
Camilla lets her new neighbor, Claire, use her grill… until she returns home to a backyard disaster. When she asks for basic respect, her neighbor demands that Camilla follow her rules. But when Camilla exposes the truth online, the fallout is far worse than anyone expected. Some lessons are only learned the hard way.
When my new neighbor, Claire, moved in six months ago, I thought she was normal. Like just a woman who would stay in her lane and not disturb the neighborhood too much.

A moving van and boxes | Source: Midjourney
I mean, she was in her 40s, lived with her 16-year-old son, Adam, and at first, she seemed chill. Friendly, even. I lent her a ladder, a garden hose, even let her use our outdoor grill station when we weren’t home.
I didn’t think much of it. It’s just being neighborly, right?
Wrong.
One weekend, my husband, David, and I took the kids to visit my parents.

A smiling woman with her son | Source: Midjourney
“We can have a date night while your parents take over with Grandma and Grandpa duty,” David said, packing snacks for the two-hour drive.
I had to admit, I was ready to get out of town for a while. I had been feeling restless, and I just wanted a change of scenery before I started to feel suffocated.
We were gone for two days.
And when we got back?

Containers of food on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney
My God.
Our backyard looked like it had survived a frat house BBQ apocalypse.
There were empty beer bottles littering the patio, my potted plants were turned upside down, and the kids’ toys were thrown everywhere. Grease stains covered the deck. Our once-beautiful grill station looked like it had barely survived an explosion.
I stood there, staring at the mess, my eye twitching.

A trashed deck | Source: Midjourney
Deep breaths, Camilla, I told myself. Maybe there’s an actual explanation for this.
So, I went next door and knocked. Claire answered, still in pajamas, looking completely unbothered.
“Oh, yeah,” she said, laughing. “That was Adam’s birthday party. You know kids, right? It’s just what they do.”
I blinked. My brain felt like it was ticking away.

A woman standing in her doorway | Source: Midjourney
That’s just what kids do? Was she mad? Didn’t she see the mess? What the hell?!
“My backyard isn’t a public park, Claire. You could’ve at least cleaned up.”
“Oh, don’t be so uptight, Camilla,” she said, shrugging. “It’s just a little mess. You’ll get over it. Surely, you and your husband can use a hose? A little bit of water will clear that up.”

A woman with her hands on her hips | Source: Midjourney
I could have thrown something at her.
Oh, I’ll get over it? Um, sure.
I went back to my home, trying to figure out what to do. I could be reasonable, or I could be erratic and make Claire pay.
“What’s that look on your face?” David asked as I walked into the kitchen. “Found the culprit?”

An annoyed woman | Source: Midjourney
“It was Adam’s birthday party. Apparently, that’s how he spent it.”
“Isn’t he, like, sixteen?” David asked, making me a cup of tea.
“Something like that,” I said, getting the jar of biscuits. “Oh my goodness. Underage drinking! There are so many beer bottles out there.”
David looked at me and laughed.

A frustrated woman | Source: Midjourney
“Every kid does it at least once, Cami,” he said. “But, I mean… you could use that as leverage, right? To scare the kid?”
I nodded.
“But I want Claire to feel something, too. She told me that we could just hose down the mess and that I’d get over it.”
We had our tea in silence while I tried to figure out what to do.

A jar of biscuits and a cup of tea | Source: Midjourney
Okay, Cami, I thought. Let’s try being reasonable first.
I grabbed a notepad and wrote down three simple rules:
- If you use something, clean it and put it back.
- Respect my property.
- Clean up after your child.
The next morning, I went over to Claire and handed it to her. I expected a mature response. But what I got in return was anything but.

A woman holding a sheet of paper | Source: Midjourney
The next day, I woke up to a list of her rules taped to my front door.
It was not a joke. It was Claire’s rules. For my property. My property.
I nearly choked on my coffee as I read the note.

