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Lee Silver
The Twist
Zane Tollison’s wife is running through their cash faster than he can
make it. A “Hail Mary” contract with Clearwater Tobacco arrives in the nick
of time to keep his fledgling consulting firm afloat, and to unchain him
once and for all from his narcissistic wife.
Beautiful, brilliant, and estranged Kathy Davis is desperate for a new
beginning. The feisty post doc bio-geneticist jumps at an offer from
Clearwater, pouring her soul into a development that will revolutionize the
tobacco industry.
The two are unwittingly reeled into a convoluted plan to steal $12
million. Zane is changing into a carbon copy of Kathy, a pawn in a bizarre
genetic metamorphosis, entangling Kathy in a sinewy web of seduction and
deceit. Forging a bond that will set the course of their destiny, they fight
to overpower the diabolic hold that has taken over their lives.
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Theme: High Tech Metamorphosis
Length: 79,000 words
"I’ll admit it, I’m a geek! But setting a romance in the framework of
high tech intrigue, my technical background turned out to be my best friend.
I wanted a heroine who would stand toe to toe with the leading man and a
plot that would keep a reader on the edge of their seat.
The Twist is only
the beginning."
~
Lee ~ |
Larger Cover
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Cover Art by Jinger
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THE TWIST
ISBN: 1-60601-174-X
E-book $5.99

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EXCERPT 1
Zane heard the tap, tap, tap of a woman’s heels
on the tile floor as he stared at his watch anxiously waiting
for the elevator.
She was a tiny thing, not more than five foot
three, probably in her early thirties. She stepped up beside
him. Their eyes met and she smiled.
One of the big guns’ secretaries, I’ll bet.
Zane couldn’t keep his eyes off her.
Wearing a stylishly short, gray tweed business
suit, her long auburn hair was pulled in a French twist.
Designer gold-rim glasses framed her petite face and green eyes.
She looked like she had just stepped out of the latest issue of
Vogue.
Zane’s eyes followed her every move as she
stepped into the elevator. A leather notebook clenched to her
chest, she was one hundred percent professional and drop dead
gorgeous.
She turned to him, a ghost of a smile on her
lips. Looking Zane squarely in the eyes, she matter-of-factly
quipped, “All right, you’ve seen my ass. I guess you can come in
now.”
He turned beet red as he walked into the
elevator. The doors closed like a vault. “I, I am so sorry,
but—”
“No buts about it. I wouldn’t have said that if I
didn’t think you were cute.” She stepped out onto the second
floor “See ya!”
He stood, frozen like a pillar of salt, as he
watched her walk in slow motion down the hall.
“Seventh floor.”
“What did you say?”
She peered over her shoulder and grinned.
“Chorde’s office. It’s on the seventh floor.”
Eyes glued to the seam along the back of her
skirt, he opened his mouth to speak, but the words refused to
come.
She rounded the corner out of his sight. His eyes
still peering into the hall, Zane’s finger pressed the button
for the seventh floor. As the doors began to close, he blurted
out to the brushed steel walls of the elevator, “Thanks.”
* * * *
Chorde glanced at the clock as he reached for his
hand. “So good to see that you are prompt. Nine o’clock on the
button.”
Clenching his hand with a confident grip, Zane
put on a well-practiced smile. “Well, I try, Jonathon.” The
truth was he was late for everything. Pat often teased him that
he’d be late for his own funeral.
Jonathon Chorde was a stately gentleman in his
early sixties. His British accent and tailored, double-breasted
suit gave him an air of cosmopolitan sophistication. He was
medium height, perhaps five foot ten, balding, and a bit over
weight.
Chorde motioned towards two stuffed leather
chairs at the far corner of his office. He poured two cups of
tea from a silver carafe and offered a small serving tray.
“Pastry, Mr. Tollison?”
Never one to pass on a free breakfast, Zane
reached for a cherry Danish. He flashed a grin as he took an
over-sized bite. “Mr. Tollison was my father. You can call me
Zane.”
“As you please. Down to business then, shall we?” He set his cup on the marble tabletop and leaned
forward. “We are both businessmen. I shan’t beat around the
bush. Simply put, Clearwater wants to buy your name.”
A piece of Danish caught in Zane’s throat and he
coughed into his napkin.
