Deliverance | By : thelostogg Category: Yu-Gi-Oh > Yaoi - Male/Male Views: 8811 -:- Recommendations : 1 -:- Currently Reading : 3 |
Disclaimer: I don't own Yu-Gi-Oh. I don't profit from these ramblings. |
Chapter 8
“Is this some kind of joke? A hit man?” Seto demanded. He had made it back to Domino and managed to put on a fresh suit before the police showed up at his office. Not just the Tokyo police, but three Interpol agents as well. He gave a statement to the Tokyo police and ushered them out, but the Interpol agents had stayed behind. He wondered why no one bothered to tell them that he was a busy man and that he allowed them to intrude upon his time simply to show the local authorities a bit of undeserved respect. Why the hell hadn’t they taken a cue from the police and bow and thanked him as they backed out of his office? One of the Interpol agents, a British man who had greeted him in Japanese and introduced himself as Agent Martin, had laid out a series of photographs taken from an airport security camera. “No sir,” the man assured him. “He was spotted flying from the Caribbean island of St. Thomas, and again going through LAX before boarding a plane to Tokyo about twenty hours ago. He goes by a dozen different names, though Interpol has nicknamed him Picasso. We know he is aware of the moniker and he seems to approve, dreadful as it sounds.” “Dreadful?” “Yes, he likes to think of himself as an artist, however, his medium of choice is blood and destruction. The apartment you mentioned was rented to a man matching the description of an equally dangerous assassin known in international circles as the Professor. Agents and witnesses who have dealt with him report that he is highly educated, extremely intelligent, and always quoting classical literature. The two of them have been spotted together on numerous occasions, so it’s no big surprise to find them both in Japan at the same time. If we were to make a list of the most dangerous assassins in the world, it would be a short list and they would be close to the top.” “They have also been spotted trying to kill each other when there wasn’t any money involved,” said one of the other agents. He had not been introduced to Seto when they came in. “And if someone was serious about taking out the Professor, Picasso would be just as likely to take the job as anyone else. More so, I would say, because he’s one of the few who could actually manage it and he knows the Professor’s habits and mannerisms.” “Hopefully we can get him into custody before anyone finds him,” Agent Martin grinned. “Now that we know his real name is Jounouchi Katsuya, it should be much easier to apprehend him. Especially if Picasso is in an artistic mood.” Seto forced himself to chuckle. “Artistic mood? His medium of choice? Come on, you sound like you stepped out of a bad James Bond movie. Who put you guys up to this?” “We are completely serious, sir,” said one of the other agents. The agent tossed a full color photograph of what looked like slaughterhouse on to his desk. “Picasso has earned his nickname just as well as the Professor has earned his. This was taken from at the apartment building this morning after we arrived on the scene. You have to connect the dots, I’m afraid.” The agent bent over the photograph with a sharpie and began to trace the thicker lines of blood in the photograph. When he was finished, he turned the picture around for Seto. “A daisy, I believe.” He tossed out three more photographs. “A sunburst, this one Henderson thinks is a rose although I can’t see it, and this one we’re not sure about yet.” Seto glanced at the photograph of all that was left of the Japanese gunman he had seen that morning. Sprays of blood had streak the wall above him and three lines of blood were pulled away from the man’s torso, extending out to etiher side. The man’s arms had been nailed to the wall below the vertical streaks. “A cat,” Seto said immediately. “Those are the ears and whiskers.” “Oh, yes, I see it now,” Agent Martin carefully drew in the lines of the image, the corner of his lips turned up as he did so. “Good eye.” “But Jounouchi can’t be this Professor person. He can’t be associated with someone like that,” Seto insisted. “He’s a thug, he worked for one of the local gangs, that’s all. As I told the detective, I went there hoping to find him, hoping he might have just gotten involved in something that was too big for him to handle. And he is neither smart nor well educated.” “Really? Our investigation showed that he only returned to Japan during the incident in which you were held for ransom. He reportedly has family ties to the local Yakuza, and he allegedly got his start here, but our records indicate he’s spent most of the last decade hopping between Europe and North America. Hard to be a local thug when you’re in a different hemisphere.” “I’m a busy man, I can’t keep track of every citizen in Domino, I’m afraid. I knew him as a kid, I saw him again when I got a bit lax with security, I don’t