A woman holding a piece of paper | Source: AmoMama
Dear Neighbors!
To keep things fair and neighborly, I’ve put together some simple rules:
Please follow these to avoid any issues.
- No grilling past 7 PM. The smell keeps me awake.
- No spicy seasonings when you’re cooking. My son doesn’t like the smell.
- If I’m using the grill, please stay out of the yard. It is distracting, and I don’t like when strangers watch me cook.
- Notify me before grilling so I know who’s using it. Schedules are key.
- Your garden hose is for community use. I may need it for washing my car and watering my garden.
- Patio furniture is for everyone!
- When you mow your side of the lawn, do mine too. It looks so much better that way.
- Be patient if my son leaves trash in your yard. Kids will be kids, and it’s not a big deal!
- Sometimes I need extra parking space. I might use your driveway when needed.
- Also, if you ever have concerns about these rules, feel free to discuss them with me. But please remember, I know what’s best for our community!
I’m looking forward to a harmonious neighborhood!

A woman reading from a piece of paper | Source: Midjourney
I read it twice to make sure that my eyes weren’t deceiving me.
This woman really thought she had just annexed my backyard into her personal kingdom. Then my eldest kid, Olivia, came running up, phone in hand.
“Mom, you need to see this,” she said. She showed me a video.

A girl holding her phone | Source: Midjourney
Claire’s son, Adam, had been posting TikTok videos.
From our backyard!
In the clips, he and his friends laughed about using our space like it was their personal hangout. And then they trashed the place on camera.
Oh. Oh.
I grabbed my phone immediately.

A close up of a shocked woman | Source: Midjourney
I walked to my backyard and filmed everything. The litter, the grease-stained grill, the beer bottles still rolling on the patio. I zoomed in on the ridiculous list of rules Claire had taped to my door.
And then I posted it on my socials.
As for the caption?
Glad my neighbor and her kid enjoy my backyard more than I do! Check out the rules she gave me!
Within three days, the video had 5 million views, with people sharing it like wildfire.

A phone opened to social media | Source: Midjourney
People flooded the comments:
Excuse me? Her rules?! For YOUR house?!
No way, put up a fence ASAP. These people are insane.
What game is she playing at?
Tell me you have an entitled neighbor without telling me you have an entitled neighbor.

Comments on a social media post | Source: Midjourney
Then someone offered to help.
A man in the comments said that he specialized in building chain-link fences. By the end of the week, my backyard was sealed tighter than Fort Knox.
There were no more:
Oops, my son and his friends needed a place to hang out!
I just needed to wash my car real quick, Camilla.

A fence dividing two houses | Source: Midjourney
If Claire wanted access to my space… too bad, because she wasn’t getting it. And she noticed the fence immediately.
She stormed over, holding a wooden spoon, and pounded on my door.
“You’re breaking my rules!” she screeched. “Goddammit!”
I smiled sweetly.

A woman standing at her front door | Source: Midjourney
“What’s with the spoon?” I asked. “What have you been baking?”
She looked at me like I was mad.
“I said that you’re breaking my rules, Camilla!”
“Oh, sorry,” I said, my voice dripping with fake innocence. “I just thought since we had different house rules, it was best we keep things separate.”

An upset woman holding a wooden spoon | Source: Midjourney
She fumed.
I sipped my coffee and smiled.
My water bill improved overnight. Suddenly, Claire didn’t have access to my hose anymore. My driveway stayed empty because there was no more free parking for her.
And then…
Two days later, there was a knock on the door around dinnertime.

A woman reading a book | Source: Midjourney
Not Claire.
Adam.
The 16-year-old looked absolutely miserable.
“Ma’am, please,” he muttered. “Please… you’re ruining my life.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.

A teenage boy standing in a doorway | Source: Midjourney
“Those videos that you made,” he groaned. “Now I have trouble at school because of you! At first, I thought it was cool and that nobody would notice anything. But then people realized that it was me. And now they won’t let me live it down.”
Oh, so he outed himself and he was mad about it?
I tilted my head.

Students sitting in a classroom | Source: Midjourney
“Oh, that sounds rough, buddy,” I said. “But you know, actions have consequences. Do you understand that you should have just cleaned up after yourself? There was no need to trash the place. I was fine with you using it. I was fine with you having your friends around. But what you did…”
“Yes, I do understand,” he said quietly.
“Okay,” I said. “I’ll delete the videos. But please remember, do not use someone else’s property as your own. Don’t take advantage of a good thing.”

