La vida
06
Before We Say Goodbye
Hey love, Ive got to tell you this wild story about Andrew Harper and his wife Mabel its a proper rollercoaster
La vida
07
There’s Still Work to Be Done at Home… Granny Val Struggled to Open the Garden Gate, Slowly Shuffled to the Door, Fumbled with the Old Rusty Lock, and Stepped into Her Cold, Untended Cottage, Sitting Down by the Lifeless Hearth It Smelled of Emptiness, Though She’d Only Been Away Three Months—Cobwebs Hung from the Ceilings, the Antique Chair Creaked in Protest, and the Wind Howled in the Chimney, As if the Cottage Was Scolding Her: “Where Have You Been, Mistress? Whom Did You Leave Me With? How Are We Supposed to Survive the Winter Now?!” “Hold on, my dear, just a moment—let me catch my breath… I’ll light the fire soon, we’ll get warm…” Just a Year Ago, Granny Val Bustled Around Her Old Cottage, Whitewashing, Painting, Hauling Water—Her Petite, Spry Figure Bowing Before Icons, Busy at the Hearth, Flitting Through the Orchard Where She Was Forever Sowing, Weeding, and Watering The Cottage Loved Its Mistress Back—Floors Creaked Joyfully, Windows and Doors Flung Open at Her Touch, the Oven Baked Pies as if Cheered On by Her Presence: It Was Good, Val and Her Old Cottage Together Widowed Early, She Raised Three Children—One a Merchant Navy Captain, Another a Military Colonel, Both Living Far from Home, Rarely Visiting Only Her Youngest, Tamara, Stayed in the Village, Chief Agronomist, Always at Work; She’d Pop In on Sundays, Fill the House with Pies and Laughter—Then Another Week Apart Her Comfort Was Her Granddaughter, Sweet Svetlana, Who Truly Was Raised by Granny’s Hands And What a Beauty She Became! Tall and Proud, With Grey Eyes and Thick Fair Hair Flowing Past Her Waist—Village Boys Were Spellbound Whenever She Walked By, Her Elegance Remarkable for a Country Girl Granny Val Was a Looker in Her Own Youth, But Comparing Old Photos to Svetlana’s Grace—It Was Shepherdess to Queen Smart as Well; She Finished Agricultural College in the City, Returned to Work in the Family Village as an Economist, Married the Local Vet, and the Young Couple Was Given a New Brick House—A Proper Little Manor for Those Times But While Granny’s Cottage Was Surrounded by a Lush Garden, Svetlana’s New Place Had Little More Than Three Lonely Stalks—She Was Not Made for Gardening, Cocooned by Granny from Every Draught and Chore Then Came Her Own Little Boy, Vanya—No Time for Gardens Now Svetlana Begged Granny to Move In: “Come live with us, it’s warm, spacious, no need to stoke a fire…” When Granny Turned Eighty, Her Health Faltered—Her Lively Legs Refused Their Duty; She Finally Agreed to Move But After a Few Months, She Overheard Svetlana: “Granny, I love you, but you just sit! You’ve always worked, and now you rest while I manage everything—I hoped you’d help…” “But, sweetheart, I can’t anymore… my legs won’t carry me…” “Hmph… Funny how you aged as soon as you moved in…” Soon After, Granny Was Sent Back to Her Cottage—Her Failure to Help Weighing Heavy on Her Spirit Her Steps Grew Feeble, Crossing from Bed to Table Became a Feat, Her Beloved Church Now Out of Reach Father Bernard, Their Vicar, Came to Visit His Once-Energetic Parishioner—He Found Her Bundled in a Worn Cardigan and Scarf, Writing Letters to Her Sons: “I’m doing ever so well, my dearest boy—everything’s grand, thank God!” Yet the Pages Were Blotched with What Could Only Be Tears Father Bernard Drafted the Neighbour, Anna, to Look After Her; Anna’s Husband, Old Sailor Uncle Pete, Would Bring Granny to Church by Sidecar When He Could Meanwhile, Svetlana Fell Ill—She’d Long Blamed Her Stomach, But It Turned Out to Be Cancer. In Six Months, She Was Gone Her Husband, Lost in Grief, Took to Drinking at Her Grave, Little Vanya Left Dirty and Alone Tamara Took the Boy In, But Her Agronomist Duties Left No Time for Childcare—So Vanya Was Sent to Boarding School Determined Not to Let Her Great-Grandson Go, Granny Val Arrived with Uncle Pete’s Help: “I’ll take Vanya myself—he won’t go to a home while I live.” Neighbours Judged Her, Wondering If She’d Lost Her Mind—How Could an Old Woman Care for a Young Boy? Father Bernard Braced for the Worst—But Found the Cottage Warm and Clean, Vanya Listening to Fairy Tales, and Granny Dancing Around the Kitchen, Baking Treats for the Vicar’s Family Later, Father Bernard Told His Wife, Alexandra, Who Pulled Out Her Old Blue Journal, and Read the Story of Her Own Great-Grandmother—Who On Her Deathbed, Hearing Her Newborn Great-Grandchild Cry, Got Up, Soothed the Baby, and Decided She Simply Couldn’t Die Just Yet As the Old Song Goes: “It’s Far Too Soon for Us to Pass—There’s Still Work to Be Done at Home!” His Wife Concluded, Smiling: “My Great-Granny Vera Loved Me Too Much to Go. She Lived Another Ten Years, Helping My Mother Raise Me—Her Beloved Great-Granddaughter.” Father Bernard Smiled Back—For Clearly, There Will Always Be Work to Be Done at Home
