niedziela, 7 czerwca 2026

The story of one acquaintance



He descended the wooden stairs. It was just after breakfast and he decided to get to the seaside as quickly as possible. He glanced briefly at the rows of people lying and relaxing carefree. Not wanting to risk being robbed while he bathed, he headed for a more deserted part of the beach.
He whistled merrily, sinking his feet into the soft sand. He turned around. The people were far behind him. He wasn't completely alone, however, as
every now and then he came across couples lying and cuddling, and every so often
, a single person just like himself strolling.
Finally, he stopped and lay down on a blanket. He took out his portable MP3 player and lazily gazed out at the sea, nodding his head to the music.
A petite, girlish figure was walking toward him from a distance. She wore a white blouse and a short, light green dress. Although she must have noticed him, she pretended not to. Meanwhile, he was staring at her, his eyes tracing her shapely figure, not bothering him in the slightest that she was a few years younger than him.
She had beautiful, black hair that flowed down her back. He noticed she was sad. She walked past him, ignoring him, and sat down a dozen or so steps away. He took off his headphones and slowly stood up. He approached her, and she looked at him curiously.
"Hi, what's your name?" she asked.
"Michał. And yours?
" "Magda.
" "Why is such a pretty girl alone?" he asked, sitting down next to her.
She smiled and looked at him flirtatiously.
"I'm here with my parents. But you know how old people are... they're terribly boring, so I won't be going around with them. And what if I'm alone? I didn't have anyone around until you showed up.
" "I came here for two and a half weeks, just to have fun. I'm from Warsaw, and you?
" "From Kluczbork.
" "I wonder how old she is?" he thought.
"I guess you're on vacation now?
" "Well... you guessed it," she smiled again. "And you?
" "I'm on vacation."
"So, are you working?
" "Yes. And what are you doing?
" "I'm still studying...
" "You're so young," he said with a mischievous smile.
"I guess that doesn't bother you?" This time she smiled. "Don't you like girls younger than you?
" "No, come on... but maybe I'm too old for you. I'm nineteen, and you're probably younger...
" "A dozen or so," she smiled, her smile growing sweeter.
"You're not afraid of older guys, are you?" He moved a little closer.
"You were a godsend, you know? Because I wanted to meet an older guy.
" "Maybe we could go for a walk?" he suggested. "I enjoy talking to you.
" "And vice versa."
They walked side by side, stealing glances at each other. He felt a familiar tingle in his stomach. "Nice young babe!" he thought. He looked at her shapely butt, at her lovely
young legs walking across the sand, at her round breasts and hair flowing down her neck. He watched and felt desire welling up inside him. She clearly felt it too, because every now and then she smiled at him with her flirtatious, innocent smile.
They approached the dunes, and even though it was forbidden, they slowly began to climb them. He offered her his hand to help her and noticed that she squeezed it tightly. "I take it
you're giving me a sign," he thought.
"How do you like it here?" he asked, once they were seated side by side.
"Nice, I haven't been here before," she replied, pleased.
"Looks like we're alone here.
" "Looks like we are."
She moved closer to him, licking her lips delicately. He touched her hand and began to stroke it, higher and bolder, reaching for her neck and touching her hair.
He pulled her to him, slowly, so as not to frighten her. He heard her breathing, deep and full of desire. Their mouths slowly met in a passionate kiss. Magda embraced him tightly, and soon they were lying on the soft sand of the dunes.
His hand traveled lower until he found her round breasts. He touched them, and
she stiffened, letting out a muffled moan of pleasure. He slipped his hand under her blouse and began to caress her young, girlish body. She began to moan, sigh, and writhe beneath him like an insatiable, wild cat. She pulled off his shirt, and he lifted her dress and began to gently pull down her panties. When he succeeded, he lay between her spread legs and found her secret treasure.
He moved his tongue in all directions, simultaneously caressing her breasts with his hand. Magda breathed rapidly, moaned, and writhed in excitement. He stroked her and, kissing her, put on a condom. When he was ready, he lay on top of her and, caressing her as passionately as possible, entered her. She moaned slightly. He entered her slowly and saw that she was feeling better and better. Her body stopped resisting him, and her moans of pleasure brought him immense pleasure.
He sped up a bit and lifted her by the ass, kneeling at the same time. Her head hung down and her legs wrapped around his hips. He felt his orgasm approaching and decided to delay it a bit. He slowed for a moment and lay on top of her as before, but it didn't help much. Magda came a moment later, digging her nails into his back, which provided him with additional, interesting stimuli.
When it was over, they lay side by side, their arms around each other.
- Oh... I've been dreaming of something like this!
They made love three more times that afternoon and felt good together.
They arranged to meet the next day. Lying in bed before falling asleep, Magda thought about her first erotic experiences. It was all so interesting and extraordinary to her. Wasn't that exactly what she wanted? Wasn't that what she dreamed of every evening, stroking her breasts, belly, and neck, brushing her fingers over the delicate petals of her little rose, accompanied by her own suppressed spasms of pleasure, her rapidly beating heart, and waves of heat and excitement flooding her body.
And how much greater and more incredible were the experiences she experienced with Michał!
The next day they met again, and after breakfast, they went to a wild beach where there was no one else.
"We'll be alone here. No one will disturb us. You know you have the look of a wild cat?
" "And you couldn't get enough of me yesterday, could you?"
"I could make love to you until dawn. You're so exciting, so sexy..."
There was a forest nearby, and they both walked toward it. Once inside, Michał grabbed Magda and pressed her against the first tree on the edge. She kissed him first. Their tongues met in a joyful dance that ignited passion and desire within them. He caressed her body, which, like the most magnificent instrument, responded with delight to pleasure, playing a melody of joy and ecstasy.
Michał lifted her slightly and entered her. She spread her legs, then wrapped them around his hips, squeezing them tightly. He began to thrust into her, harder and faster. He slowed every now and then, almost stopping completely, which was incredibly exciting for both of them. Magda, feeling her orgasm approaching, kissed him furiously everywhere she could, moaning and writhing in a paroxysm of pleasure. His manhood pounded into her harder and faster. She lifted herself slightly and, almost screaming, stiffened for that one moment in which they both became one big, exploding sex.
"You were wonderful," Michał said later.
"That's thanks to you too, my dear!" she replied sarcastically. "You made me so passionate!"
They spent many of the next days in a similar manner. However, the time was approaching when they had to say goodbye. Although they knew it, they didn't talk about it at all. They enjoyed every moment, squeezing the best out of it.
At their final meeting, they parted with a passionate kiss. Deep down, Magda felt a pang of regret that she would never see Michał again, but she also felt a turning point in her life. She discovered so many new sensations she had only dreamed of before.
That evening, when she was home and about to go to bed, she undressed in front of the bathroom mirror, just like she had done so many times before. But this time, she looked at her body differently than before.
"Now I'm open to pleasure," she thought. "With such a beautiful body, I'll turn many a man's head. There will be many of them caressing me, kissing me, entering me, and I will be a goddess of pleasure and sex!

To the second."

How much?" Amelia asked, shoving her hands into her jacket pockets.
The old man placed his watch on the counter and took off his glasses.
"Twenty zlotys .
" "Are you kidding? The strap is gold-plated...
" The man sank into the chair, as if he had been standing for three hours, not minutes. He could have been fifty or seventy. His face was too wrinkled to read his age.
"I see. That's why I'm giving twenty zlotys, not two.
" "It's worth much more.
" "Not to me. I value it at twenty zlotys. Are you keeping it?"
Amelia glanced at the watch. The gold-plated strap, Roman numerals, and white dial looked very elegant. It was a memento of her father, who had vanished into thin air.
"It runs precisely, to the minute. It's old, but it never breaks. "
The man took the watch and held it a few centimeters to his eyes.
"Let it be thirty, but that's my last word."
Amelia sighed. Thirty zlotys for a watch worth several hundred. She couldn't agree to that.
"Sixty."
The old man placed the watch on the counter and pushed it toward Amelia.
"Thirty. I can't give you more."
She looked up at the ceiling, where the paint was peeling, then glanced at the shelves behind the man. They were lined with old objects, from crystals to a communist-era tape recorder. Nothing cost less than thirty zlotys, and most were over a hundred. At the very top stood a figurine of an Indian, holding a note with fifty zlotys written on it instead of a bow. Amelia wondered if its owner had received even half that sum.
"Then thank you," she said, pocketing the watch. She didn't need the money that much. Besides, there were several pawn shops in town.
The old man wasn't concerned. He shrugged and leaned over a newspaper. She ceased to exist for him. Perhaps the watch really wasn't worth much, or perhaps the man wanted her to come to that conclusion and change her mind. If so, it would be a pleasure to disappoint him. Amelia left the pawn shop without saying goodbye.


