La vida
019
I called out the window, “Mum, why are you up so early? You’ll catch your death out there!” She just turned, waved her shovel in greeting, and called back, “I’m doing this for you lazy lot!” — But the next day, Mum was gone… I still can’t walk by our front garden without tears… Every time I see that path, my heart aches like someone’s grabbed it. I took that photo on January 2nd… I was just passing by, saw the footprints in the snow — and stopped. Snapped a picture, not even knowing why. And now it’s the only thing I have left of those days… We celebrated New Year’s as we always did, the whole family together. Mum was up early on the 31st, as usual. I woke to the smell of frying and her voice from the kitchen: “Come on, love, rise and shine! Give me a hand with the salads, or your dad will gobble all the ingredients before we’re done!” Down I came, still in my pyjamas, hair a mess. She was by the stove in her favourite apron — the one with peaches that I gave her when I was in school. Her cheeks were rosy from the oven. “Let me have a coffee first, Mum,” I whinged. “Coffee later! Chop the veg first — small, like I taught you! Not those rugby ball chunks from last time!” she laughed, tossing me a bowl of roasted veg. We chopped, and talked about everything under the sun. She reminisced about her own childhood New Years — no fancy salads, just a herring under a fur coat and a few precious tangerines Dad brought home from work. Then Dad arrived with a massive Christmas tree. “Here you go, girls — take a look at this beauty!” he boomed from the porch. “Blimey, Dad, did you clear out the entire forest?” I gasped. Mum just shrugged. “It’s lovely, but where’ll we put the thing? Last year’s was half this size.” But she still joined in decorating. My sister Lera and I strung up the lights, and Mum brought out the old ornaments — even the glass angel she quietly told me she’d bought for my first Christmas. “Remember this?” she asked. “Course I do, Mum,” I lied, just to see her face light up. My brother rolled in that evening — loud as ever, arms full of shopping bags, gifts, and bottles. “Got proper bubbly this year, Mum! None of that cheap stuff from last time.” She laughed and hugged him. “Just don’t get plastered, you lot!” At midnight, we all headed outside. Dad and my brother set off fireworks, Lera shrieked with excitement, and Mum stood next to me, her arm tight around my shoulder. “Look at it, love — isn’t it beautiful?” she whispered. “We’ve got a good life, haven’t we…” I hugged her back. “The very best, Mum.” We drank champagne from the bottle, laughed when a firework shot straight into the neighbour’s shed, and watched Mum, tipsy in her old snow boots, dance as Dad swept her off her feet. We laughed until we cried. New Year’s Day, we lounged all day. Mum made more food — dumplings, jellied beef. “Mum, you’ll feed us to bursting!” I moaned. “Oh hush, you’ll eat it all. New Year lasts a whole week!” she swatted me off. January 2nd, she was up early again. I heard the door bang, peeked out — she was outside with the shovel, clearing the snow. In her old puffer, headscarf tied up. She worked with care — a narrow, perfect path from the gate to the porch, piling snow neatly against the house. I called from the window, “Mum, what are you doing out there? It’s freezing!” She swung her shovel and hollered, “Otherwise you lot will be wading through drifts till spring! Put the kettle on, will you?” I smiled and headed for the kitchen. She came in half an hour later, cheeks bright red, eyes sparkling. “All sorted,” she said, settling in for coffee. “Looks good, don’t you think?” “Perfect, Mum. Thank you.” That was the last time her voice sounded so lively. On the morning of January 3rd she woke up and whispered, “Girls, my chest feels funny. Not bad, just uncomfortable.” I panicked. “Mum, let’s call an ambulance?” “Oh don’t be daft, love. I’m just tired, been rushing about too much. I’ll rest, it’ll pass.” She lay on the sofa, Lera and I sat with her. Dad rushed out for tablets. She tried to joke: “Don’t look at me like that, I’ll outlive all of you yet!” Then she went pale, clutched her chest. “Oh… I don’t feel right…not right at all…” We called the ambulance. I held her hand, whispered, “Hold on, Mum. They’ll help you, everything will be alright…” She met my eyes and murmured, “Love you all so much…don’t want to say goodbye.” The paramedics came fast but…there was nothing they could do. A massive heart attack. It all happened in minutes. I sat on the hallway floor, sobbing. I couldn’t believe it. Just yesterday she was dancing under the fireworks, laughing, now… Barely standing, I went to the garden. The snow had barely fallen. Her footprints were still there — small, neat, perfect. From gate to porch and back. Just as she always left them. I stared at them for ages. I asked God, “How can it be that someone walks this earth, leaves their footprints, and the next day they’re gone? Footprints remain, but the person doesn’t.” It felt like she went out on January 2nd for the last time — just to leave us a clear path. So we could walk it, even without her. I never brushed the tracks away. Told everyone not to — let them stay until the snow covers them forever. That was the last thing Mum did for us. Her quiet care for us showed, even when she was gone. A week later, a heavy snow buried them. I keep that photo with Mum’s last footprints. Every year, on January 3rd, I look at it, then at the empty path by the house. The pain is still sharp: somewhere under all that snow, she left her final footprints. The ones I keep following, still…
I called out the window, Mum, what are you doing up so early? You’ll freeze! She turned and waved
La vida
04
My Lovely Daughter-In-Law – “Mum, I’m Marrying Emily. The Baby’s Due in Three Months.” My Son Gave Me the Shock of My Life… She Was Just Seventeen, He Was Off to Join the Army, and Soon We Were Planning a Wedding with a Pregnant Bride. Years Later, After Betrayals, A Divorce, and a New Wife Named Joanna, I Can’t Help but Miss Emily—The First Daughter-In-Law Who Still Feels Like Family.