Theres always work to be done at home… Granny Edith fumbled with the squeaky old gate, shuffled
La vida
06
She Stopped Speaking to Her Husband After His Outrageous Birthday Toast—Now, for the First Time, He’s Terrified
The silence between Beatrice and her husband Mark was heavy and unyieldinglike the fog that rolls in
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06
No Magic Here New Year Was Racing In Like a Runaway Train, and Lena Felt Like She Was Standing on the Platform Without a Ticket The festive spirit was nowhere to be found as disaster after disaster struck: her trusty ten-year-old washing machine flooded the flat, her gourmet ginger cat Basil devoured the Olivier salad sausage, and a failed hunting attempt left Christmas baubles smashed among spilled soil. As Lena despaired, her eccentric relatives fell through the door—Auntie with a cauldron of jelly, her sister with backup cake plans, and her best friend tangled in tinsel with Basil. Amid the chaos, a mysterious box left by Granny Val promised to be opened at midnight, revealing a heartfelt recipe for happiness: laughter, resilience, togetherness, and love—no magic required, just knowing you’re understood.
No magic at all New Years Eve was hurtling towards me like an express train roaring through the English
La vida
04
The Secret of the Old Postcard Three days before a yellowed envelope arrived to change her life, Natalie Sokolov stood on the balcony of her London flat. The night was dense and dark, with no stars to be seen. The lights of Regent Street glimmered below. Inside, beyond the glass doors, Mark was on speakerphone, negotiating the finer points of yet another deal. Natalie pressed her palm against the cold glass. She was exhausted—not by work (she had always excelled at that), but by the very air around her. The predictability suffocated her, as if even Mark’s proposal had been scheduled into a five-year plan. An ache of longing—or perhaps mute rage—clung to her throat. Pulling out her phone, Natalie opened the messenger and typed to an old mate she hadn’t seen in ages. Her friend had just had her second baby, submerged in the happy chaos of family life. The message was little more than a sigh: “You know, I sometimes think I’ve forgotten what real rain smells like. Not this city drizzle, but the kind that hits the earth—smelling of dust and hope. I want a small miracle. Something simple, something you can hold in your hands.” She never sent it—deleted the words in a heartbeat. Her friend wouldn’t have understood, would’ve thought she was having a crisis, or had too much wine. A minute later, she was back with Mark, who wrapped up his call and glanced at her. “Everything alright? You look tired.” “Fine,” Natalie said with a smile. “Just needed some fresh air.” “In December?” He grinned. “Go to Brighton in May, if we hit our targets this quarter.” He turned back to his screen. Natalie’s phone flashed—a client confirming a meeting. No miracles. She sighed and mentally ran through tomorrow’s to-do list as she readied for bed. *** Three days later, sorting the post, her finger caught on the corner of an envelope she didn’t recognise. It fell to the floor: thick, rough parchment, yellowed with age, bearing no stamp—just an old ink stamp of a holly branch and her address. Inside, a New Year’s card. Not glossy shopbought, but warm, embossed cardboard, sparkling with gold dust that scattered on her hands. “May the new year bring your boldest dreams to life…” read the handwriting that made Natalie’s heart skip. She recognised the script. It was Alex’s—her childhood sweetheart from a sleepy Cotswolds village. Summers at her Gran’s cottage, first love, riverside dens, fireworks in August, and notes exchanged from school to school. But Gran had sold the house, they’d grown up and lost touch, each swept to different corners of the UK. Her own address, yet dated 1999. A Royal Mail hiccup? An answer from the universe to her silent plea for a simple, tangible miracle? In a flash, Natalie cancelled her meetings—told Mark she needed to scope a location for a client—got in her car. To the Cotswolds, three hours away, to find the sender. Google suggested there was a small letterpress workshop in the village. *** She expected a souvenir shop—cluttered, bright, thick with candle smell. Instead, she stepped into quiet: air sweet and heavy with wood, ink, and something bitter, maybe old varnish. A real stove puffed warmth into the room. The owner stood at a workbench, tinkering with a hulking, antique press. His back to her, sleeves rolled, solid, calm. “Is this your card?” Natalie laid it on the counter. He took a moment, wiping his hands on his trousers before lifting the card to the light as though it were a rare coin. “Yes,” he said, voice steady. “That’s our holly stamp. 