Sunday, July 12, 2020

Moving Things


Chapter 1

The Trunk

The Levers were a family of four. At first, there were three of them and then came the baby. The house they currently lived in had two bedrooms, but they needed three. So they decided to move to a bigger place.

It took them around two months to find a three-bedroom house they could afford. Mr. Lever brought out the Mover’s number which he kept in his safe, and dialed them up.

“Hello, the Moving Things’ office. How can I help you?”

“Hello, this is Russell Lever. I need to move by the end of this month. Can I get a date?”

“Please give me your customer’s ID.”

“Yes, it’s LVR333X9W.”

“Mr. Lever, is the 30th okay for you?”

“The 30th is okay.”

“Alright. The Movers will be there at 10 am. Please make sure to put all the movables in movable boxes before that.”

“Okay, I will.”

The 30th came pretty soon as it was only in a week after the call. The Levers gathered all the movables and put them in the movable boxes.

On the morning of the 30th, they woke up very early in the morning and got ready by 8. They only had dry toast for breakfast, taking them out directly from the toaster. After they were done eating, Tommy put the toaster in its box.

When it was exactly 10, the Movers arrived. From as far as Russell could remember, he thought that they brought the same van they used to move his things in that house 5 years ago. Maybe, he thought, Moving Things used a particular van for a particular customer. He asked one of the movers about this. She replied, “I don’t know if it’s the same van or not. I didn’t work in the company 5 years ago.”

He went to ask somebody else, but before he could open his mouth the man told him to go sit outside as they were going to start the moving. Reluctantly, he took his wife and children, and went outside and sat on the waiting chairs the company had brought. They even set up a large umbrella over them.

Tommy asked his father why the van is so close to the ground because no other vehicle was like that. Russell said that the lower height allowed the things to go into the van without stumbling over.

Tommy had never seen moving from such a close distance. He actually wanted to go inside the house and watch the movers give the commands. But his mother told him not to, as he might get in the way of the things.

As they sat expecting the things to start walking out one by one, the sky became cloudy and a gust of wind tried to blow away their umbrella. Cindy began to feel a bit worried; she didn’t want the things to get wet. And she has heard that if an immovable got wet while moving, it would freeze and not move anymore. The worst part for her was that the company took those frozen things back, and then they would need to buy a new one. She could do with a sofa with its legs out instead of spending money on a new one.

One of the Movers, the woman Russell spoke to earlier, came out of the house and asked Russell to go inside with her. Cindy asked if everything was alright, but the Mover didn’t wait to answer her. Russell looked at his wife with some worry in his face and then hurried back inside.

When Russell went in, he saw that all the immovables had their legs out and were waiting for their next command. The woman ushered her upstairs to his son’s room.

Once he was in Tommy’s room, he found that most of the Mover’s were present there. He asked them what the matter was. Another woman came toward him and asked him about the trunk that was under Tommy’s bed.

“It was there under the bed when we first moved in. We didn’t know about it at first, the previous owner didn’t tell us about it. She only told us that we get the bed along with the house if it was okay with us. We were fine as the bed was fine. Only much later we found the trunk when Tommy crawled under the bed one day.”

“The trunk isn’t in our list of items, and we contacted the office, they don’t have any info about its command either.”

“So, leave the trunk. I don’t need it. I don’t even know what’s inside it.”

“The problem is, the trunk is not letting the bed move. It is holding on to it very tightly.”

“How can the trunk hold on to the bed?”

“It is holding the bed with its hands.”

“What? I didn’t know immovables had hands.”

“Normally, immovables can only have legs. That’s all they need. But when an immovable has not been touched by human hand for a long time, like for 50 years, it tends to grow its own hands automatically.”

“What! How can that be! And why aren’t people informed about this?”

“The moving command was invented based on the single condition that the immovables will need to be touched by people at least once in every 50 years. And cases like this trunk are so rare that even we tend to forget about it.”

“So, what can you do about it? Tommy needs the bed, and it’s also a listed item. I don’t have the money to buy a new bed right now.”

“Robin is trying to persuade the trunk to let go of the bed. He’s under there.”

A man came out from under the bed just as she said this.

“Success! The trunk has let go of the bed. We can move it now.”

Then he took out what looked like the end of a stethoscope and pressed it on the frame of the bed. Russell once thought that the moving command must be very complex, something other people would not be able to understand. But as he found out years ago, it was simply “Move”.

