La vida
05
Leonard Refused to Believe Ira Was His Daughter—His Wife Vera Worked at the Local Shop, Where Rumors Swirled of Her Secret Meetings with Other Men. So Leonard Never Accepted That Small, Delicate Ira Was His Own, and He Resented the Child. Only Her Granddad Supported Ira and Left Her the Family Home. Little Ira Only Had Her Grandfather’s Love As a child, Ira was often ill—frail and petite. “There’s no one so tiny in either of our families,” Leonard insisted. “She’s no child of mine!” Over time, her father’s coldness rubbed off on her mother. But Ira’s grandfather, Old Matthew, truly cherished her. His cottage stood on the very edge of the village, near the woods. Matthew had always worked as a woodsman and, even in retirement, visited the forest daily to gather berries and healing herbs, and fed the animals in winter. Locals found him odd—sometimes his predictions came true! But many sought his remedies and herb brews. Matthew’s wife had passed years ago; only the forest and his granddaughter brought him comfort. When Ira started school, she spent more time with her granddad than at home. He taught her about herbs and roots, and Ira dreamed of becoming a healer. Mum objected, claiming she had no money for Ira’s studies. But Matthew promised help—even if it meant selling his cow. Granddad Left His Home and a Promise of Happiness Ira’s mother Vera rarely visited her father, but one day she appeared, desperate for money after her son lost at cards in the city and was beaten, now demanding cash. “So you remember me when you need something?” Matthew scolded sternly and refused to pay her son’s debts. “My priority is Ira’s future.” Furious, Vera stormed out: “You’re no longer my father, and Ira’s no longer my daughter!” When Ira got into nursing school, her parents offered nothing—not even a penny. Only Matthew helped, along with Ira’s scholarship. As Ira neared graduation, Matthew fell ill. Knowing his time was near, he told Ira that the house was hers. He urged her to work in town but not to abandon the cottage—“A home lives as long as it has a human soul in it. In winter, keep the fire lit. Don’t fear staying here alone; this is where your happiness will find you,” Matthew promised, as if he knew something. Matthew’s Prediction Came True Matthew passed away in autumn. Ira took work as a nurse at the county hospital. On weekends, she visited her granddad’s cottage, lighting the stove against the cold. The wood Matthew had stocked lasted for ages. One snowy weekend, Ira arrived just as a storm buried the road. A knock startled her—it was a stranger, his car stranded outside. “Excuse me, could I borrow a shovel? My car’s stuck.” “There’s one by the porch. Need a hand?” Tiny Ira offered. The tall young man laughed off her help lest she get lost in the snow. After a while, stuck again, he accepted her invitation to wait out the blizzard inside. Over hot tea, he asked, “Don’t you find it scary, staying alone by the woods?” Ira explained she only visited on weekends; she worked in the city, unsure how she’d return if buses were cancelled. The stranger—Stan—said he’d be heading to town, too, and offered her a lift. Later, as Ira walked home after work, Stan unexpectedly appeared beside her, joking, “Your herbal tea must be magic—I couldn’t wait to see you again. Maybe you’ll even pour me another cup?” They never had a big wedding—Ira didn’t want one, and Stan finally agreed. But theirs was true love. Ira discovered that men really do carry their wives—at least Stan did! When their first child was born, everyone marvelled how a tiny woman could have such a robust son. When asked his name, Ira replied, “He’ll be Matthew, after a very good man.”
Leonard stubbornly refused to believe that Lucy was his daughter. Vera, his wife, worked at the local
La vida
07
One More Year Together: The Heartwarming Story of Archie and Natalie’s Winter Trials, Lifelong Friendships, and Miraculous Reunion Just in Time for New Year’s Eve
Another whole year together… For the past year, Arthur Bennett hadnt been out alone once.
La vida
07
Excuse me, madam, I hope I’m not being too forward… but could you spare me one of those lovely pastries?” the shy elderly lady asked the baker at the corner shop.
Maam, please dont be cross with me but could I have one of those delightful doughnuts? the shy old woman
La vida
07
No More “Shoulds”: When Anton Walked Through the Door and Discovered Three Dried-Up Plates of Pasta on the Kitchen Table, an Upside-Down Yoghurt Pot, an Open Maths Notebook, Kostya’s Backpack Tossed in the Hallway, Vera Lost in Her Phone on the Sofa—He Realised He Was Too Tired to Lecture About Dishes and Homework. Instead, He Gathered His Children Around the Kitchen Table, Not to Talk About Chores or School, But to Finally Speak Honestly: About Being Tired, About Not Always Coping, About Worries No One Says Out Loud, and Why Sometimes the Most Important Family Conversation Is the One Where No One Pretends Everything’s Fine.
