The piercing shriek of the smoke alarm fills the apartment as I swat at it with a broom, sending the cover clattering to the wooden floor. Another swipe silences it.
"Fuck," I spit into the smoke scented air. "Fuck fuck fuck."
I had followed the cake recipe to the letter, but the thin, blackened crust at the base of the cake pan was a charcoal testament to my unfamiliarity with electric ovens. Cursing, I dashed the pan into the sink where it hissed balefully.
I stood in the open plan kitchenette breathing heavily, shoulders rising and falling as I fought down the rising tide of anxiety. It had been a terrible day at work, stacked on a terrible week and I was worn thin, fraying at the edges. Baking a birthday cake for my flatmate seemed a straightforward task, but even that seemed beyond my reach. As my breathing settled, I resigned to settling for a store-bought cake.
At least no-one was around to see the mess I had made. H was away at his girlfriends all weekend, while S was heading out for early birthday drinks with her work friends and wouldn't be back until the early hours. I moved about the apartment, opening windows to let out the smoke, the evening breeze slipping inside.
The apartment was a cavernous open plan warehouse conversion -- an actual warehouse, not one of those faux-industrial new-builds -- the sloped ceilings lined with skylights, the wooden floorboards worn down to splinters in places. It was the kind of place that would have been thoroughly out of my reach, were it not for the grimy East London location, the dubious credentials of the landlord and the motley collection of neighbours, all of which kept the rent down to a painful but attainable level. We had viewed it in the spring, and instantly fell in love with the abundance of space and light, not reckoning on how it would become oppressively, sweltering hot in summer and in winter cold enough to see my own breath. But for now, it was home.
There was a sharp rap on the door, no doubt one of the Italian neighbours from next door who seemed daily to come borrow various items of kitchen equipment. I sucked in a deep breath, ready to berate them at length for not buying their own damned utensils. I yanked the door near off its hinges, to find you standing there.
"Oh," I blurted, letting out all my breath into that one word. "What are you doing here?"