When the man gave the command, the four legs of the beds became actual legs with toes and everything. Then he went to the door of the bedroom and said “Come”. The bed began to move towards him and then slowly squeezed out through the door.

Then they finally looked at the trunk and its hands. It was a small, blue trunk with blue arms on its sides. The color had faded in places, but otherwise it looked okay.

The woman, who had explained the situation to Russell earlier, went and opened the trunk. Inside, as Russell looked from her side along with others, were a few ordinary things: a yellow blanket, a pair of sunglasses, a gray umbrella, and under them all, a number of cigarette butts.

Chapter 2

The Umbrella

It was a very cloudy day. White pigeons flew vividly across the ashen sky. There were men tearing down an old building, which they would soon replace with a new one.

Charlie was standing at his front door, with a gray umbrella in hand in case it started to rain. The Movers were bringing his new trunk that day. He was going to store all of Maurice’s things in it.

If he really were to put all of Maurice’s things, he would have had to fold the whole house down. But he was going to put only the things which were dearest to her. She didn’t love the house. She always complained that it smelled bad. Charlie couldn’t make her understand that there was no smell.

Then one day, Maurice was gone leaving behind everything she brought with herself. In her letter, she said those things had also begun to smell bad just as the house did.

After sulking for 2 years, Charlie had finally decided to move on. So, he needed to get closure with Maurice.

The Moving Things van arrived at the right time. By then it had already begun to drizzle.

Two Movers brought in the trunk by hand, as it was faster than to let the trunk walk in by itself. The rain could damage the new product. And if it did get damaged before entering the house, they would have to replace it free of charge.

Charlie opened the door to let the Movers go inside. They put the trunk in the living room, and to show Charlie that it was a good product, one of them gave it the “Move” command. Four small feet appeared under it from its four sides.

The trunk seemed a bit anxious to Charlie. When he asked them about it, one of them said

“Brand new products tend to be a bit jittery, especially if it’s hollow inside. If you put something in, it will become stable.”

At that moment, the other Mover opened the trunk and put a pen in it. And then when he closed the hood, the trunk seemed to relax in an instant.

“There.”

Charlie signed the papers and paid the money. Meanwhile one of the Movers began to take the trunk upstairs.

After the paperwork was done, Charlie went upstairs and found the trunk and the man standing in front of his bedroom door. He went and opened it, and the trunk followed them inside.

“Where do you want to put it?”

“There, right by the wall.”

“Alright.”

When everything was put in its place, the Movers went away. Before Charlie got down to close the front door, he left his umbrella on top of the new trunk. It belonged to Maurice, and was going to be stored inside the trunk later on.

As he was about to close the door, one of the men said

“Remember to check the trunk now and then.”

“Sure.”

He closed the door and went to sit on the couch in his living room. It was going to be hard for him to put away all of Maurice’s things. He was actually still hoping that she would come back.

Heaving a sigh, he got up after some time and decided to watch the TV.

He went behind the TV, fumbled for the power cord, and when he found it, he lazily moved towards the power outlet. The world went dark the moment the plug touched the power outlet.

At the same time, Maurice called him on the telephone. When he didn’t pick up the first time, she called him again. And again and again and again.

Maurice called Charlie all through the day and night, and still he didn’t answer the phone. At first, she thought he was angry and that’s why he didn’t answer her call. But Charlie was never the kind of person who wouldn’t answer the phone.

So, the next day she went to his house. He didn’t even open the door when she rang the bell for 10 times. That was also unlike Charlie.

“Was he not at home?”

When they met for the first time after she had gone away leaving behind the letter, Charlie had made her take the spare house key.

“I will never need it, Charlie.”

“Please keep it. I have washed it with soap, it doesn’t smell bad. So, please take it.”

She knew that Charlie still hoped that she was going to go back to him. She couldn’t make him understand that she was gone for good.

She took out that key and opened the door.

“It’s that awful smell again. Do I really want to come back here?”

But before she could take another step in, a thought occurred to her.

“Wait, this time the smell is real. How can it be?”

When Maurice used to live with Charlie in that house, she thought that the place smelled bad. But the smell was only in her head, it was never real. She used to complain about it because she likes to complain about things. It was a bad habit of hers.

However, this time it was real.

