The Neighbor Who Fed an Old Man Found His Final Note After He Died-felicia

I did not move into the old tenement in the Narvarte neighborhood expecting to become important to anyone.

I moved there because the rent was almost reasonable, the kitchen window opened toward a jacaranda tree, and the building had the tired dignity of a place that had survived many families.

The stairwell tiles were cracked in a few corners.

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The mailboxes stuck when it rained.

At night, the pipes hummed behind the walls like someone clearing their throat in another room.

I had been living alone for six months by then, long enough to know the strange comfort of returning to an apartment where every sound belonged to me.

My keys in the bowl.

My shoes by the door.

My kettle clicking off after work.

It was not glamorous, but it was mine.

Then, on the first Monday in my new apartment, I woke before dawn with my throat burning.

At first I thought I had left something on the stove.

Then I realized the smell was coming from the hallway.

It was thick, bitter smoke, not the fast sharp smell of fire but the slow sour stench of something boiled dry and punished past recognition.

Burnt soup.

Scorched metal.

Old plaster holding the odor like a secret.

I stood barefoot on the cold tile, heart pounding hard enough to make my ribs ache, and listened.

There was no alarm.

No shouting.

No sound except a faint bubbling hiss from somewhere next door.

That was the first time I knocked on Don Ernesto’s door.

I did not know his name yet.

I only knew that someone on the other side might be hurt, or worse, and that nobody else in the building seemed to be coming out.

When the door opened, a very thin man stood there in a brown sweater that had gone shiny at the elbows.

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