know what he’s been up to between high school and now.” “Well, hopefully the next time you’re inclined to rescue a thug off the street, this will encourage you to write a check to a local nonprofit instead. Incidentally, you were in your office during that explosion last week, right?” Seto held the man’s gaze, not quite certain of what he was seeing reflected back at him. The man was lying to him, Seto knew that much, but he couldn’t quite see the truth through the façade. “The one down the street? Wasn’t that a bank robbery or something?” “No. It was a hit on the regional leader of one of the Yakuza families. It seems an electromagnetic pulse was detonated just after the explosion to wipe any surveillance footage clean. Forensics is on it, or course, but preliminary reports indicate that the bank next to the parking garage was untouched. Were you in your office?” “Yes. It took us a bit to recover our internal security footage, since the electromagnetic thingy you mentioned knocked out our servers, but I was in my office meeting with the representatives of a toy retailer in China. There are witnesses and video records with the date and time embedded in the footage.” “Do the police have a copy of the footage?” “In point of fact, they do,” Seto said coldly. “I’m sure they’ll burn you a copy if you ask. I don’t see what this has to do with that explosion.” “You don’t? You promised a large amount of money to anyone who could bring you the Professor. One of the few people in Japan with any ties to him gets blown up in a parking garage a few blocks from your property last week. And this week, his apartment building gets shot up and you just happen to be there. In our line of work, Kaiba-san, you quickly find that coincidences are never coincidences.” “You’re welcome to request the footage from the police.” “We will. You see, the rumor running around is that the explosion was the work of the Professor. It’s not like the Professor at all, though. A man like the Professor would never be so crass as to use an explosive for an old friend.” “Excuse me? An old friend?” Agent Martin sat down in the chair in front of Seto’s desk, crossed his legs and leaned back. “Which brings us to why we’re here. What I think happened, Mr. Kaiba, is that you wanted revenge for the things done to you when you were kidnapped. Understandable, certainly. It’s widely rumored that you offered a lot of money to anyone who could bring you the Professor’s head. The old Yakuza man, Sasano, wasn’t it?” Agent Martin looked to one of his colleagues for confirmation, “Yes, Sasano decided to sell out his prodigal son and didn’t expect the son to take it personally.” “Son?” “Not by blood. The old man was the father-in-law of Jounouchi Katsuya’s sister, I believe. Nothing short of a personal insult would make him resort to something so tactless as that explosion, and even then…” Seto sat back and gripped the arms of his office chair. This entire week was seriously messing with his sense of general superiority. He couldn’t control Jou’s behavior, and it took several days before he stopped being surprised by it, and now for the second time in one day, someone had talked about his approach to dealing with the Yakuza as though it were merely a serious breach of etiquette rather than an excessive show of force. Agent Martin steepled his fingers together. “As a mob tactic, explosions have their place, but among men of the Professor’s caliber, they are traditionally considered something utilized by beginners and… amateurs,” his tone was dripping with disgust as he said the last word. “With men who kill people for a living, usually you can judge a man’s skill by the range at which he carries out his attacks and the amount of discretion he uses, although there are a few grandstanding bastards out there like Picasso who just don’t care. He considers discretion to be something that happens to other people. In general, though, a sniper rifle is considered a beginner’s weapon because it never requires entering the scene at all. An explosive is slightly less pathetic, but only because it requires infiltration, it requires planting the explosive itself. Smaller guns require closer range, but they’re still flashy. Among professional hit men throughout the world, those with enough skill and courage to get close enough to their target to use a knife are considered to be at the pinnacle of the profession.” Seto kept his face absolutely still as the man’s British accent faded and slipped. He deliberately did not look at the other two men in the room. If they had caught the slip in their partner’s accent, they would be watching him for any sign that he had heard it, too. “And you’re suggesting that these two… they’re both that dangerous?” “From your statement, it’s clear that Picasso took out at least seven other hit men right in front of your eyes. Do you really doubt that he’s that dangerous?” “No, no I wasn’t questioning that. It’s just that I grew up with Jounouchi.” “And you think he couldn’t