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Сюрприз у фруктовій коробці: несподівана мордочка з величезними очима

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Продавець фруктів відкрив коробку. Звідти визирнула мордочка. Величезні налякані очі ось-ось могли закотитися від страху.

— Нічого не їсть, певно, відірвали від кішки та викинули. А шерсть її злиплася, бо жила в ящику з-під сливи.

Покупчиня, нічого не сказавши, пішла. Чоловік зі смутком похитав головою: «Навіть у жінках не залишилося милосердя». Але через деякий час вона повернулася.

— Не виходить з моєї голови ваш кошеня, — сказала вона і простягнула тканину:
— Загорніть «товар».
— Візьмете? — зрадів чоловік. Обережно загорнув кошеня і, як дитину, подав жінці.

— Це по-божому, по-божому. Віддасться вам, — повторював він.

Жінка знизала плечима:
— Велику благодійницю знайшли. Ще не знаю, як чоловік гляне на цей «подарунок». А то разом на вулиці опинимося.

І як у воду дивилася. Кошеня не припало до двору. Хоча і було відмитим, приглаженим, нагодованим, але все ж виглядало жалюгідно.

— Що це за інопланетянин? — гидливо відкинув чоловік кошеня, коли той намагався видертися йому на ногу. Підозріле дряпання відволікло подружжя від серіалу. Під загрозою були нові, дорогі шпалери.
— Миші тебе заїли? Навіщо він нам у однокімнатній квартирі? — докоряв чоловік дружині.

Взявши кошеня за шкірку, чоловік з огидою дивився на безпорадну істоту:
— Щоб завтра його тут не було.

Валентина і сама вже не раділа своїй знахідці. Але знизу дивилися на неї очі-сльози, маленькі лапки благально топтали її ногу, і таке дзвінке муркотіння видавало крихітне тіло, що в її серце прокотилася тепла струмка жалості. Вона нахилилася, погладила.

Підбадьорений ласкою кошеня піднялося на руки, уткнуло носик у теплу долоню господині. «Не сотвори милість — не отримаєш милості», — згадала слова матері Валентина і, виправдавши ними свій вчинок, заспокоїлася.

Зазвонив телефон:
— Бабусю, приходь до нас на чай!

Валентина тихенько, не відволікаючи чоловіка від серіалу, вислизнула за двері.
Син жив неподалік, через дорогу. Катруся вже стояла біля свого дому і радісно махала рукою. Раптом велика чорна машина з’їхала на узбіччя. Дитяче тільце підкинуло вгору. Валентина окам’яніла. Не могла ні закричати, ні зрушити з місця.

Лише очі, як у сповільненій зйомці, вбирали кожен кадр: якась жінка підняла дівчинку. Маленькі рученята судомно обхопили її шию. Жива! Чоловік із труднощами вийшов з машини. П’яний. Йому на зустріч біг син. У формі. Тремтячими руками він намагався вийняти з кобури зброю і раптом спіткнувся об крик:
— Ні!!!

Мати стояла через дорогу, але йому здавалося, що вона відштовхує його витягнутими руками.

Підбігли люди, стали у нього на дорозі, відвели п’яного водія. Валентина не відчувала ніг. Але вона йшла… чи її несли? До Катрусі! Лікар вже оглядав, відчував кожну кісточку:
— Все нормально. Переломів нема. Сильних ударів теж.

— Але чому вона мовчить?! — невістка тремтіла.
— Злякалася. Треба відвернути, — припустив лікар.
— Зараз, я зараз.

Валентина кинулася додому. Забігла, схопила кошеня, на ходу розповідаючи чоловікові, що сталося. Встигла. «Швидка» ще не поїхала. В очах дитини плавало страхом. Обережно розжала її ручки, вклала кошеня. Катруся перевела погляд. Пальчики ворухнулися, погладили м’яку шерстку. У відповідь пролунало лагідне «Мур-мур-мур». «Муруся», — тихо промовила дівчинка. Лікар з полегшенням зітхнув. Валентина дала волю сльозам — тепер можна.