No Musts Richard opened the front door and was greeted by three plates with dried-up spaghetti on the
La vida
018
Ten Years as a Cook and Nanny for My Son’s Family, Without a Hint of Gratitude: The Story of a Retired Teacher Who Devoted a Decade to Her Grandchild, Household Chores, and Unseen Sacrifice Before Finally Finding Freedom at Sixty-Five
For ten long years, I worked as a cook in my son’s household, yet received no thanks for my labour.
La vida
013
Mum Told You to Sort Out Your Own Bills – That’s What Husband Blurted Out
Pay your own bills, muttered George, halfsmiling over the newspaper. Poppy stood in the bedroom mirror
La vida
05
The Last Summer at Home Vladimir arrived on Wednesday, just as the midday sun warmed the roof so much that the slates began to crackle. The garden gate had dropped off its hinges three years ago; he stepped over it and paused at the porch. Three steps—bottom one completely rotted. He tested his weight on the second, then continued inside. The air smelled stale, with a hint of mice. A thick layer of dust coated the sills; a cobweb stretched from the beam to the old sideboard. Vladimir pushed open a stiff window—sun-baked nettle and dry grass from the yard flooded in. He made the rounds of all four rooms, mentally listing jobs: mop the floors, check the fireplace, fix the summerhouse plumbing, throw out everything that’s rotted. Then call Andrew, Mum, the nephews. Tell them: come in August, spend a month here like we used to. Back then—twenty-five years ago—Dad was alive, and every summer the whole family gathered here. Vladimir remembered boiling jam in a copper pan, brothers hauling buckets from the well, Mum reading aloud on the veranda at sunset. After Dad died, Mum moved to the city with the youngest. The house was boarded up. Vladimir came by once a year to check it hadn’t been looted, then left again. But this spring, something clicked: he wanted to try and bring it back. Just once. The first week he worked alone: swept the chimney, replaced two porch boards, cleaned the windows. Drove to the nearby town for paint and cement, arranged for a local electrician to see the wiring. The Parish Council chairman, bumping into him outside the shop, shook his head. “Why bother, Vlad? You’ll end up selling it anyway.” “I’m not selling this autumn,” Vladimir answered, and moved on. Andrew was first to arrive, Saturday evening, kids in tow. He stared at the yard, wrinkling his nose. “Seriously? A whole month here?” “Three weeks,” Vladimir corrected. “The kids need fresh air. So do you.” “We’ve not even got a shower.” “There’s a bathhouse. I’ll heat it tonight.” The kids, a boy aged eleven and a girl of eight, trudged to the old swing Vladimir had strung from an oak the day before. Andrew’s wife, Sylvia, hauled a bag of groceries inside without a word. Vladimir helped unload. Andrew still scowled but said nothing. Mum came Monday, driven by the neighbour. She stepped into the house, paused in the front room and sighed. “Everything’s so small,” she whispered. “I remember it bigger.” “You’ve not set foot here in thirty years, Mum.” “Thirty-two.” She ran a palm over the kitchen worktop. “It was always chilly here. Dad promised to put in heating, but never got round to it.” Vladimir heard tiredness, not nostalgia, in her voice. He poured her tea, sat her on the veranda. She looked out at the garden and spoke of hauling water, of back pain after laundry days, gossiping neighbours. Vladimir listened and realised—for her, this wasn’t a nest, but an old wound. When she went to bed, he and Andrew sat around a fire in the yard. The children slept, Sylvia read by candlelight—power connected only to half the house. “Why all this effort?” Andrew asked, staring into the flames. “I wanted us all together.” “We see each other at Christmas.” “It’s not the same.” Andrew snorted. “Bit of a romantic, Vlad. Think we’ll be closer after three weeks here?” “I don’t know. I had to try.” Andrew was silent, then spoke softer: “Glad you did. But don’t expect a miracle.” Vladimir didn’t. But he hoped. The next days were busy. Vladimir fixed the fence; Andrew helped re-roof the shed. The boy, Archie, sulked at first, then found old rods in the shed and spent days on the riverbank. The girl, Sophie, weeded the new vegetable patch with Grandma. One afternoon, painting the veranda together, Sylvia laughed: “We look like some old commune.” “At least communes had a plan,” Andrew grumbled, but he smiled. The tension eased. Evenings saw them