Three years ago, a strange story happened that still makes me smile.

And the editorial. Site This story did not leave indifferent!



At the time, I was working in an office in the middle of a small provincial town. The boss warned us in advance that we would work that day until we did everything. There was no way out, because the deadline. In the morning, no one, of course, took care of all sorts of hearty things, so he collected money and went to the nearest analogue of McDuck. Standing in line, counting bills and trifles that my colleagues scraped. A seventy-year-old grandmother fits:

- God bless you! Help me what you can, son.

I understand that not helping is the height of pigskin. Maybe she really has nothing to eat. And I said, "Grandma, come on, I'll buy you milk, I'll buy you bread."

The professional beggar was instantly lost in the crowd. So she didn't need much help. I'm going back to work with bags. At the end of the block, the same grandmother meets me and pops out the same memorized phrase:

- God bless you! Help me what you can, son.

He understands that he has already asked, and that I can not milk money. She left with the phrase:

- To die...

In the end, she put in a completely non-literary word.

The day passed instantly, as they worked without lifting their heads. I'm coming home late at night. I walked home because of the short distance. Stomping on foot for twenty minutes.

Next to the store, another grandmother blocks the road. She looked like a normal grandmother. She asked me to give you some bread. I think it's a hat-trick today.

I repeat to her my crown phrase, after which the beggars disappear somewhere: “Grandma, come, I will buy you milk, bread.” My grandmother has tears in her eyes: “Let’s go.”

She didn't say anything else.

We went to the store. Dialed in full: bread, bagels, cookies, cheese, sausages, milk. Packed a whole bag of food. I went to see her home with a package. She lived, as it turned out, only a couple of blocks in an old samana house.

She ran to put the kettle on, but I had to apologize and go home because it was night. This was the only time in my life when the beggar did not refuse food.

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