The Magnus Archives - The Magnus Protocol 25 - Gut Feelings

Episode Date: August 8, 2024

CAT2RB2474-07022024-24042024Food (Gorging ) -/- compulsion (disgust)Incident Elements:Disordered EatingFood HygieneCompulsionNauseaManipulation (Supernatural)HungerInfections/InfestationsMaggotsDestru...ction of PropertyMental Breakdown, ManiaTranscripts available at https://rustyquill.com/transcripts/the-magnus-protocol/This episode is dedicated to Cassidy's Friends, thank you for your generous support! You can find a complete list of our Kickstarter backers https://rustyquill.com/the-magnus-protocol-supporter-wall/Created by Jonathan Sims and Alexander J Newall  Directed by Alexander J NewallWritten by Jonathan SimsScript Edited with additional material by Alexander J NewallExecutive Producers April Sumner, Alexander J Newall, Jonathan Sims, Dani McDonough, Linn Ci, and Samantha F.G. Hamilton Associate Producers Jordan L. Hawk, Taylor Michaels, Nicole Perlman, Cetius d’Raven, and Megan Nice Produced by April Sumner  Featuring (in order of appearance) Shahan Hamza as Samama KhalidBillie Hindle as Alice DyerAlexander J Newall as NorrisRyan Hopevere-Anderson as Colin BecherSarah Lambie as Lena KelleyAnusia Battersby as Gwendolyn BouchardLowri Ann Davies as Celia RipleyMark Nicolson as Ticket AttendantDialogue Editor – Nico VetteseSound Designer – Meg McKellarMastering Editor - Catherine RinellaMusic by Sam Jones (orchestral mix by Jake Jackson) Art by April Sumner  Support us on Patreon at https://patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop and https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quillSupport Rusty Quill by purchasing from our Affiliates;Phantom Peak – UK immersive experience – 15% discount with this linkDriveThruRPG – DriveThruRPG.comJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillX: @therustyquillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.com The Magnus Protocol is a derivative product of the Magnus Archives, created by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence.   Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi folks, Billy Hindle here, the voice of Alice Dyer in the Magnus Protocol. Today I just wanted to take some time to run you through some of the exciting Magnus merchandise, as well as affiliate links, a brand new way to support the show. You can find affiliate links in the description of all new episodes. If you are based in the UK, be sure to check out Phantom Peak, a unique immersive open world adventure in London. Use the link in the show notes or code Rusty to get 15% off tickets. Perfect for fans of escape rooms.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Next up, be sure to check out our bespoke merchandise from our partners, including exclusive perfume scents inspired by John and Martin and ex Altiorra. Find out more by going to www.rustyquill.com forward slash S B P. Find Magnus and Rusty Quill themed TTRPG accessories including dice trays, dice towers and beautiful coasters from Harps Core by going to harpscore.com forward slash rusty dash quill See the Magnus Archives polyhedral dice set from Dice Dungeon including an exclusive D16 featuring icons representing the fears
Starting point is 00:01:03 Visit thedicedungeon.co.uk forward slash collections forward slash Rusty dash Quill to find out more. There are also new designs available on our official merchandise stores for t-shirts, stickers, posters and more. Check the links in the description or go to www.rustyquill.com forward slash support. Thanks for listening. We hope you enjoy the show. the new mystery each week and is from the brilliant creator behind other great shows that include Spirit Box Radio and Not Quite Dead. When we die, the remnants of us return to the first and last place. Our fate is decided by Sir and his new apprentice, who read our remnants to determine whether they should be reshelfed or discarded. But what are the criteria? What happens to discarded souls? How are new lives for the reshelfs determined? And why, after untold stretches of existence, has Sir decided that he needs help to do it?