Катруся не випускала кішечку з рук. Ніч вони провели у лікарні. Вранці їх відпустили додому з висновком: «Дівчинка просто народилася у сорочці».
«Милість створившому милість», — прошепотіла Валентина…

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Four years. Four years she’d put up with the woman who called every evening to check what David had for dinner. Who’d arrive unannounced and critique their cleaning, who’d orchestrate family dinners so Karen ended up at the far end of the table. — Don’t make a mountain out of a molehill, — David kept his calm tone. — We’ll be fine. Pay it off fast, it’s not much. It’s family. Hot, angry tears streamed down. Karen wiped them with the back of her hand, smearing mascara. — Family? Am I family? Or just an add-on? Remember when your mum decided it was time for a new car and you sold ours without asking me? Or when she cleared my things out of the guest room because she “couldn’t sleep surrounded by strangers’ junk”? Or how on my birthday, you left with her to buy her a fridge? — It’s nothing, — David waved her off. — You’re just tired, you need a break. Karen looked at this man—tall, gentle features, dimples she once thought cute. Now she saw only a thirty-year-old boy who couldn’t cut the cord. — We’ll get through this, — he repeated like a mantra. — Love conquers all. Karen rose without a word and went to the bedroom. Two large duffel bags sat in the closet—the same ones she’d moved in with. She dragged them out, tossed them on the bed, and began opening cupboards. David appeared at the door twenty minutes later, just as one bag was stuffed full. — What are you doing? Karen, this is ridiculous. You’re not serious? She didn’t answer, quietly folding jumpers, jeans, underwear. Took down the jewellery box—gifts from her parents and friends, she wouldn’t take anything from him. — Where will you go? To your mum? She’s up in Manchester! Zipping the second bag. Checking her purse—passport, bank card, the keys to her mum’s flat she’d always kept “just in case.” — Karen, say something! You can’t just leave me. I love you! She looked him in the eye, sharp and long. Then picked up her bags and walked out. …Next morning, Karen stood in line at the registry office, clutching her completed divorce papers. Rain drizzled outside, grey clouds low over rooftops, but inside she felt a strange calm. The decision was made. The first call came at half past two in the morning. Karen jumped awake on the sofa at her friend Leah’s, not immediately sure where she was. — We need to talk, — David’s rapid breathing, scattered words. — I get it now, I’ll change. Please, give me a chance. She hung up. Twenty minutes later, the phone rang again. — Karen, I can’t live without you. You are my whole life. By morning, there were forty-three messages. Each one long, tearful, full of promises and threats. “If you don’t come back, I don’t know what I’ll do.” “Mum says you’re just being difficult.” “I’ll wait for you, forever.” A week later, David began appearing outside her office. Karen would leave for lunch and there he’d be, hovering by the coffee kiosk. She’d head to the Tube—there he was, across the street. — Just passing by, — he insisted when Karen demanded an explanation. — I wanted to see you. One evening, there was a knock at Leah’s door. Karen opened it, not checking the peephole—she was expecting the pizza delivery. David stood on the doorstep, clutching a bouquet of red roses. — Just one chance, — he whispered. — I ask for nothing more. Karen quietly closed the door. He stayed outside for two hours, until the neighbours threatened to call the police. She learned to live with it—the way you learn to live with chronic pain. Don’t read the texts, don’t answer unknown calls, don’t look back in the street. Switched to remote work at a new firm, moved to a suburb where David would never “happen” to be. The divorce was finalised three months later. Karen left court with the official papers clutched tight and cried on the steps—not for grief, but relief. The first months of freedom were frighteningly empty. Karen had gotten used to checking every decision with someone, even if they’d always do as they wished. Now she could buy any yoghurt in the shop, without wondering if Mrs Davies would approve. She could watch any film, and wouldn’t hear “normal women don’t watch that.” She could breathe. She signed up for English courses—her long-time dream, which David had dismissed as “foolish expense.” Began attending early morning yoga before