Price to Pay      Price to Pay

 by MR

  

 Author's website: http://unhinged.kixxster.org

 Disclaimer: I make no claim on anyone or anything mentioned in this
story. Fraser and Ray belong to some guys in Canada. The "things" belong
to a long tradition of spectral horrors.

 Author's Notes: To Andrew and Morgan, for being who they are and
convincing me to quit changing things before I ruined it completely,
dammit!

 Story Notes: This is the final story in the "Slipping Through the Cracks"
universe. It's suggested you read "Ray's Glasses," "Daemons of the Air,"
"InnerVision,"and "Dreamcatcher" or there's a very good likelihood you'll
be left wondering what the hell I'm rabbiting on about.

 This story is a sequel to: Dreamcatcher 

 

 Price to Pay
 By MR 

 It's an hour's round-trip drive from the cabin to Coldwater. Dependent,
of course, on ideal weather and nothing unexpected happening once I get
there. 

 I left for town at 8:30 a.m. fully believing I'd be back by 11 at the
latest. Unfortunately, the clock on the wall of Charley's garage says it's
now 12:30. I could, I suppose, walk across the street and have a quick
lunch at Margie's. No real hurry, especially as the mechanic on duty said
it could be a while before the jeeps fixed, assuming they have the parts
on hand. 

 Never assume anything, my grandmother used to say, because it makes an
ass out of 'u' and 'me'. 

 I remain where I am (hunched on the uncomfortable bench in what Charley
calls his waiting room) and pull the letter out. I don't know why I keep
re-reading it: It's not as if the message isn't the same as it was nearly
two hours ago, when I picked up the mail at the post office. 

 Despite this, I unfold it and lay it open on my lap: 

 Benton, 

 Probably surprised to hear from me since you sent the letter to
Grandfather, but he's away right now and told me to answer his mail till
he gets back. Don't know for sure when that will be. He's been gone a
month already, and it may be another month before he drops by again.
Trouble in some of the villages further east, he says. 

 Funny thing is he said before he left you'd write. Seemed to know it in
that way Grandfather knows about things he hasn't seen or heard yet. 

 Your letter didn't really make much sense to me, so all I can tell you is
what Grandfather said to tell you before he left. 

 'Do you truly trust your partner as much as you say you do? Give it some
thought and then ask yourself: Do I trust Ray to know what he's doing even
if I can't understand why? 

 If the answer is yes, then provide him with what he needs and let him be,
because he knows what he's doing even if you don't. 

 If the answer is no, then tell him. It isn't fair to leave him to bear
the burden alone if you no longer have faith in his love for you. 

 It's as simple as that, Benton. Despite your inborn desire to complicate
things past all reason, it truly is as simply as yes or no.' 

 So there's your answer. As soon as he gets back I'll have him call you.
Hopefully by then things will've worked themselves out. 

 Sincerely, 

 Brian Goforth 

 Carefully, I refold the letter, put it back in the envelope, and stuff it
in my shirt pocket. 

 It doesn't surprise me Quinn knew I'd write. Even as a boy I was aware of
his ability to know things before they happened, to show up just when I
needed him the most, to always make an entrance in the nick of time. Only
when I got older did I discover he was a shaman. I was quite upset he
hadn't told me, but when I mentioned it he'd shrugged and said it wasn't
that simple. He was, he told me, Shaman to more than one tribe, something
I'd never heard of before or since. For a Shaman to cross tribal
boundaries in times of need isn't unusual, but for one to lend his wisdom
to anyone, no matter what people they come from...that's a bit trickier. 

 Brian's one of his grandsons; Quinn's been living with him and his wife
Karrel for several years. He has a place of his own, but seldom spends
much time there. Instead he stays with his children and grandchildren for
varying lengths of time. All consider it an honor to have him; it gives
you quite a bit of prestige in the community to be related to a shaman.
Even an unorthodox one like Quinn. 

 With a sigh, I pick up my cell phone and dial our number, my stomach
tightening as it rings. Finally there's a click, but before I can blurt
out to Ray how sorry I am I didn't get hold of him earlier, I realize I've
gotten the answering machine and can only sit there, heart sinking, and
listen to the message Ray first recorded when we came hear nearly six
months ago. 

