The sharp smell of lemon cleaner blended with the warm scent of freshly baked bread, and the contrast hi:t me so hard I froze in the doorway, certain for a suspended second that exhaustion had carried me into the wrong apartment.

The sharp smell of lemon cleaner blended with the warm scent of freshly baked bread, and the contrast hi:t me so hard I froze in the doorway, certain for a suspended second that exhaustion had carried me into the wrong apartment.

“I searched for ingredients, not personal things,” he replied evenly. “I documented what I used.”

He pointed to a folded note near my keys.

Bread, cheese, carrots, celery, broth cubes. Will replace when possible.

“Replace? With what?”

Before he could answer, Oliver burst out of the hallway, backpack bouncing.

“Mom! Adrian fixed the door that always stuck!”

I blinked. “Fixed?”

“It closes perfectly now,” Oliver said proudly. “And he made me finish my homework first.”

Adrian’s mouth twitched faintly. “He focuses well when it’s quiet.”

I walked toward the front door—the one that had scraped and jammed for months.

It closed smoothly. The deadbolt turned effortlessly.

Relief and unease collided inside me.

“Where did you learn to do repairs like that?”

“I worked construction and facilities maintenance for a hospital contractor before I injured my knee,” he said.

The next question came sharper than I intended. “Why were you sleeping outside the grocery store last night?”

His gaze lowered. “Workers’ compensation disputes. Rent fell behind. Family support… disappeared.”

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