II

The hallway was so noisy that if she had screamed for help, no one would have heard. Everyone was shouting, trying to be heard over each other, scurrying around like caged rats, or sitting against the walls, waiting for their next lesson.
Amelia pushed her way through the crowd of teenagers filling the narrow hallway and entered room thirty-eight. Although there were three minutes left before the bell, most of the desks were still empty. A small group of people milled around the hamster and guinea pig cages, petting the animals. Others were surrounding the aquarium and feeding the fish. Only the python standing in the corner remained untouched.
"Where have you been? Mioduszewska was asking about you," Ela said as Amelia sat down at the desk next to her.
Mioduszewska always asked about her. Amelia was weak in math, and Mioduszewska claimed her bad grades were due to absence.
"I wanted to pawn a watch. They didn't open until nine.
" "And what?
" "Nothing. The guy offered me thirty zlotys."
Amelia placed the watch on the desk in front of Ela. The girl picked it up and began examining it as if she were doing an appraisal.
"Is it gold?
" "A little. " The strap is gold-plated, but the rest is fake. It's worth more than thirty zlotys.
"I see. Why do you want to sell it? It's probably some kind of heirloom.
" "From my father, so I can get rid of it with a clear conscience."
Ela glanced at Amelia just as the bell rang. The young people slowly began to gather at their desks and take out their books. Amelia also picked up her backpack.
"No pawn shop will pay you what it's worth. Thirty zlotys..."
Ela smiled and placed the watch on the desk.
"I'm sure they'll give me more somewhere. I'll go to the center after class.
" "Do you need money for something specific?
" "No, I..."
The teacher appeared in the doorway, so Amelia stopped and focused on searching for the book. It was no use; you can't find something that isn't there. She threw her backpack on the floor. It fell a little too loudly. Some of the class turned to her.
Pestycka began checking the attendance list. She was one of the younger teachers at the school. She tried to be both demanding and cheerful. She asked questions during every lesson, smiling at both those who were prepared and those who couldn't answer a single question. It was as if she took equal pleasure in giving Fs and Fs.
"So?" Ela asked, then yelled, "I'm here!" at the teacher. "
Louder. We can't hear you in the cloakroom," Pestycka said, pausing for a moment in her reading of the list.
Some of the class burst out laughing, but most kept a straight face. Amelia was too absorbed in her watch to be amused by the teacher's comment.
"Nothing specific.
" "But?
" "Does there always have to be a 'but'?" Amelia heard her name, so she looked at Pestycka. "I'm here."
Ela shrugged.
"No, not at all."
Amelia smiled, but when she saw the stack of papers in Pestycka's hands, she immediately sobered.
"Was there a test last week?
" "Did you forget? I studied until midnight yesterday, it's so boring."
Amelia's heart started beating faster, and her hands started shaking. The teacher was telling them to write an overdue test on plants and gymnosperms, and all she could see was that some were deciduous trees and others were conifers. This fool would reduce her chances of getting a B at the end of the year to a minimum.
"Clear the front desks." Ten people didn't take the test, but for your class, that's still a record.
Funny." Amelia was starting to wonder whether to give up right away, or wait until the teacher dictated the questions.
"Damn, it completely slipped my mind," she whispered.
"Oh, that's something new," Ela replied even more quietly. "Are we leaving?"
"How? Now? We have to take the test."
"So what? Watch and learn."
When the teacher called out Ela's name, the girl rose from her desk, took a step, and then fell. It looked very natural; Pestycka was instantly on her feet.
"Open the windows. We need to put a chair under her feet."
The teacher was probably the only person in the class who believed Ela had fainted. Beside the disbelief, there was amusement in the students' eyes. After a moment's hesitation, several people rushed to the windows, and a dozen or so others rushed toward Ela with chairs.
"We need to call an ambulance. It could be a stroke!" Jacek Rekowski shouted.
"Or a heart attack. Does she smoke?" said Wojtek Mazur, Jacek's best friend. Amelia suspected they were both supposed to be taking an overdue test today.
"Stay calm, it's probably just fainting," Pestycka said, approaching Ela. "We need to get her more oxygen. Get your books and start fanning her."
Of the thirty students, only seven hadn't moved. The others grabbed books, not necessarily their own, and began waving them over Ela's head. Most of them pursed their lips tightly, trying to hide their joy.
Amelia joined in too; after all, it was her best friend lying unconscious on the floor. If she weren't afraid of what would happen if the teacher realized Ela was faking, she would have been laughing hysterically. And the oxygen would have been more useful to Pestycka than to Ela. The teacher turned white as a sheet in a matter of seconds.
"It's probably from malnutrition. She's suspiciously thin," said Jadwiga Szewc, the classroom mistress.
"Yeah, but you can be thin for many reasons," replied Wojtek.
Ela couldn't help herself and opened her eyes. She gave the boy a cold look, then slowly sat up.
"No! Lie down!" Pestycka shouted, pinning Ela's shoulders to the ground. "Don't get up so quickly, you'll faint again."
"I'm feeling better now. Although I'm still feeling dizzy.
" "I'm telling you. It's anorexia," Jadwiga said. "It all fits."
Ela closed her eyes.
"Does anything hurt?" the teacher asked.
"Head," Ela said, opening her eyes. She touched her temple and looked at Pestycka. "But it'll go away soon, I can write the test...
" "Not at all. The doctor should see you. We'll call your parents.
" "No need. Amelia will just have to take me to the clinic where my father is a doctor. It's not far from here."
Pestycka frowned. She either wanted to send Ela straight to the hospital or was beginning to suspect the girl was faking it.
"There's no nurse at school, this will end in tragedy someday," Jadwiga blurted out.
"Are you threatening or promising?" Wojtek asked, and the whole class burst out laughing. Jadwiga's face turned red.
"This probably isn't the best time for such remarks, your friend is lying here half-conscious..."
Ela winked at Amelia, who was trying her best not to laugh.
"It's for her own good," Jadwiga said, stepping back. The others also began to return to their desks.
"Okay. Amelia, do you know where Ela's father works?
" "Yes."
"Then walk her home," Pestycka said, not taking her eyes off Ela. "Just get up slowly."
Ela stood up slowly, and Amelia meanwhile packed their backpacks.
"How are you feeling?" Pestycka asked.
"Relatively well.
" "Okay. Go, but slowly.
" "Okay," Amelia replied, following Ela toward the door.
In the hallway, she couldn't help but burst out laughing.
"I'm brilliant, right?"
"That was great: 'I can write the test.' "
Ela smiled, but within a second, she turned serious.
"And they say life kills naivety and childishness." What do you think?
"Apparently, it depends on people, not on life."


III

The red-haired man examined the watch as if it were a treasure. He turned it over in his hands, moving it closer and further away, his eyes narrowing, then widening.
A new hope filled Amelia. If the guy was examining the watch so carefully, maybe he'd offer more than thirty zlotys.
"Well, yes," the man tilted his head to the left and scratched his red beard. "Quite a nice watch. Is it a souvenir?
" "Sort of," Amelia replied, noticing Ela frowning out of the corner of her eye. She clearly didn't like that answer. She hadn't bid up the price.
"The strap is a bit gold-plated, but the dial isn't, so I can't offer you too much. And those initials on the back?"
The watch had her father's initials calligraphed on the back. HT Henryk Tarasiuk. Amelia hesitated, reluctant to mention it.
"It's from the English word 'hate,'" Ela said, getting ahead of Amelia. "Haven't you heard of the serial killer nicknamed 'Hate'? He killed seven women across the country. This watch belonged to the first of them. She was wearing it when she died.
Those letters were actually her initials, but that's where the psychopath's nickname came from."
The man put the watch down as if he'd been burned. Ela had gone too far. Who would want a watch that a woman died with? The world is sick, but not that sick.
" "So, I guess this is evidence," the man said, staring at Ela.
"No. There were no fingerprints or anything. The police handed it over.
" Ela, too, looked into the man's eyes. There was a moment of silence. The man was clearly trying to read something in the girl's face. Not even Amelia could do that, even though they'd known each other for over three years.
"If there was such a murderer, I'd have heard of him. The press would be blaring about it from morning till night.
" "The police forbade them. They don't want to stir up public concern and scare the killer away. But there are tons of undercover officers roaming the city. Sooner or later, they'll catch him.
" "In our city? That's impossible!
" "Possible. The first victim, her cousin, died here. That's where we got the watch
." Ela treated life like a game. Every move she made was carefully considered. Before she made her first move, she already knew the last. And so it was this time. She lied, looking into Amelia's eyes, because she knew it would work. It often irritated Amelia, but she was convinced that Ela was always honest with her. She trusted her, though sometimes she felt like she was walking down a dark corridor whose exit only Ela knew.
"Really?" the man turned to Amelia.
The girl desperately wanted to get rid of the watch, so she decided to lie. She made a sad face and said,
"Yes. I still can't come to terms with her death, and the watch only makes it worse. That's why I want to sell it."
The man picked up the watch again and began examining it. This time, not as if it were a treasure, but like a bomb that had just exploded.
"Five hundred zlotys."
Amelia was stunned. Her eyes widened and she gasped.
"Okay. That's fine."
When she received five hundred-zloty bills, she thought the world was a very sick place after all. She lowered her gaze so as not to see Ela's smile.


IV

Five hundred zlotys was a good sum, especially for a high school student who didn't receive any pocket money and only worked during the summer distributing leaflets. Two zlotys an hour putting trash in people's doors might seem like a good salary, but it amounted to less than sixty zlotys a week. After the holidays, she had six hundred zlotys, which was supposed to last her the entire year.
She wasn't a spendthrift and would have been happy with that amount if it weren't for the fact that she had to buy textbooks and a semester bus ticket. She wasted half her pay on that, and with the rest she bought clothes, because she had to wear something. Since her father disappeared, the house was tight. All of her mother's pay went to bills. So she was completely on her own.
Now she had five hundred zlotys to spend on whatever she wanted. The thought alone brought a smile to her face. Even the way she'd gotten the money no longer seemed as immoral as it had before.
"What now?" "Ela asked when they reached the end of the sidewalk. Shops and pubs lined both sides of the street. They tried to lure customers with colorful displays, large signs, and discounts: bargains, everything fifty percent off, come in, you won't regret it. For Amelia, it was as tempting as drugs.
"Let's go for pizza. I don't remember the last time I was in a pizzeria, I think..." She trailed off as she realized what he was about to say. The last time she ate pizza was a few days before her father disappeared. He'd gotten some kind of bonus, or so he said, so he took the family out for dinner. "I'm paying. I can afford it."
Ela frowned, but after a few seconds, a smile returned to her face.
"Okay. There's a great pizzeria on the corner.
" "Let's go then.


" The

place had the nonsensical name "Kasatra," but it looked like a thousand other pizzerias. A few tables lined the window, a few against the wall, but most were in the middle of the room. They were covered with pink tablecloths, slightly lighter than the walls. Behind the bar stood a man in a white shirt and green apron. He had long sideburns and spiky bangs. He must have used a lot of gel to style his hair.
When they sat down at the table, he approached them and handed them their cards with a smile. Ela followed him to the bar with her eyes.
"Nice, isn't he?" she asked.
"He's smiling because he expects a tip. Is that why you like this place so much?
" "How cynical. They have good pizza here. The handsome waiters are just a bonus.
" "Exactly," Amelia said with a smile.
"Exactly. You'll see," Ela said, returning the smile.
Amelia ordered a large pepperoni pizza, and Ela ordered a medium seafood pizza. Amelia laughed, summing up her friend's choice and adding two beers to her order.
The pizza was indeed delicious, so Amelia devoured it in a matter of minutes. Ela wanted to offer her some of her own, but she declined. Fruit and pizza didn't seem to go together. The beer was a different story. It was perfect for her. She ordered another round, having consumed most of the first few beers while waiting for the pizza.
She was in a great mood. Partly because of the alcohol, but mostly she was happy to be at a pizzeria instead of at school and have money to order whatever she wanted. She could do so many things with the money, but she didn't want to commit to anything just yet. She wasn't going to spend it all in one day. She'd regret it tomorrow.
She'd have to go back to her normal life, where she couldn't afford to go to parties or the movies with others. And now she could buy something from the school store or go out for pizza and beer after class to take her mind off the stress.
She motioned for the waiter to order another beer each. She didn't want to leave the pizzeria; she felt good and calmer with each passing moment. All her sorrows had vanished. And good, she didn't need them now. She could worry tomorrow; today she'd take a break from life.
"If you're buying the pizza, I'll pay for the beer," Ela said.
"No way. You've bought it so many times, so now it's my turn.
" "Fine, whatever you want. Just remember, you don't have a safe, only five hundred zlotys. That's not much.
" "I know, I know."
A waiter appeared with two mugs of beer, set them on the table, and moved on to the next table. The place was slowly filling up. When they arrived, almost all the tables were empty. Now only the ones in the center were empty, and more and more people were arriving.
Amelia glanced at the watch her father had given her for her birthday. He generally liked watches and placed a high value on punctuality. Being five minutes late could result in a week-long television ban. Even though she thought it was cruel and often got angry with her father, she had learned not to be late. She preferred arriving fifteen minutes early rather than a minute late.
"It's almost five... how quickly...
" "Very quickly," Ela replied, staring at the gelatinous waiter pouring beer. A few minutes ago, his friend had arrived, and now they were taking turns waiting tables. He was blond, of average height, and quite handsome, but compared to his friend, he looked average.
"Won't your parents worry about you? Maybe we should go back," Amelia said, not because she wanted to go, but because she felt she had to say something like that. She didn't want to force Ela to stay here.
"If they do, they'll call on his cell phone, but I doubt it," she said, shifting her gaze to Amelia.
The girl nodded and lifted her mug.
"I wonder if Janusz has a girlfriend?" Ela asked, turning her gaze back to the waiter.
"What Janusz?
" "Waiter. That's what's written on his pocket, haven't you noticed? Embroidered with blue thread, matching his eyes.
" "No," Amelia replied, and poured herself another drink. She was starting to feel a little dizzy. She rarely drank, so it didn't take much to get drunk. She had to be careful not to cross that fine line. It was a long way home, and she didn't want to risk getting lost in the town she'd grown up in.
Ela tore her attention away from Janusz to take a beer, but then looked at Amelia instead.
"I see beer's working..."
Amelia shrugged.
"Maybe a little. I'm a strong head.
" "I see," Ela said with a smile.
"At least I feel better. Even your waiter doesn't seem like such a braggart anymore. "
Ela frowned.
"A few more beers and you'll start hitting on him...
" "Easy, he's yours." Besides, he looks like the kind of guy who, when he makes a girl fall in love with him, leaves," Amelia said and took another sip of beer. This time she must have overdone it, because suddenly the whole room began to spin before her eyes.
"I don't know?" Ela looked again at Janusz, who was taking an order from a family with three fidgeting children. "I think you're jumping to conclusions.
" "Maybe. He's probably a fantastic guy, try picking him up. He's definitely worth every effort.
" "How many years ago did your father disappear?"
The question sobered Amelia completely, so she downed the rest of her beer and started looking around for the waiter. She couldn't see him anywhere.
"Five. My mother's still hoping he'll come back.
" "And you don't?"
Janusz appeared at a nearby table, and Amelia motioned for him to come over with her eyes.
"No. He probably has a new family already, the perfect ones like in TV series." Everyone's moving on time, like the hands on his damn watch." Amelia felt herself starting to ramble, so she decided to change the subject. "Your guy's coming. Maybe take off your sweater, it'd impress him."
Ela kicked her leg under the table. Amelia considered screaming, but changed her mind. Just in case Ela really wanted to go on a date with Janusz. True, she wasn't of age yet, and the waiter was closer to thirty than twenty, but the age difference wasn't more than ten years. Besides, Ela looked older than seventeen, and it had been a long time since anyone had asked her for ID when she ordered a beer.
"I'm listening," the waiter said with the smile he gave all the customers. He was probably as genuine as Ken's. When her father left, Amelia threw the male dolls in the trash.
"Two beers, please.
" "Thank you, I still have some," Ela said.
"Well, that's one."
"It's getting ready," Janusz replied, and headed towards the bar, behind which the woman was now standing. Amelia had no idea how she'd gotten there or how long she'd been standing there.
"Maybe he really had to run from the police or the mafia..."
Amelia looked at Ela, for a moment confused as to who her friend was talking about.
"Is that why he brought our neighbor with him? A dyed doll whose biggest dream was probably silicone breasts."
When Amelia found out, all the Barbie dolls ended up in the trash as well. She felt much better, though she'd rather get back at her father than at toys. "He ran off with a woman younger than your mother?
" "Almost twenty years. A high school Spanish teacher.
" "Strange..."
Janusz set a beer on the table.
"Here you go.
" "Thank you," she replied, not looking at the waiter. She didn't want to see his fake smile. When he left, she took a sip of her beer and said,
"Why strange? I think that's what you call a midlife crisis." But that name is nothing more than an excuse. If you think about it, all names justify something; maybe that's why people like to name everything so much.
"Maybe," Ela replied, looking Amelia in the eye.
"Every time, the family blamed it all on that woman. They said he'd come back when he got bored. Funny, but my mother probably wanted it. For him to come back. After all...
" "I guess that means she loves him.
" "But if he ran away, that means he doesn't love her, right?"
Ela looked down at her beer, picked up her glass, but didn't drink.
"I guess so. And didn't anyone know about his affair before?"
"No, that's funny too. We were shocked, my mother especially. I didn't want to believe it at first either. But the detective my mother hired found his letter to that woman. He wrote how much he loved her and how much he wanted to live with her. The truth remains the truth, whether we believe it or not.
" "Sure. But even the truth is rarely black or white," Ela said, finishing her beer.
Amelia also focused on drinking. The alcohol pleasantly confused her thoughts, preventing her from dwelling on the past. And that was fine. Why torment herself with something you can neither change nor understand? It's just endless torment.