Chorde ignored the outburst. “As I
indicated when I spoke to you yesterday, we are in the process
of pulling together a study to refute the accusations of the
anti-smoking coalitions. Although we certainly value your
insights, there is really very little we expect you to do. We
already know what we want to find, and except for going through
the motions of the actual ten-day investigation, our people have
basically completed the final report.”
He reached for his tea and leaned back in his
chair. Chorde continued, “We did feel that it was important for
you to actually be here while we conduct the study to lend a
touch of credence to the work. In any case, it will certainly
benefit us both for you to learn as much as you can about the
project. So you’ll be better prepared to field any questions
that might come up about the research in the future.
“We shan’t detain you once we’ve gathered our
data, but please, feel free to stay at Clearwater to dot and
cross whatever I’s and T’s you feel are necessary to put the
finishing touches to the report. After all, the findings are
going to be released by Tollison Consulting.” Chorde’s smile
could have belonged to the Grinch who stole Christmas. “We had
hoped we could attract your services and took the liberty of
having our legal people draft a preliminary agreement.”
He pushed a pen and a stack of papers towards
Zane, and reached for a French
cruller
as he continued, “A good faith advance in the amount of 1.15
million dollars shall be deposited to your account upon signing
the contract, with the balance being paid in ten equal
installments of 1.15 million dollars each day for the duration
of the study. The total for your services will be 12.65 million
dollars.
“The future of the entire tobacco industry
depends on the timely release of these findings. We shan’t
tolerate any mishaps. The agreement provides a rather stiff
penalty of 2.3 million dollars per day should you fail to see
the job through.” Chorde’s face grew cold as he glared over the
top of his glasses. “I prefer not to elaborate, but please
understand, this would be the least of your concerns if the
details of your actual role in the investigation should ever
chance to leave this room.”
Zane stared at the contract, contemplating the
contrast between the white paper and the brown marble tabletop.
Ever since he could remember, he had been a tinkerer. From high
tech military jets to antique cars, from tube-type radios to
house renovation, at one time or another, Zane had seen or
worked on just about every mechanical device imaginable.
Starting as a model builder as a child and learning the building
trades while working his way through college, there was very
little he could not or would not do. Combined with a graduate
degree in engineering, he was able to view most situations from
both sides of the fence.
A few well-timed hat tricks had earned him quite
a name for himself. After ten years in the aerospace industry,
Zane had managed to save a small nest egg and opened his own
consulting firm. Most of his clients were companies he had
worked with at one time or another while he was still in
aerospace. The work was sporadic, but at least he wasn’t a wage
slave for one of the airframe giants anymore. He smiled.
Living like a starving animal is a small price
to pay for your independence.
There were big contacts, with even bigger
expenses, but Elise’s addict-like preoccupation with her beauty
had brought him to his knees. There were spas and salons, waxes
and peels, life coaches and Feng Shui instructors, and a whole
host of female must-dos she assured he need not and could not
possibly understand. Added to her weekly jaunts to Europe to
shop at some swanky new boutique with one of her upscale
girlfriends, their bills were a four million dollar snowball
rolling down hill.
Zane twirled the ballpoint pen between his
fingers. A whole career boiled down to two simple choices: his
morals and financial ruin, or the answer to a prayer for selling
his professional reputation down the river.
Twelve million dollars.
Half for the Governor’s share, and a third to keep him out of
debtor’s prison, there would be a million apiece left so he and
Elise could go their separate ways.
Zane took a reflective bite from his Danish and
swallowed hard. “So where do I sign?”
* * * *
Zane studied the mother of pearl barrel of the
ballpoint as he slid the signed contract across the table. “Hmm,
Mont Blanc. Mind if I keep it?”
Chorde’s eyes followed Zane’s fingers as he stuck
the fountain pen in his shirt pocket.
“I will need a copy of that, Jonathon. So when do
we start?”
Chorde slipped the contract into his file drawer
and pressed a button on his telephone. “Of course. I’ll have my
secretary make one straight off. Time is of the essence. Since
you’re already here, I had hoped we could begin today.”
“Today?”
“Is that a problem, Mr. Tollison?” Chord pushed
his glasses up the bridge of his nose. “I didn’t think you were
a government worker.”