possibly be like that? I’m sorry to be the one to tell you this, Kaiba-san, but if those two ever did decide to try and take each other out, the smart money would be on the Professor. Picasso, for all of his talent, has the discipline of a ten year old. The Professor is just as talented, but he is also completely in control of himself.” “You’re wrong. Picasso would win. He can get his shit together when he needs to,” the other agent insisted. “He would be dead if he couldn’t. I think most people can’t even imagine the level of skill, observation, training, preparation, speed, and strength necessary to take the careless approach he does. When he stops to make a mess, he is totally confident that he is the top dog and that there is no one else around capable of interfering.” Agent Martin waved his hand dismissively. “Arrogance masquerading as confidence, and a hell of a lot of luck, that’s all. The Professor doesn’t leave much to chance, so there’s no way Picasso could get lucky against him.” “Picasso is twelve years older than the Professor. He’s one of the oldest in the game, so I wouldn’t be so quick to call his confidence an overestimation. He knows what he’s capable of, that’s all. He allows himself to have a bit of fun within those parameters, but he doesn’t go beyond them.” Agent Martin grimaced and was about to turn to argue with the other man when he caught Seto’s eye. “Ah, there you go. My money would be on the Professor, at any rate. As Henderson has just shown, there are those who think Picasso would turn the Professor into tacky mural of a orchid if the mood struck him right.” “I still find that hard to believe. It sounds like your investigation has been very thorough. Why haven’t you arrested either of them yet?” “They’re rather difficult to find. We don’t’ have the funds to search ever tropical beach in the world for Picasso, and until recently we were looking for the Professor in Hungary of all places.” Kaiba pressed the silent alarm button beneath his desk. “Well, you gentlemen have the statement I gave to the detective from Tokyo, do you have a business card so I can get in touch with you if I see either of them?” Roland, still carrying his rifle from earlier, stepped inside the office door, surveyed the situation, and took up a station behind the men. Two other security officers followed him. “Absolutely,” Agent Martin smiled. He practically jumped to his feet and pulled a lose business card from his jacket pocket. Seto read it quickly and made a note of the Interpol seal. The damn thing looked real enough, aside from the fact that it was so new that he could still smell the toner in the ink. It couldn’t have been printed more than a couple of hours ago. “I’ll definitely let you know if I see anything.” “We appreciate your cooperation, Kaiba-san. And if anyone else should contact you about the money you’ve placed on Jounouchi’s head…” “I have done no such thing. I would be quite distressed to know that Jounouchi was dead.” “Then if anyone suspicious contacts you at all, let us know?” “Of course.” “Roland, please have one of my security staff show these officers the way out.” “Yes, Kaiba-sama.” One of the security personnel who entered with Roland held the door open and bowed low. “Right this way, please.” Seto stared at the door until it clicked shut, then quickly motioned for Roland to be quiet. After waiting about twenty seconds, Seto hurried to the door. Roland fell into step behind him without a word. Seto forced himself not to run as he hurried towards his brother’s office. Seto passed the business card to Roland as he walked. “Check their credentials thoroughly. Then sweep my office and every other inch of the building those men had access to for anything suspicious, including any potential explosives. Until that sweep is complete, Mokuba and I will be working from home. I want the security on the manor doubled. Those three are not to be allowed back into the building, even if escorted by the police.” “I understand, Kaiba-sama. May I suggest you take the service elevator down to the car while I retrieve Master Mokbuba?” “No,” Seto insisted. “I’m not going anywhere without my brother. Jou’s cats are somewhere safe?” “I saw to it personally.” “Alright then. Let’s get Mokuba and get out of here. Maybe declare a half-holiday until the explosives sweep is complete… Try to clear the building without causing a panic.” “As you wish, Kaiba-sama.” Seto barged into Mokuba’s office without knocking, but he never knocked. Mokuba never did anything terribly indecent in his office, or anywhere else where Seto might barge in—not since a terribly embarrassing incident when Mokuba was thirteen and discovered pay-per-view, anyway. As expected, Mokuba was talking on the phone and typing quickly at the same time. “Hang up,” Seto ordered. He hoped that his brother would understand how serious the situation might be from his tone of voice, but Mokuba just flipped him off. “Fine, bring the phone. We’re leaving.” Roland grabbed Mokuba