1999. Where did you find it?” “It arrived yesterday, in London. Must be a postal error. I need to find the sender. I know the handwriting.” He looked at her—polished haircut, designer but out-of-place camel coat, tiredness she couldn’t quite hide. No curiosity, just patient waiting. “Why does it matter? It’s a generation gone. People get born, die, forget.” “I’m not dead,” Natalie snapped, surprised at her own fierceness. “And I haven’t forgotten.” Watching her quietly, the man gestured toward a kettle in the corner. “You’re frozen. Tea might thaw you out. Even for Londoners.” He poured them mugs with chipped handles, no further questions. *** Three days in the old village felt like stepping out of time—out of the rush of London, into the hush where even snow falling from the eaves made itself heard. From screens to glowing embers, from bustle to the light of memory. The man, Alex (the printmaker, not her childhood Alex), didn’t press for stories. He simply shared his world. He lived alone in the family home, creaking floors, the sweet scent of jam, and timeworn books. He showed her engraved copper plates, explained how they mixed glitter, how his father had once mailed a card of love that never arrived. “Love sent into emptiness,” he said, eyes on the fire. “Beautiful. Hopeless.” “Do you believe in hopeless love?” Natalie asked. “My dad found her eventually. They lived together for years. If it’s real, anything’s possible. As for the rest—I only believe in what I can hold. This press. This house. My craft. The rest is smoke.” No bitterness—just a craftsman accepting the grain of his material. Natalie, always used to fighting her surroundings, found the stillness here impossible to resist. The snow fell when it wanted. The printmaker’s dog napped where it pleased. A strange closeness bloomed: two lonely souls seeing each other clearly. He didn’t see her as a high-flying city girl, she didn’t see him as stuck in the past, but as a keeper—of time, of tradition, of silence. Her anxiety, constant in the city, faded in his presence. The day Mark called, Natalie stood by the window watching the printmaker, Alex, chopping wood in the snowy yard—each log splitting with crisp, satisfying regularity. “Where are you?” Mark’s voice was cold as ever. “Pick up a real tree on your way back—the fake one broke. Fitting, isn’t it?” Natalie looked at the real tree sparkling in the living room. The old glass ornaments. “Yes,” she whispered. “Very fitting.” And hung up. *** The truth surfaced on New Year’s Eve. Alex found an old sketch in his father’s album—the original wording from the mystery card. “It wasn’t your Alex,” he said quietly. “It was my dad. To my mum. The card never arrived. History loves going in circles.” The magic scattered like glitter: no mystical connection, just fate’s twist. Her go-back-in-time fantasy was a beautiful misreading. “I should go,” Natalie murmured. “I’ve got… everything. Wedding. Contracts.” Alex nodded. He didn’t try to hold her back—only stood amid his universe of paper and memory. A man who preserved warmth inside envelopes, powerless against the cold of another world. “I understand,” he said. “I’m not a magician. Just a printmaker. I make things you can hold, not castles in the air. But sometimes… the past doesn’t send us a ghost, but a mirror. So we see who we might have been.” He turned back to his press. Natalie clutched her bag, keys, her phone—her only link to the city, to cover calls, KPIs, and a comfortable, quiet marriage to a man who measured everything in money. She’d reached the door when her eye landed on another card, fresh from the press. The same holly stamp, but a new message: “May you find courage.” Natalie understood. The miracle wasn’t in the card from the past. The miracle was in this moment. In the power to choose. To see the path. She couldn’t stay in his world—but she wasn’t going back to Mark’s. She walked out into the cold, starry English night, never looking back. *** A year passed. December in London again. Natalie never returned to the events industry. She left Mark, launched a boutique agency focused on “thoughtful” events—warm, intimate, attentive to detail. She uses paper invites, printed in a small workshop in the Cotswolds. Her life is still fast but now purposeful. She’s learning the art of silence. The “Snowflake” workshop hosts creative weekends. Alex finally accepts online orders, carefully chosen. His cards are more popular, but the craft is unchanged. They don’t write often, only for work. But last week, Natalie received a card in the post. This time, stamped with a flying bird, it read simply, “Thank you for your courage.”