She went inside and into the living room. She saw nobody at first, and so she went to the stairs. She was about to call Charlie when she noticed that he was lying face down behind the TV.

Charlie had no other relatives, so she kept the house. But she never lived there. In fact, she didn’t touch anything and didn’t let others touch anything. Everything remained the way Charlie had kept it, including the gray umbrella on top of the trunk.

And like that more than 50 years went by. As her health began to deteriorate, she decided to sell the house. She called the office of the Moving Things and had them transfer all the things inside the house to anybody who was willing to take it.

Most of the things were not in any shape to use as the house had been uninhabited all these years. Of the few things that were usable and were sold to the Homers, the trunk was one of them.

The Homers moved in and began to renovate the house to their liking. When they went to check which was once Charlie’s bedroom, they found just a trunk there. They later forgot about it and so when the Movers placed their bed over it, they didn’t say a thing.

Walther and Gabe finished decorating their new home in two weeks. During this time, they had slept in the living room as the bed wasn’t delivered yet. When everything was done, they both lit a cigarette and went to sleep in their new bedroom. 

Chapter 3

The Cigarette Butts

When Gabe and Walther went into their new bedroom, the latter sighed.

“What’s wrong?” Gabe asked.

“I forgot to buy a new ashtray for the bedroom,” Walther answered with a long face. “We have to make do for tonight, I guess.”

“It’s alright, I’ll buy one tomorrow. We will have to go to the supermarket anyway. We also need to buy some groceries.”

They smoked a few more cigarettes before finally going to bed. The last month had been hectic for them. They felt lucky for getting that house and some usable furniture at such a low price.

“I heard that the previous owner died at a very young age and his lover kept the house locked for years to keep his spirit happy.” Gabe wondered aloud. “Do you think his spirit would be happy that we changed almost everything in his house?”

“It’s hard to say. I’ve never been that well-spoken with spirits.” Walther said smiling.

“My mother used to say that a happy house kept the people living inside it happy.”

“Gabe, we are happy, are we not?” “Yes, love.”

They put the makeshift ashtray on the ground and soon fell asleep.

The next day, Gabe went shopping alone and Walther stayed home to dust the house. He took his time cleaning every corner of the house. And while he did that, he kept thinking about what Gabe’s mom used to say: a happy house keeps the people living inside it happy.

They were happy, he thought. They had been happy before they moved into that house, and they were still happy afterward. So, what exactly kept them happy?

“Cigarettes, I guess. Yeah, whether it’s sadness or happiness, cigarettes have always been with us. So, I guess that’s what it is.”

Gabe and Walther first met while buying cigarettes. They both liked the same brand, and so their first conversation was mostly about that.

They met each other in the same way a few more times. It was completely by chance.

Soon they decided to meet at a different place, where they could sit down and have something other than cigarettes.

In fact, cigarettes became such a big part of their relationship that when they got married they vowed that one would not have lung cancer before the other. The priest wasn’t happy, but he still laughed along with the rest of the guests.

By the time Gabe returned, it was almost lunchtime. So, he brought some food with him.

“Shit, I forgot to buy the ashtray.” Gabe cursed.

“It’s okay. And it’s not like that’d stop us from enjoying a good smoke.”

“You know, we should finally get serious about quitting it. If we are going to have a kid, we can’t be smoking around him or her.”

“Let’s keep it up until we begin the adoption process,” Walther said with mischief.

“I think that’s a good idea.” Gabe seemed to be deep in thought as he said this. “Oh, Walther. We are both such enablers.”

“By the way, did you throw away the butts from last night?” Walther asked Gabe as they washed the dishes.

“Butts? What butts?” Gabe gave his husband a puzzled look.

“I mean, the cigarette butts. The ones we left in the ashtray at the foot of the bed before going to bed.”

“No, I didn’t. Why?”

“When I went to clean it out in the morning, I didn’t find them on the ashtray.”

“Maybe they rolled under the bed? The ashtray was basically a plastic cup.”

“I guess.” Walther shrugged. “But the cup was still upright.”

“Then I have no idea.” Gabe shrugged too.

“I will check under the bed. Maybe the previous owner’s spirit is sleeping there and felt like smoking too.”

“Then we should give him a whole cigarette.”

“But aren’t spirits are like smoke themselves? How will a smoke person smoke cigarettes?”