 'Hey. You've reached the Benton Fraser and Ray Kowalski residence. We're
out fighting for truth, justice and the Canadian Way right now, but if you
leave a message we'll try and fit you into our busy schedule and give you
a call back. Thank you kindly.' 

 I wait for the beep. "Ray? Ray, if you're there please pick up the
phone." Nothing. "Ray, I'm sorry it's taking so long, but some idiot
sideswiped me when I was pulling out of the parking lot at Walker's. I'm
waiting for the mechanic to fix the problem and I'll be home as soon as I
can. Ray? Ray, please don't ignore me. There are things I need to tell
you, but I can't say them to you if you won't listen. Ray?" 

 Nothing but the click of the answering machine disconnecting and a dial
tone. 

 I stare at the buzzing cell phone in my hand and swallow, trying to fight
back the rising panic. 

 Two hours and several increasingly frantic attempts to call Ray later,
Carl backs the jeep out of the garage, shifts it into park, and climbs
out. "Sorry it took me so long, Benton. Lucky for you McNally's had what I
needed or you would've had to have someone run you back out to your
place." 

 "How much do I owe you?" 

 He waves dismissively. "Eh, don't worry 'bout it. I'll have Charley bill
ya. Won't charge you for the extra time either; it's our own fault we
didn't have what we needed in stock. Jimmy Fontaine's supposed to be
keeping track of..." 

 No longer listening, aware only that I have to get home NOW (that I
should've been home hours ago), I walk around the jeep and climb in.
Leaving Carl talking to himself, I finish backing out into the street,
straighten her out, and hit the accelerator. 

 It's a good thing it's summer. If it were snowy the road would be slick
and I'd have to take it slowly. Good weather means that if I keep her at
50, I'll be at the cabin in under an hour. 

 Only gradually do I become aware my whole body is shaking. Fine tremors
that remind me of when Ray developed hypothermia on the mountainside. I
bring the jeep to a halt at the stop sign and sit there, trying to calm
myself by sheer force of will. Most likely Ray's simply gone outside to
enjoy the good weather. I resolutely ignore the little voice in my head
that whispers what I already know; that Ray hasn't ventured further than
the front porch since we moved here, not even after he abandoned the
bandages for the wrap-around sunglasses. 

 A sound pulls me back to the here and now, and I turn my head and find
myself face to face with Margie Walker. She's rapping on the window to get
my attention, and from the way she's frowning she's been at it for a
while. I wonder why she looks so alarmed and roll down the window. "Yes?" 

 "Are you okay, Benton? You've been sitting there close to three minutes
just staring." 

 Three minutes? "I'm sorry; I was thinking of something else." 

 "Must've been important from the looks of it. Do you still want the
salt?" 

 "Salt?" 

 "I found some." She holds up a small box. "When you were in earlier
getting supplies, you mentioned you'd run out and there wasn't any on the
shelf. Meant to do something about it, but Brenda called in sick and then
I had a rush of people wanting lunch. Just got around to checking a few
minutes ago and found some boxes in the back. Do you still want it?" 

 I replay our earlier conversation in my head. When I decided to come into
town and check the mail, I also made out a list of supplies we needed.
That's when I discovered we were out of salt, which I couldn't understand,
because I would've sworn I bought at least two boxes the last time I'd
gone shopping. I mentioned it to Ray, and I remember him saying that since
I did all the cooking I'd obviously been overdoing it. I remember wishing
I could see his eyes, because I would've sworn he wasn't telling me the
truth. 

 "Just put it in the back with the rest of the stuff, could you?" 

 She nods and opens the back door, wedging the box in between two others.
"You laying out a salt lick?" 

 "What?" 

 "Thought maybe you were trying to lure the deer closer. If you need block
salt, I can order it for you." 

 "No, I don't need block salt." Something's tugging at the back of my
mind, something connected to Quinn's advice and Ray's unwillingness to
talk and the missing salt. "Margie, I really need to be getting home. I've
been gone far longer than I intended and I'm worried something may've
happened to Ray." 

 "You sure you're okay, Benton? You're white as a sheet." 

 "I'll be fine once I get home," I tell her, knowing all the while that I
very well may not be, and drive away before she can ask me anything else,
Quinn's letter and the missing salt and the 'things' Ray's glasses showed
me all mixed together in my mind. It's connected somehow. I know it is,
just as I know for certain that Ray isn't on the porch. 

