“I’m fed up! Completely fed up!” Andrey slammed his briefcase onto the couch. “These partners are like wild animals! And you—what do you even do all day?!”
Olga froze by the stove, ladle in hand. The evening soup she was preparing for her husband simmered quietly on low heat. A painfully familiar scenario: he comes home angry, blows up, and she just stands there silently. As always.
“I’m asking you!” Andrey nervously loosened his tie. “What do you do? Sit at home, waste my money! And what’s the point?”
“My money.” Those words no longer hurt her ears—they had dulled over time. After twenty-five years of marriage, she’d grown used to that phrasing. His money, his apartment, his success. But what about hers?
“I’m making dinner,” Olga answered quietly, stirring the soup.
“Dinner?!” Andrey snorted sarcastically. “A great achievement! And who’s going to pay for the partner’s new car? His car got wrecked today. Do you know how much that’ll cost?!”
Olga slowly set the ladle down on its stand. Something inside her cracked. Quietly, almost imperceptibly. Like a twig snapping under spring snow.
“I don’t know how much it’ll cost,” her voice sounded unusually calm. “I only know that for twenty-five years I’ve cooked, washed, and raised the kids.”
“So what?!” Andrey cut her off. “Those are your duties! I work like a madman, providing for all of you!”
He nervously paced the kitchen, bumping into chairs. One toppled with a dull thud.
“Listen,” Andrey stopped and put his hands on his hips. “You can leave. Just give me back the money. Everything I’ve spent on you all these years!”
Silence. Only the soup continued to bubble quietly on the stove.
Olga slowly turned to her husband. There were no tears or fear in her eyes—only a strange, new expression. Calm.
“All right,” she smiled faintly. “I agree. Let’s count.”
Andrey was taken aback. He expected tears, hysteria, pleas for forgiveness—anything but this calm acceptance.
“What are we counting?”
“Everything,” Olga pulled a notebook and pen from the drawer. “You want me to return the money? Fine. Let’s count. But you’ll pay me too. For everything.”
She sat at the table and began writing.
“So. Twenty-five years of housework. Eight hours a day, no days off or vacations. The average salary for a housekeeper is seventy thousand rubles a month. Multiply by twenty-five years.”
“Are you serious?” Andrey smirked nervously.
“Absolutely,” Olga kept writing. “Now a nanny. Two children. Around the clock, because you remember their illnesses? When I didn’t sleep at night? A good nanny costs about one hundred thousand a month. For two kids—that’s two hundred. Multiply by fifteen years until they grew up.”
Andrey sank into a chair. His expression slowly changed.
“I was also your personal psychologist,” Olga wrote numbers neatly. “Remember the 2008 crisis? When you almost went bankrupt? Who supported you? Who sold her jewelry so you could pay the office rent?”
The soup on the stove began to boil. Olga stood, lowered the heat, and continued:
“A personal psychologist costs about ten thousand per session. We had a lot of those sessions, didn’t we? Especially in the early years of your business. Almost every evening.”
“Stop it,” Andrey rasped.
“Why?” Olga looked up at him. “You wanted to count—so let’s count. And there was also the massage. Remember how your back hurt from stress? I signed up for massage courses just for you. A professional massage costs about three thousand per session.”
She kept writing, and the numbers grew. They lined up in columns, multiplied, turned into millions.
“And, of course, moral damage,” Olga put down the pen. “You know what for? For every time you said I was wasting your money. For every time you hinted that I lived off you. For every moment I felt like nobody.”
Andrey sat, head bowed. His fingers nervously fiddled with the tablecloth edge.
“Olya,” he began.
“No,” she shook her head. “Listen. I really am leaving. And yes, I will return the money. Everything you spent on my clothes, cosmetics, hairdresser. I calculated it. About three million over twenty-five years. And you’ll pay me,” she looked at the notebook, “thirty-seven million four hundred thousand. Not counting the moral damage.”
She stood up, took off her apron, and carefully hung it on the hook.
“The soup is ready. Eat if you want. I’m going to pack.”
Two hours later, she left to stay with a friend. Andrey sat alone in the empty kitchen, staring at the cold soup and the scribbled sheet of numbers. Deep inside, a vague memory stirred: a young girl with braids dreaming of becoming a designer. She gave up her studies to support his endeavors. “It’s okay,” she said then. “I’ll catch up. The main thing is for you to succeed.”
He succeeded. Everything worked out for him. But what about her?
For the first week, he was angry. The second, he pretended everything was fine. By the third, he noticed how uncomfortable the empty apartment felt. How bad it was to sleep without a familiar breath nearby. How many little things Olga had done that he never thought about.
