czwartek, 26 lutego 2026

Salsa Salad


Ingredients
4 tomatoes
1 red onion
1 green chili pepper
1 clove garlic
3 sprigs green onions
1 handful cilantro
Lime juice
1/2 tbsp olive oil
Salt
Ground black pepper


Dice the tomatoes. Remove the seeds from the peppers and finely chop. Chop the garlic.


Chop the onion.


Finely chop the green onions.


Then chop the cilantro.


Juice half a lime in a bowl.


Place the vegetables and herbs in the same bowl.


Season with salt, pepper, and oil. Mix well. 
Bon appétit!

Tattoo


I recently decided to get a tattoo. Well, after browsing a couple of websites, I finally found the right person. The artist lived in my city, in a different neighborhood. After looking at the prices and photos of his work, I decided to get a tattoo. The work was incredibly realistic, whether it was a rose on a girl's shoulder or, for example, a sleeve (a full-arm tattoo, from shoulder to wrist) on a guy. I've always been attracted to quality. So, having taken the required amount, I called the artist and headed to his place. Half an hour by bus, and I was there.

The artist's apartment amazed me. On the walls were photographs of his work that seemed alive. It was as if that snake would start writhing and hissing, or that dagger would actually start bleeding, the blood that was on its blade. I was also impressed by the artist himself, covered in an incredibly large number of drawings. First, we drank tea in his kitchen and talked. He admitted he'd done all the designs himself, which gave me even more respect for him. We then went into the room, where I chose a design for myself—a beautiful ligature of floral and technological motifs. The artist set to work, and soon everything was ready. Very pleased with the work, I paid and went home.

A week later, the tattoo had healed and taken its final form. The realism of the work clearly exceeded 100%. Everything was fine for the next couple of days. But one night, I woke up in the bathroom and was a little taken aback: in the mirror, I saw a completely different tattoo—a tangle of many sharp blades, curving at unimaginable angles. I thought, "Oh well, I'll call him in the morning and figure it out." But that morning, I was already preoccupied with another problem. I woke up in a bloody bed. My arm was completely clean, save for a few deep cuts where the edges of the blades in the design had touched my skin. I immediately recalled my thoughts from the previous day and started dialing the tattoo artist's number. But to my surprise, the operator's voice said the number was out of service. Okay, I treated my wounds, got dressed, and, without even having breakfast, went to his place. Imagine my surprise and disappointment when, after half an hour of knocking, no one answered. Even the neighbors, who had peeked out from their apartments to see my efforts, asked me not to break in, as no one had lived there for a long time. But how could they? After all, I had just been there, drinking tea in the kitchen, listening to the whirring of the machine, and feeling the pain of the needle!

Having achieved nothing, I went home. For a couple of days, I forgot about the tattoo artist, about the drawings that seemed alive. I lived my normal life. But a week ago, I woke up at three in the morning from a terrible pain in my shoulder. More blood. I went to the bathroom... and that's where I became truly scared. A terrifying-looking dagger was etched into my shoulder, one I seemed to have seen among the works of that very same artist. It pierced my skin, and where it had made contact, a large puncture wound already gaped, bleeding profusely. I broke out in a cold sweat. I hadn't expected this turn of events. Again, having quickly stopped the bleeding, I went to the hospital. The doctor, after examining my wound, said that such a wound could indeed be left by a bladed weapon. After listening to my explanation, he advised me to see a psychiatrist. He even started writing a referral. I jumped up from my chair and left. Home.

Now I live in perpetual panic. The day before yesterday, I discovered a drawing of a snake on my chest in the morning, and later that evening, this slithering creature was hissing on the floor of my bathroom. The drawing disappeared. But I began to truly fear for myself yesterday. A twisted chain of barbed wire began to appear around my neck...

An Incident in the Garage


This happened to me a couple of years ago. I was dating a man at the time. Let me tell you right away: I'm in my early thirties, and he's in his late forties. We're both adults and quite sane.

It was February. I was at work from morning until night, and we didn't get a chance to meet for quite some time. Finally, we agreed to meet after work. The thing is, we couldn't go to my place because I have a mother and son at home, and we couldn't go to his place either, since he has a wife and two sons at home. So we always met in his car. In the summer, we'd drive out of town to "admire the scenery," and in the winter, we'd hang out in his garage. His garage was clean and decent, with a permanently open pit and a pile of odds and ends on the shelves. The garage faced a wooded area, like about fifty other similar garages nearby.