by the arm and hoisted him out of the chair. He grabbed Seto’s other arm and ushered both of them out of the office quickly. They took the service elevator down and followed more security officers to the limo. Roland lagged behind long enough to pull down the nearest fire alarm, then climbed into the car after them. Mokuba hung up his phone and slipped it back into a pocket. He glanced between Seto and Roland, trying to work out what was happening. “Did I miss something? When did the building catch fire?” “It’s been a busy day,” Seto said levelly. “We’re just being proactive in case it catches on fire. Or blows up.” Mokuba’s eyes bulged as his face grew pale. “You didn’t…” “No!” Seto rolled his eyes. “I… I’m probably just being paranoid. Some guys, who might or might not work for Interpol, showed up to talk about what happened in Tokyo this morning, and some of the things they said didn’t sit right with me.” “What happened in Tokyo this morning?” Seto pressed his lips together. He didn’t want to alarm Mokuba more than he already had. There was no telling who his brother might call, what he might tell them, or how much time Seto would have to spend talking about his feelings afterwards, if he told Mokuba the truth. “I had trouble returning Jou’s cats,” he said carefully. “So I had to have them boarded at a vet’s office.” Mokuba stared at him for a moment, pointedly glanced down to Seto’s knee and stared until Seto forced it to stop bouncing, then looked into his eyes again. When Seto didn’t rise to the bait and rush to fill the silence, Mokuba pulled out his phone again and pulled up the daily news from the Tokyo area. “Four Dead in Gruesome Downtown Shootout,” Mokuba read aloud. “Authorities Devastated by Carnage.” Mokuba glared at Seto. “Don’t look at me like that, I didn’t kill them!” “Seto…” “I did not kill them. They were all killed with a knife. I couldn’t do that. I blow people up like an amateur, apparently… Those dicks have no understanding of what a show of force is supposed to be… Hang on, this can wait until we’ve gotten away from the building.” Seto stared out the window as they pulled out of the parking garage. He half-expected to hear an explosion from the moment the three men who came to question him left the building. As the car pulled away, he mentally braced himself for the sound and the shockwave. And nothing happened. After three blocks, Seto’s chest felt tight and he had to force himself to take a deep breath. Somewhere in the back of his mind, he knew he needed to get away from this situation. This morning had brought back all of the paranoia he’d felt immediately after waking up in the hospital, brought it all back and doubled it, just for good measure. “Roland,” Mokuba turned to the security officer, “What happened this morning.” “We were caught in the cross fire of what appears to have been a circle of professional assassins who were all attempting to kill one another.” “Why were you there?” “As your brother said, he was attempting to return Jounouchi-san’s cats,” Roland confirmed. “Jounouchi-san was not present, but an acquaintance of his was in his apartment. He…” Roland glanced at Seto. Seto rolled his eyes, folded his arms, and resolutely refused to offer any help whatsoever. Roland hesitated for a fraction of a second. “He joined us on the elevator and then proceeded to engage the gunmen in close combat.” “Are you serious? He rode down in the elevator with you and just jumped right out into a gun fight and started shooting?” Seto thought about the bloody sprays and splatters that the men who claimed to be Interpol agents insisted were the art of a professional killer. Lynn Grayson hadn’t seemed like a bad guy in Jounouchi’s apartment, but as he rolled and danced through the hail of bullets, debris, and blood, Seto had to admit that his breathtaking smile looked more demonic than beautiful. He didn’t want to give Mokuba a reason to have him committed, and confessing to living through another ‘trauma’ would certainly add to the list of reasons his little brother already had, but he also knew that if he kept expecting the world to explode around him, Mokuba was going to start questioning his mental stability. Roland’s mouth was frozen open as the older man tried to frame an answer that wouldn’t sound horrible. “Actually, he leapt out and dove for cover…” “Then nailed them to the walls and sliced open their major arteries so that their blood would spray out in pretty artistic patterns,” Seto whispered with a sadistic smirk. “Oh, ha ha,” Mokuba glared at him. “Can’t you grow up and stop making tasteless jokes for once? Four people are dead, Seto!” Roland pressed his lips together in a tight line. “It wasn’t a joke,” Seto insisted. He found himself laughing despite his claim. “The Interpol guys and the Tokyo police showed me the pictures. He made three flowers shapes and a cat. And I wasn’t being metaphorical when I said he nailed them to the wall. He used a fucking nail gun!” “Two flowers,” Roland