 He's gone outside on his own. I left Dief with him, told him to keep an
eye on Ray, and Dief's well aware of his duty. But Ray could've locked him
in the bedroom and gone out alone. He'd do it if it meant Dief was safe.
Just as Dief would do anything to protect Ray, so Ray would do anything to
protect Dief. 

 And me as well. 

 Well and truly panicked, I take a hard right onto the road to the cabin
and push her for all she's worth. 

 I'm five miles from the cabin when I hit the fog. 

 Quite literally hit it. One minute the sun's shining, the next the jeep's
cocooned in a thick blanket of gray. Visibility in front shrinks to the
end of the hood. Visibility on the sides becomes zero. The only way I know
for sure I haven't gone off the road is because I can still feel the
gravel under the wheels. 

 Water starts condensing on the windows almost immediately, forcing me to
turn on the wipers, and I slow to a crawl. The road itself is more or less
straight, but there are several sppots where erosion's cut deep ditches on
the sides. If I were to slip off I'd be well and truly stuck. It once took
Charlie the better part of an afternoon to haul out a Land Rover that
strayed too close to the edge during a thunderstorm. 

 Literally boxed in, I can't keep my mind from trying to fit the pieces
together. Discovering the 'things' existed. The murders in Chicago.
Finding what remained of Stella, and our frantic flight north (Ray
insisting we get as far away from civilization as fast as possible). His
refusal to wear the glasses at all once we arrived, which eventually let
to his adoption of the blindfold, then the wraparound shades. The way he'd
sit for hours on the bed or the couch or the porch, never moving a muscle,
not saying a word, yet I couldn't shake the feeling he was 'waiting' for
something. 

 The letter from Quinn. The 'accident' outside Walker's this morning. The
extended wait at Charlie's. Not being able to get hold of Ray. The missing
salt. Fog on a perfectly clear sunny day. 

 Something(someone)trying to keep me away from the cabin? 

 I fight the urge to floor the accelerator and rush headlong, knowing that
if I slip off the road it's a long hike back to the turn-off. A long hike
through fog so thick I won't be able to see my hand in front of my face. 

 'Assuming they let you get back at all' the voice in my head whispers,
and the fear ratchets up another notch. 

 I used to have nightmares when I was a boy. Dreams in which I'd be
running from something I never saw. But I could hear it and smell it, and
I knew it wanted me dead, and no matter how fast I ran I couldn't shake
it. Endlessly running, too terrified to look back and see what was behind
me, even more terrified to go forward, and then suddenly the road before
me would disappear, leaving me balanced on the edge of chasm that was
black and bottomless. If I went forward, I'd fall into never-ending
darkness. If I turned, I'd see what was after me and the knowledge would
surely drive me mad. 

 I always woke up at that point, sweating cold even in the heat of summer;
I'd spend the rest of the night lying awake, too scared to risk falling
asleep and find myself confronted by yawing horror on one side and death
on the other. 

 A slight shudder from the jeep, and I know I've left the gravel. If the
damned fog weren't so thick, I'd be able to see the cabin. Without
thinking, I roll down the driver's side window, lean my head out and yell
"Ray!" 

 I'm answered by a wall of noise. The shock of it almost sends me off the
road, but I manage to pull back at the last minute. It's coming from the
fog. Or perhaps it 'is' the fog? 

 "Ray!" I scream, as if my voice could make a dent in the cacophony around
me. I have no frame of reference for what I'm hearing. It's as if I'm
listening to something that descended from the farthest reaches of space
or erupted from the depths of the Earth's core. Whatever it is, it
shouldn't exist in a sane, rational world. 

 And then suddenly the fog's gone, vanished as quickly as it appeared, and
I realize I am, in fact, less than 10 meters away from the cabin. 

 The hellish noise hasn't diminished one decibel, but I'm too busy staring
at the scene in front of me to care. 

 The first thing I notice is the ring of white encircling the house and
out buildings. For a moment I think it's snow, then realize that's absurd.
It's the middle of July. Besides which the texture's wrong. The suns rays
make it shimmer like a mirage. 

 Salt, the voice in my head provides the answer easily. It's the missing
salt. 

 I look away from it and see Ray, and for an instant my heart stops
beating. He's standing at the bottom of the steps, sunglasses firmly in
place, dressed in a pair of jeans and a black T-shirt that only serve to
emphasize how much weight he's lost since we moved here. He's holding
something in his left hand (a book of some sort) and he's staring up at
the sky. 