 We were sitting in the car. He'd turned on the engine to keep warm, and he'd opened the garage door slightly so we wouldn't choke on the exhaust fumes. He'd secured the door with a piece of rebar—no one from outside could get in, even if they really wanted to.

We were listening to music, drinking cognac with candy from plastic shot glasses, and laughing. By the time it all started, we weren't even halfway through the bottle. And then suddenly we heard a sound. Anyone who's driven on a narrow road with bushes on either side knows that sound—branches scraping against the car's body. But this time, it wasn't just the sides that were scraping, but the underside of the car as well (and there was an open hole underneath!).

"What the hell? I'll go and check—maybe a dog ran in," my friend muttered and started to get out. I grabbed his hand in horror—what kind of dog could there be on all sides of the car, especially in a hole?

 At the same time, I looked out the windshield and... saw nothing. The headlights were on, and until then I'd clearly seen the wall with the things hanging on it—a hose, a fire extinguisher, and a duffel bag—but now I saw nothing but pitch-black darkness. It was the same on all sides. I turned my head toward the man and saw that he was either asleep or unconscious. Terrified, I began shaking him. The scratching sound didn't stop for a moment. Panicking, I glanced out the window several times, only to see the same darkness there. I was tempted to peer more closely, but my subconscious told me better not.

Finally, he groaned and woke up, cursing slightly and wondering why he'd "passed out." I looked around again and saw the shelves and tools, the hose, the fire extinguisher, and the razor blade... It was as if the scratching sound had never happened.

I tried to find out from my friend what it was—he looked at me like I was an idiot. My romantic evening was ruined, and he drove me home. I went up to my apartment and called him from my cell phone to let him know I was okay. Meanwhile, I looked out the window at him pacing around his car, carefully examining the sides, as if he was looking for something—maybe he was looking for scratches.

I tried to bring the incident back to the conversation several times later, but he stubbornly avoided answering. We soon parted ways.

Failure


Three years ago, my friends and I went on that fateful hike. We hiked with tents and large backpacks. Our destination was a small mountain 25 kilometers from our town. We reached it in about nine hours. We set up camp at the foot of this very mountain and began to rest. The place was very beautiful, and we enjoyed the peace after a long journey under the scorching sun.

In the morning, when we woke up, we discovered that Alyosha, our leader, had lost his GPS navigator, as he had an idiotic habit of carrying it in a zippered mesh pocket.

"Don't worry, people!" he said cheerfully. "We'll go back, we remember the way!"

We headed back, angry at Alyosha. He calmly pretended to remember every bush.

Three hours later, we reached a lake that none of us had seen before. But Alyosha said we'd just made a small detour from our previous route, that's all. The water was crystal clear—it would have been a shame not to take a dip. We put our things down, undressed, and waded in.

Alyosha decided to play and started "drown" me. I went under completely, pushed off the bottom, and came up. I was surprised that the lake bottom was sandy, but the surface I'd pushed off was clearly iron and rusty.

I ran out onto the shore screaming, "Ugh, I stepped on something!" Everyone started laughing. Alyosha dove in to check, and there was a sharp creak, like an old rusty door opening. Suddenly, the water began to disappear into the ground, not in one whirlpool, but in sections—here and there. Everyone rushed out of the water—thankfully, they were close to the shore. Only Alyosha was gone...

Before we could process what had happened, the shore itself began to subside. We ran away from the cursed lake, where now only a large hole remained. A children's game of tag, a life-or-death chase... One of us, Dasha, stumbled, but we didn't have a second to help her. I heard my friends' screams nearby. My best friend, Anton, had fallen too. I rushed to him, even though the holes were getting deeper and everything around was falling away, but the ground between us gave way, and I couldn't reach him. I saw his eyes as he disappeared under the sand.

I ran on, tears blurring my vision. I don't know how long I ran, I don't remember when exactly the ground stopped collapsing beneath me. I came to when the highway flashed ahead like a gray streak. I started hitchhiking and soon hailed a car. I begged the people in the car to help my friends. We walked back to the lake together, though I felt lousy and was afraid to take another step.

We didn't find any lake, and neither did my friends. The ground was smooth—sand, grass... The sinkhole swallowed us up and disappeared without a trace.

