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Rude Cabin Neighbors Ate All My Food, but Got a Lesson They Won’t Soon Forget

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The rhythmic clatter of the train wheels echoed the contentment Id dreamed of for months. Three months of scrimping, three months of longing for the seafor salty breezes on my skin and sunsets unobstructed by city towers. The compartment was empty for now, and I savoured the rare luxury of solitude, alone with my thoughts and my hopes.

Carefully, I laid out my provisions on the little table: homemade beef pasties wrapped in foil, a jar of pickled gherkins, sliced sausage sandwiches, apples, biscuits, and a thermos of strong tea. Enough to last the long journey to the coast. I imagined leisurely lunches by the window, watching the countryside blur past, sipping tea from my favourite mug as I lost myself in a book.

The train slowed as it approached the next station. I barely noticed the commotion in the corridorwhat did it matter, when the sea and two blissful weeks of doing nothing awaited me?

But fate, it seemed, had other plans.

The compartment door swung open, and in barged a family: a short, dishevelled man with a beer gut, his wifea stout woman with a booming voiceand their son, a stocky boy of about ten, built just like his mother. They noisily settled in, tossing bags about, their voices clashing like cymbals.

“Finally!” the woman huffed, flopping onto the lower bunk. “Thought my legsd give out hauling all that!”

“Well, whose idea was it to bring half the house, Linda?” the man snapped.

“Necessities, Barry!” she shot back.

The boy clambered onto his bunk without a word and immediately began crunching crisps loudly.

I clung to my good mood. They were on holiday too, after all. Maybe theyd calm down.

They didnt.

Half an hour later, Linda eyed my spread hungrily. “Ooh, whatve we got here? Looks proper tasty!” She rummaged in her bag and slapped down two boiled eggs and a limp cucumber beside my neatly arranged food. “Thereour contribution!” she announced, as if shed done me a favour.

Something inside me tightened, but I held onto hope.

Futile.

Barryintroduced with a gruntunwrapped one of my pasties and took a bite. “Blimey, homemade!” he mumbled through a full mouth. “Proper good, this.”

“Give us a bit, Barry!” Linda reached for it.

“Excuse me,” I said, forcing calm, “but thats my food. I packed it for the journey.”

They stared at me as if Id sworn in church.

“Cheek of it!” Linda scoffed. “You put it out on the table! If its on the table, its for sharing! Basic manners!”

“We brought our bits too,” Barry added, gesturing to the pitiful eggs. “Help yourself!”

Meanwhile, the boy dug grubby fingers into my gherkins. “Thesere lush,” he declared, mouth full.

A wave of helpless anger rose in my chest. They were devouring my food with shameless entitlement, hiding behind some imaginary train etiquette. Worsethey acted as if *I* should be grateful.

I stood abruptly. “I need some air.”

“Off you pop, then,” Linda said dismissively, already reaching for another pasty.

In the corridor, I let the tears come. Not for the foodfor the humiliation. How could people be so brazen?

Then a voice: “You all right?”

I turned. A tall man stood there, his gaze steady, his posture relaxed but strong. Not pryingjust kind.

“Fine,” I lied, wiping my cheeks.

“Doesnt look it,” he said gently. “Names James. You?”

“Emily.”

“Emily,” he said, “sometimes it helps to talk. What happened?”

So I told himthe holiday, the careful preparations, the family bulldozing through my food as if it were theirs.

James listened, nodding. Then his expression hardened. “Right. Which compartment?”

“Seven.”

“Wait here.”

I lingered by the window, unease prickling. What was he doing?

Muffled voices drifted outLindas shrill protests, Barrys bluster, then silence. Jamess calm, firm tone cut through.

When he reappeared, satisfaction flickered in his eyes. “That should sort it.”

“What did you say?”

“Just clarified the rules.”

Back inside, the atmosphere had shifted. The family sat stiffly, avoiding my gaze.

“Emily,” Barry began awkwardly, “sorry about earlier. Didnt realise you werent alone.”

Linda nodded vigorously. “If wed known your boyfriend was with you, wed never have touched your things!”

*Boyfriend?*

At the next stop, they scurried off and returned with bags of foodfresh pasties, fruit, even a bottle of cider.

“Here,” Linda said sheepishly. “To say sorry. And for your lad too.”

That evening, I found James gazing out at the passing lights.

“What *exactly* did you tell them?” I asked.

He grinned. “Mightve fibbed a bit. But it worked.”

“Go on.”

“Told them I was your partner. And mentioned my job.” His eyes glinted. “Explained that thefteven of train foodis illegal. And that, as a police officer, I could file a report right then.”

My jaw dropped. “*Are* you police?”

“Now that,” he said, smiling, “is a story for dinner. Theres a lovely spot by the sea. Fancy it?”

My pulse skipped. This manwhod stepped in without hesitationwas going to the same place as me. Maybe it wasnt chance at all.

“Deal,” I said, meeting his gaze. “But only if you tell me the truth.”

“Promise.”

The wheels hummed beneath us, no longer just carrying me to holiday, but to something newsomething beginning right here, thanks to the right person at the right time.

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