“Well, my love, that’s a very hard question. And thinking about all this smoke is making want to smoke.”

And so they forgot about the missing cigarette butts and went to the living room to smoke cigarettes and talk about how they should quit it.

They did quit once their first adoption process was complete. They got to have a boy the first time, and the second time, a girl.

As their second adoption was getting processed, Gabe told Walther one day that they would need to move to a bigger house. “We can have the kids sleep in the same room for now, but very soon they will need separate rooms.”

“I guess, that wouldn’t be in the next 5 years?”

“Yeah, I guess.”

“Then we can save in that time and get a bigger place after 5 years. It might take more than that, and it would be hard to get by while we are saving.”

“We can manage that. As long as the kids get the things they need, we can always manage.”

In the next 7 years, the Homer family made a lot of memories in that house. They did found out the trunk under the bed, but they couldn’t open it no matter how hard they tried. The biggest problem was that they couldn’t even bring it out from under the bed.

They had a very busy life while they took care of their children and saved money for a bigger house. From time to time, Gabe wanted to call the Moving Things’ office and inquire about the trunk. But just as those missing cigarette butts, this also slipped his mind.

They sold the house to a woman named Frieda, who always wore big, round sunglasses. The few times Walther and Gabe met her, she always wore a different pair, and they always matched the rest of her outfit.

Their last day in the house was unceremonious. They took almost all the things, including the stuff they got from the previous owner. But they left the trunk. They told Frieda that the trunk was probably useless as it couldn’t be opened or moved for that matter. She didn’t care much.

“I guess, I will put a bed on it too, and forget about it.”

Chapter 4

The Sunglasses

Frieda had always lived a busy life. When she was a little girl, she had been busy taking care of her younger siblings. When she was a teenager and then when she went to university, she had been busy with her studies and earning money for her studies. When she got a job, she had been busy with the job.

She liked to put a mirror close to her house’s front door. She needed to know how she looked like before going out and after coming back. Some people called her narcissistic, but to Frieda her appearance was a thing as necessary as food. That is, it was something for her body and so it had to look good.

She had always been so busy surviving that she didn’t get to live until she was 30 and was earning a steady income. And the only thing she luxuriously indulged in was sunglasses.

She bought a pair of sunglasses with every new clothing item. Sometimes, she even bought them along with food.

She wore them almost all the time except when she was working at the office and when she was home. Though, if her mood asked for it, she even wore sunglasses at home sometimes.

She did put her bed over the trunk, and like the previous owners of the house, she soon forgot about it. The only other thing she put in her bedroom was a dresser, which was mostly full of her sunglasses.

She liked going to sleep looking at her sunglasses and waking up the same way. Sometimes when she couldn’t fall asleep, she would put on a pair of sunglasses and stare at the ceiling.

Frieda had made plans of moving to a distant coastal town, and buy a house from where she could directly look at the sea. Life had always run fast for her. Even when she slept, the nights seemed to be over in an instant. She wanted to rest, and some more sunglasses.

Like the previous owners, she had also heard about the first owner of the house. And she also didn’t know how he had died and why the house remained locked for over 50 years.

“Was it love?” she wondered loudly as she stared at the ceiling through her sunglasses.

“The woman had left him and then kept the house because of love? That doesn’t make sense,” she remarked to the empty bedroom.

“Then why?” she fell asleep as she kept asking the question over and over again. And she had a very strange dream.

She saw that the first owner of the house wasn’t dead but lived under the bed. He didn’t do much from under there. Sometimes he just put out his arms and searched for something. Something that could give meaning to his existence. Something. Anything.

To her horror, she saw his arms reaching for one of her glasses. She cried out and batted his hand away. For some reason, the hand felt very hard yet hollow. And it was definitely cold. It felt like a hand that was made of cold, hollow metal. In fact, it even made a sound such metal objects made. The feeling was nothing like that of touching a human hand.

She kept thinking about it and woke up with a start. She got up and counted all her sunglasses.

“All of them are here. What kind of weird dream did I dream?”

Then she got on with her usual routine. And that was how she spent the next 30 years of her life. During this time, she saved enough money to buy her retirement home. Nothing unusual happened other than losing one of her sunglasses. She couldn’t find it anywhere and as the years went on, she forgot about it too.