A woman standing in a doorway | Source: Midjourney
He nodded and walked away.
The night air was cooler than usual, and the quiet hum of the neighborhood felt almost… peaceful.
I stepped outside, tightening my robe around myself as I walked toward the trash bins. The motion sensor flicked on, casting a harsh yellow glow over my yard.
And that’s when I saw her.

A woman holding a bag of trash | Source: Midjourney
Claire.
She was leaning against the side of her house, a cigarette dangling between her fingers.
Her shoulders were curled inward, and her hair was messy and unbrushed. She looked nothing like the smug, entitled woman who had taped her ridiculous rules to my door.
For a second, I considered ignoring her.

A woman smoking outside | Source: Midjourney
But then she exhaled slowly, tilting her head toward me.
“You win,” she muttered, her voice hoarse.
“Excuse me?” I asked.
She took another drag from her cigarette and then laughed quietly to herself.

A woman holding a cigarette | Source: Midjourney
“You heard me, Camilla,” she said, waving the cigarette in the air. “You won. Congratulations. You should see what people are saying about me…”
I stared at her, trying to decipher her tone. It wasn’t mocking. It wasn’t even angry. It was just… tired.
Defeated.
I dropped the trash into the bin, dusting off my hands.
“Not really sure what you mean, Claire,” I said. “I didn’t realize this was a competition.”

Two outside bins | Source: Midjourney
She scoffed.
“Oh, come on, Camilla,” she muttered. “We both know what this is. You didn’t like how I did things, so you went nuclear. You put my kid on blast, for goodness’ sake. You ruined his life.”
I crossed my arms.
“Adam ruined his own life,” I said flatly. “I didn’t force him to throw a party in my yard. I didn’t force him to post videos bragging about it. And I sure as hell didn’t force you to act like my backyard was yours.”

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney
Her nostrils flared, but she didn’t argue.
For once.
She exhaled again, staring out at the darkened street.
“Do you know how hard it is to raise a teenage boy alone?”
I blinked slowly. That was… unexpected.

A woman standing outside | Source: Midjourney
I stayed silent.
She let out a humorless laugh, shaking her head.
“Adam doesn’t have a dad,” she said. “Never did. It’s just been us. And I tried to give him a good life, I did. But…” she shrugged. “Kids are kids, right? He made a stupid mistake.”
I narrowed my eyes.

A teenage boy sitting on a couch | Source: Midjourney
“Claire, this wasn’t just a stupid mistake.”
She didn’t answer. She just took another slow drag.
“You know,” I said, my voice calm but firm. “I could have taken things a lot further.”
That got her attention. Her head snapped toward me.
“What?”

A woman standing outside | Source: Midjourney
“Seriously, Claire. You gave me rules for my own house. You let your kid treat my property like his playground. And when I asked for basic respect, you laughed in my face.”
She just stared at me.
“I could have taken legal action. I could have pressed charges. I could have gone to the police. I had enough proof. But I didn’t. I’m not a bad person, Claire. I just don’t like being walked all over.”

The exterior of a police station | Source: Midjourney
For the first time since I met her, she looked small. She turned away, flicking the ash from her cigarette.
“Yeah,” she muttered. “I get that now.”
I watched her for a second, letting the moment sit between us.
Then I nodded.
“Good.”
And with that, I turned and walked back inside, leaving Claire in the dark.

A woman walking back to her home | Source: Midjourney
What would you have done?
If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |
When Brooke returns home from a weeklong work trip, she’s eager to unwind with her favorite snack. But her peanut butter jar is mysteriously half-empty. Her husband, Aaron, is allergic, so who ate it? Determined to uncover the truth, Brooke turns to their security cameras and discovers a shocking secret: Aaron had been hiding a guest. What starts as suspicion unravels into an emotional journey neither of them expected.
This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.
My Mom’s Friend Outed My Pregnancy Without Permission—She Made a Big Mistake

When Mischa’s trusted family friend violates her deepest secret, she must choose between protecting someone she once knew well or standing up for herself. In a world where betrayal wears a familiar face, Mischa learns that forgiveness doesn’t erase consequences… and some stories must be told on your own terms, no matter the cost.
When I found out I was pregnant, I wasn’t ready to tell anyone. Not my friends. Not my family. I just wanted to keep it between my boyfriend, my doctor, and myself.
I was 20. Still figuring out who I was. Still making peace with the fact that adulthood doesn’t come with a manual. A baby? Goodness me. It felt both terrifying and beautiful. Like standing at the edge of a cliff with your arms open.