Starting point is 00:02:08 Remnants explores the boundaries between right and wrong, examining humanity from its brightest and best to its darkest and most frightening, and all the grey in between. To listen, search for Remnants in audio drama wherever you listen to your podcasts. Or for more information, go to HangingSlothStudios.com slash remnant or www.rustyquill.com. Let's face it, most meal replacements are rough on sensitive stomachs, not Sperry. Sperry is a complete plant-based meal crafted for better digestion. What makes Sperry different? It's 100% allergen-free with no dairy or harsh artificial ingredients. So it's gentle on your stomach and safe for all common food allergies and digestive issues. It's also packed with premium plant-based proteins to
Starting point is 00:02:48 keep you satisfied, plus all the essential nutrients for sustained energy. Try Sperry and get 15% off at Sperry.ca with code podcast 15. Sperry, trust nature. This episode is dedicated from Cassidy. To the friends I've met thanks to Magnus, to my cat Neiron, who patiently allowed me to listen and re-listen to episodes instead of giving him pets as is his right, and to the cup of tea the person listening to this likely forgot to drink. Rusty Quill presents... The Magnus Protocol. Episode 25 – Gut Feelings The Hey. Hey. How was it? Well, it was pretty good. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here.
Starting point is 00:04:26 I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here.
Starting point is 00:04:34 I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here.
Starting point is 00:04:42 I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. Ied and ate me, if that's what you're worried about. Good. Probably not enough meat on you anyway. Barely a snack. Have you heard from Celia? She's fine too.
Starting point is 00:05:04 Got a text from her a few minutes ago. She's running late again. Another childcare emergency? Sounds like it. But she is, and I quote, definitely not dead. Please reassure Alice. Christ, am I that bad? You don't want me to answer that. Sorry. I get it. You're worried. I mean, we are too. And that's why we're being careful. But like, you know when a dog gets nervous and starts barking at the postman because
Starting point is 00:05:32 it's worried he might secretly be a murderer or whatever? Wow, okay. Well, first of all, statistically, 73% of all postmen are murderers. And second, you better not compare me to a dog again, or I will start humping your leg. Ha ha, noted. Any sign of Gwen, by the way? Not that I imagine it would devastate you if she got a bit monsterised. How dare you! I would definitely consider being sad about it at some point. But no, she's fine.
Starting point is 00:06:04 Got in a few minutes ago and was immediately dragged into some planning session with Lena. I assume they're deciding which of the ministers arse cheeks to snog when he visits. To Kiran Thar. UQ writes at mailpod.com. From Tom Connolly. Editor at museninepublishing.com. Date February 07 20 24 subject re hungry man grill review
Starting point is 00:06:32 Hi Kieran, thanks for sending the review. It was a real ride That said sorry to be blunt as it sounds like you've had a rough one But I'm afraid we just can't publish it as is. I know I usually only give you a few line edits, but I think this one needs a full redraft. First up, it's way too anecdotal. I know that Dirty Eating is a personality-driven series, but it takes you over half the review just to get to the food. And the whole tone of the piece is off in a way that makes it kind of hard to take seriously. We're looking for early 2000s Gordon Ramsay rage. I don't know who you're channeling in this one. Ironimus Bosch?
Starting point is 00:07:10 Regardless, it needs to be more in line with your previous reviews. I also don't actually understand what you mean when you talk about the diner's location. Also, and I hope I'm off base here, does that ending mean you're planning to retire? Fingers crossed that's not the case, but if you are looking to get out of the game, I would have hoped you would actually talk it through with me and not let me know through some surreal faux review. Are you available for a call tomorrow? Would love to get on the line and hash all this out. All the best. Original message to Tom Connolly, editor at news9publishing.com from Kieran Hart, eqwrites at mailpod.com, date February 06-20-24. Tom, here's your review. I hope you choke on it. Dirty eating, the hungry man grill, Newham. It has often been said that there is nothing in this world as satisfying to read as a truly bad
Starting point is 00:08:11 review. The writer, unchained at last from the need for balance and consideration, can unleash the full force of their pen, indulging in turns of phrase and condemnation as vile and awful as the food they have been served and it was with full knowledge of this that I began the Dirty Eating column four years ago. While I certainly wasn't lying when I told you my aim was to push back on health food puritanism by profiling the grimeiest and most deep-fried of roadside eateries and greasy spoons, I was also quite certain that I'd get to write a lot of bad reviews. And I did. And no doubt you devoured them greedily, reveling in my bile and disdain. Perhaps the Hungry Man Grill is my punishment. Perhaps it is all of our punishments. I found it down a small side road in Newo, though should you be in line for a seat at its table I have no doubt it will move to accommodate your booking. I shall not