dining at a makeshift long table on the veranda. Mum made soup, Sylvia baked cottage cheese pies from the village shop. Chatter was all about small things: where to get mosquito netting, whether to mow the grass, if the pump had been fixed. But one night, with the kids in bed, Mum said, “Your father wanted to sell this place—a year before he died.” Vladimir froze, mug in hand. Andrew frowned. “Why?” “He was tired. Called the place an anchor. Wanted a flat near the hospital in town. I was against it—thought it was our inheritance. We fought. He never sold, then he died.” Vladimir set his mug down. “Do you blame yourself?” “I don’t know. I just… grew tired of this house. It’s a reminder I pushed for my way, and he never got his peace.” Andrew leant back. “You never said.” “You never asked.” Vladimir looked at her—bent, old, hands worn—and now he saw the house wasn’t a treasure, but a weight. “Maybe we should have sold,” he murmured. “Maybe,” Mum agreed. “But you grew up here. That counts.” “Counts for what?” She met his gaze. “So you remember who you were, before life pulled you all apart.” He didn’t believe straight away. But next day, taking Andrew and Archie to fish, and watching his brother laugh for real as Archie showed off their first catch, Vladimir understood a little. And in the evening, hearing Mum teach Sophie to read where she once taught Dad—her voice didn’t sound pained anymore. Something else: maybe peace. Departure was set for Sunday. The night before, Vladimir fired up the old sauna; they all bathed, then drank tea on the veranda. Archie asked if they’d come again next year. Andrew glanced at Vladimir, but said nothing. In the morning, Vladimir helped pack up. Mum embraced him at the gate. “Thank you for inviting us.” “I thought it would be better.” “It was good. In its way.” Andrew clapped him on the shoulder. “Sell it, if you want. I’m fine with it.” “We’ll see.” The car left; dust settled on the lane. Vladimir went back inside, tidied dishes, took out the rubbish. Closed windows, locked up. Fished a rusty barn lock from his pocket, looped it on the gate. Heavy, rusted, but strong. He stood at the gate, looking at the house—roof straight, porch solid, windows shining. The house looked alive. But Vladimir knew better. A house is alive when people are in it. For three weeks, this one had been alive. Maybe that was enough. He got in the car. In the mirror, the roof flashed once, then the trees hid it. Vladimir drove slowly on the rough lane, thinking of calling an estate agent in autumn. But for now—all he wanted was to remember them all, laughing, eating together, as Archie proudly displayed his fish. The house had done its job. It brought them together. And maybe that was enough to finally let it go without regret. The Last Summer at Home
The Last Summer at Home Edward arrived on a Wednesday, just as the afternoon sun began melting the moss
La vida
06
At the Edge of the World: As Snow Stings Her Skin and Fills Her Boots, Rita Refuses to Buy Wellies and Chooses High Boots Instead—Yet She’d Look Ridiculous Here, Especially Since Dad Blocked Her Card. “Are You Really Going to Live in the Countryside?” He Sneers, Hating Anything Rural and Expecting Rita to Marry Gosha This Summer, But She Craves Love and Drama, Not Money or Predictability—Choosing to Teach in a Village School, Where Cold Winters, Difficult Children, and Meeting a Mysterious Father Force Rita to Reconsider Life, Love, and What Truly Matters Over a New Year’s Holiday That Will Change the Course of Her Heart.
At the edge of the world. The snow battered its way into Emmas boots, biting at her skin beneath layers
La vida
05
Leonard Refused to Believe That Little Iris Was His Daughter and Turned Away from Her, While Her Mother Vera Worked at the Local Shop, Her Reputation Tarnished by Rumors. Only Grandpa Matthew Loved Iris—He Taught Her About Forest Herbs and Left Her Their Family Home, Guiding Her Towards Happiness and Predicting Her Fate, Which Came True One Snowy Night When a Stranger Named Stan Found Shelter at Her House and Became the Love of Her Life. In the End, Iris Named Her Son After Her Grandfather, Honoring the Only One Who Had Ever Truly Cared for Her.
Leonard never truly believed that Emma was his daughter. His wife, Susan, worked at the village grocers.
La vida
08
In the Winter, Valentina Decided to Sell Her Home and Move to Be with Her Son.
In the dead of winter Margaret Thompson finally decided to put her old cottage on the market and move