Iliya looked at his calloused hands. "In the world, there is noise," he replied. "In this cell, there is only the truth of the stone."
In the village of the White Stones, where the Danube whispers secrets to the reeds, there lived a master mason named Iliya. He was a man of few words and heavy hands, known throughout the region of Kiliya for building walls that could withstand even the fiercest winter gales.
One autumn, as the mists rolled off the water, Iliya began his most personal work: a small, sturdy cell, or kiliya , on the edge of the village. He did not build it for a monk or a traveler; he built it for the quiet that lived inside his own chest. "Gradil Iliya Kiliya," the neighbors would say— Iliya is building a cell —as they watched him haul stones from the riverbank.
Irina smiled sadly. "The stone is honest, but it cannot breathe." She left him then, disappearing into the Kiliya mist, leaving only a sprig of dried basil on the windowsill.
By dawn, Iliya did not lock the door. Instead, he took his hammer and carved a wide window facing the Danube. He left the cell open for any weary soul passing through Kiliya who needed a moment of peace. He understood then that he hadn't been building a place to hide, but a place to learn how to look out.