Love At First Fight: My Next Door Neighbour
img img Love At First Fight: My Next Door Neighbour img Chapter 3 Unwanted Offerings
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Chapter 6 Stirring Up Trouble img
Chapter 7 Unexpected Guests img
Chapter 8 Midnight Cravings img
Chapter 9 Whispers in the Dawn img
Chapter 10 Taste of Trust img
Chapter 11 Simmering Tensions img
Chapter 12 Heat of the Moment img
Chapter 13 The Way to Someone's Heart img
Chapter 14 Midnight Recipe img
Chapter 15 Safe Harbor img
Chapter 16 Midnight Cravings img
Chapter 17 Through the Lens img
Chapter 18 The Heat Between Us img
Chapter 19 Midnight Cravings img
Chapter 20 Morning Light img
Chapter 21 Simmering Heat img
Chapter 22 Midnight Confessions img
Chapter 23 Heat and Spice img
Chapter 24 Terrific Closure img
Chapter 25 Taste of Desire img
Chapter 26 Simmer and Spice img
Chapter 27 Heat and Heart img
Chapter 28 Layers of Trust img
Chapter 29 Whispers and Promises img
Chapter 30 Stirring Up Feelings img
Chapter 31 Stirring Things Up (Badly) img
Chapter 32 Petty Mistake img
Chapter 33 Definitely a Thing img
Chapter 34 Wow, Feelings Are Annoying img
Chapter 35 Why Is Everyone Calling Me img
Chapter 36 So I Guess This Is a Thing Now or Whatever img
Chapter 37 So, This Pantry Wasn't That Terrible img
Chapter 38 The Knock, The Noise, and The Nerves img
Chapter 39 Kind of a Lot but Also Not Really img
Chapter 40 Chaos, Carrots, and Connections img
Chapter 41 A Little Light, A Little Hope img
Chapter 42 Simple Moments, Steady Beats img
Chapter 43 In the Dark img
Chapter 44 In the Quiet After img
Chapter 45 The Day Felt Softer img
Chapter 46 Rain, Rice, and a Really Big Feeling img
Chapter 47 The Way He Sees Me img
Chapter 48 The Way She Looks at Me img
Chapter 49 Like a Normal Day (But Not Really) img
Chapter 50 A Little More Like Us img
Chapter 51 When Family Shows Up img
Chapter 52 Just Trying to Be There img
Chapter 53 Just Us and the Quiet Moments img
Chapter 54 A Really Simple Day img
Chapter 55 Just Another Day img
Chapter 56 A Soft Day Together img
Chapter 57 Trouble at the Door img
Chapter 58 Holding on Tight img
Chapter 59 We Just Keep Going img
Chapter 60 Holding It All Together img
Chapter 61 Words I Can't Find img
Chapter 62 Stirring the Pot img
Chapter 63 Finding My Balance img
Chapter 64 Not a Great Day or Whatever img
Chapter 65 The Space Where You Should Be img
Chapter 66 Holding It Together img
Chapter 67 Things She Didn't Mean to Leave img
Chapter 68 The Quiet Between img
Chapter 69 Barely Hanging On img
Chapter 70 A Start img
Chapter 71 Go Home img
Chapter 72 The Quiet Return img
Chapter 73 The Taste of Memory img
Chapter 74 Her Anchor img
Chapter 75 The Ones Who Stayed img
Chapter 76 Her Seat at the Table img
Chapter 77 Big Sister img
Chapter 78 When the Walls Come Down img
Chapter 79 The Pitch img
Chapter 80 Crowds and Quiet img
Chapter 81 Found Family img
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Chapter 3 Unwanted Offerings

Skye's POV

Sarah's words still rang in my ears long after she'd left. I aggressively reorganized my kitchen cabinets for the third time, trying to drown out her voice with the methodical sound of ceramic mugs being arranged by size and color.

"Mom and Dad wouldn't want..." I mimicked under my breath, slamming a cabinet harder than necessary. "Well, Mom and Dad aren't here to have an opinion, are they?"

The moment the words left my mouth, guilt crashed over me. I gripped the counter, forcing myself to breathe the way my therapist had taught me. In for four, hold for four, out for four.

A knock at my door made me jump, scattering my carefully ordered thoughts.

"Ms. Mitchell?" Zane's voice. Because of course it was. "I brought you something."

I stared at the door, debating whether to pretend I wasn't home. But the smell seeping under my door was making my stomach growl traitorously. Something rich and garlicky that reminded me of Sunday dinners from before...