“Well, there are a couple of things I’ll need to
check on at the office, and I didn’t pack for the trip. But I
guess if there’s nothing I need to square away at home—”
“By all means, please make whatever arrangements
are necessary with your office and your wife.” He reached in the
top drawer of his desk and handed Zane a company charge card.
“Small amenities shan’t be a problem. You can purchase anything
you need for your stay with this. As far as the deposit, feel
free to check with your bank. I’m sure you will find everything
to be in order.”
A call confirmed that both the advance and the
first day’s deposit had already been credited to Zane’s account.
He regretted his unprofessionalism in feeling the need to verify
the deposit. If he had any doubts, it was becoming obvious
Jonathon Chorde didn’t miss a trick.
Zane picked up the phone and dialed his office.
As always, Pat’s friendly voice was on the other end.
“Tollison Consulting.”
“Pat, this is Zane.” He covered the mouthpiece
with his hand as he spoke. “You know that raise I was telling
you about?”
“Yes.”
His secretary had taken the bait. “Well, how
about I start you out with a bonus and a couple of weeks of
vacation?”
“Oh, thank the stars. I was afraid you were about
to let me go!”
“You know I’d fire myself first. That big
contract with Chorde…I got it!”
“Well, congratulations. That certainly is good
news.”
“I’ll be out of town for a couple of weeks. Close
up the office, turn on the answering machine, and write yourself
a company check for $20,000. I have a couple of pre-signed ones
in my bottom—”
“For heaven’s sake, I know where they’re at!
Zane, I don’t know what to say. I’m so happy for you.”
“You don’t have to say a thing. Go visit those
grandbabies of yours for a couple of weeks. I’ll give you a call
when I get back in town.”
“And did Mrs. Tollison approve of the flowers
last night?”
Zane smiled, a stirring in his pants as visions
of the night he’d spent with Elise flashed through his mind.
“Yeah, she loved ‘em. Thanks for sticking with me, Pat.” He
closed his cell phone with a snap.
One more call. The
sweat beaded on his forehead as Zane dialed Elise’s cell phone.
“Hiya sweetie,” she flirted.
“I got the contract!”
“Oooh, sweetie, I gotta talk to ya about that. I
mean like last night was so wonderful! I got to thinkin’ this
morning. About me and you and us, and this whole contract thing
…” Elise rambled like a broken record. “And I can probably even
give up the Fengs way, and, and everything! But I just got out
of the shower, and I’m like all dripping wet and—”
“You take care, Elise. I’ll be in touch.”
Maybe she isn’t as dumb as I thought.
He breathed a silent sigh of relief. Naw, she’s dumb all
right. Just greedy as hell.
Zane cleared his throat as he prepared to hang up
the phone. “Hugs and kis—”
“In touch?”
Oh shit, here it comes. The hair on the back of his neck stood up. “Uh,
yeah. The folks up here at Clearwater? They want me to start
today.”
“Today? Sure, why nawt? I can take care of things
around here again. I mean it’s only another ten days.”
Zane held the phone away from his ear. He could
always do without the sarcasm.
“Ya know, why’d ya even bother to call? You’re
gonna do what ya want anyway.”
He fidgeted with the Mont Blanc. “I guess even
twelve million dollars isn’t enough for you for a little
inconvenience, is it?”
“Three years of marriage and ya still don’t get
it, do ya, Zane? There’s always something comin’ before me.” He
could hear the tears in her voice. “And I was thinkin’ that
maybe after last night… Damn you! Why couldn’t ya even have
checked to see if I was gonna be ok before ya took that dumb old
contract?”
“But Elise—”
“Forget it. Just forget it. I gotta go. I really
hope ya get what ya want.” Click.
Her words burned in his ears.
Zane slipped his cell phone in his pocket and
nodded to Chorde. “It’s OK with the wife. We might as well get
started.”
* * * *
Chorde stepped around from behind his desk and
pointed over Zane’s shoulder. “I’d like to introduce you to our
senior researcher for the project. Zane Tollison, meet Kathy
Davis.”
Designer gold-rim glasses and leather notebook
clenched to her chest, the woman from the elevator stood leaning
against the doorjamb. She stepped over beside Chorde and placed
her notebook on his desk. “We sort of ran into each other
earlier, Jonathan. It’s nice to meet you, Zane.”
