Year two: his sister, Nino, started seeing the boy from the hills. A gentle one. Until he wasn’t. Until Lasha came home to find her staring at a wall, her hands folded like broken wings.

“The fruit,” his father said, “is not the curse. The curse is thinking you must eat it alone.”

In the print shop’s back room, Lasha kept a single photograph: Mihail, his brother, in military uniform. Killed in Abkhazia '93. Not by a bullet. By a landmine made in a factory that no longer exists. The fruit passed down: father’s blood, sister’s silence, brother’s scattered bones.