 I open my mouth to call him again, then my eyes shift upwards and the
words dies stillborn in my throat. 

 I'm not really surprised to see them. It's as if I knew they'd find us
sooner of later no matter how far we ran. It takes me a minute, though, to
realize there's a difference between these ones and the ones Ray described
seeing in the alleys. These remind me of what I saw in the bullpen the day
I so stupidly tried on Ray's glasses. But oddly, I don't feel the same
revulsion I did then. 

 I remember something Ray said one night in our bed, when he told me what
he'd seen in the alleys near the dead bodies. His voice had been barely a
whisper, as if he were afraid to speak too loudly lest somebody hear him. 

 "They aren't like the other ones, Ben. They're something that slipped
through the cracks." 

 I shift my gaze back to Ray; despite the noise, I can tell he's talking
to them (arguing actually, if the way he's waving his free hand around is
any indication). The sheer impossibility of what I'm looking at hits me
and for an instant I'm back in my nightmare, standing on the edge of the
abyss. Then I remember what Quinn said in his letter. Do I love Ray enough
to believe he knows what he's doing? Do I truly have that much faith? 

 The tightness in my chest loosens a bit as I realize I do. I may not
understand it, but I know he'll do whatever he has to do to protect us. 

 It's what he might be willing to sacrifice personally that frightens me. 

 Carefully, not wanting to draw his attention away from what he's doing
(or draw undue attention to myself) I open the door of the jeep and slide
out. 

 Apparently I'm not as silent as I hoped, because Ray looks at me. Even
without being able to see his eyes, I can tell he's annoyed. "Fraser," his
voice is hoarse with fatigue, and I suddenly wonder just how long this'
been going on, "do me a favor and don't come any closer, okay?" 

 I nod, not bothering to wonder why I can hear him clearly over the noise,
and remain where I am. There's a momentary, almost painful, increase in
the unearthly howling, and I'm very much aware that the 'things' have
shifted their attention to me. I hear Ray say something that sounds like
"He's the one I was tellin' you bout," and they turn back to their
business with my lover, dismissing me as if I weren't even there. 

 With nothing to do but watch, I find myself trying to catalog the
differences between them. Like the ones in the bullpen that day, they're
of every conceivable shape and color. Some are almost the size of the
cabin, while others resemble mere wisps of smoke. If there's any hierarchy
among them, I'm unable to distinguish it. 

 I've become so used to the noise it isn't till the silence starts ringing
in my ears that I realize it's stopped. Without me really noticing, the
'things' have been gradually fading out, until only Ray and a
fragile-looking trapezoid the same color as his eyes remain. He's closed
the book and is nodding his head in response to something I can't hear. 

 "I'll keep my side of it," his ruined voice makes me ache in sympathy.
"You got what you wanted. If I never see any of you again, it'll be too
soon." He reaches out a tentative hand to touch it, the small blue object
evaporates under his fingertips, and we're alone. 

 Unsure of what I've just witnessed, I carefully close the door of the
jeep and walk across to him, stepping over the salt. 

 "Didn't want you scuffing it accidentally." He rasps. 

 I nod, then reach out and gather him into my arms, burying my face in the
crook of his neck. 

 "Shh." And why is he comforting me when he's the one who's been through
hell? "It's okay now. They won't bother us again." 

 For a long time we stand there, him murmuring nonsense in my ear while I
let all the fear and panic of the day bleed away. 

 Eventually I get myself under control and he pulls me over so we can sit
down on the steps. "Why salt?" 

 "Protection. The book was pretty specific about it." 

 I have a sudden recollection of watching my grandmother take a pinch of
salt from a shaker that tipped over while she was cooking and tossing it
over her shoulder "for luck." I pick up the book and flip through it.
"Where did this come from?" 

 "Don't know." His mouth quirks when I look at him. "Remember the box mum
sent me a couple months ago?" I nod. "It was stuff from when I was a kid.
This was buried at the very bottom." 

 I turn the pages slowly. "It looks vaguely Russian." 

 "Polish." 

 "You can read Polish?" 

 "Learned how to read it before I started school. The old man had a bunch
of books great-grandma Kowalski brought from the old country. I think it
was hers. Don't remember ever seeing it before, though." 