Escape from “Kresty

**”**

In the summer of 1937, I was a very young man working at the Kirov Plant. One day a paint warehouse caught fire there. I wasn’t even nearby — that day I was supposed to work the night shift. But I never made it to work — they grabbed me almost at the factory gates and threw me into a “Black Maria.” They drove me somewhere and locked me in a cell without any explanation. In the morning, they called me in for interrogation.

From the investigator’s questions, I realized there was a denunciation against me, claiming I had planned the arson. I could already guess who had written it. There was a guy at the plant who kept pestering my girlfriend, and once after work I had given him a bit of a beating. Now he had decided to get revenge.

I denied everything. The investigator grew angry, especially since he had no real evidence against me. Suddenly his phone rang — apparently his superiors were summoning him. He told the guard:

“Take this son of a bitch to an empty cell. We’ll continue in an hour. Maybe by then his memory will return.”

The guard silently led me down the corridor, then along some stairs, unlocked a door, and shoved me into a cell. A man was sitting on the bunk inside, writing something. The barred window had been painted over with white paint, so I couldn’t see where it faced, but suddenly from outside came the long blast of a steamboat horn, followed by music drifting from a boat passing along the river. Then I realized I was most likely in Kresty Prison, which stands right on the bank of the Neva.

A wave of despair overwhelmed me. Just a few days earlier, my girlfriend and I had taken a boat excursion and sailed past that very place (perhaps even on the same boat whose horn I now heard). And now — who knew when I would ever leave… Such anguish seized me that my heart seemed to contract, and at that very moment I felt myself losing consciousness. Everything went dark before my eyes. Staggering, I instinctively threw up my hands to grab hold of something — and when my vision cleared, I found myself standing on the bank of the Neva, holding onto a parapet. And there, on the river, the very same little steamboat was moving toward the Liteyny Bridge.

I stood there like a fool, unable to understand anything. It felt as if someone had given me a powerful kick and thrown me out of the cell. For a long time, I just stood there, not believing my own eyes or sensations. When I finally looked around, I saw that I was indeed not far from Kresty, closer to the city center. It was early morning, and there were hardly any passersby. I shrugged and slowly began walking toward the center. No one stopped me or called out to me. I walked almost as far as the Peter and Paul Fortress before deciding to head home.

I had no money — everything in my pockets had been taken at the prison. I had to ride part of the way clinging onto the outside of a tram until a young female conductor took pity on me and allowed me to ride for free.

At home, I thought long and hard about what had happened and what to do next. My passport was still with the investigator. Then I remembered that I had automatically memorized his phone number when he told someone to call him at that number.

We didn’t have a phone at home, of course, so I went upstairs to my neighbor — the mother of one of the plant’s leading engineers. They had a separate apartment like ours, and they had a telephone.

When I heard the familiar voice answer, I gave my name and asked when my documents would be returned.

“Where are you calling from?” the investigator asked.

I explained.

“Do you know any poetry? Pushkin, Nekrasov… Read something — anything — and under no circumstances hang up. And don’t even think about running. We’ll find you anyway.”

This time a passenger car arrived — something like an “Emka,” but foreign-made. Besides the driver and the investigator, there was another man in plain clothes. When the investigator came inside for me, the other man stayed in the car.

“How did you escape?” he asked.

I said I hadn’t escaped and told him everything that had happened.

“I know,” the investigator said. “Your cellmate confirmed that you entered his cell and immediately disappeared.”

On the stairway, he stopped me and said:

“Here’s the thing, kid. It seems you’re clean in this case, since you called me instead of making a run for it. I can’t lock you up — what if you pull that stunt again? But I can’t just let you go either, since you’re involved in the case. You’re lucky I hadn’t processed you yet. So let the learned men deal with you. Just remember — not a word about what happened. Answer only what you’re asked, and you’ll be free sooner.”

And straight from home, they took me… to a psychiatric hospital. Indeed, no one asked me about the incident there, but they kept me almost a week anyway. During that time, they found the real arsonist — the very man who had denounced me. The investigator had decided to look into him and discovered that he had been selling the paint on the side and delivering barrels of water to the plant instead.

That was the only such incident in my life; nothing like it ever happened again. But during the war, I heard of a very similar case: a young recruit disappeared from a dugout during an artillery bombardment, right before his comrades’ eyes — and later it turned out he had ended up that same day at home in Tashkent.

