No real introductions. She just showed up, cast a few spells, and changed everything I thought I knew about magic." He scratched at his jaw absently, the smallest smile tugging at his lips.

"She was the smartest and strangest girl I've ever met."

Rickert didn't speak. He didn't need to.

"She gave me the basics of magic," he continued. "Not as a teacher. More like... someone holding open a door. And once it was open, she left. Just like that."

His voice dropped, a note of something unspoken caught beneath the words.

"I didn't realize how much that mattered until she was gone."

Rickert gave a small, knowing smile, soft and bittersweet. "Sometimes the people who change your life don't need to stay long. Just long enough to point you in the right direction."

Naruto nodded, quietly.

It wasn't love. It wasn't even friendship, not really. But it was a connection. And in a place like Lordran, that meant more than most people would ever understand.

"You know," he said after a moment, voice low, "I wanted to find her in the present day. Thought maybe she'd be somewhere out there... waiting. I even imagined teasing her, calling her an old hag just to see her roll her eyes." He gave a small laugh, one that faded almost as quickly as it came. "Guess I can say goodbye to that friendship."

"Are you sad?"

"Yeah," Naruto replied. "But I'm happy, too. Happy that Bea lived her life the way she wanted. And died on her terms. If you have to go, that's the best you can hope for, right?"

With slow reverence, Naruto raised his left hand, palm open toward the sky. A silent prayer. A goodbye.

Rickert watched, saying nothing, but the moment etched itself into his memory like stone.

He'd heard the stories.

Beatrice wasn't just a sorceress. She was a legend. A rogue witch whose very presence in battle reshaped entire outcomes. Men from every corner of the world had tried to win her hand—princes, generals, scholars... all turned away with silence or a sharp spell. And then there was the tale Rickert remembered most vividly. A knight—unnamed in every version—who approached Beatrice with quiet confidence. They say she gave him a moment. Let him speak. Even smiled.

Until he took off his helmet. And then, cold as moonlight, she said: "You aren't him."

The line became a legend of its own. Who was she waiting for? Who was him? Most chalked it up to poetry. A myth. The kind of thing people told each other when trying to make sense of a woman who refused to be understood.

But now, as Rickert looked at Naruto, a strange thought crept into his mind. Was he the one? The knight Beatrice waited for?

Before the idea could fully form, Naruto stood, stretching his arms overhead. "Well," he said, "I think it's time I head back. I've got a mission to finish."

Rickert nodded, his face composed but his thoughts still swirling. "I'll see you next time, then."

That made Naruto pause. He turned halfway, eyes thoughtful. "Hey, Rickert... since you're not exactly tied down anymore, why don't you try tinkering with some tech from my world?"

"Technology?"

Naruto reached into his inventory, materializing a worn but functional flintlock pistol and placing it on the windowsill with a light clack. "This is..."

"Don't tell me," Rickert interrupted, holding up a hand, his eyes gleaming with a childlike fascination. "I want to figure it out on my own."

"Alright, suit yourself. But if you manage to make something out of it, let me know. I'd love to see it."

Rickert smirked, already turning the flintlock over in his hands, fingers tracing the grooves of the barrel and trigger with growing excitement. "Oh, don't worry. I'll find something. Can't let my skills rot down here from idleness."

Naruto grinned. "Good luck, then."

"Goodbye, Naruto. And... keep your head on out there. You're a rare sort, you know. You help break the monotony."

Naruto blinked. "That a compliment?"

"Take it however you want, kid."

With a casual wave and a confident step, Naruto turned and began his walk up the stairs, the sound of his boots echoing softly against moss-covered stone. The chill of New Londo nipped at his back, but his heart was steady. His mind was already drifting forward—toward Zabuza, Gato, and the Wave mission still waiting for him. Toward the battles yet to come.

And he was ready for whatever hell came next. Because Lordran had taught him well. And somewhere deep in his soul, he could feel it: The real game had just begun.

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[ Personal Note: First off, thanks a ton to all of you for sticking with this story. Seriously, you guys are awesome. Now, if you're interested in supporting me on P@treon, let me just say that over there, I post these massive 5k-word Chapters. But heads up, if you're jumping to P@treon, you'll need to start from Chapter 71, since that's where this Chapter lines up with the content there.

To everyone here just reading along, please don't forget to leave a comment! Honestly, your comments make my day, and they let me know you're as invested in this story as I am. So yeah, thanks again, and I hope you have an amazing rest of your day!

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