"I know you're in there," he continued, his voice warm with amusement. "I can hear you reorganizing your kitchen."

Heat flooded my cheeks. "I'm busy," I called back, cringing at how defensive I sounded.

"Too busy for peace offerings? It's sofrito - a sauce that's basically happiness in a jar. Great for writing fuel."

The way he said it - playful but genuine - made something flutter in my chest. I squashed it immediately. "I don't need-"

"Found it!" A new voice chirped, followed by the jingling of keys.

My door swung open to reveal a tiny woman with purple-tinted hair and more vintage jewelry than a thrift store. Behind her stood Zane, looking equal parts amused and horrified.

"Ruby!" he hissed. "You can't just-"

"Mrs. Garcia gave me the master key for emergencies," the woman - Ruby - announced, bouncing into my apartment like she owned it. "And this is definitely an emergency. You two need to sort out this noise situation before someone" - she looked pointedly at me - "commits the perfect crime."

I backed away, my heart racing. "Get out. Both of you."

Ruby's expression softened as she took in what must have been obvious panic on my face. "Hey, it's okay. I'm Ruby Chen - food blogger, professional peacemaker, and your new best friend whether you like it or not."

"Ruby," Zane's voice had lost all its playfulness. "Back off."

Something in his tone made me look at him. He was watching me with those warm brown eyes, and there was understanding there that made my throat tight.

"She's right," he said quietly. "We should go. But..." He held out a glass container filled with what looked like a vibrant red sauce. "At least take this? Consider it an apology for the noise."

The container sat between us like a peace treaty. Part of me wanted to refuse it on principle. But another part - the part that remembered how food could bring people together, how it had always been Dad's way of showing love - made me reach out.

Our fingers brushed as I took the container. His were warm, slightly calloused. Chef's hands.

"Thank you," I managed.

"SKYE!" A teenage voice shouted from the hallway. "Are you killing Zane? Because I need him alive for Thursday's dinner!"

A lanky boy with a mop of dark hair skidded into view, followed by a quieter girl about the same age. Both wore clothes that had seen better days.

"Tommy," Zane sighed, "what did we say about volume control?"

"Sorry," Tommy stage-whispered. "But Maria's never had your paella, and I was telling her about Thursday, and-" He stopped, finally noticing the tension in the room. "Oh. Um. Are we interrupting something?"

"We were just leaving," Ruby announced, hooking her arms through Tommy and Maria's. "Come on, kids. Let's go help Marcus organize the spice rack."

As they filed out, Zane lingered in my doorway. "The sofrito's good on eggs," he said softly. "Or just with bread. Or..." He ran a hand through his hair, messing it up further. "Just try it? Please?"

I nodded, not trusting my voice. He smiled - a real smile, not the confident grin from earlier - and followed his friends.

Alone again, I stared at the container in my hands. The sauce inside looked like sunset in a jar, flecks of herbs catching the light. Despite myself, I opened it and inhaled.

The smell hit me like a memory: Mom in the kitchen, Dad telling stories while he chopped vegetables, the pantry door open and welcoming instead of...

A crash from next door made me drop the container. It hit my counter with a crack, red sauce splattering across my pristine white cabinets like...

No. Not blood. Just sauce. Breathe. In for four, hold for four...

But the memories were already rising like flood waters: the sound of breaking glass, Mom's scream, the pantry's dark embrace as I huddled behind shelves of pasta and canned goods, trying not to breathe...

Another crash, followed by laughter and apologies. Music started up again, softer this time but still there. Always there.

My hands shook as I reached for my phone. I had two options: call Sarah and admit she was right, that I couldn't handle this, or...

My finger hovered over Mrs. Garcia's number. One call and I could file an official complaint. Get the music shut down, restore my quiet, protect my peace.

But Tommy's eager face flashed in my mind. Maria's shy smile. The understanding in Zane's eyes.

The sofrito dripped steadily from my cabinet, marking time like a broken metronome.

And then, because the universe had a sick sense of humor, my phone lit up with a text from my editor: "Where's my draft? Also, just heard about a fascinating case. Local chef running illegal operation out of apartment. Could be perfect inspiration for your next book..."

I stared at the message, then at the sauce on my wall, then at the thin barrier between my sanctuary and whatever chaos Zane Rodriguez was brewing next door.

The smart thing would be to call Mrs. Garcia.

Instead, I found myself googling "what is a supper club?" and trying very hard not to think about why.

            
            

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