In a small village tucked between the rugged peaks of the Carpathians, there lived two boys, Luca and Matei. Though they were not born of the same mother, the villagers called them Fratti —brothers—because they were never seen apart.
Matei didn't move. He knew that by the time he returned with the village elders, the mountain would have claimed his friend. Instead, he sat down beside Luca, wrapping his own heavy wool cloak around both of them. He began to sing—a low, steady melody of an old folk song about the strength of the earth. BRATTР/FRATTI - PRIETENIA
"Go back, Matei," Luca whispered, his breath visible in the freezing air. "Get help before the snow covers the path." In a small village tucked between the rugged
As they climbed the frozen ridges, the wind began to howl. A sudden ledge gave way under Luca’s feet. He didn't fall into the abyss, but his leg was pinned under a heavy stone, and the cold was beginning to seep into his bones. He knew that by the time he returned
Years later, when people asked Luca how he survived that night, he didn't talk about the cold or the pain. He simply pointed to Matei and said, "Blood makes you related, but prietenia —friendship—is the soul choosing its own brother."
One harsh winter, a heavy mist settled over the valley, and a prize sheep from Luca’s family flock went missing. Without hesitation, Matei grabbed his coat. "We find it together," he said.
Matei spent the night rubbing Luca’s hands to keep the blood flowing and singing to keep him conscious. When the search party’s torches finally flickered through the mist at dawn, they found the two boys huddled together, frozen but alive.