A pensive young woman | Source: Midjourney
So, I made an appointment at one of the best OB-GYN offices in town. It was clean, professional, and discreet. It was exactly what I needed.
Or so I thought.
When I walked into the waiting room, my heart stopped for a second.
Behind the reception desk, flipping through paperwork like it was any normal Tuesday, stood Monica, an old friend of my mom’s.

The interior of an OB/GYN office | Source: Midjourney
I froze in the doorway, my heart lodging somewhere between my ribs and my throat. I did remember her from when we were younger though. Monica used to basically live in our home. Visiting all the time. I hadn’t seen her in years but I knew they still texted occasionally. Christmas cards. Birthday wishes. The occasional “we must catch up” lunch that never actually happened.
The air in the waiting room felt too sharp, like breathing in tacks. I told myself not to panic. Monica wasn’t just a receptionist anymore, she was a medical assistant now. She’d know better… she had to.
Right?

A medical professional looking at a clipboard | Source: Midjourney
Confidentiality was everything in healthcare.
Surely, she would be professional.
Surely.
I filled out the clipboard with shaking hands, feeling her eyes flicker toward me and then away, polite but not oblivious. Every fibre of my body screamed that this wasn’t how it was supposed to happen.

A young woman sitting in a doctor’s room | Source: Midjourney
I went through the appointment trying to block it all out, the tension in my shoulders, the tight ache under my skin.
Instead, I focused on the doctor’s kind voice. The cold gel smeared across my belly. The faint, miraculous thud-thud of a heartbeat emerging from the static. Tiny. Fragile. Real.
Tears pricked at the corners of my eyes as the grainy shape appeared on the monitor.
A life. A beginning.

A doctor standing in her office | Source: Midjourney
Something so impossibly mine that it made my chest hurt with a strange, wild kind of love. I clutched the ultrasound photo on the drive home, holding it against my chest like a fragile secret, emotions swirling too fast to name.
And when I opened the front door, my mom was already there.
Beaming. Congratulating me loudly. Throwing her arms around me like it was Christmas morning, her voice bubbling with excitement I couldn’t match.
“You’re going to be such a good mom, Mischa! I’m so happy for you! My baby is having a baby!” she gushed, squeezing me tighter.

A smiling woman standing in a doorway | Source: Midjourney
The room tilted sideways, the walls pressing in.
I hadn’t said anything yet.
I hadn’t even decided if I wanted to tell her today. Or tomorrow. Or next week. I hadn’t even had time to process the reality myself, let alone share it.

A pensive young woman standing in a living room | Source: Midjourney
My mom kept talking, oblivious to the way my hands hung limply at my sides. She floated between baby names, crib shopping, nursery colors… all the while I stood frozen, the blood draining from my face, my heartbeat hammering somewhere near my throat.
Somewhere between “maybe Emma if it’s a girl?” and “I have the old bassinet in the garage,” I found my voice.
It came out thin and brittle.

A baby bassinet in a garage | Source: Midjourney
“Mom,” I interrupted, swallowing hard. “How… how did you know?”
She blinked at me, confused, almost amused.
“Darling, Monica texted me, of course!”

A smiling woman in a living room | Source: Midjourney
Just like that.
Casual. Cheerful. Oblivious.
Monica had reached out and ripped away my most personal moment before I even made it home.
I mumbled something about needing the bathroom and stumbled down the hall, locking the door behind me.
The cold tiles pressed against my bare feet. I sank onto the closed toilet lid, pressing my trembling hands into my forehead, willing the spinning in my head to stop.

