She Asked for Sugar Every Morning. The Truth Nearly Broke Me.-felicia

Lucía first knocked on my door on a Tuesday morning at 8:17.

I remember the time because I was watching the morning news, drinking coffee I had reheated once already, and enjoying the kind of silence only a widow learns to appreciate.

My apartment smelled of bitter coffee, floor cleaner, and the lavender soap my granddaughter bought me because she said old people should stop smelling like Vicks.

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Then came the knock.

Not loud.

Not urgent.

Just three careful taps from someone who did not want to be noticed by anyone except the person behind the door.

I opened it in my robe with my eyebrows already raised.

The young woman standing outside looked barely strong enough to hold herself upright, much less the sleeping baby pressed against her chest.

She had dark hair pulled back too tightly, a pale face, and eyes that dropped before mine could fully meet them.

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

Behind her, the hallway stretched gray and narrow toward the stairs.

The fluorescent bulb at the end flickered once.

I glanced at the baby.

He was asleep against her chest in a yellow onesie with one sleeve rolled badly at the wrist.

I gave her half a cup of sugar from the ceramic bowl beside my stove.

I did not invite her in.

I did not ask her name.

I only watched her walk back toward apartment 302 with the careful steps of someone trying not to wake a child.

Then I closed my door and muttered to myself that young people did not know how to shop anymore.

My name is Carmen Herrera.

I am seventy-two years old.

I had lived in that building for nineteen years by then, long enough to know the sound of every elevator groan, every pipe knock, every neighbor’s argument.

My husband, Rafael, had died seven years earlier in the armchair beside our bedroom window.

My two brothers were gone too, one from diabetes and one from stubbornness dressed up as pride.

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