Starting point is 00:09:11 give you the address as even if I should be wrong and it remains where I found it, I would not risk those who consider themselves adventurous eaters going to find it. The question of where I first heard about the place is one that has preoccupied me since my visit. It was nestled in the list of reviews I was due to write, far enough down so as not to draw attention, but when I think about those long hours of research I spent compiling my monthly itinerary of Epicurean disasters, I cannot recall adding it. Nor was there anything written in my notes to explain why I might have considered it worth visiting. This, however, is something I have realised only since the end of my meal there. At the time, I simply accepted it as the next stop on my grand tour of London,
Starting point is 00:09:56 Greece and made my way down there on an otherwise unremarkable Tuesday lunchtime. Finding the place was more challenging than expected, as the address I had apparently noted down did not correspond precisely to the roads I found myself on, and my sat nav kept sending me around in circles. It was only when I noticed a grim little alleyway tucked behind an overflowing skip looming in front of a closed down vape shop that I finally found my destination. The street was narrow and steeper than I would have expected from that part of London, and as I made my way gingerly down it, I nearly slipped and fell twice. The cobbled stones were slick and oily, stained by small rivulets of old fat that leaked from
Starting point is 00:10:39 the torn plastic of the bin bags that were piled up on either side. Small white shapes dotted them, and I turned my eyes away, reluctant to come face to face with the maggoty refuse so close to the time and place I would, supposedly, be eating my lunch. Perhaps this is what the astute reader might have pointed out as my first warning, but to be clear, it was not. Unpleasant and extreme as the place was, it was far from unique in my odyssey to the heart of the capital's least healthy eating houses. Such fly-blown paths have more than once led me to hidden gems serving deep-fried masterpieces and symphonies of fat
Starting point is 00:11:17 and batter. No, my first warning was that as I approached the filthy sign at the bottom of the street, I felt hungry. No doubt those who regularly indulge in my columns will raise an eyebrow at this. Lavish prose extemporizing the depths of my ravenous hunger are a common feature of my more ebullient reviews, and here is where I must reveal that these, all of these, were lies. It has in fact been my habit of a day when I am to visit one of these establishments to ensure I have had a full and proper lunch beforehand. My reasoning is, I should hope, obvious. Given how vile many of these diners can be, I always wish to be in complete control of how much of their food I wish to eat, and
Starting point is 00:12:01 not be compelled by hunger to take more than a single bite if I do not wish to. On this particular day, I had fortified myself not an hour before with a sizeable sandwich from the Green Pig, a reliable cafe near Embankment. And yet, as I walked down that fetid, noxious alleyway towards the dimly buzzing sign for the Hungry Man Grill, I found myself, well, I found myself a hungry man. Nor was it the sort of hunger that I am accustomed to. It was not the creeping, gentle ache of the stomach that alerts the mind to a need for
Starting point is 00:12:34 sustenance. Rather, I felt it in my whole body, a sudden weakness and trembling in my legs, punctuated with the most terrible emptiness I have ever known in the depths of my gut. The feeling was so thorough, so profound and unsettling that part of my mind rebelled, desperately telling me to turn and leave, but my appetite pushed me onwards, towards the doorway that seemed to hold the most immediate promise of food. There was the smallest hint of resistance when I pushed on the door. Perhaps it was a symptom of my own reluctance to enter, or perhaps another manifestation of that sticky,
Starting point is 00:13:10 pervasive filth that I soon realised coated everything inside. In layout and decor, it is everything you would expect from an ageing greasy spoon, from the red plastic of the chairs to the chipped formica of the tables. Faded posters advertising illegible meal deals papered the walls interspersed with picture frames containing photos of supposed celebrities who had eaten there. I recognized none of them and they did not look happy to be on the wall of the Hungry Man Grill. There were other people eating there, hunched over the tables in silence, but when I first entered I took no notice of them so overwhelming was my agonized appetite. I slumped down at an empty table, noticing but paying no mind to the tiny shapes that scurried away into the shadows when I did so. There was no counter that I could see or any obvious waitstaff to take my order,
Starting point is 00:14:00 but I did not have the strength to stand up again and go looking. All I could do was wait, and it was as I waited that two things hit me at once. The first was the smell. I've been to more than one restaurant where the fridge had failed, and the smell lingers with you, most notably the cloying, vomity smell of spoiled milk that nothing seems to shift. There were hints of other things in there as well, the sweeter notes of rancid meat and something acrid and chemical, all carried on a base of old and overused cooking oil. To say it was the worst smell I have ever encountered would be redundant. And yet, it did nothing to quash my hunger. If anything, it seemed to make it sharper still.