VI

After finishing her fourth beer, Amelia started to feel dizzy, so they went for a walk. Ela claimed the fresh air would perk her up, and she was right. After half an hour of wandering the streets of Sopot, both large and small, she felt much better.
It was almost 8 p.m., and her mother usually returned home from work at that time. She had to call home to let them know she'd be home late today.
They headed toward Monciak, which was full of phone booths. Ela did have a cell phone, but hadn't bought a card for it in a long time. People could call her, but she couldn't even get a signal.
When Amelia said she'd be there at midnight, her mother was a little surprised, but she didn't protest. She hung up, scanning Monciak.
"What now?" Ela asked.
"Maybe..." Amelia began, but stopped short as she saw a man standing at an ATM a few meters away who looked just like... "It's him!"
Ela began, having no idea what was going on.
"Who?
" "My father. At the ATM!
" "Impossible, you think. It's the alcohol and the memories.
" "I don't think so, let's get closer."
Without looking back at Ela, she took a few steps toward the ATM. She stopped ten meters from her father, not wanting him to see her. It was him, she had no doubt. The same auburn, carelessly tossed hair, only flecked with gray. Her father's face also had more wrinkles, but those green eyes…
"Do you have his picture on you?" Ela asked.
"Why would I have a picture of someone I have no feelings for, except maybe anger?" Amelia replied, not taking her eyes off her father. It was him, Henryk Tarasiuk, no one else.
"If it were him…
" "It's definitely him."
Her father pocketed the money and began walking up the street. Amelia followed him without a second thought.
"What do you want to do?" Ela asked, keeping pace.
"I don't know. I'll see where he lives. You don't have to come with me if you don't want to.
" "But I will. You're not thinking completely logically right now.
" "Maybe. And how would you feel about meeting your father, who abandoned you five years ago?
" "Bad.
" "That's exactly how I feel. I need to know where he lives.
" "Okay.


" VII

But knowing this didn't help her at all. Looking at the two-story house with its garden, she felt terrible. As if someone had run her over with a truck and left her dying in the middle of the road.
The villa must have cost her father tens of thousands more than her mother had earned since he left. He lived in luxury, while his wife and daughter couldn't even save enough for a movie ticket in a year. Besides, what was the point of saving when you had to take out a loan because you couldn't pay the bills?
Amelia felt tears welling up in her eyes. She blinked to keep from crying, but the lump in her throat grew even larger. She took a step back and turned her back on the villa. An even more elegant house appeared before her eyes. This was a wealthy estate.
She closed her eyes and sucked in as much air as she could. Like the first breath of a diver whose breathing apparatus has broken.
This was about more than money. Her father had fled his wife and daughter, abandoning them like torn, worn-out shoes. He wanted nothing to do with them. They didn't matter to him.
Amelia was nothing to him. He didn't love her…
The alcohol and her thoughts were making her dizzy. Grief was turning into anger. Her father had abandoned his family without a second thought, but he couldn't bear to part with Sopot. This city meant more to him than Amelia.
Or perhaps he had left, realized he'd made a mistake, and returned? It was impossible for him to have lived here from the beginning. The police would have found him. After all, they were considering kidnapping, murder, or even some kind of embezzlement. They'd surely searched all of Sopot.
She opened her eyes and turned back toward her father's house.
"I need to talk to him," she said.
Ela didn't answer, so Amelia looked around to see if her friend was still beside her. She almost screamed when she saw the figure in the black hood right behind her. Only now did she feel the coldness return. She wished she had a hoodie today, like Ela.
"And what will you tell him?"
Amelia reluctantly began to consider this. Anger, mixed with regret and hope, was raging through her. She wanted to confront her father, to unleash the negative emotions that had been building up over the past five years on her father.
"I'll tell him what a pig he is, how much he hurt us."
Ela took a step forward and found herself beside Amelia.
"Do you think this will make any impression on him? That he'll fall to his knees and beg for forgiveness?"
Anger stifled the tears that were welling up in her eyes again.
"I don't know, I don't care. I just want him to know. I want..." Amelia trailed off, already doubting what she wanted and didn't want. Everything blurred together. Past and future. Illusions became the same as reality.
"Okay. If it makes you feel better, talk to him. But not today, not like this.
" Amelia was tired of waiting. And she was afraid that her father would vanish into thin air tomorrow, just like he had five years ago.
"I've waited long enough," she said, moving toward the gate.


VIII

Amelia thought the gate would be locked, but when she pressed the handle, the metal door gave way.
She entered the garden. A paved path ran from the gate to the door, surrounded by lawn. To the left, the greenery gave way to flower beds, and to the right stood a plastic table and two deck chairs, each matching its height.
Didn't her father live here alone? If he found his Spanish teacher or another woman inside, controlling his emotions would be next to impossible. She was already furious, and if she had to face her father's mistress, she might not be able to control her nerves.
"Wait here for me. I have to handle this myself," she said, heading toward the house.
Ela continued following her.
"No way. You're too drunk and too angry to go there alone.
" "I'm sober now," Amelia replied. It seemed to her that the angrier she got, the lower her blood alcohol level. It wasn't the alcohol that was crippling her logical thinking, but the anger.
"You just think so."
Amelia reached the porch. There was no name on the door.
She raised her hand to the doorbell, but before she touched the button, she lowered it.
"You don't have to do this," Ela said in a hushed voice, pulling back her hood.
"I think I do."
Amelia took a deep breath and rang the doorbell.
For a moment, she wanted to run, but her legs felt so heavy she couldn't move them. It was as if she were standing on glue.
She looked into Eli's eyes, and her friend smiled faintly and blinked. That calmed her a little. She wasn't alone; she had support.
The curtain moved, but the light was off, so she couldn't see the face of the person staring at her. A moment later, the lights throughout the house and on the porch came on, and the door lock creaked. Amelia jumped, nearly falling off the porch. The lights blinded her, and for a moment, she couldn't see anything.
But when the door opened, she recognized her father immediately. He stood in the doorway, eyes wide, staring at her daughter as if she'd come to him from beyond the grave, not from another part of the same city.
"Hi, Daddy," she said, accentuating only the vowels. "Can we come in?"
Henryk's lips moved, but no words came out. Amelia felt more confident.
"What? You won't let your own daughter in? After all these years, Dad?" She emphasized the "a" and "o" again. She wanted to annoy her father, but he didn't seem to be listening. Maybe he was trying to convince himself he was imagining things.
"Ttt..." he stuttered on that letter like a scratched record. A woman's voice spoke from deeper in the apartment.
"Honey, who is that? Why are you standing there, on..." The woman stood at Henryk's side and was as speechless as he was. Jadwiga Oliczak, the Spanish teacher, as usual, wearing makeup, dyed, and fake hair.
Amelia thought that if she saw a woman with her father, she would lose her composure, but nothing of the sort happened. The sight of a graying middle-aged man and a twenty-something Barbie doll, unable to speak, was as amusing as it was pathetic.
"Well, come on. So, everything's back to normal. Are we going to talk here? I don't mind. I'd love to tell the residents of this wonderful neighborhood what a scoundrel you are!" Her voice rose an octave with each word, though she hadn't planned on it. Maybe the alcohol hadn't completely evaporated after all.
"Come in. We're not stopping you. Why make a scene now?" Jadwiga said, freezing Henryk with a cold stare. "What are you doing standing there? Move, damn it!"
Father stepped back from the door, letting them in. The living room they found themselves in was a sickly pink. The color absorbed the walls, the carpet, and the sofa. The wooden table was covered with a blue floral tablecloth, and the cabinets were upholstered in blue and purple. Fortunately, the walls were full of paintings, and the shelves were full of vases, photos, and other decorations. Otherwise, one could go crazy here.
"How did you find me?" Henryk asked. He seemed to feel more comfortable in his pink kingdom.
"I simply found me. Sopot is a small town."
Her father nodded and headed for the sideboard at the back of the room, just behind the stairs. As he passed the sofa, he pointed to it and said,
"Sit down. I suppose you want to talk.
" Amelia shook her head and looked at Ela. The girl was examining a painting hanging on the wall. It depicted a fruit platter, its shape elongated and distorted.
"We'll stand. It won't take long."
Jadwiga gave the girls a cold look, then turned to Henryk. She took a glass of some kind of alcohol from his hand and gestured at Amelia.
Henryk frowned, glared at Jadwiga, but then approached his daughter.
"I'm sorry it turned out this way. I was planning to visit you, I was just waiting for the right moment. And I wasn't sure you wanted to see me."
Amelia lowered her gaze. She tried to gather her thoughts, put aside her emotions, and calmly tell her father what she thought of him. But she was increasingly unsure if this was what she wanted.
"You waited five years for the right moment? You lived in Sopot the whole time and didn't even bother to ask how we were doing? Do we have food? Where to live?
" "I've only lived here six months. An opportunity arose, this house..." her father began looking around as if he were in a palace. "An opportunity. We bought it for next to nothing. And your mother was always resourceful. You're certainly not starving.
" "No thanks to you.
" "Believe me, it was hard for me too. I had to start all over again. I worked from morning till night to break even. If I had any savings, I would have sent them to you immediately. Believe me. But life hasn't been kind to me."
Her father was wearing a suit more expensive than her entire wardrobe, lived in a villa whose living room was more expensive than Amelia's entire house, and tried to convince her that his life was hard. Anger began to take over every cell in her body again.
She wanted to vent all her fury, but Ela spoke up:
"Are those paintings a bargain too? They're famous reproductions.
" "They're my inheritance," Jadwiga interjected, approaching them. "My uncle left them to me in his will. He was a connoisseur of modern art. Is that why you came here? For money?"
Amelia took a step toward the teacher and fixed her with a baleful gaze:
"I don't care about your money! You could both choke on it." Amelia looked at her father, feeling tears welling up in her eyes, but she didn't care. "I just want you to know how much you hurt Mom and me. At first, we thought something had happened to you." My mother cried all night, praying for you to come back. Every day she ran to the police station and walked around town with your picture, asking passersby if they'd seen you. She spent all her savings on ads, detectives, and fortune tellers to find you.
"I didn't know...
" "We thought you were dead until the detective connected your disappearance with our neighbor's departure and found a letter you'd written to your mistress. He also mentioned your company's problems. He said the tax office was investigating tax fraud. Everything seemed clear.
" "I had to...
" "But you know what?" My mother didn't believe it," Amelia said, cutting him off. She wanted to say what she'd come here for, while she still had some control. "She told me you wouldn't do something like that, that you were a good person who wouldn't be capable of doing such a terrible thing to anyone, especially not your family. She was waiting for you, hoping you'd come back to us."
Henryk took a few steps toward Amelia; now she was less than a meter away.
"Listen, honey, there are these...
" "Don't call me honey! Never!
" This "honey" seemed to be too much; tears began to flow from Amelia's eyes.
"Okay. Amelia, unpredictable things happen in life. Things we don't plan for. I fell in love. I didn't want to hurt your mother, but the feeling was stronger. I was going to file for a divorce, but business matters... I had to disappear for a while.
" "You could have called, written a letter, anything.
" "I know. I'm sorry. I should have done it."
Amelia didn't know what else to say. This conversation was going nowhere.
"You should have. But it doesn't matter now.
" "I really had my reasons," he said, his voice trembling. Only now did Amelia notice that her father had turned terribly pale.
"Everyone has their reasons," she said, moving toward the door.
"Wait, Amelia! You need money, wait." Her father pulled his wallet from his jacket and began rummaging through it, as if he couldn't decide which bill to take out.
It didn't matter to Amelia. She wasn't about to take any money from him. She opened the door. A pleasant coolness immediately enveloped her. Ela stepped out onto the porch.
"Wait...
" "I said I don't need your money. Goodbye. "
Her father grabbed her hand. Amelia jerked away so violently that he was frozen in shock.
"I'm sorry. Maybe when we both calm down, we can meet somewhere in town and talk. Now that I'm back in Sopot...
" "For me, you could even live on the moon. I don't want anything to do with you."
She ran off the porch and headed down the path toward the gate. Her father shouted something, but she didn't hear him. Her heartbeat drowned out all the words.