She called the Movers and returned most of her furniture for recycling. The Moving Things had produced so many things that they could use them later as raw materials for making more new things.

“A very self-sustained business” Frieda had thought when she heard about that system.

She didn’t return her bed, as the Movers said it was in good condition and could be used for some more time. So, she sold the house and the bed to Russell Lever. She had totally forgotten about the trunk. And so it wasn’t officially handed over to Russell.

He and his wife took the other bedroom where they put their own bed and gave Frieda’s room to their son, Tommy. 

Chapter 5

The Yellow Blanket

The Levers moved into the house in a single day. They didn’t renovate or redecorate. They brought their old furniture and set them up. They were supposed to buy a new bed for Tommy, but they didn’t need to as they got one with the house.

Russell didn’t get to talk to the previous owner much. He only met her when he came to look at the house with his wife, Cindy. She didn’t seem like the person who liked talking much. He was contacted by the Moving Things company, as they also did the job of a realtor. And they did most of the paperwork.

From the neighborhood Cindy came to know about how the first owner of the house had died mysteriously, and how his lover, rather adding more to the existing mystery, had kept the house locked for over 50 years. Some even said that it was his lover who must have had killed him. And to make sure nobody got a whiff of it, she kept the house closed and got rid of all the evidence over the course of 50 years.

“Why would it take her 50 years to get rid of all the evidence?” Cindy couldn’t help asking.

“You know what I think? There must have been blood and guts all over the house. She took her time to clean it all up.”

“That should have been tiresome,” Cindy said thinking how hard it would be for her if she had to clean bloodstains smeared all over the house.

She and her family didn’t have to press pause on their otherwise busy life in order to get settled in a new place. The moving happened so swiftly those days that it was as if one just moved from one house to another which had the same furniture.

The only adjustment any of them needed to do was Tommy adjusting to his new bed. It was bigger than the one he used to sleep in. In fact, this was a real bed and the one he had before was more like a cot.

The new bed and the new house didn’t bother him much though. After all he had his yellow blanket. The blanket was the one thing he couldn’t live without.

If he could, he would take it to his kindergarten as well. But since it wasn’t allowed, he had to wait till he came back home to smother his face in his favorite blanket.

He wasn’t as attached to his mother as he was to the blanket. Or, so Russell told Cindy one night.

“If we went away one day without telling him, and left enough food for him, I don’t think he would even notice that his parents were gone.”

“What are you talking about? You are saying Tommy wouldn’t notice if we were gone one day without notice?” Cindy said with disbelief. “Our son loves us a lot, Russ, why would he not notice? I bet he would cry his eyes out.”

“Maybe he would. But I think as long as he has his blanket, he doesn’t care if we are there or not.”

“I didn’t know you were so coldhearted. Is this how you are going to behave if we have another kid?”

“I’m not coldhearted, honey. Have you seen how much Tommy loves that blanket? He doesn’t even let us touch it. That’s the one thing he washes and dries. And we can’t even make him take a shower every day.” Russell shrugged as he got into bed beside his wife.

“He loves the blanket alright. But that’s how kids are. They can get very attached to something, and then forget about it the next day.”

“Now that’s coldhearted.” “Tommy is your son too, don’t be such an ass.”

Tommy did forget about the blanket after only a year of moving into the house.

The blanket would sometimes fall off the bed during the night. Then in the morning, Tommy would pick it up and wash it and dry it before he went to school.

That’s how it had always been, until one day he didn’t pick it up in the morning. And when he came back from school that day, he didn’t even notice that the blanket was gone.

After another year had gone by and his mother was putting on a fresh sheet on his bed, he suddenly remembered the blanket. He tried to call back to mind what had happened to it, but couldn’t. He asked his mother, but she didn’t know anything either.

“You never let us touch the blanket, baby. How would I know where it is? Why, did you lose it?”

“It’s not like that. Anyway, forget it. Can I watch TV after dinner tonight? I want to watch that cooking show.”

“You don’t have school tomorrow, so you can.”

Later that night, when he came to his room he thought about checking under the bed. Maybe the blanket was there, he wondered.

But when he sat down and flashed a torch under his bed, the light caught some movement. He froze and lost his focus for a second. Some very traumatic memories came back to his mind, ones that the blanket had made easy to forget.