sunrise, when the city was just waking up. Took a solo trip to Brighton for the weekend, wandering the streets and eating doughnuts. Six months later, the calls stopped. The texts too. Karen waited for the catch another month, then another, and finally understood she could relax. She landed a job at a marketing agency—bright office, young team, exciting projects. Life was moving on. …She met Andrew at a work event her colleague Maddy insisted she attend. — This is our lead developer, — Maddy introduced a tall guy in thin-rimmed glasses. — Andrew, this is Karen from marketing. He shook her hand—firmly, but gently. Smiled—just a plain, genuine smile. — Escaping from the karaoke too, I see? — he nodded toward the stage, where the Finance Director was butchering “Wonderwall.” — Saving my nerves, — Karen nodded. They talked most of the night—about books, travel, the oddities of life. Andrew listened more than he spoke. Asked questions, actually waited for answers, never interrupted. Never tried to lecture or explain how she should live. When he found out she was divorced, he just nodded and changed the subject. …Half a year later, they moved in together, picking a flat in the city centre. Small, light-filled, high ceilings, overlooking a quiet courtyard. — Are you sure you like this flat? — Karen asked, as they viewed it before signing. — Maybe we should see some more? — Do you like it? — Andrew turned to her. — Yes. Very much. — Then let’s take it. Small things—the right to have an opinion, and be heard—meant more than any declarations of love. He proposed on the roof of their building, as the sun sank below the skyline, painting the sky pink and gold. He pulled out a tiny box, opened it—inside shimmered a diamond ring. — I’m not much for speeches, — Andrew admitted. — But I want to wake up next to you every day. If you don’t mind my snoring and my addiction to terrible coffee. Karen laughed through tears and nodded. …That May evening began like any other. Andrew was late at work—a looming deadline, an urgent bug. Karen was making pasta, humming along to the radio, when a sharp, insistent knock came at the door. She glanced through the peephole—and jumped back. It was David. Pale, dark circles under his eyes, crumpled shirt. Two years. Two years of silence—and now he was here. — Karen, open up! — his fist hammered the door. — I know you’re there! We need to talk! She grabbed her phone, dialled Andrew. The line was busy. — We love each other! — David shouted through the door. — You can’t be with someone else! It’s wrong! The door shuddered—he was throwing his weight against it. Karen pressed her back tight against the door, feet braced. — Get away, — she yelled. — I’ll call the police! — You’re my wife! — his voice climbed to a shrill pitch. — You were mine and you’ll always be mine! I waited two years for you to come to your senses! Two years! — We’re divorced! It’s over! — Nothing’s over! — he shoved again, and she barely held the door. — I’ve changed! Mum says you just don’t understand your own happiness! Open up, let’s talk! Through the peephole, his face was twisted, possessed. Nothing like the man she’d once shared a bed with. Karen dialled 999. — David! One click and the police will be here. Leave. Now. David froze. A few seconds passed. Then he spun around and strode to the stairs. Downstairs, the front door banged. Karen slid to the floor against the wall, dizzy. After half an hour, she managed to stand and call Andrew. The police took her statement the next day. The officer, an older bloke with a mustache, took notes, nodded. — We’ll deal with it. We’ll have a word. Whatever he said to David, Karen never found out. But after that, her ex never appeared again. No calls, no messages, no accidental run-ins. …She and Andrew held their wedding in early June—a small country restaurant, twenty guests, just close friends. No fuss, no groom’s relatives demanding old traditions. Karen stood across from Andrew in a simple white dress, holding his warm hands. Outside, birch trees rustled, the air scented with flowers and freshly cut grass. — Do you take… — began the celebrant. — I do, — Karen cut in, making the guests laugh. Andrew slid the ring on her finger—thin gold, engraved inside: “Always with you.” Karen looked up at the man who would be her husband. Not a mummy’s boy, not an obsessed stalker. Just a man who knew how to listen, respect, and love. Ahead lay a life where her voice mattered…

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