Part I: The Anomalous Harvest
The summer of 1952 had been so relentlessly scorching in the region of Tre Colcose—specifically within the collective farm known as the Precepts of Ilich—that birds reportedly fell from the sky like stones. The village’s single, unpaved road melted under the sun into a sticky black patch of tar. The air itself grew thick and difficult to breathe, as if the heatwave were a living, oppressive weight settling permanently over the community.
However, it was not the suffocating heat that truly unsettled the elders; it was the condition of the distant field stretching just beyond the ravine. There, the wheat had grown in a manner that defied all agricultural precedent. Even the oldest residents, who vividly recalled the pre-war era, swore that the local soil had never yielded such a dense and towering crop. The stalks stood unusually heavy, turning a shade so deep it appeared almost black at the base, resembling the coat of a dark wolf. Remarkably, the vast field remained completely motionless, showing no movement even when strong winds crossed the open plain.
The elderly women of the village routinely crossed themselves as they looked out over the ravine, murmuring that this particular harvest was not nourished by ordinary rain, but by something far thicker and saltier. The collective farm president, however, dismissed their concerns with a laugh, preoccupied with preparing his finest jacket for the official labor decorations he anticipated receiving for such high production metrics.
The harvest officially commenced at dawn. Yvan, the combine harvester driver and a decorated war veteran who prided himself on believing in neither spirits nor curses, guided his heavy machinery into the first row of dense wheat.
The mechanical blades swallowed the thick stems with a succession of dry, rhythmic cracks, throwing up massive columns of dust around the cabin. Suddenly, the entire machine shook violently, grinding to a halt with a sharp, screeching metallic noise. Yvan swore under his breath, switched off the engine, and climbed down from the operator’s platform. He fully expected to find a large stone or a thick, stray branch wedged tightly within the mechanism.
When Yvan pulled back the protective housing to clear the obstruction, he suddenly recoiled in horror, stumbling backward into the sharp stubble of the field.
Something completely anomalous shone brightly among the tangled straw and sheared stalks. It was not a piece of wood or a misplaced boulder; it was a bleached human hand, severely torn by the iron teeth of the machinery but largely intact down to the fingertips. On one of the fingers, a heavy gold ring set with a dark red ruby gleamed in the morning sun. Directly adjacent to the remains, wedged tightly between the crushed stems, was a fragment of thick blue denim fabric featuring a brass rivet engraved with a foreign brand name: Levi’s.
Yvan shouted so loudly that flocks of crows took flight from the nearby treeline. Despite the grim discovery, the institutional pressures of the collective farm ensured that the harvest continued later that afternoon. However, a strange, lingering odor remained trapped in the summer air—not the clean, sweet scent of freshly threshed grain, but the heavy, pungent smell of deeply disturbed earth. To understand how foreign gold and premium city clothing had come to be buried in the soil of this isolated agricultural community, it was necessary to examine the events of the preceding month.
Part II: The Arrival from the City
Mariana was a twenty-two-year-old woman who lived and worked permanently at the collective farm. Tall, robust, and possessing the physical build of an elite athlete, she had been an orphan since early childhood, growing up in the immediate vicinity of the livestock stables. Consequently, she spent far more time interacting with the animals than with the local villagers. She had established herself as the most efficient milkmaid in the entire district, uniquely capable of lifting a fifty-liter aluminum milk can entirely by herself.
Despite her extraordinary physical strength, Mariana possessed a naive, gentle, and remarkably trusting disposition. To her simple worldview, human behavior seemed unnecessarily complicated, whereas animals were entirely honest and predictable. She occupied a small, austere room directly adjoining the main dairy barn, and her clothing constantly carried the familiar scent of warm milk and fresh hay. She knew absolutely nothing of urban perfumes, modern fashions, or city life.
Her quiet routine was abruptly shattered one afternoon by the arrival of a sleek, black Volga sedan that pulled into the farmyard in a thick cloud of dust. Three young men stepped out of the vehicle. They were dressed in expensive, imported denim jeans, wore dark sunglasses, and carried a portable tape recorder blasting foreign music at a high volume.
They surveyed the rural workers with open amusement, treating the collective farm as an entertaining weekend spectacle. They threw state banknotes around carelessly and drove their vehicle recklessly through the yard, running over domestic geese for their own amusement. For these urban visitors, the isolated village was not a place of labor, but a consequence-free playground.
On their second day in the district, the trio observed Mariana as she washed her work clothes by the riverbank, her damp shirt clinging to her powerful frame. They whistled loudly and approached her. One of the men openly made a wager with his companions that he could compromise her before the sun went down.
Smiling smoothly, they initiated a conversation. Mariana, entirely blind to the underlying danger and assuming standard hospitality was required, responded with genuine kindness, inviting them to the dairy farm for a drink of fresh milk. Behind her back, the three men exchanged calculated glances. To them, she was not a person deserving of respect, but mere prey.

Part III: The Incident in the Barn
Evening fell heavily over the collective farm like a warm, suffocating blanket. Inside the dairy barn, the low-wattage yellow lightbulbs vibrated constantly under thick clouds of flies. The dairy cows chewed their cud slowly, entirely unaware that a hostile element had penetrated their secure environment. Mariana was completing her evening shift, pouring fresh, frothy milk into the large aluminum transport cans.
The three city men stepped quietly into the barn behind her, immediately drawing the large wooden door shut. The heavy iron bolt slid into place with a sharp, definitive click. The sound was brief, but within the cavernous silence of the barn, it resonated with the finality of a gunshot.
Mariana turned around quickly. The amused, urban smiles had completely vanished from their faces, replaced by cold, impatient expressions. They no longer looked at her as a human being, but as an object intended for their amusement. Recognizing the shift in tension, Mariana took a cautious step back.
Attempting to diffuse the situation, she calmly asked if they would care for another ration of milk. None of them responded. The largest of the three men advanced slowly, intentionally violating her personal space. He smelled heavily of alcohol and stale tobacco. A second man circled around to her flank, scanning the layout of the barn and checking the automated machinery to ensure they were completely alone. The third man extracted a small folding pocketknife, casually clicking the blade open and shut—not with the immediate intent to strike, but as an explicit display of leverage.
Mariana finally understood that their presence had nothing to do with hospitality. She stepped back again, but her retreat was blocked by the wooden enclosure housing a young calf she had personally nursed since its birth. One of the men placed a heavy hand on the frightened animal, stating in a soft, menacing tone that the creature had no reason to make noise. He added pointedly that no one in the village would hear her if she screamed, and that things would go infinitely smoother for everyone involved if she simply remained still and complied.
The sheer cruelty of the human ultimatum shocked Mariana far more than the physical threat. Having spent her entire life insulated from malice, her experience was limited entirely to animal ailments and predictable farm accidents. She froze in place as the three men closed in.
The minutes that followed passed in a heavy, nightmarish fog. The men spoke in sharp commands, occasionally laughing among themselves as they physically restricted her movements, forcing her to remain exactly where they dictated. Their primary objective was not merely physical dominance, but a calculated exhibition of systemic humiliation—a game designed to make their absolute social superiority visible.
Throughout the entire ordeal, the barn seemed to hold its breath. The iron tether chains rattled softly against the stalls as the cows stamped their hooves uneasily on the concrete floor, clearly sensing the intense distress of their caretaker. Mariana gritted her teeth tightly, enduring the violations without uttering a single scream.
Time completely lost its shape. When the three men finally exited the dairy barn, they left behind a scene of complete disorder: the sharp smell of spilled liquor, overturned equipment, and trampled straw. They contemptuously threw a handful of high-denomination banknotes onto the dirt floor,