Posty

Little Suns

Obraz
**** I often remembered the old communal apartment in St. Petersburg where my childhood passed. That very beautiful and very dilapidated building, the well courtyard, the dark archway through which we would emerge from our gloomy little world into the big noisy city. My parents moved there after my grandmother died. She, in turn, had received the apartment right after the war, having moved from Moscow. And my childhood in the eighties of the last century was truly happy. Next door to us lived another young family with a boy my age. We quickly found common ground and became friends. His name was Dimka. He was very calm and didn’t especially like the active games the rest of us played in the courtyard. But he had a whole heap of books and drew very well, gladly teaching me, though I turned out to be rather clumsy. Later, in high school, Dimka switched to poetry and wrote somewhat strange and “druggy” but definitely talented poems. Sadly, around that time my family moved to a newly built ...

The Co-Dweller

Obraz
**** To some, this story may not seem scary, maybe even banal, but it frightened us quite a lot. I’ll start from the beginning. It all started six years ago, after my husband and I got married and moved into a two-room apartment our parents had given us. About a month after the wedding, our friends (a young couple) and my six-year-old nephew Zhenya stayed the night with us. My husband, Zhenya, and I slept in our bedroom, and our friends stayed in the living room. In the morning my husband and I went to the living room and lounged in front of the TV with our friends. Then we heard a child’s bare feet slapping across the parquet floor from our room to the kitchen (we didn’t have carpets yet). My husband even said to me, “Go feed Zhenya.” I went into the kitchen—he wasn’t there. I thought he’d gone back to the bedroom, but when I went in there, he was sleeping like an angel, clearly hadn’t woken up. We were surprised then—four of us couldn’t all have imagined it. The story would have been...

Ghost Dogs Not Orange-Colored*

Obraz
*** This happened in the late nineties. Of course, we had jobs back then—how could we not? But we didn’t have salaries. Six months, a year—just promises. Many people went to work simply because things were even more hopeless at home. At least there was some hope that they would pay us. And, surprisingly, sometimes they did. What a joy that was! You could pay off your debts and start waiting again for the next small payout. My acquaintance Nastya, a proofreader by profession, decided to break out of this vicious circle. She had always been a desperate sort. After quitting the newspaper that fed everyone only rotten news, she got a job as a vendor. That is, a salesperson. Standing at the market in frost and sunshine, she earned money from the day’s takings. The owners, former shuttle traders who had made it big, had set up their own knitwear workshop. For those times, the clothes were excellent: any pattern or model, no matter how complex, could be created on imported machines equipped w...

A Dog Under the Bed

Obraz
When my friend's daughter was about five years old, she started running to her parents at night crying. When asked, she'd claim there was a dog under her bed. Her parents, naturally, explained there was no dog there. They turned on the lights and shone a flashlight under the bed, but to no avail—the child continued to come crying every night. My friend consulted a psychologist, who advised taking her daughter to a toy store and buying her a stuffed dog she liked, naming it, and placing it under her daughter's bed. That's what they did. The child calmed down and stopped running to her parents at night, only occasionally mentioning that the dog was snoring loudly or scratching and disturbing her sleep. After some time, my friend decided to clean up and, in a creative burst, moved her daughter's bed. Imagine her surprise, bordering on shock, when she saw a multitude of telltale scratches on the floor. These are well known to pet owners, as they are the result of their...

Laughter from the Mirror

Obraz
For a while, I went through a "horror period"—I watched horror movies and thrillers every day. Since I lived alone at home that month, no one distracted me. I went to bed around 3 a.m. One day, I went to bed as usual, turning off the lights in the apartment. Suddenly, in the middle of the night, I was awakened by a strange sound, like someone scratching on a smooth surface. At first, I thought it was the cats, but they were both lying at my feet. I listened, but the sounds stopped. The next day, I abstained from watching horror movies, but that night, when I went to bed, I still felt uneasy. Around the same time as the previous night, I was awakened again by a strange sound from the hallway—I was afraid to get up, but I was sure it was coming from the mirror. It sounded like someone's nails slowly scratching tracks across the glass. After a while, everything stopped again. I didn't go to work that morning, citing feeling unwell. That day, I noticed one of the cats be...

The Death of Abramovich

Obraz
**** Abramovich was the name of a cat who lived with my wife’s brother. I don’t know who gave the animal that name. Probably because he was all plump, well-fed, big-faced—in short, content with life. And once, they were going away to the south for a couple of weeks and asked us to take the cat in for that time. We agreed—my wife and I had had a cat before who got lost during a trip to the countryside and was never found, so we loved cats. It should be said that by then our family was still very young—we had been married for only a year, and my wife had just given birth to our first child, a baby girl named Vika. We didn’t have our own home, and we didn’t want to live with our parents, so we had to rent an apartment. A one-room place had been enough before, but after the baby was born we decided to rent a two-room apartment closer to the city center. When Abramovich arrived, we had been living there for no more than five or six weeks, and Vika was only four months old. My wife immediate...

