La vida
06
A Woman Called and Said: “I Have a Child with Your Husband
The phone rang. An unknown number flashed on the screen, and I lifted the receiver while my hands were
La vida
07
The Letter That Never Arrived Grandma sat by the window for a long time, though there was little to see. In the English twilight, the lamp post outside flickered lazily, lighting up the patchy footprints of dogs and people in the thin snow. Somewhere in the distance, a caretaker scraped the path, then all was quiet again. Delicate glasses and an old mobile with a cracked screen rested on the windowsill. The phone would sometimes buzz briefly when pictures or voice notes landed in the family group chat, but tonight it was silent. The flat was quiet; the ticking clock sounded louder than she liked. She got up, went to the kitchen, and switched on the light—dim yellow spilling across the table. There was a bowl of cold dumplings covered by a plate, left in case someone dropped by. No one had. She sat at the table, tried a dumpling, but set it aside—the dough had turned rubbery. Still edible, but joyless. She poured tea from her battered enamel kettle, listening to the water, and, surprising herself, sighed aloud. It was a heavy sigh, as if something was torn out of her chest and settled down on the stool beside her. Why am I complaining? she wondered. Everyone’s alive, thank God. I have a roof over my head. And yet… Fragments of recent conversations floated through her mind. Her daughter’s tense voice—”Mum, I can’t go on like this with him. He’s at it again…”—and her son-in-law’s slightly mocking tones: “She’s complaining to you, yeah? Tell her life isn’t all her way.” Her grandson, Alex, now only responding with a sullen “yeah” when she asked about school. Once, he could talk for hours. He’d grown up, of course. But still. They never really argued in front of her—no slammed doors, no shouted words—a silent wall had grown between them. Small barbs, what wasn’t said, old hurts never admitted. She hovered, drifting between her daughter and son-in-law, always careful not to say the wrong thing. Sometimes it seemed to her it was somehow her fault—she’d not raised them right, given the wrong advice, or stayed silent when she should have spoken up. She sipped her tea, winced—the first sip was too hot—and suddenly remembered a time, years ago, when Alex was little and they’d written a letter to Father Christmas together. He’d scrawled in big, careful letters: “Please bring me a building set, and make Mum and Dad stop arguing.” She had laughed at the time, stroked his hair and said Father Christmas would hear every word. Now she felt a prick of shame for that memory, as if she’d lied to the child back then. His parents had never really stopped; they’d just grown better at arguing quietly. She pushed the glass aside, wiped the table, although it was spotless, then wandered to her desk and switched on the lamp. Pen and notebook—untouched for ages, since everything happened on her phone these days—sat ready. She stared at them, then, absurdly, felt a small glow at the idea: writing a letter. A real one, on paper. Not for a present, but just to ask. Not family, who each carried their own baggage, but someone—anyone—outside of it all. She smiled ruefully. An old lady, off her rocker, writing to a fairy-tale granddad. But her hand already reached for the notebook. She sat, adjusted her glasses, found a clean page. She paused, then wrote: “Dear Father Christmas…” Her hand shook. She felt oddly exposed, as if someone peered over her shoulder. But the room was empty. “Well, never mind,” she muttered, and wrote on: “I know you’re for children, and I’m old now. I won’t ask you for a coat or a TV. I have what I need. There’s just one thing: please, could you bring peace to our family? So my daughter and her husband don’t quarrel, so my grandson isn’t silent, like a stranger. So we could all sit around one table and not fear who’ll say the wrong thing. I realise people are to blame. You don’t owe us anything. But if you could help, even just a little, I would be grateful. Maybe I have no right to ask, but I’ll ask anyway. If you can, let us hear each other. With respect, Grandma Nina.” She read it through. The words seemed naive, crooked like children’s drawings. But she didn’t cross them out. She felt lighter, as though she’d shared her worry with someone who might actually listen. She folded the letter, then again, and sat with it in her hands, unsure. Where to put it? Out the window? The bin? Ridiculous. She remembered she’d planned to go to the shop and the post office the next day, to pay the bills. Fine, she thought—she’d drop it in the children’s postbox to Father Christmas, which seem to be everywhere now. Somehow, that made her feel less foolish; she‘d be one among many, not alone. She slipped the letter into her handbag, next to her passport and bills, and turned off the lights. The clock ticked in the stillness as she lay in bed, listening to the hush until sleep came. … The rest of the story weaves together subtle English details—the post office, the street swept by a caretaker, a knock at the door, the quiet visiting family—all circling around that letter. It is found, lost, found again; it floats between hands and hearts, never quite posted, never quite said, but always shaping the quiet, careful peace that settles, finally, around their table. And so, the story ends, not with miracles, but with small, brave steps: a boy’s awkward invitation, a daughter’s honest word, a family’s quiet meal. The letter never arrives, but its wish comes true in simplest, human ways. The Letter That Never Arrived
The Letter That Never Arrived Grandma Nora sat by the window for ages, though there wasnt much to see.