IX

She stopped only when she had run out of the residential area. She'd love to keep running, but she didn't know where she was. On one side of the street was a park, and on the other, gray tenement buildings. She felt like she was seeing this neighborhood for the first time.
Ela stood beside her, breathing deeply and holding her side.
"Do you know where we are?" Amelia asked, watching her friend. She was afraid Ela's patience had worn thin and she was about to start an argument.
"More or less. You ran the wrong way. Oh my! I should probably work on my fitness.
" "I'm sorry. I didn't think so.
" "Never mind."
Ela crossed the street, then turned left and walked along the sidewalk separating the tenement buildings from the road. A confused Amelia followed her.
"Are you better now?" Ela asked after a moment.
"A little. I know everything; I can close this chapter. Do you think I did the right thing by not taking the money? We could really use it.
" "You did the right thing. And if anything happens, you can always sue him for child support. As long as he doesn't run away."
Amelia frowned and looked into her friend's eyes:
"It doesn't matter to me. She can even run to the ends of the earth. I don't care."
She hadn't fully come to terms with the thought yet, but she was closer than she had been an hour ago. She knew the truth, so now all that remained was to accept it.
"Will you tell your mother you met him?"
Amelia wasn't convinced it was a good idea. Her mother would definitely want to visit her father, there would be a fight, and she would cry at night again. Only recently had she come to terms with the thought of never seeing her husband again. She was starting to live a normal life again. On the other hand, Amelia had no right to hide from her mother that her father lived in Sopot. If she were her mother, she would prefer to know the truth.
"I don't know. I'll think about it. I'm too tired for that now. Life can be full of surprises, right?"
Ela smiled and nudged Amelia in the side.
"People, not life. But that makes it interesting. Will we study seed plants tomorrow after class at my place? Nothing will save us from the test on Thursday. Not life, not people."
Amelia reluctantly returned her thoughts to everyday life. It was already after 11 p.m., she would get home around one, and at six she would have to get up and go to school.
"Fine. But maybe between studying different plant species, we can figure out a way to get out of the test again? You could pretend to be crazy...
" "Interesting idea, but you would handle it better," Ela said, trying to hold back a smile. After a few seconds, they both burst out laughing.


X

Amelia entered the house with a smile. In her hand, she clutched a quiz on plant and gymnosperms, graded a four out of five by Pestycka.
Her mother's black stilettos, which she always wore to work, stood in the hallway. Amelia dropped her backpack on the floor and went into the kitchen. Her mother wasn't there.
"Mom?" she asked in a raised voice, entering the room.
"I'm here."
Weronika Tarasiuk was sitting in an armchair with a note in her hand. Tears welled in her eyes.
"What happened?"
Amelia was terrified that something bad had happened to them again.
"Henryk... He's alive, your daddy's alive. He sent a letter and money. He says he's very sorry, he apologizes to both of us..."
Amelia retreated toward the kitchen. She hoped she wouldn't hear about her father again. She hadn't told her mother she'd met him because she wanted to cut him out of their lives forever. And now...
" "She wants to meet, talk. He lives here, in Sopot. Wonderful, right?"
Amelia shrugged. She had touched her father's conscience, so he sent money to calm her down. It didn't matter; it didn't change her feelings one bit. "I'm sorry" can't fix everything. Money, especially not.
She sat down on the sofa next to her mother, letting her arm go around her.
"He wants to meet, you know? Maybe he wants to come back."
Amelia sighed. She had already come to terms with her father's departure; her mother would have to do the same. But this letter... Yes, it's people who surprise, not life.

A Christmas Story



Amelia returned from the city angry, wanting to do some shopping in peace. Unfortunately, she couldn't. There were so many people everywhere. Many mothers with children squealing, "Mommy, I want this for Christmas...", "Mommy, please bring me this..." Everyone was running around, rushing somewhere, and strangely excited, joyful. They radiated an aura of anticipation, joyful expectation...
Amelia, on the other hand, was angry; she wanted to buy herself some new perfume and maybe some pants. But how!? How!? In this crush, this rush. You have to constantly watch out for pickpockets or accidentally lose something. She settled into her four empty walls. She turned on the radio, wanting to relax, wanting to listen to good rock music, but instead, a Christmas carol was playing. She turned the radio off so hard it fell to the ground. Amelia thought about how much she hated Christmas. Lavish food, expensive gifts... What's the point of that, who needs it!? Why celebrate New Year's Eve too!? A night just like any other! Amelia decided not to celebrate Christmas or New Year's Eve! She convinced herself that these were just like any other day... The fact that people were gripped by this madness meant it wouldn't affect her too. And after Christmas, she'd buy herself some amazing clothes with the money she'd saved!
The days flew by faster and faster... Amelia sneaked stealthily across the street until one day a large, bearded Saint Nicholas appeared in front of her. She tried to escape, telling him what she thought of Christmas... The Saint was worried. He asked her to remember her childhood holidays. The smell of the Christmas tree, gingerbread, carp floating in the bathtub, fireworks, and much, much more... She ignored him. She returned to an empty house. But the holidays were everywhere, swarming her from the radio, television, outside the window, and in the newspapers. Resigned, she went to bed. That night, she had a strange dream. She dreamed that she was being attacked by a huge Christmas tree that wanted to devour her. Santa Claus defended her from the bloodthirsty tree, begging her to remember her childhood. When she got up in the morning, she did everything she could to forget. In the afternoon, she decided to leave. She felt sad. Her feet carried her to her friend's. There were more people there. Everyone was kind, exchanging greetings. It was sincere and genuine. There was so much kindness in that one day that it would last for several cold months... As she returned home, her heart slowly melted. On the way, she bought a small Christmas tree; it smelled wonderful... She took out a dusty set of baubles and lights. A festive atmosphere immediately arose. She slept soundly through the night...
The next day, she went shopping. She bought trinkets for her loved ones. She was no longer bothered by the crowds, the rush, the hustle and bustle, or the grumbling children. She found joy in the holidays.
Amelia felt the magic of the holidays thanks to people who like and love her. Thanks to people who want her to be happy, who want her to be happy. People who bring a smile to her lips and a cheerful sparkle to her eyes. Amelia is happy. However, she's afraid of the memories and losing that happiness. Fear intertwined with happiness and gratitude for what is.

Chance - Part 3 (A Walk Along the Boulevard of Lost Dreams)




The chilly September air stung his cheeks painfully, and the wind forced tears that had not spilled out of despair from his eyes. Heavy clouds filled the sky. The air was thick with the scent of approaching autumn.
The decline of all that was beautiful...
Todd stared melancholy at the browned leaves.
"Just wait until the trees shed their rusty cloaks at the feet of the majestic winter... Just as I cast my life aside before the silent Lady of Cold..." He shuddered involuntarily and clutched his shoulders. He didn't like his thoughts. He was cold. Not just physically.
"Well, Todd, you have to get used to the fact that you're dying..." he thought dispassionately. "God, how that sounded..."
He lowered his head. He wasn't looking where he was going. He didn't care. He let fate carry him along in its swift current. He didn't look at people either, as if his mere glance could harm them. He felt dirty. He stared blankly at the sidewalk and shuffled steadily on his journey to nowhere.

He raised his head and looked around in surprise.
"I'm so tired..." There was genuine surprise in his voice. He had arrived at one of the wealthiest districts. He was standing on the city's main promenade, lined with luxury shops. The price of most of the products sold there could have fed an ordinary mortal for three months.
Todd clearly sensed that this wasn't his place. He didn't belong. He scanned the faces of the passersby uncertainly. They expressed either complete indifference to his existence or simple contempt. Young Armstrong didn't know which was worse. Paradoxically, surrounded by a crowd of people nudging him, he felt utterly alone. He wanted to scream in helpless despair. With a desperate leap, he broke free from the venomous horde and ran blindly forward. People moved out of his way, fearful of this terrified misfit. He stopped only a few streets away. He leaned his back against the cool window of a shop window.
"What's happening to me?" he asked quietly, not expecting an answer. He wiped the sweat from his forehead. He gasped for air in shallow, ragged breaths. His heart was beating fast, as fast as a terrified animal caught in a trap. He took a deep breath, trying to calm himself. His thoughts resembled the ocean during a summer storm. He was no longer certain of anything.
He sighed heavily and pulled his back away from the glass. He turned and accidentally caught his reflection in the glass.
"Is that really... me?" he wondered. Before him stood a strange man, rendered in shades of gray. Dark hair peeked out from under an even darker cap, lazily framing his neck. A black jacket hugged its owner's thin body. The stranger's pale eyes were unnaturally wide. He was afraid.
"Why are you trembling, sad twin? After all, your death is certain, and you can't change anything..." He leaned his burning forehead against the window, quoting the words of a long-forgotten poet. He bit his lip. He raised his head and looked at his friend in misery. A solitary tear rolled down both cheeks.
"Farewell..." He placed his hand against the window and smiled sadly. "Who knows? Perhaps this will be the last time we see each other..." He laughed softly, his voice devoid of humor. He abandoned his brother and walked away, leaving the district of desolate decay without regret.

