The Sugar Cup Was Her Only Way Out Of Apartment 302 Alive-yumihong

The first time Lucy knocked on my door, I thought she was just a young woman who had no idea how to keep her kitchen stocked.

I was sitting at my little table with a mug of coffee, the kind I drink too slowly now that nobody is around to rush me.

The morning news was playing low on the TV by the window.

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Outside, somebody was dragging a trash bin across the parking lot, and the sound scraped through the quiet like a rake over concrete.

My apartment smelled like toast, coffee, and the lavender floor cleaner I used every Sunday night.

That quiet mattered to me.

When you are seventy-two and living alone, quiet stops feeling empty after a while and starts feeling like something you earned.

So when the knock came, I frowned before I even stood up.

I opened the door in my bathrobe with my hair pinned badly and my patience already halfway gone.

The young woman from Apartment 302 stood in the hallway with a baby asleep against her chest.

She was thin.

Too thin, I thought, but I did not say it.

Her face was pale, and her smile had that nervous little bend people use when they are sorry for taking up space.

“Excuse me, ma’am,” she said.

Her voice was soft enough that I almost missed it over the TV behind me.

“You wouldn’t happen to have a little sugar, would you?”

I looked at the baby first.

He was tucked into a yellow onesie and sleeping with one cheek pressed against her shirt.

Then I looked at her.

No purse.

No phone.

No keys in her hand.

At the time, none of that meant anything to me.

I just saw a young neighbor asking for something small.

I gave her half a cup of sugar in a little plastic container and did not invite her inside.

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