Mom was gone for a long time, maybe for three days. While she was away, grandpa got sick and had to be taken to the hospital, and grandma needed to visit him. She asked if I wanted to stay with Raya, just for a tiny bit, one night only. I think grandma was scared I would start crying like when mom left, but I understood because she explained how grandpa had pulmonary inflammation and how she, grandma, had to visit him in the hospital to bring him food and to talk to the doctor. I even forgot to be upset, because everything at Raya’s was so fun and different: her izba, the garden, her old barn. Our house was tidy, with neat rows of flowers lining the front yard, well-kept vegetable patches and delicate apple trees. Grandma was always busy in the garden, while grandpa worked in the barn. He even had a furnace there, and sometimes he forged fences for the cemetery and such. Raya’s place was different, it was littered with trash, her apple trees were giant and unkempt, the vegetable garden had no beds, things just grew at random places, carrots with strawberries, potatoes with chives, and even the hens somehow looked dirty. Our garden had a big rhubarb bush, its reddish-green leaves so huge, a cat could sleep on one without breaking it, and when a sprig with tiny flowers shot up to the sky it almost looked like it could touch the clouds. Raya’s garden had a pond overgrown with green duckweed, and frogs that never stopped croaking.
That’s how I found myself inside Raya’s izba. Everything there was different too. Grandma never let our cat go past the seni*, and our dog Trezor wasn’t allowed to even enter the house. Raya let all her pets inside. When we came in, a hen was pecking at the kitchen floor, and Muchtar was laying beside a chair, nibbling at its wooden leg. Raya said he was an old dog and his teeth hurt. I lightly pet Muchtar on the head and he responded with a lazy tail wag. He was very sweet. Then Raya was gone to fetch water from the well, and I tried to ride Muchtar. I mounted him all right while he was laying down, but each time he got up, I inevitably tumbled down. I even hit my head on the stove once, and got very scared, but the stove turned out to be lukewarm. Then finally I got Muchtar to sit, mounted him from behind, held onto his fur, but when he got up I felt that I was sliding down again, so I grabbed his ears. In that exact moment Raya came back with a bucket, Muchtar wagged his tail, lowered his head, and down I tumbled down once again, almost spilling the water. Raya took Muchtar and locked him in the seni, where he whimpered a little and then got silent, maybe he fell asleep.
After lunch I laid down on Raya’s bed, and she turned on the radio. Her radio was an old big black device the kind I only ever saw in movies about the great patriotic war. Nothing fun was on, and I fell asleep. After my nap we went to the other side of the village together. Turns out, there was a shepherd there, and every evening people came by to take their goats home. That’s why the goats walk through the village in the evening, and I always thought they were just out enjoying the air. We walked with the goats, the road was littered with goat droppings, and Raya told me a story from when I was a little boy. I had just started walking, and Zoya was still a baby goat, I used to pick up her droppings, I must have thought they were candies or raisins, and eat them. Filled my mouth with the stuff, and wouldn’t let grandpa pick it out. I didn’t believe her of course, how could I eat poop? It’s not at all like raisins, everyone can see that. I understand one little pellet, but a mouthful? That doesn’t sound like me at all. Raya never explained and just laughed, and I laughed with her because it must have looked funny, a little boy with a mouth full of poop.
We had dinner, Raya fried up white mushrooms with onions and potatoes. She served delicious jam with bad tea. And then I went to bed. I don’t know where Raya slept because her bed was the only one in the house. I asked her to tell me a bedtime story, and she told me about her life, about her husband who had died, about the war… I was bored and scared. Lying in someone else’s bed was funny, the bedroom was different, a different streetlight shone a different light through a different window… Raya’s izba had no wallpaper under the wall carpets, like our house, it only had a wardrobe, a cabinet, a table and a single shelf. Some walls were just exposed logs. I could hear mice behind the carpet, or maybe they were rats. Mice are nicer. I suddenly remembered how grandpa demolished our old barn to build another one in its place, and under the floor boards we found a nest with tiny pink rat pups. I put one pup in my palm and went home to show it to grandma. I have never known her to be this fast of a runner or this loud of a shrieker. When I came back to the barn, I saw that grandpa was slicing the rat pups with a shovel. I watched silently, tears streaming down my face and neck. I didn’t shriek like grandma, but there was a knot in my throat, I couldn’t bear the thought of those small blind babies, completely bald, pink and warm, squealing for their mom, because their mom had left them just like my mom had left me, because their house was demolished and then they were killed with a shovel, and this was all so, so wrong. I stopped talking to grandpa for a long time, even though he made a bow and arrows for me and taught me how to make a screw tied to a feather with a thread fly up… I was laying on Raya’s bed and I was happy that her rat or mouse pups were safe there, behind the carpet, like I was safe under the duvet, and that their mom must be with them.
And then mom came back. I immediately wasn’t mad anymore and was instead very happy. We went fishing together, and I tried to teach her, but she was too squeamish