"How high up here!" he said, leaning over the bridge railing. A dozen or so meters below, the water flowed peacefully. But appearances cannot be trusted—in truth, it was a deadly force.
Todd stared emotionlessly into its depths. He wondered what its temperature was.
"Perhaps I'll find out?" he wondered aloud. Why not? He was dying anyway. He would end his life here and now. Why bother?
He climbed over the railing. He stood on a narrow strip of concrete suspended above the river. He held on to the metal bars, waiting for the right moment.
"As a child, I wanted to kill myself many times. I wonder if I'll have the courage this time..." he thought.
"I wish I'd decided to do it sooner," he admitted regretfully.
He felt a fresh breeze on his face. There was no one nearby, and in the silence that reigned, he could hear the soft, inviting whisper of water. He smiled.
"Yes, the world is beautiful..." He looked at the horizon. He didn't even try to hold back his tears—two salty streams adorned his face. He felt happy. "And without me, it will be even more beautiful."
He let go of the railing.
"The end..."
As his body leaned forward, he heard a sad female voice in his mind.
"Don't you dare do anything! Remember, there will always be someone waiting for you here..."
The whisper was like a bucket of icy water.
"God! I don't want to die!" he cried desperately. At the last moment, he jerked back, his slender fingers clutching the metal bars. He stared down in horror. His throat was so tight he couldn't even utter a word. He was shaking as if he had a fever. Swinging his leg over the railing was a superhuman effort, but he hesitantly undertook it. As soon as both feet touched the surface of the bridge, the last of his strength left him. He fell limply to the ground. The bars dug painfully into his back, but he didn't even notice. He pressed his thighs against his steadily moving chest. He folded his hands helplessly on his knees. He slumped his shoulders and burst into tears.
"I'm pathetic..." he sobbed. So what if he was well over twenty? He was still a child, as helpless as the day he came into this world. His own mother had never made him feel safe. When he most needed love and support, he received only hatred and contempt. Only with two strangers had he found what he'd been searching for his entire life. And he wanted to just abandon it?
"Jimmy... Rebel... I want to go home..." he whispered, wiping away his tears. He was like the prodigal son who had realized his mistake. And now, even though he felt like trash, afraid and hated at the same time, he longed to return to the place where he belonged. To his true home. To a home where someone was waiting for him...
But he didn't have the courage to get up and face the world. He gave in...
An icy droplet fell down his neck. He shuddered. Another one splashed on his pale hand. He looked up at the sky in surprise.
"Rain?"
A cold downpour, like a baptism that washed away all sins, washed his face of bitter tears.
Todd sneezed.
"Oh, yes. I'm sick..." It seemed to him that the fever had returned. And in his condition, that was very dangerous. "It's too far from home. I need shelter somewhere..." He jumped up. What stagnation and despair had halted, a simple rain could stir. Todd broke into a run, splashing water from the puddles. The steam rising from his lungs created a hazy curtain behind him. His vision blurred and distorted in his feverish frenzy.
He ran off the bridge, desperately searching for refuge for his tortured body. Empty.
Some violent impulse he couldn't explain drove him on. He passed streets after streets with unfamiliar names. Yet something kept pushing him forward. He didn't know what it was, but it was an incredibly powerful feeling.
A right turn, a dilapidated tenement building, a left, a wrecked Volkswagen, another alleyway, and…
Todd stopped dead in his tracks.
The bronze gates were open. The dim light illuminated by the faint glow of lamps and the timid flicker of candles. The unmistakable scent of dignity. An iron cross above the door.
A church. A house of God in a poor neighborhood.
He hesitated. When had he last visited a church? When had he been eight? Ten?
"No…" he remembered. "I was at my mother's funeral. As a fourteen-year-old brat…" he muttered glumly. Why had he come here, anyway? He couldn't answer that question. But since he was here, why not take refuge from the unfavorable weather inside?
He wrestled with his thoughts for a moment and hesitantly stepped into the church.
Todd didn't actually believe in God. However, he figured "you never know," so he tried to stay out of His way too much. He had enough troubles as it was…
He took off his cap and stuffed it in his pocket. However, he couldn't bring himself to dip his hand in the holy water.
An eerie silence enveloped him like a cocoon, muffling all sound. His presence in this holy place was blasphemy. He felt like an intruder, a false note in the melody of creation.
He paused in the vestibule, pondering what to do next.
The church was empty—people had already left after evening Mass, and the sexton hadn't yet managed to put a padlock on the grate separating the corridor from the main part of the church.
Only by touching the very essence of silence, without the crowds around, can one perceive the full mystical beauty of sacred buildings. Todd was captivated by this atmosphere. He entered, mesmerized. Halfway to the altar, he fell to one knee. Although he hadn't been in the House of the Lord for many years, he still vaguely remembered the activities he had performed long ago. He rose and looked back. The rain hadn't let up even a bit, and in fact, it seemed to have intensified.
As if out of spite...
Todd glanced around automatically and, without much conviction, took a seat in the pew. He blew on his hands, not so much to warm himself, but more to exercise his upper limbs. In church, hands automatically folded in prayer. And yet, he didn't believe in God.
"Besides... What's the harm?" he asked himself and knelt. He crossed himself clumsily. His lack of practice was evident. He placed his folded hands on the back of the pew. He sighed silently and began to pray the bitter, incoherent, yet sincere prayer of an incorrigible sinner.
"God,... if you're even there at all, of course..., I won't recite any litany or prayers for you here. Forgive me, I don't know a single prayer. My mother was too busy drinking to teach me any. Besides, you know that perfectly well..."
"What idiocy..." flashed through his mind, but he quickly reconsidered.
"I don't like to beat around the bush. So I'll be blunt: you've screwed up, for I don't want to
put it more bluntly, my entire life. I'm not afraid of hell, because I've simply become accustomed to it. And it's all your doing. Actually, I don't blame you for that. I don't hold a grudge. On the other hand, I have a grudge against you for something else. Why, when my life was finally starting to fall into place, do you want to take it all away from me? It's a bit unfair, don't you think? What am I saying, it's damn unfair!"
He felt tears welling up in his eyes.
"You never listened to my prayers. Not once. Never. Not even when I wanted my mother to be sober on my seventh birthday. Nothing happened - I was also beaten with a vacuum cleaner cord. I still have a scar under my shoulder blade. I understand, you had many other worries - floods, diseases, murders, epidemics... What did you care about one crying and unhappy child? But now I beg you to listen to me again,at least this once..."
He raised his glassy eyes to the altar.
"You can do whatever you want to me—maim me, beat me, strike me with lightning, kill me... I don't care. I might die, but I beg you: Don't kill Jim and Rebel too!" He didn't even realize he'd shouted the last sentence forcefully to the entire church. He rested his forehead on his clasped hands and stopped holding back tears.
"You'll probably ignore me anyway, right?" he whispered, his tone so strong that it could never dispel the darkness of suffering.
"Do you want to confess?" the timid question came from his right. Todd jumped as if scalded, trying to discreetly wipe his eyes. A young priest sat down next to him. He looked at him patiently and gently, with that characteristic look of all "men in black" eager to convert another sheep.
It took a moment for the meaning of the words to sink in.
"No," he smiled ironically. "My sins are too 'grave'. It's far too late for me to forgive."
"It's never too late..." The priest wasn't put off by his words, but placed a hand on his shoulder and smiled reassuringly.
"No," he repeated firmly. That was all he needed—a religious fanatic on his back. "
I see something's bothering you... Perhaps you'd at least like to talk? Talking is balm for the soul...
" "And what about you, priest? Is he getting a doctorate in psychology?" he said dryly. "We have nothing to talk about."
He'd hoped the priest would be offended and leave him alone. He'd miscalculated; the man sat motionless, staring expectantly at Armstrong. A very irritating look..."
Todd sighed dramatically. "
Listen, I'm an alcoholic, a drug addict, and a gay man who found out today that he's HIV-positive, and on top of that, he might have infected his friend and loved one. Do you still want to 'talk' to me?" "He asked mockingly, but there was a bitter note in his voice. His blue eyes narrowed to slits.
The priest instinctively withdrew his hand. For a moment, fear flashed in his pupils. Anxiety, contempt, and reluctance. And though he made no further movement, he moved a little away. A terminal illness and resignation can effectively discourage help.
"I knew..." The ironic smile on Todd's face looked like a cardboard cutout. It didn't fit the sad face and glassy eyes. He hung his head, staring at the bright floor of this holy place, which he sullied with his mere presence.
The priest was visibly confused. This wasn't what they taught him in the seminary...
"I heard you scream..." he began cautiously. Todd remained silent. The priest continued. "If someone asks with such faith and passion, it will be granted. You opened your heart to God." Trust Him, and you will be heard. Deep faith is always rewarded...
Todd glared at him and burst out laughing, a hollow echo echoing through the vast church space.
"But I don't believe in God! I'm just desperate. I could beg and hug the knees of every passerby if it would help. So don't tell me anything about deep faith..." he grimaced in disgust. "This whole Church is a complete sham." He folded his arms across his chest, glaring defiantly at the tabernacle. "
You offended me with that statement." The priest's voice sharpened. "
You don't think I'm going to apologize, do you?" he challenged. He frowned, and a deep furrow crossed his forehead.
They stared at each other for a moment. A storm hung in the air...
They both turned away, hiding their embarrassment with a short clearing of their throats.
"Come on..."
"We're adults after all..."
After these simultaneous sentences, silence fell again. Todd closed his eyes. He felt truly awful. A gray space filled him. He was slowly sinking into its treacherous depths...
"But why don't you actually believe in Him?" the priest's slightly pathetic voice brought him back to reality. He looked at him in surprise.
"You still ask? It's so obvious... He's unjust and doesn't care about our fate at all," he declared. "
Why?" he probed. In some strange way, this man was beginning to fascinate him.
Todd's eyes misted over.
"You want a reason?" he laughed cynically. "I'll give you enough..." He exhaled with a hiss, and along with the carbon dioxide, the last semblance of humor vanished from him. "I was born a bastard of the worst kind—the product of rape. Every day I was spat upon, insulted, and hated with all my heart. Even as a small child, loneliness, bitterness, and despair consumed me. I asked God for help, but He was deaf to my pleas. Finally, I stopped. If He won't listen to innocent and unfortunate children, will He listen to a sinful adult? And when, after so many bitter years, I finally found loved ones worth living for, He wants to take it all away from me. And now tell me," he stared at the young priest with haunted eyes. "Can you believe in Him after all this?" he said dryly and rose from the pew. Suddenly, he felt a strong tug. He turned around, surprised. The priest grabbed his sleeve and spoke gently.
"God loves all people. Just give Him a chance...
" "Yeah... sure." He jerked his hand away angrily and quickly left the House of God. The rain had stopped. Todd looked at the sky. It had cleared considerably.

And the priest knelt, crossed himself, and offered a fervent prayer to the Creator...

End of Part Three.