 "It told you how to contact the things?" 

 "Kind've. It made me realize I was right when told you they'd been aware
of me since I got the glasses. Remember when I said I got the feeling they
were here before us?" I nod. "Was right about that too. What you've gotta
understand is that they're not even remotely human. Where they come from
there's no such thing as 'good' or 'evil.' They're beyond that. But
they've learned a lot about us over the years, so they know there are
certain things we believe are wrong. They try to avoid doing those things
because they don't want to call attention to themselves." 

 "And the ones that were committing the murders slipped through the
cracks?" 

 "Well they all slipped through the cracks. There are doorways..." he
shakes his head at my blank look. "The other thing is that they don't act
as individuals. They think and act as a single entity." 

 "Are you saying the ones committing the murders were different from the
rest of them?" 

 He nods. "Their society's equivalent of psychopaths. From what they told
me it's happened before. Thing is, it's been so long since they had any
trouble with renegades the rest of the collective wasn't aware anything
was going on till I saw the first body. I attracted the attention of the
ones doing the killing, but I also made the other ones aware of what was
going on. Didn'tknow that, though; that's why we ran." 

 "So we were running the ones committing the murders?" 

 He nods. "Couldn't though. All we could do was thrown'em off the trail
for a while. Then mum sent me the book and I started reading it." 

 "Reading it?" 

 He flushes, obviously embarrassed. "I used to take the blindfold off at
night, after you were asleep. I hated lying to you, but it was my fault.
You would've never seen the damn things if you hadn't put on my glasses.
They were already familiar with me, so it made sense I'd be the one they
came for. Read further in the book and discovered I could contact them if
I wanted to. Problem was I didn't know who'd get here first; the ones I
already knew or the ones that were doing the killing." 

 I reach out and touch his face. "And all those times you just sat there
not saying anything?" 

 "I was keeping watch. I figured I'd know when they were coming. If the
regular ones got here first, maybe I could cut a deal with them that'd
keep us safe." 

 "What sort of deal?" 

 He looks away, staring out across the lawn. "I didn't know. The book was
clear enough about everything else, but when it started talking about
making deals with them, it didn't go into a lot of detail as to what they
might want. Just that it'd be something personal." 

 "They'd want a part of you?" 

 "Something that was important to me. Like I said, the book was sketchy on
the details. I've only got a few things that really mean anything to me
anymore. I didn't know what they'd want." 

 "What did they want, Ray?" 

 "You and Dief. No way in hell I was gonna give either of you to them,
okay? Then they wanted mum and dad." 

 "And?" 

 "Jesus, Ben, you think I'd sell my own parents just to save myself? I
love you; I love them. That's how it is. It's not negotiable." He runs a
hand through his hair. 

 "You were going to give yourself to them weren't you?" 

 "If I had to, yeah. I figured it'd be worth it if they'd leave you and
Dief and mum and the old man alone." 

 "And what about my feelings, Ray? Do you think I love you any less than
you love me?" 

 "No. But like I said, it wasn't your problem. They were my glasses. I
knew they could be dangerous if the wrong person got hold of them. I
should've never left'em lying around where you could try them on." 

 "And I shouldn't have put them on. Nobody's to blame for this mess.
Except maybe them," I wave my hand at the sky. "And you still haven't
answered my question." 

 "What question?" 

 I pinch the bridge of my nose and pray for patience. "You obviously
didn't give yourself to them or we wouldn't be sitting here having this
conversation. What did you give them, Ray? What did they take in exchange
for leaving us alone?" 

 He swallows and looks down at the ground. "Promise me you're not gonna
freak out." 

 "Ray, if you don't tell me what you've done right now, I'm going freak
out in a manner that may well result in the locals calling the Depot and
asking for an emergency medical helicopter to take me to the nearest
psychiatric facility for an extended rest. Am I making myself clear?" 

 "Yeah." A moments hesitation, then he carefully removes his sunglasses
and turns to me. 

 I find myself staring into eyes so devoid of color they're almost silver.
For an instant what I'm looking at doesn't register. Then I recall the
color of the last one to disappear and it hits me like a ton of bricks.
"Oh God, Ray!" 

 "Hey, it's okay." He smiles slightly and touches my face. "I can still
see. Matter of fact, I see better than I ever did with the glasses. 

