Her Neighbor Asked for Sugar Every Morning. The Truth Was Terrifying-felicia

Carmen Miller had always believed apartment buildings taught people how to ignore one another.

You learned the coughs behind the walls, the elevator groans, the music that came through vents at midnight, and the footsteps that belonged to neighbors whose names you never asked.

You learned to mind your business because everyone else was minding theirs.

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At seventy-two, Carmen had made a life out of quiet.

Her husband had been gone for years, her children lived far enough away to call mostly on Sundays, and her grandson visited when school and work allowed him to remember that old people did not stop needing company just because they stopped asking.

Her apartment was small, clean, and warm in the mornings.

The kitchen smelled of coffee before eight, the television spoke low from the counter, and the window over the sink caught a pale strip of daylight that made the dust shine in the air.

Carmen liked that hour.

It belonged to her.

Then the young woman from apartment 302 knocked.

Carmen had noticed her moving in because the hallway was narrow and the building carried noise like a tin can.

There had been a baby carrier, two trash bags of clothes, a cracked laundry basket, and a man in a motorcycle jacket who kept telling the movers where not to put things.

The woman had apologized to everyone for taking up space.

The man had apologized to no one.

Carmen remembered thinking the girl looked too thin to be carrying both a baby and a marriage.

Still, she did what most people do when instinct taps them on the shoulder.

She ignored it.

The first morning Lucy came for sugar, Carmen opened the door in her bathrobe with irritation already sitting on her tongue.

The baby slept against Lucy’s chest in a yellow onesie, his tiny mouth damp with milk, his hand curled into the fabric of her shirt.

“Excuse me, ma’am,” Lucy said. “Would you happen to have a little sugar?”

Carmen gave her half a cup.

She did not ask her name.

She did not invite her in.

She watched Lucy walk back down the hall toward apartment 302 and told herself some young women were simply disorganized.

The next morning, Lucy came again.

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