For months, the world had felt like it was fading to gray. Pyotr had stopped answering the phone; the voices on the other end felt like they belonged to a life he no longer lived. He looked at the meager tree in the corner—a spindly thing he’d bought from a street vendor out of a lingering sense of duty. It had only one ornament: a glass bird with a chipped wing that had belonged to his mother.
The city was a blur of neon and slush, but inside the small apartment on the fourth floor, the air smelled of dried orange peels and old books. Pyotr sat by the window, his breath fogging the glass. Outside, the world was celebrating Christmas Eve, a whirlwind of laughter and heavy coats, but inside, the silence was heavy. rozdestvo_tak_xocetsya_zit
Pyotr took the star, the wet glue sticking to his fingers. "What kind of promise?" For months, the world had felt like it was fading to gray
A sharp rap at the door startled him. He hadn't expected anyone. It had only one ornament: a glass bird
"A promise to see something new every day," she said firmly, then turned and ran back down the hall.