A young woman standing in a bathroom | Source: Midjourney
A deep, hollow ache ballooned inside my chest, swallowing everything else.
It wasn’t just gossip. It wasn’t just excitement. It was a violation. It was my life and someone else had decided that they had the right to announce it for me.
Every fear I’d carefully tucked away, judgment, pressure, losing control of my own story… came roaring up at once, crashing through the thin walls I’d tried so hard to build around myself.

An upset woman | Source: Midjourney
I wasn’t ready to shout my pregnancy from the rooftops.
I wasn’t ready for advice, for sidelong glances, for whispers behind my back about “the poor young girl who ruined her life.” I wasn’t ready for anyone else’s hands in my future, tugging at it, twisting it.
It was mine. And now it wasn’t.

An upset and stressed young woman | Source: Midjourney
The knowledge sat like a stone in my stomach, heavy and cold. I wanted to scream.
I wanted to march back to that OB office and demand Monica’s badge, her job, her dignity. To burn everything down just so someone, anyone, would understand what had been taken from me.
But my mom, still smiling a little too brightly, still hoping everything could be smoothed over, begged me not to.

A pensive woman sitting at a kitchen table | Source: Midjourney
“She meant well, Mischa,” she said softly, wringing her hands and looking at the freshly baked scones on the table. “Please, baby… just talk to her first. Give her a chance? Yes?”
Meant well. Meant well?
It was funny how people used that phrase like it erased damage.
I wasn’t feeling merciful. Not even a little. But I was feeling strategic.

A plate of scones with cream and jam | Source: Midjourney
Anger could scorch the earth, sure. But sometimes, patience could break it open.
If Monica didn’t realize what she’d done to me, she would do it to someone else. Someone younger, maybe? Someone still living under their parents’ roof, someone who could be hurt worse.
Someone without a safe place to land.
I couldn’t let that happen. No way!

A young woman sitting at a kitchen table | Source: Midjourney
So, we set a trap.
The next day, my younger sister, Allie, texted Monica, pretending she needed advice about medical school applications. Monica agreed immediately, thrilled at the idea of “mentoring” a future healthcare worker.
I could almost hear her preening through the text messages, already imagining herself as a wise sage, guiding another generation.

A phone on a table | Source: Pexels
That evening, Monica waltzed into our kitchen like she owned the place. Her hair was sprayed into a stiff helmet, her perfume so thick it clung to the air like syrup.
She kissed my mom on the cheek, patted Allie’s shoulder, and smiled at me like nothing had ever happened.
“I hope you made your roast chicken, Madeline!” she said to my mother. “I remember how much I loved it the first time I ever tasted it. Wow.”

Food on a table | Source: Pexels
My mom smiled and nodded.
“Of course, Mon,” she said. “Roast potatoes and the works.”
We made small talk, the kind that scratched at my skin. College classes. SAT scores. Internships, blah blah blah. I let her settle in, watching her posture relax as she sipped on hibiscus tea, her guard dropping quickly.
When the moment felt right, I leaned across the table, keeping my smile sugary sweet.

A cup of tea on a table | Source: Unsplash
“So… what’s the policy about patient confidentiality, Monica?” I asked, tilting my head just slightly.
Monica chuckled, waving a manicured hand dismissively.
“Oh, it’s super strict,” she said. “You can never share patient information. It’s a total disaster if you slip up. You can lose your job, your license… everything. It’s not worth it, really.”

A close up of a woman | Source: Pexels
I nodded, slowly, deliberately. Letting the silence stretch just long enough for discomfort to creep in.
“So technically,” I said lightly. “You weren’t supposed to tell my mom about my pregnancy, right? According to what you’ve just explained, I mean. Right, Mon?”
Her smile froze.
You could almost hear the gears grinding in her head as the realization hit.

A woman hidden by her hair | Source: Unsplash
Across the table, Allie shifted uncomfortably in her seat, her hands pulling at the hem of her sweater. She had been uneasy since Mom and I told her she was going to be an aunt.
“Well…” Monica stammered, a nervous laugh bubbling up. “That’s different, Mischa! Your mom’s my friend. It’s not like I told a stranger!”
I kept my expression as neutral as possible, my hands calmly folded on the table.