I’ve told this story to several scientists, but it seems none of them believed me. I would like to know whether there are other reliable cases like this, and how they might be explained.

Stump


Between the ages of 9 and 11, my brother and I had a passion for climbing a mountain near the town of Korkino almost every day. Back then (eight years ago), the mountain seemed enormous. Of course, we'd heard legends about a pre-war explosion and fire nearby that claimed the lives of many people, but we paid no attention to it.

Recently, a year ago, my brother, a mutual friend, and I decided to reminisce about our youth. We set out around three in the afternoon. We took nothing with us except mineral water and gingerbread.

On the way, we stumbled upon a strange place. Among the birch trees, which were generally quite bright, we noticed a dark spot. Pine trees grew so densely over an area about 20 by 20 meters that they blocked out the sunlight, creating a gloomy atmosphere. Even stranger, we discovered unusual figures and structures there. Cubes, crosses, and stars were formed from thin pine sticks. They were tied together with bloody bandages. Some of the pine trees themselves were also out of order—bent at 90 degrees, literally.

It was six o'clock in the evening. After inspecting the area, we continued climbing. We climbed to the top, where there was nothing special—rocks, earth, boulders... we sat down to rest and drank mineral water. We sat there for two to two and a half hours, and only then realized we smelled gas. Everyone had headaches. It was getting dark, and we had to go back. We descended quickly, practically sitting down on the rocks as we slid down.

Before reaching the mountain (or vice versa), we had to cross a swamp about four meters wide. Swimming was impossible—it was a quagmire. That's when the fun began. Even though we'd been there many times and knew every bush, my brother and I were completely disoriented (my friend was there for the first time). We had no idea where we were or where we were supposed to go... it was already night, and we were still wandering along the edge of the swamp. Our feet were soaked by the damp grass, and everyone was bitten by mosquitoes. Owls began screeching. It was the first time I'd heard an owl make a sound like a little girl's scream. We walked along the swamp, looking for a crossing. I glanced back many times, strangely enough, constantly noticing a certain stump. It was smoldering—some kind of smoke was visible near it. I didn't pay it any mind at the time, because I kept turning around and catching a glimpse of it.

Suddenly, I heard someone catching up with me from behind, running. Without turning around, I continued on. Then a friend (it turned out to be him) suddenly grabbed me by the shoulder and pulled me forward. We caught up with my brother and stopped.

"Why are you scaring the man like that?" I asked indignantly. "Where are you going?"

My friend's face suddenly relaxed. His face became so calm and frightening that my knees began to tremble. He looked at me for a full minute and said,

"Turn around."

My brother and I turned around.

"So what?" my brother asked.

And then it dawned on me. This whole time we were looking for the road, this "stump" had been following us. It was terrifying to think that I wasn't the only one who had found it suspicious. We slowly backed away, and it moved behind us—about 10 meters away, no more and no less. We walked forward, and it moved behind us. We walked toward it, and it moved away from us. It was the dead of night—nothing was visible except this "stump."

My friend grabbed me by the shoulder again. I turned to him and saw that his entire chin was covered in blood—his nose had started bleeding so badly that you could have filled a glass with it. But his face was still calm. He started telling me that we were going the wrong way. "Well, yes, of course," I thought ironically. "You've been here a hundred times before, unlike us, inexperienced as we are."

I was just about to move on when he squeezed my shoulder again, his eyes turning mad:

"I said no, we'll go along. That's what I want!"

Who would argue, looking at a man whose face is covered in blood, his eyes darting frantically from side to side, and yet he's as calm as stone. My brother was already in tears—no, he's a strong man, but when you're aimlessly wandering at night along the edge of a swamp twenty kilometers from the dacha, through wet grass and a cloud of mosquitoes, your nerves give out. We followed our friend. The "Stump" didn't give up even a meter. And then—miraculously!—we somehow reached the bridge.

We ran the entire 20 kilometers, without looking back or speaking. Once they arrived, they fell asleep, but nightmares tormented them all for a long time. Well, not really nightmares—you close your eyes, and there before you is a dog's skull with red eyes. All three of them had seen this vision, and all three had seen the tree stump, too.

Perfume in the Night

****

I’m asking more for advice or explanations than trying to impress you with yet another story.

We live in our own house — an ordinary suburb built not so long ago. I’ve always liked it: you work in the city but live in a clean and cozy neighborhood of private homes.