The Incident with Mom

Obraz
That evening, as usual, I was spending my evening at the computer. I soon grew tired of this activity and decided to go into my mother's room. She had come home from work about half an hour earlier and was now lying down, relaxing and watching TV. When I entered her room, she was watching the news and smiling. I sat down next to her, wondering what had made her so happy. Mom looked at me, then suddenly asked me to fetch a knife from the kitchen. This was strange, since she didn't seem to have eaten anything that needed cutting, but I went into the kitchen anyway. I picked up the knife and was about to take it to her when my phone, which I had left in the kitchen that morning, rang. I picked it up. It was my mother, standing under the window, telling me to get dressed—we were going grocery shopping...

Incidents in the Apartment

Obraz
Since 2010, strange things have been happening in our apartment, which I'd like to tell you about. I'll start with a description of the apartment—an ordinary two-bedroom apartment in a residential area. We live on the 5th floor (a family of three and a cat), and ordinary people live in the building below. A couple of the residents turned out to be drug addicts, and one of them was recently murdered. 2010. I'm lying in my bed (I was 14 at the time), my parents are sleeping in their room, and I can't sleep at all. Suddenly, I have difficulty breathing, as if someone is choking me. I jump out of bed, but find no one. I didn't panic and went back to bed. After that, no one choked me that night, but the feeling that someone was nearby didn't leave me until I fell asleep. I didn't tell my parents about this incident. 2011. My parents went to the dacha, and I stayed home under the pretext of "it would be boring with you there." At midnight, I turn off th...

Trace

Obraz
It was back in the turbulent 1990s, when yours truly was working in the homicide department. My partner and I were late for work one day—he worked in the motor vehicle theft department, the so-called "motorcycle theft." It was around 1 a.m. We were getting ready to go home, when the duty officer came in: "Guys, something crazy is going on at the warehouse on Angarskaya Street. The alarm went off several times, but no one was seen. You should go and take a look." So we went in my car—the duty team was somewhere else. We arrived and were met by a stunned security guard. He said, "I can't figure anything out. The alarm goes off, I run out—there are footprints... I follow them, but they disappear... When the OVO (non-departmental security department) arrives, there are no footprints, nothing." It must be said, it was winter, a light snowfall, and there was a cemetery not far from the fence. The tracks, like the guard's footsteps, were all visible, no ...

Sweet fear

Obraz
He took a drag on his cigarette and blew out smoke rings. They slowly melted and floated toward the ceiling. "Fear, you say? Fear has nothing to do with it. When I say 'they scare me' or 'I'm afraid,' it doesn't mean it's fear. Or rather, not the kind of fear you're used to." "What kind of fear?" the boy looked at him in confusion. "I'm afraid of monsters under the bed." Well, that is, I was afraid. I'm afraid of grades. But it's the same fear. Even if it's about different things. I'm sweating, my legs are shaking, and probably these little hamstrings—I don't know where they are, but they're definitely shaking. How is that not the same kind of fear?" He looked at the boy with a grin. Small, with dark circles under his eyes, skinny. A smart guy, but still a child. "When you grow up, you'll understand." He took another drag on his cigarette. "Everyone says that. Explain....

Skryrr

Obraz
There's nothing more annoying than a creaking window. Skryrr—opening. Skryrrrr—closing. And, worst of all, it's squealing in the entryway, I can't stand it! I want to sleep, the bastards, and here it is! Just as I doze off, the wind squeals, the trains squeal, the zombie-voice of the dispatcher outside, and the window, like a coffin lid, squeal! I hate it. No, I need to check. I have to get up soon, and I haven't slept! Skryrrrr. Worse than a neighbor with a jackhammer! "Listen," a ghostly voice rang out in my room as I sleepily pulled on my slippers, "don't go." "Psholnah." Those are the hallucinations from lack of sleep. Who could have come in?" It's a shared apartment, yes, but the door's locked at night. "Listen," a whisper came from the corner, "stay home. You're leaving me some milk. Don't go." "Go the fuck away," I somehow didn't even understand what it was until I saw a red...

Family Celebration

Obraz
**** I don’t like family celebrations. More than any of the others, I don’t like my birthday. Every year the same thing happens. Of course, my parents are the first to congratulate me. Well, “congratulate” is a strong word. Mom meets me in the kitchen not with cheers but with a pitiful attempt at a smile, and Dad, already drunk in the morning, grips my hand tightly and turns on the music. That’s how I understand that another year has passed. Dad’s musical taste is awful, but arguing with him is useless: he wouldn’t open the apartment door even for the police, he’d just yell something about how it’s his son’s birthday today and anyone who disagrees can go to hell. That’s regarding outsiders. With family it’s simpler: if Mom or I ask him to turn the volume down, he’ll grab us by the collar, breathe fumes in our faces and say that once a year a working man can relax, especially for an important occasion. So we don’t argue, and the disgusting songs about a “thief’s life” blare through the ...

