Stories: Unknown number

My neighbor was having a loud party—again.

The bass thudded through my walls, rattling picture frames and setting my dog on edge. Around ten, she knocked on my door, smiling too brightly.

“Hey! Quick favor—what’s your Wi-Fi password? My guests can’t get a signal.”

I blinked at her. “I’m sorry, I don’t share my network.”

Her smile dropped. “Wow. Okay.” She turned on her heel and marched back across the lawn.

I locked the door, bracing for the music to get even louder out of spite.

Instead, fifteen minutes later, everything went silent.

Dead silent.

The sudden quiet felt almost eerie. Then my phone rang. Unknown number.

I hesitated before answering.

“Hi… this is Maya from next door.”

Her voice didn’t sound annoyed. It sounded shaken.

“I owe you an apology,” she said. “And… a thank you.”

I frowned. “For what?”

“After you refused the Wi-Fi, one of my guests tried to be clever. He said he could ‘borrow’ it anyway. He started messing with some kind of hacking app. I didn’t think he was serious.”

My stomach tightened.

“He ended up tripping my own router security. It shut down my entire network—and apparently flagged suspicious activity to my provider. They called me immediately.”

“So that’s why it’s quiet?” I asked.

“Yeah. The party’s over. I kicked him out. Honestly… if you had given me your password, he might’ve tried the same thing on yours.”

I felt a chill at that.

“I didn’t realize what kind of people I’d invited,” she continued. “I’m really sorry for the noise. And for putting you in that position.”

There was a pause.

“Are you… in trouble?” I asked.

“No. Just embarrassed. And grateful you said no.”

The next day, she knocked again—this time holding a small box of pastries.

“Peace offering,” she said sheepishly. “And I already ordered my own upgraded plan. With a password I’m not sharing.”

I laughed. “Good call.”

Over the next few weeks, the parties stopped. Instead, we started chatting over the fence in the evenings. She even began texting me beforehand if she planned to have people over.

One afternoon, she said, “You know, when you refused, I thought you were being selfish. Turns out you were just being smart.”

I smiled. “Boundaries aren’t selfish. They’re protective.”

That night, my house was quiet. My Wi-Fi was secure. And surprisingly, I had gained something I didn’t expect:

Not a new headache.

A new, respectful neighbor.

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