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© Copyright 1996, Jim Loy
This problem originally appeared in the Montana Chess News.
This is an
interesting mate-in-3, which I composed. Without the Black pawn, it is still an
interesting mate-in-3, but it then has 3 solutions.
You will probably enjoy trying to solve it, before looking at this:
Solution: 1 Qe4 Kb4 2 Qe1+ Ka3 3 Qa5++.