An unbelievable story [I]



Meg woke before dawn. For a moment, she couldn't gather her thoughts, her gaze wandering the dark corners of her room. Finally, she remembered her dream. It wasn't a nightmare, but she felt very uneasy after waking. She only remembered the house and a vague feeling that something wasn't right there.

Finally, she got up and headed for the kitchen. She always said there was nothing like a cup of tea in the morning. Even if it hadn't started yet. Sitting at the small table, sipping the hot beverage, she pondered the meaning of her dream.

Although she was never superstitious, she preferred not to ignore her dreams, because sometimes they came true. Besides, the one she'd just had could only mean one thing: the excitement of buying her own house.

The inheritance she'd received six months earlier had allowed her to fulfill one of her most cherished dreams. One of them was buying an old mansion in the English countryside.

Everything was ready, the contract signed; all she had to do was collect the keys from the previous owners and move in. Meg was optimistic. She had decided to rent her apartment. She had even found suitable tenants.

The bath would be refreshing, and Meg could finish packing the little things she planned to take with her. She had already cleared out the closets, now all that remained was to go through the belongings and gather whatever she felt particularly fond of.

She couldn't remember the exact location of the house. She had only been there once and was afraid she wouldn't find it again. The taxi driver, however, managed to sort everything out, and after a two-hour drive, he parked the car in front of the enormous, two-story house.

"Hello, and I invite you for tea," the landlady greeted Meg.
"Good morning. I need to gather my things first and check the taxi in."
"Okay. We'll be waiting in the living room."

The old woman entered the house, and Meg, along with the driver, carried the suitcases and boxes into the hall. She felt a little uneasy in the owners' presence, but she knew that in half an hour at most, she'd be alone there. Alone among the multitude of rooms, nooks, and old portraits. She was looking forward to it, but she didn't show it as she sipped the hot, aromatic drink Edith had prepared.

Watching the elderly couple, she wondered how they managed to maintain such a large house and why they had decided to sell it for such a low price.
The old woman washed the tea dishes and handed Meg a set of keys, along with a few warnings and instructions. The couple finally left the mansion. The new owner stood on the steps, staring at the disappearing taxi. When she lost sight of it, she stepped inside and sighed. That sigh held an unusual mix of emotions: hope that everything would work out, the joy of starting a whole new chapter of life, fear of failure, and a childish excitement at exploring every nook and cranny of the old house.

Meg hurriedly sorted through the boxes containing her belongings. With the joy of a teenager, she arranged photos and knick-knacks in the living room. She also unpacked some of the tableware and made herself a cup of tea.
As she tossed some wood into the fireplace, she felt that this was exactly what she had been waiting for. She had fulfilled her dream and was finally living her own life.

The house made a huge impression on her. It was old and certainly needed renovation, but her boundless joy overshadowed these negative aspects for now.
Meg, sipping her tea, breathed in the atmosphere of the house. The oldness and the secrets it held. She was certain it held its secrets. She believed in secret passages and hidden hiding places. Finally, shaking off her reverie, she set out to find them.

Having arrived for the first time, she had only briefly surveyed the rooms on the upper floors. She knew only that they were mostly bedrooms with wardrobes and bathrooms. There was, of course, a library, a study, and a small, cozy drawing room, but most of them were bedrooms.
Now she visited each one in turn, opening the shutters and carefully examining the furnishings. Finally, she collapsed from exhaustion in the largest and, in her opinion, coziest bedroom. She no longer had the strength to explore the second floor. She placed a picture of her son on the nightstand, arranged her clothes in the dressers, made the bed, and, exhausted, collapsed onto the pillows.

The morning sun and the piercing cold woke her. Only then did she realize that the previous day, the only warmth had come from the fireplace downstairs. A thick robe and hot tea helped her start the day. She made herself breakfast with the leftover bread and two eggs.

Dressed in a warm sweater, she lit the fireplace and then set out to explore the second floor. The first few rooms, as she had expected, turned out to be bedrooms. Another small sitting room with several scarlet armchairs arranged around a small table left her speechless.

However, it wasn't the charm of the place, but the still figure resting in one of the armchairs. Meg had no doubt the man was dead. The red stain on his shirt and his unnatural pallor were unequivocal signs.

At first, she was paralyzed with fear. Before her was a dead man, with whom she had most likely spent the night! Finally, trembling with terror, she ran down the dark stairs.
The living room was warm and cozy. This calmed her down a bit. She hastily dug her cell phone out of her purse and dialed the police.

A few minutes later, a car pulled up in front of the house, and two men got out. They made the worst possible impression on Meg. They weren't interested in what she was saying until they saw the body and believed she'd actually found it. Only then did they politely take an interest in her and call for backup.

Meg, still shaken, returned to the living room. She tried to distract herself from what had happened. She put wood in the fireplace, adjusted the cushions on the couch, rearranged the photos… But the image of the man with the red stain on his chest remained in her mind.
One of the policemen appeared in the living room doorway. She paid him no attention. Only when he asked her a question did she turn her wandering gaze on him.

"Did you know this man?" His voice was melodic and warm, which calmed her somewhat.
"No. I moved in yesterday. I don't know anyone here."
"Did you lock the door last night?
" "Yes. Of course," she paused, then added in a choking voice. "I don't know anything. Please don't ask me...
" "It would be good if someone came to see you. At least for a while. You shouldn't be alone here," he said, walking away.

The police took the body, searched the house and garden, secured all evidence, and left. The sergeant in charge assured Meg he would return to question her as soon as she calmed down.

The next two days were uneventful. Joy and excitement gave way to dejection. The house became gloomy and uninviting.
A local photographer attempted to take pictures at the murder scene but left empty-handed. Despite this, a local weekly newspaper published a huge photo of the mansion on its front page and a lengthy article devoted both to its new owner and the crime.

When Sergeant Weston arrived to question Meg, he found her in a dressing gown over her clothes, unkempt, and clearly sleep-deprived. In the living room, dirty plates and cups littered every flat surface. The fireplace was littered with ashes. The air was bitterly cold.

Kay, defying every rule he lived and worked by, gathered up and washed the dirty dishes, made Meg hot, strong coffee, and lit a fire.
"Now, tell me what actually happened here.
" "I already told you I don't know anything. I've been living here for four days. Why won't you leave me alone?
" "Why? I'll explain. We found no fingerprints anywhere in the house except yours. There's not a speck of dust in the rooms that haven't been used for several years, and the people you bought this house from have been dead for eight years. Is that enough?"

Meg stared at him wide-eyed, unable to contain her astonishment. She wasn't even sure if he was serious or joking. The words jolted her out of her two-day lethargy and made her feel a surge of anger.
"Are you accusing me of something? How dare you?!
The house purchase documents were in her purse. Since finding the body, she'd lost all desire to settle in and unpack boxes. Everything lay in a disarray, waiting for the owner to brighten up.

"Here you go. Is a notarized purchase and sale agreement sufficient to declare me the legal and rightful owner of this house?" she asked sharply.
"I'm not saying you did anything illegal. I simply want your cooperation. I need an explanation."

Meg sank helplessly into her chair. In an instant, everything had become so complicated. Sergeant Weston watched her, his interest evident. He couldn't quite picture her in the role of a murderer, busily dusting the entire house to exasperate the police.

"Besides, this man was murdered in the garden and only later transferred here. He'd been dead for three days when you found him.
" "I... I don't understand any of this. Why would anyone go to all this trouble? Who were the people I bought the house from? Who was the dead man?
" "I can answer that last question. It was Tony Mayson, if that tells you something—but it didn't."

The sergeant asked Meg more questions, and she grew increasingly confused. Her dream house had become one big mystery. Besides, she was tired and irritated. She wanted to be alone.
"Consider my advice and invite someone to stay with you," Kay said as he left the residence.

He hadn't managed to obtain much information relevant to the investigation, but he didn't consider the time wasted. He was convinced that the owner of the house had nothing to do with the murder. But if not her, then who?

Meg decided to pull herself together. She found an electric heater, put it in the bathroom, and took a long bath. Then she dressed warmly and set off for the village. The residence was surrounded by a large park and a concrete wall. The sounds of village life filtered out.
The maze of narrow streets disoriented her. All the houses seemed similar. Finally, she spotted a shop. While shopping, she kept thinking about how to direct the saleswoman's chatter to the right topics. She needed a specialist. She didn't know exactly what kind, but he simply had to know about central heating.

Finally, she managed to get a name and address.
"I only want to heat the ground floor. I don't plan on developing the upper floors for now. I would have done something about it myself, but the installations are too old."
The man who had almost immediately offered his help was now eagerly scanning every corner of the house. Meg interpreted his tapping on every pipe she encountered more as a desire to reach the dead body than to find a fault or leak.
Finally, however, refusing payment and resigning himself to the future, the man departed, and Meg fetched coal and wood and lit the stove. She also prepared dinner and sorted through the boxes of belongings.

Evening fell early. For the first time in days, the house was warm, and the smell of food filled the air. Meg took the bedding down from upstairs and pulled out the couch in the living room. As she ate, glancing at the television out of the corner of her eye, she reflected on the events of the last few days.
Buying this house was supposed to be a balm for the past. Her divorce from her husband four years earlier had turned her world upside down. Since then, she had changed jobs three times and lost friends and acquaintances one by one. Only her son, Mike, was there for her throughout.
His father paid for his education at a prestigious boarding school, but he didn't interfere with his upbringing.

Meg wanted to buy a small, cozy house in the country and, at thirty-six, start a new life. However, fate presented her with another option. At a bargain price, she purchased a vast Elizabethan mansion and decided to open a boarding house there. She wasn't familiar with the area or the building's condition, but she knew she wanted to take a chance.
However, fate decided to play a trick on her and make things difficult from the very beginning. The police questioned the legality of the transaction. This wasn't surprising, considering the sellers turned out to be ghosts.

Besides, Meg was certain the sergeant suspected her of involvement in the murder. In his place, she would have suspected herself too. She had no logical excuse. If the deceased had been her ex-husband, she would have had more to say, and any speculation about her guilt would have been fully justified.
Unfortunately, the deceased was completely unknown to her; ghosts were wandering the area, and she had no desire to delve into these mysterious matters. She also had no one with whom to share her fate, so she was left to abandon her pessimistic thoughts and focus on planning for the immediate future.

The next day, Meg decided to look around the garden. The flowerbeds, borders, and lawns that had likely graced it in its heyday were gone. In several places, tulips, crocuses, and other spring flowers were poking through the layer of decaying grass and leaves.

In the dilapidated outbuilding, Meg found a hoe and rake. She carefully weeded and dug up the spots where she spotted sprouting plants. Her work absorbed her so completely that she didn't notice the man approaching along the path between the trees. She only saw him when he was a few steps away.
"Hello, ma'am. My name is Simon Chayefsky. We've met before.
" "I don't recall.
" "I wanted to take a few photos here, but you dismissed me without even opening the door.
" "If you still want the same thing, please don't waste your precious time," Meg replied irritably.
"Could we talk? About this house," he continued, ignoring her harsh words. "Why did you buy it?"

She didn't want to answer this or any other question, but the man didn't seem like a thrill-seeker. This confused her a bit.
"It was cheap. For that amount, I could have bought a small cottage in the middle of nowhere. Would you agree that it was a good deal?"
"Call me Margaret. Or maybe Meggi?"
She glared at him. How did he know her name!? What was he really after? Her first, good impression turned out to be completely deceptive.
"As for you, Mrs. Grey," she said indifferently, trying to hide her nervousness.
"Don't get upset, Meggi. I just want to know the real reason you're here. You bought this dump for next to nothing. Or maybe you didn't buy it at all? Maybe you're just temporarily guarding it?
" "Please leave this place immediately. I don't want you bothering me and insinuating nonsense.
" "So I finally got it," he said, more to himself than to her, and smiled maliciously. "Don't get upset. I'm leaving, but I'll be back. You can be sure of that. I'll find out what's going on here and I'll be back."