A close up of a blonde woman | Source: Pexels
“Oh,” I said, my voice feather-soft. “So there are exceptions, then?”
Monica’s face darkened. Her shoulders tensed, the mask slipping fast.
“I did you a favor!” she snapped. Her voice was shrill now, slicing through the kitchen’s heavy air. “You were scared. I could see it in your face. I helped you! You had that same haunted look that young women have when they don’t know how to tell their families… you should be grateful.”

An upset young woman | Source: Pexels
The kitchen seemed to shrink around us, the tension vibrating in my bones.
Allie sat frozen across the table, wide-eyed, the color draining from her face.
I pushed back my chair slowly, the scrape of the legs against the floor loud and deliberate.
“You didn’t help me,” I said quietly, my voice steady and cold. “You stole a moment that wasn’t yours to take. You stole a precious moment from me.”

An uncomfortable teenage girl | Source: Pexels
Monica’s hands shook visibly. She opened her mouth as if to protest again but no words came out.
She saw it then. She’d already lost.
She left quickly after that, muttering something about not being hungry. Something about “good luck” over her shoulder. The door slammed harder than necessary.
I stood there in the quiet kitchen, my hands trembling, my heart racing but feeling a little steadier inside.

A pensive woman | Source: Pexels
I had given her a chance to recognize her mistake.
She didn’t. She doubled down. She would do it again.
“Girls, let’s have dinner,” my mother said quietly. “You need to eat, Mischa. Your body needs good sustenance for the baby.”

A plate of food | Source: Pexels
The next morning, I sat at the kitchen table with my laptop open. The “Submit” button glowing at the bottom of the complaint form.
My finger hovered over the mouse for a long moment, heart thudding slow and heavy in my chest. I wasn’t cruel. I truly wasn’t.
I didn’t blast Monica on social media. I didn’t rant or call her names. I didn’t tell anyone outside of my family. I simply stated the facts.

A laptop on a table | Source: Unsplash
Monica had breached patient confidentiality. She had shared private, sensitive medical information without consent. While my case hadn’t ended in tragedy, another patient might not be so lucky.
A soft breeze drifted through the open window, stirring the papers on the table, brushing my skin like a nudge forward.
I took a deep breath and clicked submit.

A close up of a young woman | Source: Unsplash
At the OB’s office, the manager listened carefully, her face grave and still.
Later, I learned that Monica had previously completed, and signed, a mandatory confidentiality training, explicitly reaffirming that she understood the rules she had broken.
They took it seriously. Very seriously.
A few days later, Monica was placed under internal investigation and suspended while the clinic decided her fate.

A person holding a clipboard with a contract | Source: Pexels
At dinner one evening, my mom twisted her fork through her mashed potatoes, her voice barely above a whisper.
“She’s losing everything, Mischa. Her job. Her reputation. She called me earlier today.”
I stared down at my own plate, the food untouched and cold, feeling both heavier and lighter at once.
“I didn’t do that,” I said quietly. “Monica did.”

A bowl of mashed potatoes | Source: Pexels
There’s a difference between being kind and being a doormat. There’s a difference between forgiveness and allowing someone to hurt others just because they didn’t hurt you badly enough.
Forgiveness doesn’t erase consequences.
It just means that you don’t let their actions define your future.
Weeks passed.

A young woman leaning against a wall | Source: Unsplash
The early spring sun grew warmer, wrapping the afternoons in gold. My belly grew. My excitement grew. And so did my confidence.
I told people about my pregnancy on my own terms, in my own words, in my own time. Not because someone stole the story from me. But because I chose to share it.
The first time I posted my ultrasound photo online, I hesitated, staring at the screen, my thumb trembling slightly over the button.

An ultrasound | Source: Pexels
Tiny fingers. A curled-up nose. A future that was still mine to shape.
I smiled.
Not everyone deserves access to every part of your story. Especially the parts you’re still writing.

A person holding an ultrasound | Source: Unsplash
What would you have done?
If you’ve enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |
When Mia honors her late mother at a family dinner, her stepmother’s cruel outburst ignites a truth long buried. Forced to choose between silence and self-respect, Mia walks away and writes a letter that could shatter everything. This is a raw, unforgettable story about grief, memory, and what it takes to reclaim your voice.
This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.
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