Chorde placed his palm on her buttocks as she
offered her hand to Zane. Without so much as a flinch, Kathy
reached behind her back and smacked his wrist, a wide grin on
her face as she shook Zane’s hand.
Chorde cleared his throat and straightened his
necktie. “Kathy, perhaps you could take our visitor to get the
things he’ll be needing for his stay with us. You will be
working together quite closely for the next few weeks. It will
be an excellent opportunity for the two of you to get better
acquainted. Oh dear me, I nearly forgot. Mr. Tollison, if I
might have your wrist for a moment, so I can put on your
security bracelet.”
“Bracelet?”
Chorde reached in his pocket and removed a shiny,
white metal cuff. “Yes, we have voice recognition security for
our employees, but provide bracelet keys for visitors to allow
them to come and go as they please during their stay with us.”
He placed the S-shaped link around Zane’s wrist,
rotated the halves to form an oval, and pressed them together
with his fingers. The bracelet closed with a metallic snap.
“The bracelet contains an encoded microchip that
emits a frequency well beyond the range of the human ear. Simply
hold your wrist up to the monitor to open a door.”
Zane stretched out his arm and looked at his
wrist. “Pretty stylish. What happens if I lose it?”
Chorde smiled. “It doesn’t come off.”
He studied the bracelet and tugged solidly. The
cuff would not slide over his fist. “I like. Much nicer than the
cheesy plastic jobs they have in the hospital.”
“We’ve found them to be both impeccably secure
and convenient for our guests.” He put his arm around Zane’s
shoulder and led the two towards the door. “Of course, unlike
that Mont Blanc, we will want it back when you leave
Clearwater.”
EXCERPT 2
Kathy’s eyes were glued to the monitor. “These estrogen
numbers are sky high and your
cholinergic neurons are going crazy from the nicotine.”
She bit her lip, scrolling through the unwieldy matrix of data
as she waited for the chromosome analysis program to boot.
“It’s the most natural geometry for Huey—the craving for
calcium, your cramps, and wild mood swings. I can’t believe I
didn’t think of it before.”
“Kathy, you’ve gotta tell me what you’re babbling about.”
She pecked at the keyboard, reloading his DNA files.
“I’ve worked with the same twists for so long, I never even gave
a second thought to the fact that you’re a guy.” The chromosome
graphics popped up on the display. “Bingo.” Kathy propped her chin in her hand. “Your DNA?” She
tapped the screen. “It’s female.”
Zane snickered. “Let me get this straight. You mean I’m
turning into a girl?”
The silence was deafening.
He ran his fingers though his hair. “No, it can’t be.”
She placed her hand atop his shoulder and switched off
the computer. “You’re not turning into a girl, Zane.” She could
instantly feel the muscles in his neck relax. “You already
are one. Technically speaking, your body is just making a
few corrections to match your altered genetic profile.”
“Dandy, just fucking dandy.” The room rumbled like
thunder as he pounded his fist on the table. “Do you always have
to be so goddamn clinical?” Zane tossed his hands in the
air and stormed towards the doorway. “That’s it. I don’t give a
shit about the money. I’m through.”
A familiar voice echoed from the intercom. “What’s the
matter, sweetie, don’t ya wanna be a girl?” One hand perched on
her hip, the lanky blonde giggled, waving her fingers as she
stood behind the glass observation window at the far end of the
lab.
“Elise, what are you doing here?”
“That bitch wife of yours is in on this!” Kathy shrieked.
“Shut up, you nerd slut,” Elise snipped. “He’s always
been pretty dickless, so it ain’t really gonna make all that
much difference now, is it?” She folded her arms and chuckled.
“I don’t know what I ever saw in him, but from last night’s late
show, it sure looks like he plugs your socket!”
“Ladies, ladies,” Chorde’s voice interrupted. “This
catfight is utterly unbecoming for the both of you.” A man
stepped up behind Elise and put his arms around her waist. “The
test shall continue.”
Zane’s finger quivered as he pointed at the window.
“That, that’s me!”
“Surely, you must be beside yourself, my dear. Have you
had no occasion of late to see yourself in a mirror?” A shallow
grin spread across Chorde’s face. “I must admit, the boy-cut
clothing and trendy punk hairstyle make quite the fashion
statement. Might I suggest nipple rings and a few well chosen
tattoos?”