I’m a heavy smoker, but my beloved wife категорически forbids smoking inside the house. So I always go down into the yard (my office is on the second floor), whether it’s winter or summer.

Let me say right away — our houses are built in a completely ordinary place, no cemeteries or anything like that.

About a year and a half ago, in winter, strange things started happening. Imagine: winter, a frosty evening, a light breeze. I step outside for a smoke, and in that breeze — which is odd in itself — there’s a steady smell of men’s cologne, as if someone is standing nearby. And what’s even more remarkable — the scent is noticeable only on the porch, right under the door. Five steps lead down. After a few seconds of my presence, the smell begins to dissipate.

Once I went down the steps, trying to find the source of the fragrance, although the nearest neighbors are about thirty meters away — for their scent to reach me would require not a “trail of aroma” but a “shock wave” that would engulf the whole settlement.

The fragrance is very pleasant, not something cheap from a metro kiosk, but it’s clearly “retro.” Those who remember might recall a Soviet cologne called “Ozhon” — it’s something like that.

My yard is spacious, the porch faces a gazebo, and with even a slight breeze there’s nowhere for air to “stagnate.” Yet the aroma is as if someone is standing right beside you. But as soon as I step outside, it moves downward, and when I follow it, it disappears entirely. The first time I went down, I again caught the scent to the side of the porch, downwind. I told my wife; she didn’t believe me.

The smell doesn’t appear every day — once or twice a week, sometimes absent for ten days.

The next evening, when I went out for a smoke, my wife laughingly followed me and went out first. Honestly, I was pleased to see how she grew surprised and stopped smiling. But my wife is an extremely rational and resourceful person. She conducted a whole set of “investigative measures” — crawled over the entire lawn looking for traces of strangers, examined the fence, walked with and against the wind, inspected the basement and its ventilation openings, let the dogs out into the yard, ordered and installed three surveillance cameras, spent several weeks reviewing footage — but nothing. Absolutely nothing. And yet the aroma was there. Not every day, only in the evening when it got dark. The dogs didn’t react at all. But she did get a result, although an unexpected one (she is, after all, an investigator by profession).

One day I was sitting in my office when my wife entered in an unusually formal manner and asked me to go outside and check whether the aroma was present. She said it should be there today. All my questions about what her certainty was based on remained unanswered. She said she would stay inside.

I went out — and indeed, there was the light, pleasant cologne, which began to fade after a few seconds.

When I questioned her later, she said she would soon give me an answer. She asked me to record somewhere the dates when the perfume appeared over the course of a month, but not tell her; she would record dates herself based on indirect signs, and later we would compare.

Intrigued, I created a password-protected document on my laptop and recorded all the dates when the “fragrant stranger” appeared.

In February, it appeared four times.

At the beginning of March, around the 3rd or 4th, after smelling it during another smoke break, I remembered we were supposed to compare notes.

I went back inside. Olesya was busy with something. I brought up the topic. She looked at me strangely and said, “Bring your notes, but don’t show them to me.”

When I brought the printed document, she sat down at the computer and showed me short video files from the surveillance cameras — 28 short clips, each with date and time stamps, one for each day of February. She named four dates when, in her opinion, the stranger had appeared. They matched mine exactly. Honestly, I was stunned.

One of the three outdoor cameras is installed opposite the gable; it captures the porch and part of the wall with windows. On the days when the aroma was present, our two beloved cats — Marta and Vezha — at around 6:30 p.m. would firmly occupy the wide windowsill in the living room. The window faces the same side as the porch. The cats would spend an hour to an hour and a half on the sill.

Now, when I go out to smoke, I first glance into the living room. If the girls are on the windowsill, the perfume will appear again.

What this is, how a smell (if brought from outside) can locally concentrate in one spot and immediately vanish when I step out (sometimes shifting under the porch, as if an invisible person steps back to give me space but doesn’t want to leave), I cannot understand. I told our priest; he had one answer — a restless soul. He prayed for its repose, but the stranger still appears from time to time. Sometimes I even say something aloud to him.

People, what do you think about this?

P.S. We built the house ourselves from scratch. The land used to be a former collective farm field; there have never been any murders or other criminal, mystical events here.

Salsa Salad

Ingredients 4 tomatoes 1 red onion 1 green chili pepper 1 clove garlic 3 sprigs green onions 1 handful cilantro Lime juice 1/2 tbsp olive oi...