La vida
07
My Wife Packed Her Bags and Vanished Without a Trace: How Manipulation, Betrayal, and a Baby Tore Our Family Apart
His wife had packed her bags and vanished without a trace. Stop acting like a saint. Shell calm down
La vida
08
I Raised My Granddaughter for 12 Years, Believing Her Mother Had Moved Abroad: One Day, the Girl Revealed a Truth I Never Wanted to Hear
I raised my granddaughter for twelve years, convinced that her mother had gone off to work abroad.
La vida
011
The Fiancée and the Father Karina only pretended to want to meet Vadim’s parents. Honestly, why should she care about them? She’s not going to live with them, and as for his father—who, apparently, is quite well-off—she’d get nothing but trouble and suspicion from him. Still, once you’ve decided to marry, you have to play the part to the end. Karina dressed up, but kept things simple, hoping to make a sweet impression. Meeting your fiancé’s parents is always a tricky event full of hidden pitfalls, but meeting clever parents? That’s a true test of character. Vadim thought she needed reassurance. “Don’t worry, Karina—really, don’t. Dad’s a bit of a grump, but reasonable. They won’t say anything awful. And they’ll love you, I promise! Dad is strange, sure, but Mum is the life of the party,” he assured her outside his parents’ house. Karina just smiled, flipping a lock of hair off her shoulder. Well, Dad’s gloomy and Mum’s the soul of the company. Quite the combination, she thought wryly. The house didn’t impress her. She’d seen grander places. They were greeted at once. Karina wasn’t particularly nervous. Why should she be? Ordinary people, after all. Nina Petrovna, as Vadim had already mentioned, had spent years as a housewife, hardly working at all, sometimes off on trips with friends, but nothing remarkable. The father, Valery Aleksandrovich, was said to be not much fun, but at least he was quiet. Though, his name did sound oddly familiar… They were welcomed in… And Karina stopped dead, freezing on the doorstep. This was the end. She didn’t know her future mother-in-law, but the father-in-law she recognised in an instant… They’d already met. Three years ago. Not often, but certainly mutually beneficial. Bars, hotels, restaurants. Naturally, neither Valery’s wife nor his son knew about their acquaintance. Here we go. Valery recognised her too. There was a flash in his eyes—surprise, shock, maybe something darker, perhaps plans already forming—but he kept silent. Vadim, oblivious, cheerfully introduced her to his parents. “Mum, Dad, this is Karina. My fiancée. I’d have brought her before, but she’s so terribly shy.” Oh dear… Valery Aleksandrovich shook her hand. His grip was firm, almost hard. “Very pleased to meet you, Karina,” he said, with an almost imperceptible note of…something Karina couldn’t quite pin down. Anger? A warning? Or… Karina braced herself, waiting for Valery to reveal who she really was. “Very pleased to meet you, Valery Aleksandrovich,” Karina replied, trying to play along and avoid immediate discovery. She squeezed his hand, feeling the rush of adrenaline. What’s going to happen now… Nothing. Valery managed a semblance of a smile, then pulled out a chair for her at the table. Perhaps he was saving up her shame for later… But nothing happened. Then it hit Karina—of course he wouldn’t say a word. If he revealed her, he’d have to reveal himself to his wife. Once she relaxed, things seemed fairly cordial. Nina Petrovna shared childhood stories about Vadim, and Valery Aleksandrovich appeared to listen to Karina with keen interest, asking about her work. Oh, he knew quite a bit about her. But his subtle irony no longer stung. He even cracked a few jokes; to her own surprise, Karina laughed. His jokes, though, were laced with nuances only the two of them understood. For example, when he looked at Karina and said: “You remind me of an old…colleague of mine, Karina. Very clever. Knew how to deal with people. All sorts of people.” Karina didn’t miss a beat. “Everyone has their own talents, Valery Aleksandrovich.” Vadim, completely smitten, gazed at Karina in adoration, missing all the undercurrents. He really loved her. And that was perhaps the most important—and most bitter—thing. For him. Later, the conversation turned to travel, and Valery Aleksandrovich, eyeing Karina, remarked: “I prefer secluded places. No fuss, no crowds. A good spot to sit and think. Especially with the right book. And you, Karina, what sort of places do you like?” A trap. “I like it lively—people everywhere, a bit of noise and fun,” answered Karina, refusing to be drawn in. “Although, sometimes, a few too many ears isn’t always safe.” For a