Zane pawed at the window. “Chorde, what the hell is going
on?”
“The name is Tollison, Zane Tollison.” Chorde
glared out of the window. “With a few subtle improvements, of
course.” Ignoring Zane’s presence, Chorde walked to and fro. “It
occurred to me rather serendipitously that several objectives
could be achieved during the course of a single study. Not only
could we demonstrate the ability to add the Hydrolyzed
Unilateral Esquilax responsible for nicotine addiction to a male
subject, we could put to rest the messy debate over whether
genetics or socialization is root cause of women’s low tolerance
for the stuff.”
He put his cigarette to his lips and inhaled. “As dear
Kathy can confirm, it was a decidedly simpler process to develop
a phantom to add this new gene through a shot gun approach,
altering the entire genetic structure than to wade through the
tedious process of designing a recombinant to add a single gene
to a foreign DNA geometry. Of course, we would have to perform
our test on a subject who not only lacked the gene, but who was
also not a woman.”
Chorde paused, his hands following the curve of Elise’s
shoulders. “At least for the beginning of the study. And so, you
will be relating for us first hand the experience of your
artificially induced nicotine addiction—” His lips formed a
twisted a grin. “From a most feminine perspective. A vantage
point that if every study ever done on women and smoking is any
indication, would even now be, shall we say, quite difficult and
in a few short days, impossible to reverse.”
Chorde crushed out his cigarette. “Which brings us to the
question, what then shall become of Zane Tollison and his lovely
wife?” He turned to Elise, stroking her cheek with the back of
his hand. “Twould be nothing short of sinful for such a sweet
young beauty to fritter away the years alone, the love of her
life, just a memory in another woman’s mind.”
Cocking his head as if he were in deep thought, he
continued, “Ah, but perhaps, just perhaps, the same technology
that could save an entire industry from financial ruin, could
restore the waxing memories of youth to a tired old man as the
lost husband of the young woman he loves.” Chorde looked deep
into Elise’s eyes. “Two star-crossed sole mates, rich beyond
their wildest dreams.”
Elise batted her eyes and giggled. “I just love the way
you say things, Zane.” She removed a tube of lipstick
from her handbag, impetuously touching up her already perfect
lips.
“And the mystery woman who dares challenge me so
brazenly?” Chorde leaned forward, hands pressed against the
window. “She and her pathetic memories of Zane Tollison will be
strewn aside like a paid wench.”
Elise pursed her lips and snapped the clasp on her
handbag. “Did ya get that, sweetie? Zane said you’re
screwed.”
Zane stormed towards the doorway. “I don’t give a fuck
about you or your money. I’m getting out of here.”
Chorde put his cigarette to his lips. “As you please.”
Zane grabbed Kathy’s hand. They raced out of the lab and
headed for the elevator. He held his bracelet to the microphone
of keyless entry system.
The computer voice replied, “Access denied.”
Zane pressed Kathy towards the speaker. “You try—”
Kathy stepped up to the microphone. “Kathy Davis, ground
floor.”
The light flickered. “Access denied.”
“Oh, Zane,” she shrieked. “It’s not working!” Kathy
cleared her throat and repeated, “Kathy Davis, ground floor.”
She sheepishly peered over her shoulder. “Please?”
The speaker crackled. “Voice recognition pattern unknown.
Access denied.”
Chorde’s laughter echoed on the walls. “Your efforts are
futile. This facility is as impossible to escape as it is to
penetrate.”
Zane sprinted up and down the hall. He tossed his hands
in the air. “Where’s the goddamn stairwell?”
Kathy bit the tip of her finger. “The elevator’s the only
way out.”
“The phone!” He dashed into the suite and picked up the
receiver. “Get me 911.” Zane slammed the handset in the cradle.
“Damn it hell! He’s blocked me out. You try—”
Kathy fingers trembled as she put the telephone to her
ear.
The automated operator greeted her, “What number please?”
“Get me 911.” Kathy’s voice wavered. “This is an
emergency!”
“I’m sorry,” the automated voice replied, “but your voice
recognition pattern is not in my file. Please press the star
button and try again.”
She ran her fingers through her hair. “It won’t let me
through. What are we going to do!”