The Mystery of the Old Postcard Three days before the yellowed envelope appeared in her life, Alice Whitmore
La vida
03
Love Isn’t for Show Annie stepped out of the cottage with a full bucket of pig feed, her face stormy as she passed her husband, Henry, who had been fiddling with the old well for three days running. He’d decided he wanted it carved and fancy—beautiful, as though he had nothing better to do! She bustled about looking after house and livestock while he stood with a chisel in hand, covered in shavings, grinning at her. What kind of husband had God sent her? He never uttered a tender word, never slammed his fist on the table, just quietly worked away. On rare occasions, he’d simply glance at her and gently run his hand along her thick, honey-blonde braid—his sole display of affection. Oh, how Annie longed for more: for pet names and sweet nothings… Lost in thoughts of her lonely woman’s lot, Annie nearly tripped over old Buster, the family dog. Instantly, Henry darted over, caught his wife, and shot the dog a stern look: “Watch where you’re going, Buster—you’ll end up tripping the missus.” Buster lowered his eyes, tail tucked, and shuffled off to his kennel. Annie was amazed, not for the first time, at how animals seemed to understand her husband. She’d asked Henry once about it, and he’d just replied, “I love animals, and they love me right back.” Annie, too, dreamed of love—love that swept her off her feet, with whispered words at night and flowers on her pillow each morning. But Henry was always so reserved, barely affectionate… Sometimes she even doubted whether he loved her at all. “God bless, neighbours!” came a cheery voice over the fence—it was Victor, their neighbour. “Still fussing with your well, Henry? Who needs all those carvings anyway?” “I want our children to grow up with an eye for beauty,” Henry replied. “Well, you’ll need to have some first!” Victor winked at Annie. Henry’s eyes grew sad; Annie hurried inside, embarrassed. She wasn’t in a rush to have kids—after all, she was still young, beautiful, and maybe wanted to live for herself a little longer. Besides, her own husband was hardly the dashing type. And Victor—tall, broad-shouldered—now, he could make your heart flutter! He’d greet her near the gate, voice gentle as summer rain: “My little dove, my darling sun…” Annie’s knees would turn to jelly, but she’d always run from him. When she married Henry, she’d vowed to be faithful; her parents, together for decades, had taught her to cherish her marriage. Yet why did she yearn to catch Victor’s eye just for a moment? Next morning, as Annie led the cow to pasture, she ran into Victor at the gate. “Annie, dearest, why do you keep avoiding me? Are you shy? I can never get enough of your beauty—it makes my head spin.” He whispered, “Come see me at dawn. When your Henry leaves for fishing, just slip over, and I’ll shower you with all the love you could wish for.” Annie flushed, cheeks burning, heart racing… but hurried past him in silence. “I’ll be waiting,” he called after her. All day, Annie couldn’t stop thinking about him—Victor, with his smouldering gaze, promising her all she ever wanted. Yet she couldn’t bring herself to cross that line. Not yet… Maybe never. There were still long hours till dawn. That evening, Henry fired up the bathhouse—and even invited Victor to join. Victor happily agreed, saving himself the trouble of heating up his own. The two men swapped stories, laughing and thwacking each other with birch branches. After their steam, they relaxed in the changing room; Annie poured them a jug of homemade cider and arranged snacks, then dashed off for some pickled cucumbers in the cellar. As she came back and reached the door, she overheard voices from inside and paused: “Why so hesitant, Henry?” Victor said quietly. “Come along next time—you won’t regret it. Widows like those, they’ll smother you with affection… And the beauties there! Unlike your Annie—she’s a plain little mouse.” “No, friend,” came Henry’s quiet yet steady reply, “I want none of that. I won’t even think of it. And my Annie isn’t a little mouse—she’s the most beautiful woman in the world. There’s not a flower or berry to match her. When I look at her, I can’t even see the sun—just her eyes, her slender form. My love for her is like a river in flood. I just ache because I can’t speak the words to tell her how much I love her. She feels hurt, I know, and I’m frightened of losing her. I couldn’t live a day without her—I couldn’t even breathe…” Annie stood frozen, heart pounding, a tear sliding down her cheek. Suddenly she lifted her head, strode in, and loudly declared, “Victor, go keep those widows company—we’ve got more important things to do here at home. We don’t yet have anyone to gaze on the beautiful carvings Henry’s making. Forgive me, my dearest, for my foolish thoughts—for my blindness. Happiness was in my hands, and I nearly missed it. Come on, we’ve wasted enough time…” And at dawn the next day, Henry didn’t go fishing.