Starting point is 00:14:47 The other was my fellow diners. Thin, ragged people lost in old suits and tattered dresses, all bedecked with a gruesome rainbow of ancient food stains. They said nothing, but many of them seemed to be openly weeping as they shoveled forkful after forkful of their meal desperately into their toothless mouths. And that was when I saw the food. Even in my weakened state, the sight of it was almost enough to send me running, but I did not have time to even get to my feet before the door at the back opened and the chef walked out. He was, underneath it all,
Starting point is 00:15:27 a very normal looking man. Average height, slim build, dark brown hair, but he was a normal looking man born of an overflowing waist bin and baptized in a deep fat fryer. Every part of him was caked in grime and slick with a dozen varieties of viscous ooze. And in his hand, he carried my plate. Order up, he said. This is what you're here for, isn't it? This is why you read these reviews. The money shot of awful food.
Starting point is 00:16:01 The lurid, exquisite descriptions of the most disgusting food imaginable. What did it taste like? What was the texture? Did I throw up? How much of it did I choke down, feeling the writhing lumps sliding slowly down my throat? Fine. The first course was soup. Viscous, creamy white with streaks of lurid green. Thin, pale strands floated in it that were I to try and rationalise I would pretend were noodles. But noodles don't move like that. Noodles don't leap off the spoon and crawl eagerly down your throat. The soup itself was oily with a sour, metallic tang to it, both too watery and too lumpy, with an aftertaste reminiscent of a week old unchanged bandage. I swallowed every last mouthful, so acute
Starting point is 00:16:53 and agonising was my hunger. Yet still it grew. So down came the second course. The contents of the burger might once have been meat, but if it were beef, lamb or something else entirely, it was impossible to say now. It glistened with a putrid rainbow sheen as though it were coated in some sort of petrol, and I could not tell if the thick pus-like substance that dripped from it was some awful condiment or an emanation of the meat itself. By contrast, the bun seemed, at first glance, almost edible. Touched stale, perhaps, slightly discoloured, but no obvious signs of mould or rot. It was only when the jagged knife of rising hunger forced me to bite down into it that I felt the thousands of tiny rice-like
Starting point is 00:17:43 weevils that crawled within its hollow shell. My reviewer's arsenal of descriptors fails me when I try to describe the taste of that burger. Fetid, foul, noxious, none quite encapsulate the experience. Was it sweet? Yes. But the sweetness of spoiled milk. Was it salty? Yes. But the saltiness of infected blood. Was it bitter? Yes. Perhaps that is the only word I can be sure of. Bitter in a way that went beyond the tongue and seeped its way into my brain. I can still taste it. The weevils were the most palatable part after they'd stopped moving and my teeth had ground them into a paste, but that took an awful lot of chewing. I will perhaps skip the detailed portrait of dessert. Suffice it to say it was presented
Starting point is 00:18:37 as an ice cream cake, and no matter how much I willed myself to throw it back up, to purge myself in a vomitous fury, my ever-growing hunger kept me eating. At that moment, there was a feeling almost like hope. Starter. Main. Dessert. I had finished. Surely that was enough. But despite the roiling fullness in my stomach, I was still ravenous, far hungrier than when I started. And as the chef, if so I might call him, walked back into the kitchen, I knew there would be more coming. I knew there would always be more. It took every ounce of strength I had to rise from that table.