MY ENGLISH DAUGHTER-IN-LAW Mum, Im marrying Emily. In three months, well have a baby, my son told me
La vida
07
The Bride’s Mother Seated Me at the Worst Table with a Smirk: “Know Your Place,” She Said.
The brides mother slid me into the worst table with a smug grin. Know your place, she whispered.
La vida
06
“Mum, I’m Ten Years Old Now, Aren’t I?”: A Heartfelt Tale of Promises, Parents, and the Search for a Dog in England
Mum, Im ten years old now, arent I? said Michael suddenly as he returned home from school. So what?
La vida
03
The Adventure Awaits: An Invitation to Explore the Unknown
Rain pattered against the sill of the cramped twobed flat in Battersea. Andrew watched the droplets sketch
La vida
02
“Mr Evans, You’ve Overslept Again! — The Kind Reproach of a London Bus Driver and the Unusual Friendship with His Loyal Elderly Passenger Who Takes the Same Route to the Cemetery Every Morning”
Mr. William, overslept again! The bus drivers voice is kindly, though tinged with gentle reproach.
La vida
057
The Fool Everyone Thought Anna Was Silly: Fifteen Years of an Unfaithful Husband, Two Children, a Thankless Job at a Toy Factory, an Empty Fridge, and the Day Her Calm Agreeance to Divorce Changed Everything—A Tale of Quiet Revenge and Shocking Revelations in Ordinary English Life
You know, everyone used to call Annie a bit of a fool. Shed been married to her husband, Paul, for fifteen years.
La vida
09
The Recipe for Happiness… The Whole Block Watched as the New Tenants Moved Into the Flat on the Second Floor—The Family of a Factory Foreman at the Town’s Only Major Employer in a Quiet Little English Village “Why on earth would they choose to live in an old Victorian terrace?” pensioner Mrs. Nina Andrews wondered aloud to her friends. “With his pull at the factory, they could’ve easily snagged a shiny new-build!” Her daughter, glamorous thirty-year-old Annie with her signature bold makeup, protested, “Don’t be so quick to judge, Mum. These Victorian houses have high ceilings, spacious rooms, a grand hallway—and that balcony might as well be another room! And they got a phone line straight away! There are only three phones in our whole building of nine flats…” “All you want is to gossip on the phone,” her mother scolded. “Leave the new people be—they’ve got better things to do than chat with you!” “They’re not so out of reach—they’re young, their daughter Natasha is only nine! Practically my age, well, a few years older maybe,” Annie replied, casting an indignant look at her mum. The neighbours turned out to be friendly enough—Lydia worked in the local school library and Ivan had already notched up a decade at the factory. Annie wasted no time in getting to know them, regularly popping over to use their phone, unlike some neighbours who wouldn’t even open their door for her half-hour chats with girlfriends. But soon, Ivan grew weary of Annie monopolising their phone line. “I can’t get any calls in from work, and Natasha gets distracted from her homework by the noise,” Lydia admitted. One evening, Annie arrived with a chocolate bar as a sweet gesture, only to be told by Lydia, “Best not—Natasha’s allergic, chocolate is completely off-limits in our house.” Annie, red-faced, took her chocolate home. Determined, Annie returned soon after, notebook in hand, asking Lydia for her secret recipe for those delicious sweet cheese buns she baked each morning. “But why not ask your own mum? Our parents always know best!” Lydia replied, too rushed to help. Annie left, disappointed once more. Finally, Annie turned to the old, well-thumbed recipe notebook buried in her mum’s kitchen cupboard—and there, in spidery cursive scripts, she discovered the exact recipe she’d been searching for. Before long, their own flat was filled with the tantalising warmth of freshly baked buns. With each batch, Annie grew more content in the kitchen—her boyfriend Slava soon followed the scent, and laughter and joy returned to their home. And when Annie found herself awaiting the arrival of a baby, she realised she finally held the true recipe for happiness: a warm home, a loving husband, and the sweet aroma of home-baked treats enjoyed together.
The Recipe for Happiness The entire building looked on with curiosity as new tenants moved into the flat
La vida
05
A Kindred Spirit
Granddad, eat! the little boy clutched at the coattail of the lanky, overcoated man, his hands trembling
La vida
010
The Recipe for Happiness… The Whole Block Watched as the New Family Moved into the Flat on the Second Floor: The Factory Foreman’s Family Settles into a Stately Old Building in a Small English Town, Sparking Gossip Among Neighbours about Connections, High Ceilings, and the Allure of Homemade Pastries—A Tale of Friendships, Missed Tea Invitations, and the Warmth of Baking Leading to a Daughter’s Sweet New Beginning
The Recipe for Happiness The whole block watched with curiosity as new neighbours moved into the second-floor flat.