whispered. “They said the third was a sunburst.” “It was a flower,” Seto insisted. “There were leaf shapes at the bottom. Apparently he did a scar tissue smiley face on Jou’s chest, too. It’s kind of morbid, but very precise. No!” Seto held up both of his hands and leaned across the seats towards his brother. “No, don’t throw up! I’ve heard them both talk about it and I am absolutely sure that it some kinky and totally consensual game!” “Do you really think that’s going to make it better?” Roland glared at him. The old body guard dug behind the drinks in the mini fridge and pulled out a folded paper bag. “Just in case,” he explained and he passed the bag to Mokuba. “It’s alright, Mokie, it really is. I may have lost control of the situation over the last week, but I am totally on top of things from here on out,” Seto promised. “I will deal with it. I just wanted to get you and everybody else out of the office because I was freaking out. Probably just PTSD, you know sometimes even a car backfiring can trigger bad phases for me.” “You can deal with it!” Mokuba screamed. “How the hell do you think anything you’ve done recently counts as dealing with it! Do you think blowing up half of downtown to kill a Yakuza Lord is dealing with it! Do you think kidnapping a member of the local Yakuza and tying them up in your guest room is something a rational, sane person would do! You were nearly killed this morning and you can sit there and joke about a man cutting other people to pieces! You need help, Seto!” “Actually, Jou’s not a member of the local Yakuza anymore. Apparently he’s a—“ Roland’s arm wrapped around Seto’s neck and his hand covered Seto’s mouth. “Not making it better,” Roland growled. Seto glanced at him and tried, with a look, to apologize. Unfortunately, the glance didn’t quite work. The serious look in Roland’s eyes made Seto begin to chuckle, despite everything they’d been through during the day—or maybe because of it. Roland bit his lip to try and stop himself from laughing. That just made Seto shake with the effort of not laughing. Somehow, he couldn’t help it. His stress level had gotten to the point where he felt like he was going to scream, and laughter was what came out instead. Mokuba slowly tightened both of his hands into fists. “I hate you both,” he hissed. “This kind of crap is not funny! I cannot believe I used to defend your fucked up sense of humor!” Mokuba pressed the intercom button. “Stop the car up here, I will walk back to work.” “No!” Roland shouted through the intercom. “Don’t stop the car! No, Master Mokuba, forgive me for laughing. We are not joking with you! And your brother’s paranoia aside, there was something very off about those three men. I have a member of the staff trying to verify their credentials with Interpol, but I haven’t heard back from them yet, and until I do, I am inclined to trust my instincts. My instincts tell me not to let you or your brother near the building again until it has been searched thoroughly.” Mokuba sat back, seething but quiet. “I’m sorry, too,” Seto finally managed to get control of himself. “I didn’t mean to make a joke out of any of it. Even if I am just being paranoid, I would like you to work from home until I…” Seto didn’t want to continue, but humility was sometimes the easiest way to manipulate Mokuba. “Until I’m less frightened, alright? Just… Humor me?” “Fine. But you need to start talking to Temari again.” “As soon as I sort this out, I will give her a call,” Seto promised. “Tonight,” Mokuba insisted. “I wont have time tonight,” Seto insisted. “I need to find Jou before anyone else does, stop the Yakuza kid who has put out a contract on his life, run a check on those three fake Interpol agents, sweep Kaiba Corp. for explosives, and then go pick up Jou’s cats. I’m swamped.” “I don’t want to know,” sighed Mokuba. Mokuba leaned back in his seat and stared out the window. Then he leaned forward, trying to get a better look at something. “Well, that figures.” “What?” Seto asked, feeling the panic set in again. Mokuba hit the intercom button again. “Go around the block and find a parking space.” “Kaiba-sama?” “It’s alright, go ahead,” said Seto, trying to see what his brother had noticed out the window. The limo pulled around the municipal library and stopped along a side street. “It’s getting dark out,” said Mokuba softly. “The lights in the library make it easy to see through the windows. I saw Jou inside, standing in one of the aisles with his nose in a book.” Seto really did feel like screaming then. He didn’t. But it was a difficult urge to quell. “Jou left me to go to the library! I nearly got killed in Jou’s apartment building and he is in the library! Mokuba, wait in the car. Roland, come in but keep your distance.” Kaiba jumped out of the limo and hurried towards the mail doors of the library. He kept his distance from people on the street, and he found that the adrenaline began to gush through his system every time he thought he saw someone with an American