moment—just the briefest flicker—Nina seemed to notice something. Karina saw the future mother-in-law frown, only to shrug off some uncomfortable thought. Valery Aleksandrovich knew Karina wasn’t one for quiet. He knew exactly why. When the evening ended and it was time for bed, Valery Aleksandrovich hugged Vadim. “Take care of her, son. She’s… special.” It sounded both like praise and mockery—though only Karina understood. She felt the temperature in the room drop. “Special.” That choice of word. *** That night, after the house fell asleep, Karina lay awake, thinking over their unexpected meeting and how to cope with these new realities. The future looked grim. She suspected Valery Aleksandrovich wasn’t sleeping either—for the same uneasy reasons. She slipped out, pulled on a hoodie over her tee and shorts, and padded down the stairs, making just enough noise to alert any fellow night owl. Out on the veranda, she waited, certain she’d soon be spotted. She didn’t have to wait long. “Can’t sleep?” he asked, coming up behind her. “Restless night,” Karina replied. A gentle wind blew, carrying his familiar cologne. He watched her carefully. “What do you want from my son, Karina?” Gone was the polite mask—his voice was hard. “I know exactly what you’re capable of. I know how many men like me have crossed your path. It was always about the money, wasn’t it? You hardly hid that. You named your price—discreetly, but clearly. So why Vadik?” If he didn’t want to dwell on the past, neither did she. Karina grinned defiantly. “I love him, Valery Aleksandrovich,” she sang. “Why shouldn’t I?” He was unimpressed. “Love him? You? Don’t make me laugh. I know exactly what kind of woman you are, Karina. And I will tell Vadik everything—who you really are, what you did. Do you think he’ll marry you then?” Karina stepped closer, almost within arm’s length, tilting her head as if studying him anew. “Tell him, Valery Aleksandrovich,” she drawled deliberately, “but if you do, I’ll make sure your wife learns all about our own little adventures.” “That’s—” “That’s not blackmail. That’s mutual destruction. If you tell everyone the circumstances of our meeting, you won’t be able to keep your own secrets either. Believe me, I’ll fill in ALL the blanks.” “That’s not the same…” “Really? Will you tell your wife the same thing?” Valery Aleksandrovich was silent. He realised his threat had failed. She had him right where she wanted. They were in the same boat. “And what exactly are you going to tell her?” “Not just her. Everyone. Vadim too. I’ll tell them what a fine family man you are, how late you ‘worked.’ I’ll tell everything. I’ll have nothing left to lose. Go on, save your son from me. Try.” A terrible choice. To warn his son was to sign his own marital death warrant. “You wouldn’t dare.” “Me? Not dare?” Karina laughed. “So you’re allowed, but I’m not? I’ll keep quiet if you do. But if you out me for being a ‘gold-digger’ while you’ve got so much to hide—well, Nina Petrovna does value loyalty.” Once, blind drunk, he’d confessed to Karina how sorry he was for cheating on his loyal wife. Nina would never forgive. Never. So there really was a choice. He knew Karina was not bluffing. “Fine,” he said at last. “I’ll say nothing. But you—stay silent too. No one says a word. We forget the past.” Which is why Karina never really worried. He had more to lose than she did. “As you wish, Valery Aleksandrovich.” The next morning, they left Vadim’s parents’ house. Under her father-in-law’s well-concealed loathing, Karina said her farewells to his wife, who had already started calling her “daughter.” Valery almost twitched. He tormented himself with his inability to warn his son about her—but exposing her would ruin him, too. Lose Nina, and he’d lose not just a wife, but much of his fortune. She’d never leave empty-handed. And his son would never forgive him… Next time, Karina and Vadim stayed with his parents a full two weeks. A holiday, as they say, in full swing. Valery did his best to avoid Karina, burying himself in endless ‘business.’ But one day, home alone, curiosity got the better of him. He snooped through Karina’s things—makeup bag, organiser, little notebook—until his eyes caught a blue-and-white stick. A pregnancy test. Two clear lines. “I thought the disaster was my son marrying… No, THIS is the real catastrophe!” He put it back, but didn’t manage to close the bag. Karina caught him. “Ah-ah, rummaging through a woman’s bag—naughty,” she scolded, mockingly, but didn’t seem truly upset. Valery didn’t even deny it. “You’re pregnant with Vadik’s baby?” Karina took her bag from his hand, met his gaze, and said: “Looks like you’ve spoiled the surprise, Valery Aleksandrovich.” Valery was furious. Now Karina was truly tied to Vadim. If he spoke out, he’d bring down disaster on his own head. All he could do was keep quiet. But what misery, knowing what a trap his son was in. *** Nine months passed… and then another six. Vadik and Karina were raising Alice. Valery did his best to avoid them—never visiting, never thinking about it. He didn’t consider Alice his granddaughter. And Karina scared him. Her indifference towards Vadik, her shadowy past. Then, yet again. Nina planned to visit Vadik and Karina. “Valery, are you coming?” “No. Still have that headache.” “Again? That’s quite a pattern.” “Just tired, that’s all. You go.” Valery always had an excuse: migraines, colds, earaches, bad legs. He even took pills for effect. He couldn’t bear to see Karina, but he couldn’t tell anyone why. The evening dragged by, full of restless thoughts. He read. Tried to nap. Suddenly he noticed Nina was very late. Eleven at night, and not home. She wasn’t answering her phone. Naturally, he called Vadik. “Vadik, is everything alright? Has Nina left yet? She’s not home.” “Dad, you’re the last person I want to speak to right now.” And hung up… Valery was about to set out for his son’s house when Karina’s car pulled up outside. When he saw Karina, he almost fainted. “What are you doing here? Speak! What’s happened?” Karina looked calm, almost serene. She poured herself some wine. Sat down in comfort. “Catastrophe, that’s what.” “What catastrophe?” “Ours. All of ours. Vadik found photos from four years ago on a café website, from that party at ‘The Oasis’, remember? Vadik wanted to book it for our anniversary, checked their site, and—there we were. Clear as day. The photographer posted everything! Now Vadik is losing his mind. Your Nina’s planning to divorce you. And it looks like, just as you wanted, I’ll be divorcing your son as well.” Valery stared at her, memories and understanding flashing by. That website, that party… He remembered thinking nothing good would come of it, telling them not to photograph anything… But who’d have guessed it would all come together like this? He sat heavily on the floor beside her. “And why have you come to me?” “Wanted to escape the chaos for a bit,” Karina smiled. “It’s a mess at home. Alice is with the nanny. Care for some wine?” She offered him his own bottle. They sat on the veranda, drinking. For a moment, only the song of the crickets connected them. “It’s all your fault,” he said. Karina nodded, eyes on her glass. “Yup.” “You’re insufferable.” “Can’t argue.” “You don’t even feel sorry for Vadik.” “A bit. But more for myself.” “You only love yourself.” “True.” He suddenly reached out and took her chin in his hand, turning her to face him. “You know I never loved you,” he whispered. “I believe you.” *** In the morning, when Nina finally came to make peace—ready to forgive her husband even if it would cost her half her sanity—she found Karina and Valery Aleksandrovich together. Still asleep. “Who’s there?” Karina stirred. “It’s me,” said Nina, looking at the ruins of her life. Karina, seeing her, just smiled serenely. Valery woke up a moment later, but didn’t rush after his wife.
Wife and Father Charlotte only pretended to want to meet Simons parents. What would she gain from such a visit?
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018
His Wife Packed Her Bags and Vanished Without a Trace: A Family Torn Apart by Deceit, Manipulation, and the Struggle for Independence
His wife had packed her bags and vanished without a trace. Stop acting like a martyr. Shell get over it;
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06
A House That Belongs to No One
Nobodys House Graham woke up, as always, at half six, alarm clock entirely unnecessary. The flat was
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026
His Wife Packed Her Bags and Vanished Without a Trace: A Tale of Betrayal, Choices, and the True Meaning of Family in Modern England
His wife packed her belongings and vanished in an unknown direction. “Stop acting like a saint.
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04
My Mother-in-Law Dug Up My Prized Lawn at Our Country Retreat for Vegetable Beds – But I Made Her Put Everything Back the Way It Was
Simon, are you sure we didnt forget the charcoal? Last time, you had to dash off to that village shop
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06
My Adult Son Has Always Avoided Me. When He Landed in Hospital, I Discovered His Secret Life – and the People Who Knew Him in a Completely Different Way…
Eleanor had always felt the distance grow between her and her son, James. When the call came that he