Page 267
Posted: Fri Jun 13, 2025 6:41 pm
– No. When something happens, then we’ll talk.
– Why?
– Because when something happens to people, they become kinder, somehow, and listen to me more. You only talk to me after something happens. When everything is fine, this superficial cheerfulness of yours, you’ll just joke and mock me.
– No, no, come on,” – they pour me a cocktail. Naturally, I think they mixed it, half a glass would be enough. I drank it, started to feel a little tipsy, and they say, – Come on.
– You’re a killer. Every time you come to visit, I feel this energy from you, like from a killer. I just know what energy a killer gives off when they show those people on the news, it’s the same energy as yours. And every time you come in, I feel this atmosphere.
And he sits there, crying, in shock, the boy. And he says:
– How do you know this?
– I feel it like I just described.
– No one knows this. Only relatives know.
And he starts justifying himself to me and says:
– I didn’t do it on purpose. They attacked me, and I defended myself.
Some thugs attacked him, some guys with knives, and he practiced martial arts and defended himself, and one of them, as I understand it, died. Well, for him, this was a shock. That was the story. And he’s in shock, wondering how I know this. Then the other boy says:
– Tell me about me, tell me about me.
– Well, when we were at the store buying groceries, you deliberately pretended you were talking on the phone, stepped aside to avoid giving money at the checkout, not paying half. And you thought about it a lot, worried the whole time we were shopping. And then, when we had paid for everything, you calmed down. And you were thinking about it.
– Why?
– Because when something happens to people, they become kinder, somehow, and listen to me more. You only talk to me after something happens. When everything is fine, this superficial cheerfulness of yours, you’ll just joke and mock me.
– No, no, come on,” – they pour me a cocktail. Naturally, I think they mixed it, half a glass would be enough. I drank it, started to feel a little tipsy, and they say, – Come on.
– You’re a killer. Every time you come to visit, I feel this energy from you, like from a killer. I just know what energy a killer gives off when they show those people on the news, it’s the same energy as yours. And every time you come in, I feel this atmosphere.
And he sits there, crying, in shock, the boy. And he says:
– How do you know this?
– I feel it like I just described.
– No one knows this. Only relatives know.
And he starts justifying himself to me and says:
– I didn’t do it on purpose. They attacked me, and I defended myself.
Some thugs attacked him, some guys with knives, and he practiced martial arts and defended himself, and one of them, as I understand it, died. Well, for him, this was a shock. That was the story. And he’s in shock, wondering how I know this. Then the other boy says:
– Tell me about me, tell me about me.
– Well, when we were at the store buying groceries, you deliberately pretended you were talking on the phone, stepped aside to avoid giving money at the checkout, not paying half. And you thought about it a lot, worried the whole time we were shopping. And then, when we had paid for everything, you calmed down. And you were thinking about it.