skin tone in the crowd. By the time he made it to the steps of the library, he was practically jogging. He quietly strolled through the library and back into the stacks, searching for any sign of his blonde. Seto saw him sitting at a table in the far corner, his back to two windowless walls. He had a hardcover book propped up on the table in front of him, leaning against a stack of well-worn paperbacks. Seto watched laughter dance through Jou’s eyes as he turned the page. Seto walked towards him, wondering if he should give the man some kind of warning. Jou seemed to be engrossed enough in his book that Seto was worried he might startle him. However, as he got closer, Jou kicked the chair across from him out, then turned another page without even glancing up. “Any good?” “Yeah,” said Jou, his smile gigantic. “It’s the new Terry Pratchett novel. It just came out today. I’m almost done, I swear. Sit down, grab a paper or something.” “I’ve got my phone, I’m good,” said Seto casually sliding into the chair. “How long have you been here?” “Since nine thirty,” said Jou. He stifled a chuckle at something he read. Seto glanced at the spines of the books in Jou’s stack and saw five different Mark Twain novels. “The bookstore opened at nine,” Jou explained. “And I don’t have my Kindle. This works out good, though, because here I can look up all of the literary references in the book.” Seto sat back and took in the whole picture. “Lots of Mark Twain references?” Jou nodded happily. “River boats, slavery, hotheaded country folk, it’s great. Have you ever read Pratchett?” Seto shook his head. “Never heard of him.” Jou looked up at that. “Oh, Kaiba, you’re missing out.” Seto pulled out his phone and began to type out of a text message, but stopped when he noticed that Jou’s chuckles and page turning had stopped. Seto felt awkward, but when he turned around he saw that there was no one around. He was about to turn back to his phone when a familiar American in a new tweed suit walked around the corner, smiling and bouncing as he walked. As the man’s blue eyes landed on Seto, his smile grew. Seto glanced at Jou and noticed that the blonde wasn’t smiling. Both of Jou’s hands were beneath the table, out of sight. “What terms are we on at the moment, Col?” Jou asked, his eyes calm and sharp as steel. “I’m not that broke, Joey. Although, I could buy a chunk of Seychelles for what that kid is offering for you. I could have my very own tropical island resort. How cool would that be?” “I don’t think you have it in you to paint palm trees for the rest of your life.” “Too true. No, I’m here because word got out last week that you were dead. I came to keep my promise, silly boy. Still, I prefer you alive. May I join you? And Mr. Kaiba, always a pleasure,” the man bowed slightly. Jou’s glance shot towards Seto. “Hello, Mr. Grayson.” “Oh, call my Lynn, we’re all friends here, after all.” “Are we?” Jou slowly pulled his left hand up from beneath the table. In his hand was a stack of white drawing paper, wrapped in shrink wrap. On top of it was a small box of oil pastels. “I caught a bit of the news when I went for coffee. Figured I’d be seeing you,” he explained. “Joey, you shouldn’t have!” Lynn sat down in the chair next to Jou and ripped the shrink wrap off of the paper and the pastels. “Flesh tones! Oh, Joey, you’re the best!” He pulled away the paper from one of the pastels and began to sketch a round shape on the top sheet of paper, just as focused on the page as Jou was on his book. “I try,” said Jou. He dog-earned the page of his book and shut it carefully, using only his left hand. Seto leaned back in his chair and tried to see Jou’s right hand under the table. Against Jou’s thigh, held in a ready grip, was a small pistol that Seto had never seen before. It was aimed just to the side of Seto, towards the hall. “So,” Jou stared between the two of them. “Talk about a small world. How do you two know each other?” “Oh, we met at your old place this morning. Had a bit of a disagreement about the whole Budapest issue,” Lynn said quietly. “Do you know he comes with his own riot cops? That was funny, and I admit, more than a bit helpful.” “Disagreement? Where are they?” Jou growled quietly. “Well, discussion, really,” Lynn clarified. “I intended to bring them with me, but at the last minute I got caught up in a project. He was kind enough to grab them for me.”While AFF and its agents attempt to remove all illegal works from the site as quickly and thoroughly as possible, there is always the possibility that some submissions may be overlooked or dismissed in error. The AFF system includes a rigorous and complex abuse control system in order to prevent improper use of the AFF service, and we hope that its deployment indicates a good-faith effort to eliminate any illegal material on the site in a fair and unbiased manner. This abuse control system is run in accordance with the strict guidelines specified above.
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