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Dust and Light-Houpful Neglight

skyd8_sky
7
chs / week
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Synopsis
Prologue *Łódź, Poland — Five Years Ago* The woman in the gray coat had been searching for this child for nineteen years. She stood at the edge of the factory parking lot, her breath misting in the November cold. Inside her shopping basket: fresh bread, warm milk, a handkerchief embroidered with blue flowers. The factory whistle blew. Workers spilled out, shoulders hunched. And then—there. A girl, thin and small, her jacket too light for a Polish winter. She slipped behind the warehouse, pulled half a loaf of hard bread from her pocket. The old woman followed. “Child.” The girl looked up, startled, hiding the bread behind her back. The old woman held out the bread. “Fresh. Still warm.” “I don’t have money—” “I don’t want your money. Eat, child.” The girl bit into the bread. Tears fell. The old woman wanted to hold her. To tell her everything. Instead, she said: “Don’t suffer too long. In this world, someone is waiting for you.” She turned and walked away before the girl could ask more. At the curb, she got into a black Volvo. She sat in silence for a long moment. Then: “She’s alive.” Nineteen years of waiting. Helena Novak finally let herself cry. --- *Four years later, the girl would learn the truth. But that morning, all she had was a piece of warm bread, a stranger’s kindness, and the belief that somewhere—someone was waiting.* *That was enough to survive another day.*
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Chapter 1 - Hot Bread

Anna crouched behind the storage rack, her knees pressing into the cold concrete floor. Through the narrow gap between stacked boxes, she watched Magda.

Her fingers found the silver necklace under her collar—the tiny oval pendant, cold against her skin. The only thing she couldn't afford to lose.

The supervisor stood in the corner of the warehouse, clipboard in hand. She was supposed to be checking inventory. But her eyes kept darting to the carton on the third shelf.

Anna held her breath.

Magda looked around. No one else was in the warehouse. She reached into the carton, pulled out two packs of cigarettes, and slid them into her bag. Smooth. Practiced. Not her first time.

Anna watched. Memorized every detail. The way Magda's fingers moved. The way her eyes scanned for witnesses. The slight tremor in her hands—not fear. Excitement.

When Magda left the warehouse and turned into the empty fire exit, Anna followed.

Her footsteps made no sound on the concrete. She'd learned to walk like a shadow. Three years of hiding taught you that.

"Magda."

Magda spun around. Her face went from surprised to angry when she saw who it was.

"What do you want?" The supervisor's voice was sharp. "Get back to work. Now."

Anna didn't back down. She stood straight, looked Magda in the eyes. Her voice was soft, but every word landed like a hammer.

"Those two packs in your bag. Third shelf. I saw you."

Magda's face went pale. Her mouth opened, but nothing came out.

Anna stepped closer. "Next time you try to cut my pay, the boss will know."

She turned and walked away. Didn't look back.

Behind her, Magda stood frozen. Speechless.

The workshop was loud. Machines growled. The conveyor belt never stopped.

Anna had just taken her place when the boss slammed his palm on the metal table.

"Nobody leaves until this batch is done!"

The whole room went silent. Then the machines started again. No one dared to complain.

Anna's fingers flew over the cardboard. Fold. Press. Stack. Fold. Press. Stack.

Glue caked under her fingernails. Tiny cuts from cardboard edges covered her hands. Her fingertips were rough and cracked, like old tree bark.

She looked at her hands for a moment.

They weren't always like this. She remembered her mother's hands—soft, warm, always smelling of bread dough. Anna used to hold those hands when she was scared.

Now her own hands looked nothing like that.

Her eyes stung.

She wanted to cry.

But she didn't.

Tears were useless here. Tears didn't pay for food. Tears didn't keep you warm at night. Tears just made your eyes red and your throat tight.

She blinked once. Twice. Then folded another box.

Fold. Press. Stack.

Her hands hurt. But she couldn't stop.

At noon, the other workers headed to the cafeteria. The smell of cheap soup followed them down the hall.

Anna slipped into the fire exit alone.

The concrete steps were cold. The air smelled of dust and rust. She sat down and pulled half a rock-hard piece of bread from her pocket.

Last night's dinner. She'd saved half, like always.

She took a bite. Dry crumbs scraped her throat. The bread had no taste anymore—just the dull flavor of survival.

Footsteps.

She froze.

Light. Steady. Coming closer.

Not the heavy boots of the factory workers. Not the quick steps of someone in a hurry.

Someone else.

Anna looked up.

An old woman stood at the entrance to the fire exit, carrying a shopping basket.

Gray coat. Worn scarf. Deep wrinkles around her eyes.

But her boots—plain-looking at first glance, but Anna could tell. Handmade leather. Spotless. The kind of boots that cost more than Anna made in a month.

An old woman in expensive boots, carrying a shopping basket, standing in a factory fire exit.

Anna's hand tightened on the bread.

The old woman didn't ask questions. She didn't stare with pity. She just walked closer, reached into her basket, and took out a small package wrapped in wax paper.

She held it out.

"Eat."

Anna didn't move.

The old woman pressed the package into her hands. Her fingers were thin and bony, but warm. Warmer than they should have been on a day like this.

Then she looked at Anna.

Not the way a stranger looks at a homeless girl. Not pity. Not disgust.

The look of someone who had been waiting for a very long time.

Then she turned and walked away.

Her footsteps faded. The fire exit was empty again.

Anna unwrapped the paper.

A fresh bread roll. Still warm. The crust was golden. Steam rose from the soft center.

She took a bite.

The warmth spread through her chest. Her eyes burned. The tears came before she could stop them.

She wiped her face with the back of her hand. Ate the rest. Saved nothing.

Then she folded the paper carefully, stood up, and walked back to the workshop.

The conveyor belt was still running.

She took her place. Folded another box.

Her hands still hurt. But she could take it.

She touched the silver necklace under her collar.

Her mother had pressed it into her palm three years ago, in a small room in Lviv. Her mother's voice was barely a whisper.

"Take it. Go to Poland. Find the old woman in the gray coat."

Anna thought she was delirious. Dying people said strange things.

But now—

The pendant was small and oval, carved with strange symbols. Like a flower. Or a crest. She'd tried to open it a hundred times. It never budged.

Tonight, it felt different.

Colder. Much colder. Cold as if it had been sitting in ice water.

She didn't know why.

She didn't know that the old woman who gave her bread lived in a manor three hundred meters away.

She didn't know that she had been watched since the day she crossed the border.

And she didn't know—not yet—that her mother had been waiting for this moment for twenty years.