Cult

Obraz
**** I want to vent. Whether it’s nonsense or not, I don’t care anymore. I’m writing all this out in advance—trying to make it easy and clear to read. I’ll admit I’ve rewritten it several times, but all the facts are real. This happened in Moscow, in the North-West Administrative Okrug, in a pretty nice neighborhood. There’s a big park nearby, far from the “general city bustle.” The outskirts, but still a residential area, a couple of metro stations in the district (well, I think someone might guess the place). I’ve been living here all summer in a шикарная apartment belonging to my relatives while the owners are vacationing down south. I myself also live in Moscow, but, unfortunately, in less fancy places. So, late July. I was sitting at the computer, watching something on YouTube, chatting online—everything as usual. Evening, around 10 p.m. The upstairs apartment had been pretty noisy since six in the evening. Stains appeared on the ceiling. And for me that’s serious business—after a...

A Date in the Dark

Obraz
When the power went out in our neighborhood, I was waiting for my girlfriend to come over. I didn't change my plans, hoping to use the darkness as an excuse for intimacy. Hearing a knock, I opened the door. For some reason, for a moment, I was overcome by a strange and unpleasant feeling of anxiety. I'm not paranoid, so this rarely happens to me. But a moment later, recognizing a familiar silhouette in the dark entrance, I calmed down and began explaining the situation to my girlfriend. She wasn't the least bit upset and, contrary to my fears, even hinted at what I could do in the dark. Everything was going swimmingly, but someone kept calling my cell phone. Finally, I just turned it off. We had a wonderful night. The next day, I woke up late and saw that my girlfriend had already left. I was upset because I knew she had to leave for work early, and we had agreed that I would walk her home. I even set an alarm so I wouldn't oversleep... So, why didn't it go off? Oh...

Did the Power Come Back On?

Obraz
**** When the power went out, Masha had just been about to stick her fork into the first piece of chicken breast she’d fried for dinner. Startled, she sat motionless for a moment, frozen with the fork raised, then hissed expressively: “D-d-damn.” As luck would have it, there was no moon, and the whole apartment instantly plunged into complete, impenetrable darkness. Masha’s windows faced a strip of forest; there were no streetlights there anyway, so… Carefully setting the fork down on the table, Masha got up from the couch and, stretching her arms out like a sleepwalker, shuffled toward the kitchen. In the dark the apartment suddenly felt hostile and чужой. Masha couldn’t remember where she’d put the matches, since the stove lit with a button (of course, electric). Bumping into a hanging sheepskin coat, Masha suddenly remembered the lighter in its pocket and exhaled with relief. With a small flame that quickly burned her fingers but was still fire, Masha hurried into the kitchen and tu...

A supernatural phenomenon

Obraz
Recently, I've been terrified of being home alone. It doesn't matter whether the lights are on or not, whether music is playing on the computer, or whether the TV is on. Fear rolls over me in terrifying waves—sticky, disgusting, to the point of despair, I even want to run away from the apartment. I can't explain logically what exactly causes this dread. I just come home from work, and my heart sinks, my breathing quickens. I walk around the house, looking around, as if I'm afraid of someone. About two years ago, I had almost the same experience—an unreasonable, primal fear. But back then, I attributed it to moving to a new house, stress, and all that. Over time, this feeling passed. But now, living with such terror is simply unbearable—I come to work sleep-deprived, with dark circles under my eyes... Consequently, after consulting with my parents, I decided to rent out the apartment. And that's when the worst part began. Until the realtor set foot in my house, I ha...

Wedding Dress

Obraz
I married a man I loved very much and gave birth to a daughter a year later. It so happened that I needed money, so I decided to sell my wedding dress. I posted an ad, and soon two women came to us and asked me to show them my wedding dress. For some reason, these women were wearing black, and this made me feel a little uneasy. Nevertheless, I showed them my dress anyway. Apparently, the size was right, and the dress itself was very beautiful. They said they were buying my wedding dress, then one of the women asked if I still had my wedding shoes. I also brought them the shoes (I didn't wear them because of the high heels). Basically, they bought everything I wore at the wedding: the dress, the veil, the gloves, and the shoes. While stuffing everything into her bag, the woman quietly said to another woman—she must have thought I couldn't hear, but I have very good hearing: "Well, now at least we'll bury her properly." Her words sent a chill through me, but I didn...