Blessed is he who shows mercy to animals читать онлайн

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Издано в 2025 году.

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Аннотация

Leo, a young man living in a quiet, historic Volga city, enjoys his peaceful life in an old merchant house. On a winter morning, he is unexpectedly visited by a mysterious gray cat, brought by his neighbor, Aunt Varya. As the day unfolds, Leo learns that Aunt Varya is hospitalized, yet the cat’s presence seems connected to her. The story blends the mundane with the mystical, exploring themes of history, memory, and the inexplicable bonds between humans and animals. Through subtle hints and dreamlike moments, the narrative suggests that the cat may be more than it appears, intertwining reality with the supernatural.

Gennadiy Kiryushin - Blessed is he who shows mercy to animals



Leo woke up feeling the bright spots of sunlight on his face, breaking through the half-circle windowpane covered with a thin layer of ice.

It was the first of January. Ahead lay two days free from work.

He could consider himself lucky.

After graduating from the institute, he had been assigned to one of the quiet, ancient Volga cities untouched by the war, where pre-revolutionary merchant houses of two, three, and even four stories, made of white and red brick, still stood. It was in such places, behind the facades of such buildings, that design organizations were often located, avoiding the prying eyes of outsiders. Tourist groups never ventured here.

But there was plenty to see.

The mansions, each unique, stood proudly facing one another, lining both sides of the city’s main street. Arched windows with intricate stucco and false balustrades. Ornate cornices marked the boundary between the end of the facade wall and the beginning of the roof.

Each balcony was invariably supported by two symmetrically placed female figures – caryatids, bare to the waist. They emerged from the walls, their hands folded above their heads, leaning unnaturally forward, looking like a parody of ancient Greek style, a reduced and simplified copy of a non-existent original. Their faces bore the same meaningless expression. Unlike the buildings, each with its own unique history.

The house where Leo had been lucky enough to rent an apartment cheaply was no different from the others. Except that, of all the residents, only he and one woman of indeterminate age, Aunt Varya, lived there – one floor below. She had a mocking gaze from her pale blue eyes, a quick and friendly response in fleeting conversations, and an enviable ease in navigating the staircases. The rest had been temporarily relocated, awaiting the next major renovation.

He liked this house, silent and deserted. His previous apartment in a prefabricated five-story building had poor sound insulation, and here Leo found peace and tranquility.

As the landlady had told him, the first and only owner of the house had been the daughter and heiress of the merchant Nikita Sysoev, who had made his fortune on goods from China. Before the revolution, she had run a cat shelter. Many might not know this, but in those days, there were no stray cats. At least not in the numbers seen today. Back then, even signs were placed on houses with a quote, it seems, from the Bible: “Be compassionate to animals! Blessed is he who shows mercy to beasts.”

When the Bolsheviks came to power, something terrible happened at the shelter on New Year’s Eve. He couldn’t remember the details, but according to legend, since then, Nikitishna had invisibly protected the house, and thanks to this, it had survived to this day in relatively good condition. Of course, only the walls, floor slabs, and roof remained from the original structure, but as they say, as long as the walls stand, the house stands.


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