After about a week of moving into that house, Tommy wanted to check if there was any secret treasure under his bed. When his parents had fallen asleep, he took his father’s torch and flashed it under his bed.

He saw something blue along the wall across which his bed was kept. It looked shiny and he could hear some sort of sound. So, he crawled under the bed and went up to that blue thing.

It was cold and hard, and he could feel that it was shaking. It was slight, but he could feel it. And suddenly something as cold and as hard as that blue thing grabbed his feet. He screamed and quickly came out from under the bed.

Within seconds his parents were in his room and asked what had happened.

Tommy was crying so much that he couldn’t say a word.

“It’s alright, baby. We are here now, sssh, don’t cry, it’s okay.”

Russell also got beside his son. “Here son, what happened? Look, we are here now. You can stop crying. Please tell us what happened. We will make it go away, promise.”

Tommy calmed down after some time and told his parents what had happened. They then both looked under the bed, while Tommy stood facing the other way. And that’s when they found the trunk.

Russell went under the bed and tried to bring it out, but he couldn’t.

“What’s inside it that it’s so heavy?” He sighed as he came out from under the bed.

“Why didn’t you bring it out?” Cindy asked.

“I couldn’t. Either it’s too heavy or it’s been glued tight to the floor.”

After that, Cindy tried too, but with no result.

Then they tried to make Tommy understand that it was nothing scary. It was just a blue trunk. It took them half of the night to persuade him that there was nothing scary. At one point, Russell got up and brought a yellow sheet to cover the trunk so that Tommy wouldn’t have to see it.

However, Tommy said that he wants the sheet instead. He took the yellow sheet, put it on himself like a blanket, and went to sleep.

It’s been some years since that night, but Tommy found out that he still wasn’t sure if he was ready to go near the trunk.

Then his baby sister came one day, and after that, they were soon moving out of the house to go to a bigger place. 

 Chapter 6

The Trunk

“Do these belong to you?” The Mover woman asked Russell Lever.

Russell looked at the components of the trunk: a yellow blanket, a pair of sunglasses, a gray umbrella, and under them all, a number of cigarette butts. None of them seemed familiar to him.

“No, I don’t think so. Can you give me a minute? I’ll ask my wife if she knows anything.” Russell called his wife from his mobile phone.

“Russ, is everything okay?” Cindy asked as soon as she answered.

“Yes. Remember the trunk under Tommy’s bed?”

“Yeah, what about it?”

“It,” Russell took a deep breath, “grew hands.”

“What the hell are you talking about?” Cindy couldn’t understand what her husband was telling him.

“Yeah, the Movers said that if something isn’t touched by human hands at least once in 50 years that thing tends to grow hands.”

“I still don’t understand. I thought they only grew legs, and that so only after getting the command?”

“I also thought the same. So, anyway, the trunk was clutching on to Tommy’s bed and that’s why the bed couldn’t move. They called me up to ask about the trunk. Honey, do you remember putting anything inside the trunk?”

“No, I didn’t put anything in it. How could I have, we couldn’t even open that damn trunk.”

When Tommy heard his mother say “trunk”, he got very stiff. As if his mother was talking about something so deadly that even hearing its name made him his skin crawl. “What happened to the trunk, mom?”

His mother suddenly remembered what had happened all those years ago, and somehow she could realize what may have really gone down that night.

“It’s nothing, baby.” She didn’t want to give any more reason to be scared.

“Well, they found a bunch of stuff inside the trunk,” Russell told his wife.

“What stuff?”

“A blanket, an umbrella, a pair of sunglasses, and some cigarette butts.”

“Ah,” Cindy couldn’t make heads or tails about this weird assortment of things.

“Do you think Tommy may have put these things in the trunk?” Russell asked his wife.

“I don’t know. And if he had, he would have taken them out.”

“I guess you are right. So, the Movers will take the trunk away. They said there is a place for stuff like this at their HQ.”

“Yeah, let them take it away. That thing was never supposed to be there.”

The Movers then moved all of the things belonging to the Lever family to their new house. And afterward, they came back to the old house and took the trunk to the Moving Things headquarter.

There, they had a separate storage area where they kept things like that trunk. Some of the Movers were assigned to come and touch the trunk every once in a while.

Slowly, the hands shrank and never grew back again. Once they were assured that the trunk was not going to grow hands ever again, they took it to the recycling department where it was then broken down to make other new things.

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