Love Not for Show I remember the days when Annabel would step out of our cottage, arms straining with
La vida
04
Echoes in the Night: Alexandra Finds Connection and Hope on New Year’s Eve in an English Rehabilitation Centre
Echo in the Night Margaret Collins found herself admitted to the rehabilitation ward precisely two weeks
La vida
06
Dear Lady, Have a Slice of Cake with the Young Lady!
Take a biscuit, miss! shouted the bloke perched on the bakerys stone steps, his coat still damp from
La vida
06
There’s Still Work to Be Done at Home… Granny Val trudged through the front gate, struggling with the rusty old lock before stepping into her chilly, long-empty cottage, the cold stove her only companion as she settled on a creaky chair. The air was tinged with neglect; three short months away, and the cobwebbed ceilings, groaning floorboards, and angry wind through the chimney greeted her, the house demanding to know where its mistress had vanished. “Just a moment, my dear, I’ll catch my breath and light the stove soon…” Not so long ago, Val was lively and bustling, painting and scrubbing, fetching water, tending the garden, moving nimbly between housework and prayer, her presence breathing life into the old home. The house loved her back—doors swung open at the first touch, the stove baked golden pies, and everything felt right when Val was in charge. She’d outlived her husband and worked hard to raise three children: one son a ship’s captain, the other a colonel, both now living far away, seldom visiting. Only her youngest, Tamara, stayed in the village as chief agronomist, popping in at weekends with pies and love, but always whisked away by her duties. The light of Val’s life became her granddaughter Svetlana, a local beauty with shining hair and a city diploma, who returned to work as an economist and, with her new vet husband, received a solid brick house through a social scheme. But Svetlana wasn’t suited to gardening, and life with a small son, Vasya, and little time for anything else, soon saw her begging Val to move in. Reluctant but aging, Val agreed, only to find herself chided for doing little to help. Rejected, she returned alone to her empty cottage, her body slowing, and her heart heavy with guilt for disappointing beloved Svetlana. The village priest, Father Boris, checked in, finding Val battling the cold, scraping by, writing brave letters to her sons—each page declaring how well she was, though the smudged ink betrayed tears. Anna, a neighbor, stepped in to help, while Father Boris brought food, chopped wood, and made sure Val had warmth and company. Tragedy struck when Svetlana, never robust, was diagnosed with lung cancer and passed within six months. Her bereft husband turned to drink and the cemetery, little Vasya neglected until Tamara took him, only to see internment in a boarding school as her only option. It was then that Val, now nearly housebound, insisted Vasya come live with her—“As long as I draw breath, he won’t go to an orphanage.” Against all odds, she found new life in caring for her great-grandson, her energy returning, the once-quiet cottage filled again with warmth, music, and baking. Neighbors gossiped, yet Father Boris discovered Val not feeble and frail, but bustling with renewed purpose as she tended to young Vasya. Reflecting on these turns, Father Boris’s wife, Alexandra, recalled her own great-grandmother Vera Yegorovna, who delayed death itself to help her newborn great-grandchild, declaring as in the old song, “It’s too soon for me to die—there’s still work to be done at home!” Vera lived another ten years, nurturing the generations that followed, her spirit an enduring legacy of love and resilience. And so, in Granny Val’s humble English cottage, as in Vera’s, the truth was plain: there’s still work to be done at home, and always another reason to carry on.
There are still things to be done at home… Grandma Mildred struggles to open the gate, limping
La vida
02
The Daughter
Tom, weve got a girl, 7.7pounds! Gail shouted into the phone, her voice trembling with joy.