 "How...why..." 

 "They're color-blind, Ben. For them everything's black and white and
shades of gray. They've always known humans see in color, but they
couldn't grasp the concept of what color was. I've given them a chance to
see for themselves. And since I don't need the glasses to see anymore..."
he shrugs. "Course, I'll have to wear the sunglasses when we go into town.
Don't wanna spook the locals." 

 "You can only see in monochrome?" He nods. "How could you give up
something that important, Ray?" 

 "Because you're more important than being able to tell whether someone's
shirt's blue or green. Mum and the old man are more important than knowing
what color the jeep is. Anyway, I've got it all stored in here." He taps
the side of his head. "I know what your Serge looks like, and what color
your hair is, and how your eyes go dark when you're turned on. I've seen
the aurora borealis enough times to know how the colors flash and fade. If
I ever need to remember what color leaves are in the fall or how the woods
looks when it snows, all I hafta do is close my eyes and remember." He
leans towards me, resting our foreheads together. "I won't deny it's gonna
take some getting used to but consider the alternative, Ben." 

 I nod, realizing I'm perilously close to tears. I knew Ray would be
willing to surrender his own life if it meant saving us, but I never
stopped to think of having to live with the consequences of him
surrendering something less fatal but just as permanent. "I love you, Ray
Kowalski. You've got more courage than anyone I've ever known." 

 He sniffs slightly. "Not courage, you freak. Was so scared I damn near
wet myself again. Just making the best of a bad situation. They get to see
in color; we don't have to spend the rest of our lives looking over our
shoulder and jumping at shadows." 

 "And the ones that were committing the murders?" 

 "Already taken care of. Soon as they knew what was happening they rounded
them up. They're back outside where they belong. Where they all belong, I
guess." 

 "Where's Dief?" 

 Ray flushes again. "Locked in the bathroom. I drugged his donuts." 

 "Ray!" 

 "You think I don't know you left him behind to watch me? Last thing I
needed while I'm trying to negotiate with aliens was him charging through
the front door doing his 'rabid killer half-wolf' imitation!" 

 "Why the bathroom?" 

 He looks at me. "Cause I was afraid he'd wake up and try coming through
the window, okay? He's as big a freak as you, Fraser. Even if he could
knock the glass outta the bathroom window, there's no way he could get
through it." 

 For some reason this strikes me as hysterically funny, and I give a
giggle that's half relief, half long-suppressed panic finally coming to
the surface. "If he keeps eating donuts, he won't be able to get out the
window at all." One corner of Ray's mouth twitches, then we collapse
against each other and laugh till we're in very real pain. 

 We suddenly sober when a faint but very annoyed whine filters through the
open front door. 

 "Busted." Ray says, and I look at him, thinking that if you didn't know
his eyes used to be blue you'd believe they were naturally gray. Providing
you don't get to close. 

 "What now?" 

 He smiles at me; the first genuine smile I've seen since we left Chicago.
"Figured we could go back to the states and tie things up properly. Tell
people good-bye, pick up the rest of my stuff, maybe give the Lieu my
formal resignation." 

 "Do you want to stay there?" 

 "Don't think I could. But I bet the Mounties'll be glad to have you back
if you ask'em nice enough." 

 He's right of course. Buck's already contacted me twice wanting to know
when I'd be able to come back to work. "What about you?" 

 "Apply for citizenship and try to find a job. " 

 "With the police?" 

 He shakes his head. "Don't think I could ever do that again. Too many bad
memories. You get much call for mechanics up here?" 

 "That depends on what they can fix. In your case, since you can fix about
anything, I don't think you'll have much trouble finding work. Until
then," I lean over and kiss him, "what do you say to becoming my kept
man?" 

 He cocks his head to one side, considering. "What's it pay?" 

 "All you can eat. And sexual favors, of course." 

 "Of course." 

 From inside comes the barking of a wide-awake, extremely annoyed Dief. 

 "Suppose we should spring'im?" 

 I stand, pulling Ray to his feet. "I'll explain the circumstances. I'm
sure he'll forgive you eventually." 

 "Right." He throws an arm around my shoulders. "Until them, you know
we're both of us gonna pay and pay and pay..." 

 FIN 

End Price to Pay by MR: psykaos42@yahoo.com

Author and story notes above.