Starting point is 00:19:22 I tapped into some core of resolve I never knew I possessed, pulling myself away, surrounded by diners who would never stand up again and fleeing, stumbling blindly out into the sunlit London afternoon. This will be my last review. Not simply because I am afraid to cross the threshold of another restaurant, terrified that on the other side I might find myself back in that place. But because even now, a week after I took my last bite at the Hungry Man Grill, I can still feel that food inside me. It sits in my stomach, pulsating, heavy and growing. I can feel it pressing against the inside of my flesh even as I write this. See it bloating and distending my belly.
Starting point is 00:20:11 And I am still hungry. In conclusion, a meal at the Hungry Man Grill will stay with you until your dying day. Well that brings back uni memories doesn't it? Does it? The student uni in CAF. Oh god yeah! Ugh, how could I forget those sloppy joes? Sloppy was definitely the word.
Starting point is 00:20:41 I can still taste it. Do you remember when they tried to do a veggie option and it just... Oh, er, hi Colin. Oh hey Colin! I thought you weren't... Colin? Mate? What er... What's with the hammer?
Starting point is 00:21:00 Stay out of my way Alice. Um, Colin? What are you... Jesus! I'm going to the server room. I don't think that's a good idea, mate. I think you should listen to Alice... Shut up! Both of you just shut the fuck up! Don't you get it?
Starting point is 00:21:18 I'm trying to help save us from this goddamn fucking nightmare machine. Okay, okay, Colin, listen to me alright. We've all seen messed up things happening recently. You say the computers need to be destroyed. We can totally believe that, right Sam? I mean yeah, that actually sounds pretty plausible right now. Yeah but you can't just start smashing shit without explaining what's going on. No, it's listening!
Starting point is 00:21:45 But that doesn't matter if you're going to smash it into bits, does it? So, why don't you just tell us? That's only if it lives in the servers. If not, then... Then let's go somewhere beyond here. There isn't anywhere! That's the problem! You're not making sense, Colin. No, you just don't get it.
Starting point is 00:22:03 You don't believe me. You're just trying to buy time. Keep me busy until... Colin, that's not what we... Drop it! Come on! Come on! Come on for me! Come on!
Starting point is 00:22:16 Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on!
Starting point is 00:22:24 Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! Come on! So, does anyone care to explain why you thought it was a good idea to tackle an unstable armed man on government property without alerting the authorities? Is Colin going to be okay? I doubt it. But since he's in custody, the matter is out of our hands. The OIAR's mental health policies only stretch so far, and this became a police matter as soon as he attacked government property and employees.
Starting point is 00:22:57 It's a miracle no one was hurt. A miracle that cost us three computer terminals and damaged a server rack. So I'll ask again. What on earth were you thinking confronting him like that? We were trying to talk him down. Oh really? Because it looked to me like Sam attempted to body tackle him. I thought he might hurt Alice.
Starting point is 00:23:18 How very chivalrous. And foolish. I expect you to review our liability waivers before you attack any other hammer-wielding maniacs is that clear crystal good now how's the system looking Gwen it seems fine as far as I can tell the server damage was superficial but again as I keep saying I'm not an IT expert I don't actually know how any of this works, so... I shall have someone take a closer look in due course.
Starting point is 00:23:48 In the meantime, I want you all focusing on cleaning everything up ahead of the minister's visit. Understood. No, no, hang on a minute. I think we need to discuss if Colin's right. Right about what, exactly? About the system listening in on us? About there being something dangerous in the computers No, I'm done playing office intern after everything else that's been going on. It would be stupid of us not to even consider it
Starting point is 00:24:14 While I understand your concerns Sam. There's no way we can realistically act on them Whatever quirks the system might have, it is still essential for departmental functionality and interfering with government equipment is a criminal offense. As it is, Colin will be lucky to avoid charges of domestic terrorism. So what do you suggest? I suggest you do as you are told and clean up. Meanwhile, I will begin looking for a replacement IT manager, as if we didn't have enough new hires already. Speaking of which, does anyone know where Celia is? She had an emergency. She's not sure when she's going to get in. Let me
Starting point is 00:24:54 know as soon as she does. Her repeated absences have become a problem and I will not hesitate to add a second position to the jobs page if I have to. I'll tell her. See that you do. Now if that's everything I would appreciate it if you would all get to work. And please refrain from any further attempts at heroism on government property. I could do without the paperwork. Hi, erm, could you tell me when the next coach to London is? Oh, you're in luck. Should be any minute. If you need a ticket, the machine's over there. Right. Cheers. Er, can I pay by phone? Yeah, should be able to.