The kids called rarely. More and more, they called their mother.
“Dad, have you lost your mind?” the daughter asked in a rare phone call. “‘Return the money’? Seriously? Do you even realize Mom put her whole life into you?”
“I—I got carried away,” he stammered.
“Carried away?” Her voice was steel, just like her mother’s that evening. “Dad, I always loved you. And I still do. But you’re a real jerk.”
And she hung up.
And Olga? Olga unexpectedly blossomed. Her friend helped her get a job at a design firm—starting small, but her natural taste and intuition quickly made their mark. Within a month, she was leading her own projects.
In the evenings, she studied. Took courses, read, talked with colleagues. It was hard, but it was a different kind of hardship—not the crushing fatigue of a housewife, but the invigorating tiredness of someone growing.
She rented a small apartment. Bought silly cups with kittens. Learned to make coffee in a cezve—something Andrey had always done before. On weekends, she went to the park to draw—her childhood dream of design was finally coming true.
Andrey tried calling. She didn’t answer. She only messaged once: “I’m saving money. Soon I’ll pay back your three million.”
Then he saw her at a café. By chance. She sat by the window with some people—colleagues, it seemed—and animatedly talked, gesturing. An album of sketches lay before her. A strange smile played on her lips—free, light. Did she always smile like that? Why hadn’t he noticed?
He froze on the street, looking through the glass. The woman at the table looked up—and their eyes met.
Olga flinched slightly. But her smile didn’t disappear—it just changed. Calm. Slightly sad.
She nodded to him and turned back to her companions.
That evening, a call came.
“I saw you today,” she said instead of hello.
“Yes,” he swallowed. “You look better.”
“You know what I realized these months?” There was no reproach in her voice—only thoughtfulness. “I realized it’s never too late to start living. Just living—for yourself. Not for anyone else, but for yourself.”
“Olya,” his voice trembled. “Come back.”
“For what?”
A simple question. Murderously simple.
“I miss you. Without you, it’s not the same. Empty.”
“And what’s changed?” She paused. “Do you still think I should pay you back?”
“No!” He almost shouted. “No, of course not! I was an idiot. A complete idiot.”
“All right,” she paused again. “Then here’s the deal. I can come back. But on different terms.”
“What terms?”
“First: I keep working. No discussion. Second: we are equal partners. In everything—money, decisions, life. Third: you learn to say ‘thank you’ and ‘sorry.’ Not just to me, but to the kids too.”
“Yes,” he exhaled. “Yes, of course.”
“And one more thing,” her voice softened. “We need to learn to talk. Really talk, you understand? Not shout or accuse—but listen to each other.”
He was silent, listening to her breathing on the phone. Then quietly asked:
“Can you forgive me?”
“I already have,” she smiled. “You know, this whole thing was actually useful. Like I woke up. And thank you for that.”
“For what?!”
“For making me so angry that I finally started living.”
She came back a week later. To start fresh.
Now she leaves for work in the mornings. And he makes coffee for two and learns to cook breakfast. She has her own money, projects, plans—and he learns to be happy about it.
And that scribbled sheet of numbers still stays in Andrey’s desk drawer. Sometimes, especially on tough days, he takes it out and rereads it. To remember how easy it is to lose the most important things. How simple it is to destroy what was built for years. And how hard—but possible—it is to fix everything.
On their apartment wall hangs a painting—Olga’s first independent work. An abstract composition: a gray whirl transitions into calm blue tones, then explodes into bright colors.
“This is our story,” she says. “Look: here everything falls apart, and then real life begins.”
Andrey hugs her shoulders and stays silent. He’s learned to be silent—not with a heavy, suffocating silence, but with that special, warm one that’s worth more than words.
In the evenings, their new kitchen fills with the smells of food and quiet conversations. They cook together—it turns out it can be fun. Olga commands, Andrey carefully chops vegetables and sometimes deliberately messes up—just to hear her laugh.
The kids started coming more often. Once, watching their kitchen bustle, the daughter quietly said:
“You know, Mom, I always thought marriage was about putting up with things and making compromises. But now, looking at you two, I realize: no, it’s not supposed to be like that. Not at all.”
Olga smiled, watching her husband concentrate on chopping herbs:
“Sometimes you just have to break everything down to build it back up. Right?”
And now when people ask Andrey the secret to their strong marriage, he just smiles:
“Good accounting. You have to know how to count properly—what’s really valuable and what’s just small stuff.”