
The Old Potter and the Golden Cracks
Listen to story
May 16, 2026
Stories are AI-generated with editorial curation.

Listen to story
May 16, 2026
Stories are AI-generated with editorial curation.

Eva and Dundo had a rare day off without the kids. Otto and Maria eagerly stepped in to babysit the little ones while the couple decided to revisit the place where they first met. As they approached the old wooden bridge over the stream, Eva reminisced about that evening, and Dundo had a special gift hidden in his pocket.

Pino and Vito jumped out of the car and ran towards Luca's farm. The tall grass glowed yellow-green under the sun, and somewhere in the distance, the bray of the donkey Berto could be heard. "Why does the donkey shout so loudly?" asked Vito, his eyes wide. Pino chuckled as Luca waved from the barn door. "Come on, I'll show you everything!" shouted Luca. But Jole stood frozen under the old fig tree, staring at the approaching goat. "Dad, what about Jole?" Pino asked.

"Dad, why do we always take this longer path?" Pino asked as he looked at the steep trail winding up the hill. Down in the valley, he could see the road—straight, paved, and easy. Dundo patted him on the shoulder. "Because there's something you need to see at the top." Jole, their faithful dog, trotted alongside them, wagging his tail happily. They walked for nearly an hour. Pino was already feeling tired, but Dundo encouraged him with stories from his childhood. When they finally reached the top of the cliff, two trees stood before them. One was enormous and sturdy, with a canopy so wide it cast a shadow over half the cliff. Its branches bravely faced the wind that blew incessantly at this height. The other tree, barely five meters away, was dry, broken, and almost dead. It creaked sadly in the wind. "Both trees were planted on the same day, from the same seed," Dundo said quietly.

In the narrowest street of the old town stood a bakery that never had more than one customer a day. Every morning, an elderly woman named Maria would knead the dough, braid a perfectly shaped bun, and place it in the window where the cat Loli often slept. Then she would sit and wait. The customer was always the same—an old man with a blue hat who would arrive exactly at 7:15, leave a coin, take the bun, and leave without a word. People thought Maria was crazy. 'Why doesn't she bake more? Why doesn't she sell to others? Her buns are the best in town!' But Maria would just wave her hand and say, 'I don't bake for everyone. I bake for the one who needs it.' One morning, the old man with the blue hat didn't come. 7:15. 7:30. 8:00. The bun sat on the window, cooling. For the first time in thirty years, Maria began to cry in her bakery. Then there was a knock at the door from someone she had never seen before...