Meg wanted to throw a hoe at him, but she controlled herself. She was only glad he hadn't used the camera he had slung over his shoulder. Then she certainly wouldn't be responsible for his behavior.
What an impudent man, she thought as she entered the house. She wasn't sure if she was more nervous or frightened. His insinuations unsettled her. There was as much truth in them as snow in the garden, yet she subconsciously sensed that he believed what he said, and even if she showed him the purchase agreement, he wouldn't acknowledge it.

Besides, that nickname… Since her parents died, only her ex-husband had used it, and she wanted to forget him and everything connected with him forever.
A cup of tea and the monotonous voice of the radio announcer calmed her somewhat. She glanced out the window to make sure the pushy photographer had disappeared from the grounds. No trace of the unwanted guest remained, except an unpleasant memory.
The weather was clearly about to take a turn for the worse. Dark clouds appeared above the wind-whipped treetops. Meg threw on her jacket and left the house. She hurriedly gathered up her scattered garden tools and grabbed a stash of firewood from the shed.

With her field work interrupted, she decided to start preparing dinner. Although she had no one to share it with, she decided to finally celebrate the purchase of the house. The bottle of sweet red wine she'd brought from the apartment was perfect for this. Chocolate cake was a perfect accompaniment, so she quickly found her recipe book and got to work.
A knock on the door interrupted her efficient bustle in the kitchen. Meg had had enough of unannounced guests. Especially since it was another strange man.

"I apologize for the intrusion, Mrs. Grey, but it was raining so hard that I decided to hide out at your place. Derek Knight, at your service.
" "Come in. It rained so suddenly..." she began, halfheartedly.
"I don't think that's a sufficient reason for my visit, but I have two more," she looked at him with interest. "I'm a friend of Sergeant Weston's, and it just so happens he asked me to check on you when I have a moment to make sure you're all right and that you've followed his advice. Secondly, if you'll excuse me, I was very curious to know who bought this house. What's that strange smell?" he asked suddenly.
"Oh, I beg your pardon, but I think my cake is burning. Please go into the living room. I'll be right back," she said hurriedly, the last words drifting from the dining room.

Positive thoughts part 3


When I somehow left that hotel (I even forgot which one), I went straight home. I didn't want to stop anywhere else, lest I start another fight because of me. At home, my nerves calmed down. I sat down in my favorite armchair, covered myself with a blanket, even though it was the middle of summer, and my beloved kitty, Pusia, immediately jumped onto my lap. She immediately purred when I started petting her. I don't know, but petting that cat immediately calmed me down. I looked at the papers lying on the table next to me. I covered them with the newspaper with the program and went to bed, feeling like I wouldn't get anything useful done that day. My lovely, soothing sleep ended as suddenly as it had come. When I woke up, it was night and a storm was raging outside. Pusia was pacing back and forth. My head was pounding, probably from all the drinks I'd had during the day. When I got up and took a sip of juice from the fridge, the sound of bottles smashing was still fresh in my mind. Suddenly, the sound stopped, and a few seconds later, it resonated in my mind again. I walked to the door and slowly opened it. At that moment, there was a loud bang, and my cat meowed. I thought I was going to have a heart attack, I was so scared. When I stuck my head out the door, I realized it wasn't my head making the noise, but someone downstairs. I lived on the third floor of an old tenement building, so the echo was just right. That no one else had heard it was a miracle. Driven by my innate curiosity, I went downstairs. The flashes of lightning scared me a little. I liked thunderstorms, but they terrified me at the same time. When I got downstairs, I didn't notice anything unusual. Once on the first floor, the noise suddenly stopped. I went all the way downstairs. There was no one there. There were broken bottles in the corner; someone had even broken a lot of them. But who was it? There was no one there anymore. Suddenly, I heard quick footsteps and another flash of lightning. Only this time, almost simultaneously with the flash, I heard such a clap of thunder that the glass in the main door shook. A chill ran down my spine. I suddenly smelled the stinking stairwell, was terrified by the darkness, the sudden silence, the piercing wind that whistled through every crack, the feeling of someone running up the stairs suspiciously quickly moments ago, and the fact that I was completely alone. Another chill ran through me, and I quickly ran up the stairs, eager to get to my cozy, safe apartment. When I reached the door, I noticed it was open, even though I'd slammed it shut after putting the key in my pocket. I immediately thought of burglars. Suddenly, I remembered those footsteps. What if that someone was still in my apartment? I was terrified. Another thunderclap; I felt like I was in a horror movie. I entered the apartment quietly; of course it was dark, of course. I walked through the hallway and into my bedroom, if you could even call it a bedroom. My house wasn't very big, consisting of a small hallway, a fairly large kitchen, a bathroom where something was constantly breaking down, a guest room, and my bedroom.which was also my oasis of peace. No one was allowed there except me and my friend Klara. Well, maybe a man would pass through occasionally, but not very often.
When I stood in the middle of my oasis of peace, I noticed that someone had dared to disturb my haven of peace. Someone was undoubtedly in my apartment, as a black envelope lay on the bed, which I certainly hadn't placed there. Unless my cat had suddenly become intelligent and wanted to send me letters. I immediately turned on all the lights in the apartment and searched every room very carefully. I checked to make sure no one had taken anything, even though my possessions weren't very large, and only then did I tackle the black envelope. Puśka jumped onto the bed and watched my actions intently. My hand trembled slightly as I pulled the black paper from the envelope. I unfolded the sheet and saw a mosaic of letters cut out from various newspapers and glued to it in the following order: "You better take this inheritance, or you won't be so happy." I'm not joking, so don't tease me and run to the priest. Unless you don't want to wait until the next day.
Well, that's pretty much what it looked like. If I'd been standing, I probably wouldn't have been standing anymore, I'd have been lying on the floor. I started feeling dizzy, so I lay down and forced my respiratory system to work way beyond normal. I stopped, though, afraid of hyperventilating.
Someone knows where I live, knows I've received an inheritance, and knows I don't want it at all. He was here, in my apartment, and now I'm in danger of not seeing the next day. It made me incredibly angry. My privacy was being seriously violated. I grabbed my cell phone and found Damian's number. I looked at my watch; it was ten to two. What the hell, I thought. He told me to call, so I did.
"Damian?" I asked stupidly. I heard him yawn. "Did I wake you?" That was a pretty stupid question, I know. It was obvious he was asleep.
"What happened?" My brother didn't like to beat around the bush.
"Someone was in my apartment, someone who knows about the inheritance. Come here and you'll see for yourself."

