The secretary suddenly felt unwell at work, so she went outside: she sat down on a bench, closed her eyes, and when she came to, she saw an old man trying to remove a gold bracelet from her wrist 😱
“Hey, what are you doing? That’s a gift from my husband!” The old man looked at her in horror and replied quietly, “You lost consciousness because of this bracelet. Look for yourself.” The secretary looked closer and froze in terror. 😨🫣
Anna felt unwell right in the middle of the meeting.
She was sitting next to the director, as always, taking notes of every word and trying not to show her fatigue. The conference room was stuffy, the air seemed thick and heavy. Her temples began to pound, her heart started beating faster than usual. Anna took a deep breath, but it didn’t help. An unpleasant pressure appeared in her chest, as if a heavy weight were slowly pressing down on her.
At some point, the room began to spin. Anna grabbed the edge of the table so she wouldn’t fall and quietly apologized. She stood up, trying to walk straight, but her legs were giving way. The director asked something, but Anna could barely hear the words anymore.
Outside, it was cool. The fresh air hit her face but brought no relief. The weakness only grew stronger. Anna took a few steps and collapsed helplessly onto a bench near a small park. She closed her eyes, hoping it would pass.
Her heart was racing.
When Anna slightly opened her eyes, she saw an old man bent over her. He was over seventy. A simple jacket, an old hat, a calm but attentive gaze. He gently held her wrist and seemed to be examining her hand.
“What are you doing?” Anna asked hoarsely, trying to pull her hand away. “Don’t touch it. This bracelet is a gift from my husband.”
The old man didn’t argue. He simply said quietly:
“You’re feeling unwell because of it. Look more closely.”
Anna lowered her gaze to the bracelet — heavy, gold, one she never took off. And at that very moment, her hair stood on end. 😢😱 Continuation in the first comment 👇👇
The gold had darkened exactly where it touched the skin. Not completely, but in patches, as if someone had brushed a dark shadow across it.
“Who are you?” Anna whispered, feeling everything inside her tighten.
“I’m a former jeweler,” the old man replied calmly. “I worked with gold for forty years. When I saw that you were unwell, I happened to look at your hand. An ordinary person wouldn’t notice this.”
“What does this mean?” Anna’s voice was trembling.
“These are traces of thallium,” he said softly. “A very insidious poison. It’s invisible to the naked eye. It’s applied in an extremely thin layer. It’s absorbed through the skin and slowly poisons a person. But gold reacts. It darkens.”
“You mean that…”
The old man nodded.
“The one who gave you this bracelet knew exactly what he was doing. He wanted you to become ill, to weaken, and one day simply not get up.”
Anna looked at the jewelry, then at her hands. The image of her husband surfaced in her mind — his cold looks, his strange attentiveness lately, and his insistent words: “Wear it. Don’t take it off. It’s my gift.”
At that moment, she understood everything.
The old man carefully removed the bracelet and wrapped it in a handkerchief.
“You need to go to the doctors and the police immediately,” he said. “And never wear this again.”
Anna nodded silently. Sitting on the bench, clenching her trembling fingers, she realized she had just survived by a miracle.
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