The Next Step by Zary Fekete

Growing up in Communist Hungary in the 1980s, a child comes to appreciate Father's willingness to get things done, no matter how impossible it seems. Image generated with OpenAI The summer sun slanted across the old Dacia's windshield as we pulled up to the ice cream parlor. Its metal shutters were drawn tight. A painted sign dangled from a rusty chain in the window: ZÁRVA. Closed. Of course it was closed. It was Sunday in Hungary in the 1980s. Nearly everything was closed. We had just come from church, a Methodist gathering held in a crumbling gray building that housed workers from a local bottling plant. Several downstairs apartments had been converted into a makeshift sanctuary with creaky wooden floors and radiators that rattled mid-hymn. We were driving home the rowhouse my parents rented on the Buda side of the city. My sisters and I sat in the back seat, the itchy fabric sticking to our legs. We weren't thinking about theology or politics. We were think...