Zane turned towards the bedroom. “My cell phone—”
Kathy reached for his arm. “It’s no use. They won’t pick
up inside the building.”
He flung open the vertical blinds. The window looked out
at a cement block wall illuminated by a fluorescent light.
“There’s got to be a way out of here!” His eyes darted around
the room. The ventilation return duct was so small a hamster
could barely crawl inside. “I’ll cut my way out of here if I
have to!”
Zane rustled through the kitchen drawers for a knife. He
gouged at the plaster and pulled back the insulation to find a
cement block wall. He climbed up on the dining room table and
pushed back a ceiling tile. The roof was solid cement. He sliced
through the carpet, clawing at the padding only to find the
poured concrete floor.
“Jeezuz.” He jabbed the knife deep into the mahogany
table top. “Out of aces and trapped like a fucking rat.” He
shook his fist and leered at the intercom. “You can keep me
here, Chorde, but you can’t make me play your game.”
Chorde cleared his throat. “Oh, really? Perhaps if you
begged, and used my proper name, I might reconsider.”
“Beg?” Zane fell to his knees. “What the…?” He clenched
his hands as the words flowed from his lips. “Please Mr. T…Tollison,
oh please, let us out of here!”
A mocking clap resounded from the intercom. “A touching
exhibition, my dear, but alas, the answer is still no.” The
speaker fell silent.
Hands on her hips, Kathy stared in amazement. “Zane, are
you crazy?”
“I, I couldn’t help myself.” He pointed towards the
speaker. “Did you see him? He’s using a goddamn recombinant to
turn himself into me.” Zane raced back into the lab. Elise and Chorde were gone.
He beat his hands against the window pane. “You son of a bitch,
give me back my body!”
Chorde’s laughter rang through the room. “Temper, temper,
my dear. Why don’t you just sit down? Relax, enjoy a cigarette.
A few more days, and this will all be over.”
Her mouth opened as Zane sat on the floor and took a
cigarette out of his shirt pocket. “What do you think you’re
doing?”
A hypnotic serene spread across Zane’s face as he put the
cigarette to his lips. “There’s nothing to get excited about. I
might as well relax. A couple more days and this will all be
over.”
Kathy shook his shoulders. “Zane, that’s exactly what
Chorde just told you to do!”
“Jeezuz. It felt so natural, like I had made the
decision myself.” He tossed his hands in the air. “How the hell
is Chorde doing this to me?”
Tears streamed down her cheeks. “I don’t know. I don’t
know! It must be some weird cellular level response.”
Zane crushed out the cigarette, bursting into laughter as
he reached for her hand.
She sniffled. “What in the world do you think is so
funny?”
“You don’t get it because the joke’s on me. The bastard
is stealing my body and my money, and there’s not a goddamn
thing I can do except sit back and watch. He’s going to take the
twelve million I’m getting for this job and hang me out to dry.”
Zane reached in his pocket for a cigarette. “Chorde’s not
brilliant, he’s a fucking genius.”
“Twelve million dollars.” She mouthed his words. “They’re
paying you twelve million dollars?”
“Yup. Worth a little inconvenience, maybe even a little
risk to your health, huh, Kath?” Smoke rolled out of his nose as
he exhaled. “I can’t quit now if I could quit now. If the gene
doesn’t get me, the nicotine will. But if I don’t follow through
on this deal, I owe Chorde the twelve million.”
Kathy shook her head and fumbled in her purse. “No, it
can’t be. There’s got to be some other way.”
“Looks like I’ve just been screwed.” Zane offered her the
packet in his shirt pocket. “How about an after-sex cigarette?”
“We need to get to cracking. CAT scan,
MRI, electro cardiogram, I need to run a whole
battery of tests on you. Now that I know where this thing is
going, I can start to figure out how I’m gonna fix it.”
“Yeah, right.” He inhaled and crushed his cigarette on
the side of his shoe.
“Zane Tollison, you snap out of this right this instant!”
Her eyes welled with tears. “I’m the best damn geneticist in the
world. If some wannabe DNA hacker could throw together a recom
to do this to you, I can design a deposing recom to reverse the
process.”
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Copyright © 2008
All rights reserved, Siren-BookStrand, Inc. Cannot be reproduced in whole or in part in any form without expressly permitted to do so in writing from the
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