Starting point is 00:25:43 Sigh. Yeah, should be able to. Listen, is everything alright? Not to be rude, but you're looking like you've had a bit of a time of it. No, yeah, I'm alright. Just a lot of last minute travel recently. If you're sure. Well, best get that ticket. Looks like this is your coach. Oh, right. Thanks! Just try and get some rest when you get home, yeah?
Starting point is 00:26:09 Yeah. Right. The Magnus Protocol is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial share alike 4.0 international license. The series is created by Jonathan Sims and Alexander J. Newell and directed by Alexander J. Newell, and directed by Alexander J. Newell. This episode was written by Jonathan Sims and edited with additional materials by Alexander J. Newell, with vocal edits by Nico Vitesse, soundscaping by Meg McKellar, and mastering by Catherine Rinella, with music by Sam Jones. It featured Billy Hindle as Alice Dyer, Shahan Hamza as Samarma Khalid, Anuja Battersby as Gwen Bouchard, Laurie Ann Davis as Celia Ripley, Sarah Lambie as Lena Kelly, Ryan Hope Veer Anderson as Colin Becker,
Starting point is 00:27:22 with additional voices from Alexander Jane Ewell. Anderson as Colin Becker with additional voices from Alexander Jane Yule. The Magnus Protocol is produced by April Sumner with executive producers Alexander Jane Yule, Danny McDonough, Lynn See and Samantha F.G. Hamilton and associate producers Jordan L. Hawke, Taylor Michaels, Nicole Perlman, Cetia Steraven and Megan Nice. Cetius de Raven and Megan Nice. To subscribe, view associated materials, or join our Patreon, visit RustyQuill.com. Rate and review us online, tweet us at TheRustyQuill, visit us on Facebook, or email us at mail at RustyQuill.com. Thanks for listening. Hainai, a podcast recently launched on the RQ network. Hainai has an atmospheric analog-style horror audio drama featuring folk horror, mythology and chilling supernatural terrors in an urban setting. Follow Mari, a Filipino
Starting point is 00:28:32 immigrant in Toronto who casually handles supernatural threats like it's just another Tuesday, using her lived experience raised by her Babylon mother to save the city from unimaginable horrors. She's joined by two supernatural detectives Donna and Murphy, her strong-armed lesbian neighbor Laura and Ashvin, a conman guru with real magic powers. The title, Hi-Nai or Hi-Mum, comes from Mari Phonkhan and I, or Mother, in the Philippines about her adventures. Season 1 has our protagonist face rich immortal occultists from the early 1900s called Elders, who feed off ordinary people's deaths. In particular they must hunt down
Starting point is 00:29:02 the Elders' leader, the Benefactor, who's so powerful nobody remembers his face or name. The story centers mystical immigrants fighting the supernatural to cope with the real-life horrors of fascism and corruption, which characterize Mari's childhood flashbacks in the Philippines. Search for Hainai wherever you listen to your podcasts, or go to HainaiPod.com or www.rustyquill.com for more information. Let's face it, most meal replacements are rough, unsensitive stomach www.rustyquill.com for more information. Let's face it, most meal replacements are rough on sensitive stomachs, not Sperry. Sperry is a complete plant-based meal crafted for better digestion. What makes Sperry different?
Starting point is 00:29:34 It's 100% allergen-free with no dairy or harsh artificial ingredients. So it's gentle on your stomach and safe for all common food allergies and digestive issues. It's also packed with premium plant-based proteins to keep you satisfied, plus all the essential nutrients for sustained energy. Try Sperry and get 15% off at Sperry.ca with code PODCAST15. Sperry. Trust Nature.

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