Damian entered my apartment at two. By then, I'd already had my coffee and recovered from all of this. Damian, like a true lawyer, started asking me all sorts of questions. When I heard the footsteps, did I see anyone, did I hear any voices downstairs, was I being followed, had I searched everything, had I left anything but a black envelope, and so on. After a while, I couldn't take it anymore and yelled at him, saying yes, I had checked everything, no, no one had followed me, I hadn't heard any voices, I hadn't seen anyone, I had thoroughly searched the house and found nothing but a black envelope and footprints, which my intelligent little brother probably left on my carpet. I also added that I didn't remember the exact time I'd come downstairs. Damian fell silent, undoubtedly pondering all this.
"We have to go to the police," he said firmly. I knew that too, even without his wisdom. Before leaving, however, Damian told me to change, because I was still wearing the outfit I'd worn to the funeral. In my bright skirt and plush sweater, I looked no different than working women who weren't afraid of any drivers on the highway. So I quickly changed into jeans and a blue sweatshirt from my college days. It had the clever "University of Warsaw" logo on it, so I always felt different from everyone else in it.
We stepped outside, and I immediately felt a refreshing, cool breeze hit my face. It somehow brought me back to reality. My brother was doing quite well since I'd stepped into his new Audi. We got to the station quickly, so I couldn't even think about what I was going to tell them there. It turned out I had to tell the entire story of the inheritance and repeat exactly what I'd already told Damian.
I sat with my brother on one side of the desk, and on the other sat a policeman with a mustache. Another uniformed officer stood over him, this time without a mustache. He had a grimace, as if he regretted ever being born. They both listened intently, but when I finished speaking, they looked at each other simultaneously, and it seemed to me that they telepathically began to laugh at me. I glanced at Damian; after all, this was his business.
"You gentlemen, I don't think you're taking this seriously," he said firmly. This time, his lawyerly, stern tone didn't bother me at all. The policemen looked at him differently than they had at me.
"That sounds a bit... strange," said the one with the mustache, as if he'd been considering it beforehand.
"I've never heard a story like that before," replied the one with the grimace.
"Me neither, I assure you. In my career, I've never encountered such a strange inheritance case. The condition my late father set may indeed be controversial, but those are the facts, and unfortunately, they must be acknowledged.
But Damian liked to show off.
"This isn't a court hearing," I said quietly, but he heard me anyway and glared at me.
"Could I speak for myself?" I finally asked. I wanted to express my opinion on the matter. "I think it was a one-time prank by someone who was terribly bored, and it probably won't happen again," I said, though I wasn't entirely sure.
"I wouldn't be so sure," a voice suddenly replied, as if reading my mind. I was starting to think I was going crazy and hearing voices, when suddenly the man with the mustache looked over my head.
"Good morning, Mr. Zagórski," the one with the mustache said in a formal tone. I turned around to see who this Zagórski was. A tall, handsome brunette man appeared before my eyes. The room was bright with fluorescent lights, so I could see Mr. Zagórski's beautiful brown eyes. He was standing in the doorway, leaning against the doorframe, a mug of coffee in his hand. He was wearing light trousers and a matching jacket. He looked as if coffee at 2 a.m. was completely normal for him. I stared at him, because it was a sight to behold. He stared back at me, my cheeks burning.
"What did you say?" I asked, unable to bear the tension that had suddenly built up in the room. I couldn't remember any stranger having such an effect on me, not counting, of course, my platonic love for Brad Pitt.
"I told you I wouldn't be so sure this was the first and last time you'd received that black envelope."
Everyone remained silent. Me too. They were probably doing the same thing I was: wondering how the hell he knew about it.
"But, how do you know that..." I started, but he interrupted me. He had a strange rasp in his voice that sent shivers down my spine.
"I was in the next room and heard what you were saying.
Was I talking that loud? The door was open, but I wasn't shouting." A stranger, Mr. Zagórski, approached me, and my throat tightened when he stood next to me and I smelled his perfume. I thought to myself,
"Marek Zagórski," the handsome stranger introduced himself, extending his hand. I offered him my shaking hand in greeting, and he shook it firmly. I wonder what was hidden under that shirt, I thought, and immediately scolded myself for thinking such nonsense at a time like this.
"Irmina Szadowska," I said, and he smiled. Probably because of my idiotic name. God, why do I have such a terrible name?
"Sit down," the man with the mustache said wisely, because the handsome Zagórski was still standing. He grabbed a chair and sat down next to me. Why couldn't he sit next to Damian? Now I couldn't concentrate on anything.
"Now that I started talking, I don't think it was a one-off," he said, placing the coffee on the table. What... one-off, what was that supposed to be, aha, I remembered once I'd stopped staring at him. Oh yes, that envelope, it really wasn't one-off; it could still be useful. What am I saying!
"My name is Damian, I'm Mina's brother," my brother said suddenly. They both shook hands. Why did he say Mina? Didn't he know he was completely embarrassing me?! "I also think it'll happen again. Someone tried to scare my sister and succeeded. Next time it might be different.
" "What could be different?" I asked.
"I completely agree with you. Someone found out about the inheritance, and from what I understand, he's very keen for your sister to take it over.
" "Yes," Damian said with a smile, as if pleased to have found someone worth talking to. "I just don't know who could find out so quickly. Mina, have you told anyone about this?"
There was silence. After a moment, I realized the question had been asked, and it was directed at me.
"What?" I asked, turning to him. This Zagórski had completely captured me. I didn't want to reveal it, but I wasn't doing well. I pulled myself together and focused on the question.
"No," I said, not letting Damian repeat the question. He looked at me disapprovingly. "I didn't tell anyone about it. When I got home, I went straight to bed." I listened to every word I said, aware that Mr. Zagórski could hear everything. "I didn't tell anyone," I repeated.
"Well, then, someone must have been following you, maybe they overheard your conversation with your brother.
" "There was no one around us at the time," my brother stated firmly.
"Or maybe..." I started, but quickly bit my tongue. I wanted to say that maybe there were cameras in the hotel, but that would have been a complete joke. After all, cameras only show images, not sound, unless someone had practiced lip-syncing. Everyone was staring at me, including handsome Zagórski. God, I'd embarrassed myself. How can I get out of this now?
"Or maybe..." I repeated, stalling for time. Suddenly, it dawned on me. "Maybe it was someone in the family?" At first, when I said it, I thought I'd been talking nonsense again, but that had been the most likely explanation so far. Silence fell.
"That's probably the most likely," Zagórski said first. He must have thought about it earlier too. Maybe he didn't want to be the first to say it. "After all, who cares most about you accepting this inheritance?"
I instinctively looked at Damian, because he was the one who kept telling me to take my inheritance. He must have seen it in my eyes, because he looked at me reproachfully.
"What, are you stupid?" he said quickly. No, he wasn't. He was stupid sometimes, and annoying, but Damian had too much money to want a little money from me.
"You're right," the man with the mustache said suddenly. "Now that I'm listening, it's clear as day that this is some kind of family conspiracy. I also saw in that one movie where a guy had an inheritance and the whole family wanted to do it..." the man with the mustache said enthusiastically.
"Thank you, Constable," Zagórski interrupted, and I was grateful. The man with the mustache fell silent. He was probably famous for such foolish speeches.
"I think you should be careful for now and not tell anyone," the beautiful Mr. Zagórski said to me. He said this to me... until I fell silent, listening to his beautiful voice. I nodded, signaling I understood.
"Who in the family knows exactly about this inheritance?" This time the question was directed at Damian. He, on the other hand, looked a little confused. He shifted in his chair again. He seemed to prefer asking questions rather than answering them seated.
"Actually, everyone in our family knows about it," he said reluctantly, as if it were his fault.
"We need to limit the number of suspects a bit," Zagórski said. How clever he was. I was starting to like him more and more, but it was a purely platonic infatuation. Nothing would have come of it anyway, and I'll explain why later. "And who knows that Mrs. Irmina doesn't want to collect this inheritance?
" "Everyone does, too. I talked to our mother about it, so I assume she shared the news with everyone.
" "Did you tell your mother? And does everyone know?" Now they'll probably think I despise money," I told him indignantly.
Zagórski smiled and lowered his head. At that moment, I didn't even care what he thought of me.
"And they'll be right, just because of some stupid story from your childhood, you don't want to go to that priest and tell him.
" "What did you say?" I shouted at him, rising from my chair. Zagórski stood up too, followed by the mustachioed one and the one with the grimace. My brother stared at me like I was a first-class lunatic. "I've had enough of all this. I've had enough of no one believing me. You don't even know how I feel. I can't live a normal life because of this, and you still think I made it all up!"
As I screamed, I suddenly realized everyone was looking at me. I left as quickly as I could. Once outside, I felt the cool, refreshing breeze again. I sat down on the stone steps and started crying.
I was right when I said I couldn't live a normal life. This also applies to what I promised to explain earlier. It all comes down to one thing – my father. As a child, I experienced my first time, if you can call it that. It was a truly painful experience, and I will never forget it, no matter how hard I tried. When, as an adult, I wanted to be in a relationship, I couldn't, I couldn't. I couldn't trust anyone. Every man was my father. And sex was just pleasure. There was no love in him. At least not from me. Who could endure such a toxic relationship? No one. That's why I had no one. I couldn't give myself entirely to one man and trust him completely. I was an unhappy, lonely woman whose only family were Puśka, Klara, and Paweł, my friend from college. He was an orphan and as a child lived with a foster family where he couldn't experience love. So we had a lot in common. They were the only people (and the cat) I fully trusted.
That's why I couldn't understand how Damian, an intelligent man, couldn't show me even a shred of tenderness and brotherly love. I felt so terribly sad. Why couldn't he accept the fact that my father had sexually abused me? Was it really that impossible? Klara believed me immediately. She had been with me the entire time I lived in my parents' house. She hadn't abandoned me when I needed her. And what was my own brother doing? God, I couldn't understand it.
Suddenly, I felt someone sit down next to me. The warming scent of Zagórski filled my nostrils. I looked up at him. In the streetlight, I could only make out his well-defined features and disheveled hair. I couldn't bear the thought of him seeing me in a moment of weakness, and even when my eyes were filled with tears.
"When I was seven, I had to go to school alone because my mother was sick," Zagórski suddenly began to say. His voice pulled me away from the darkness. He radiated positive vibrations that made me feel strangely absent-minded. But I listened very carefully now, not wanting to miss a single word he said. "It was the first day of school, and I was terribly angry that no one would go with me," he said, staring straight ahead. My first day of school wasn't any different, except perhaps that no one in my family was sick. No one simply wanted to go. That's how it was. "First I was angry, then sad. When I went to school, I remember wearing this awful suit that I didn't like. That made me feel even worse." Zagórski confided in me, even though I hadn't asked him to. He spoke, though I didn't know why. But since I've always preferred listening to people rather than confiding in them myself, I was happy that this handsome guy wanted to tell me something. "I was almost at elementary school when I heard a quiet whimper coming from someone's basement window. There was no glass in that window, so I went inside. I ripped my clothes on a nail and fell onto the coal. When I got up, I saw a small dog sitting in the corner, whimpering like that." Zagórski said it as if it happened yesterday. It must have been deeply etched in his memory. "I went up to him; I wasn't afraid of him at all. He looked so sad, just like me... I remember he was completely black. His fur was perfectly black, not even a speck, not a single spot anywhere. I managed to get him out. It wasn't easy. I had to dig through the coal; I completely ripped my suit jacket because it was full of wires and nails driven into the wall." I knew it could have been someone's dog, but only a cruel person could have locked him in a cold basement. I also saw that he was completely emaciated. I had to do something about him. I spent the money my mother gave me for school books on food for Czarny…
"Czarni? Is that what you named the dog?" I asked, drawn into his story. He looked at me and smiled. I no longer even cared that I was calling him by his first name. Later, he addressed me that way too.
"Yes. I named him that because of his black fur. Nothing else came to mind at the time. That was my sentence.
I looked at him questioningly. He just nodded.
"Listen further," he ordered. And of course I did. I could have listened to him like that for hours.
"I bought him that food. When I walked with him down the street, people kept staring at me. I was covered in coal, dust, and soot. The suit was ready to be thrown away. My hands were black, not to mention my face. I could even feel the dust and sand in my teeth. I wandered around the city and the park, and the Black Man followed me. I finally found him a hiding place in the park and was supposed to leave him there to return the next day. That's when, just out of spite, it was raining. I couldn't leave him like that. I was afraid to go home too, because I knew I'd get a good beating for ruining the suit, spending money on a dog, missing school altogether, and, on top of that, I looked little different from my black dog, whom I didn't want to live without. So I stayed with him in the park all night.
" "What?" I asked. "You were seven years old and you were left all alone in the park with a dog?"
I couldn't believe a seven-year-old child would willingly do that.
"I was so afraid my mother would discover what I'd done, that she'd discover my secret. I simply preferred not to go home. I was scared, hungry, and worried about my mother, because she was home alone, and I knew she needed me. First thing in the morning, when Czarny woke me up with his barking, I went home. I stood at the door and rang the bell. My mother opened the door quickly, and when she saw me, she didn't know whether to laugh or cry with joy. She hugged me and asked what had happened. Next to her stood my two aunts, a neighbor and her husband, and right behind them, a friend of my father's.
"That was quite a welcome," I said, happy that the whole thing had ended well.
"But imagine the sight. I stood before them, completely dirty, practically black, wearing the remains of my first suit, with mud in my hair. I was cold, hungry, and my eyes were swollen from crying."
I had to laugh as I pictured the handsome Zagórski boy covered in mud, his eyes puffy with tears.
"Mom was crying, the neighbor, and my aunts too. My dad's friend came up to me and asked who I'd brought with me. I looked at the dog and said, 'This is my friend Czarny.' I don't know why, but everyone immediately burst out laughing. My mom said I was blacker than my friend, and that I should be called that. And that's how it became Czarny. I got my nickname after the dog I named myself.
" "Yeah. That's all well and good, but why are you telling me this? You've got to admit, you've condemned yourself, right?" I laughed. "Now it really is? Czarny?
" "Yes. But that's not what I meant.
" "So?" I asked, not sure what he meant anymore.
"I wanted to tell you that because I was afraid to tell my mother, I spent a whole, terrible night in the park. If I had just come home and bravely admitted what I had done and that I intended to stop the Black One, I probably wouldn't have had to cry all night and suffer.
" "It's true," I said. I had no idea why he was telling me this. I noticed Zagórski was watching me intently. Suddenly, I understood why he'd told me all this. He clearly wanted me to tell him why I didn't want to take possession of two hundred thousand. And that anecdote was probably meant to make me realize that you can't be afraid of secrets because it will end badly. I figured that out quickly; after all, I had taken psychology classes. I stood up quickly, startling Zagórski.
"Mr. Zagórski," I began.
"I'm Marek," he said, upset that I'd spoken to him that way.
"These are my personal matters," I finished, ignoring what he'd said. He smiled and stood up.
"You didn't waste your time in college after all. Your brother told me you studied psychology," he said. Now I knew why he'd used that story. He knew I'd figure it out.
"Never mind," I replied. "I didn't finish my studies anyway. I just wanted to say that you shouldn't be trying to get me to tell you. Let my brother tell you, because you probably won't believe my story," I said, certain that would be exactly what would happen. Marek was very interested in what I said, because he looked serious. I must have really wanted to know what was bothering me so much. I had a huge urge to tell him everything. I wanted to throw my arms around him and tell him how bad I was, how much I was suffering, and how I couldn't get my life together normally. But he probably wouldn't want to hear it. In my opinion, it was too complicated for Marek to understand. So I didn't want to prolong it any further. Besides, I don't even know this man," I began to tell myself.
"I have to go," I said, turning to leave my handsome boyfriend, who wanted to know my life story.
"If this happens again, come to my place," he told me, and I froze, unable to say a word. I felt as if he'd suggested we spend the night together at his house. "Call me if anything happens." He approached me and handed me his business card. "Are you sure you don't want a ride?"
"No," I replied, my voice hoarse, as my throat had gone dry.
"I asked your brother to stay and tell me exactly what this inheritance is all about and who in the family knows about it. It's very likely it's someone in the family. Things happen in the world, and I wouldn't be surprised if it's true," he said. I stared at him like an art connoisseur staring at the Mona Lisa. He impressed me with all his stupidity, even the insignificant ones. I smiled at him and nodded to show I understood. I shared his opinion, though it was hard for me to accept that my family truly didn't want me in this world and all they cared about was my money.
Marek shook my hand but didn't let go for a long moment. Suddenly, someone stepped out of the building, and only then could I free myself from Mr. Zagórski's penetrating gaze.
"So, see you later," Marek said, and went up the stairs to the building where I'd first seen the man of my life.

The story of one acquaintance

He descended the wooden stairs. It was just after breakfast and he decided to get to the seaside as quickly as possible. He glan...