—
Valencia. The same afternoon. Diego has been in the bathroom on the second floor of his office for nine minutes — the one nobody uses because the tap drips. Someone has knocked on the door twice. He hasn't answered.
Part 2: Desde el baño del trabajo
Diego retreats to his office bathroom in Valencia to process what he heard, while Valentina rewrites messages she can't bring herself to send. Their mutual friends in the group chat read the thread in stunned silence — and then Diego asks the one question that hurts most.
—
Valencia. The same afternoon. Diego has been in the bathroom on the second floor of his office for nine minutes — the one nobody uses because the tap drips. Someone has knocked on the door twice. He hasn't answered.
i need five minutes
Valentina sees the message. She reads it three times. She starts to write.
The typing dots appear on Valentina's side. And they disappear. And they return. And they disappear. This goes on for twenty minutes.
— —
Meanwhile, in the group of friends — the same one where Valentina sent the audio by mistake — Marcos has heard it. Lucía too.
hey
yes
was that audio for this group?
no, marcos. clearly not
damn
should we write something?
i don't know. i don't think so. this isn't ours
no. you're right
poor both of them
The group falls silent. Neither Marcos nor Lucía write anything else. Valentina's audio is still up there, with blue checkmarks from both of them.
In Barcelona, Valentina is still in the same chair. She has ordered another coffee from the waiter because she didn't know how to explain that she had been there for an hour without moving. In Valencia, someone knocks on the bathroom door again.

they're knocking on the door for the five o'clock meeting. i've been in here for i don't know how long
i'm sorry
are you sorry for sending the audio or are you sorry for what you said in it?
Valentina starts writing. Deletes. Writes again. Deletes again. The dots appear and disappear four times in a row.
for both things
Diego reads the message. He doesn't write anything for three minutes. Valentina stares at the screen without blinking.
valen, are you okay?
has he responded?
yes. he's... calm. too calm. that's what scares me the most
thanks ele
Valentina's phone vibrates. It's a notification from the chat with Diego. She switches conversations.
i'm trying to understand it. i really am
but there's one thing i don't understand
we talk every day. every day, valen. and you never said anything
i know
i didn't know how. or i didn't want to know how. i don't even know which of the two
okay
Diego leaves the bathroom. He walks past the meeting room with his head down. A colleague asks if he's okay. He nods and keeps walking. He goes out the stairs to the outside of the building. The street in Valencia smells of fried food and exhaust. He leans against the wall and keeps writing.

i went outside. i couldn't stay in there anymore
and the meeting?
what does the meeting matter, valentina
you're right. sorry
Valentina listens to the audio twice. The second time her eyes are closed. When she opens them, the waiter is looking at her from the bar. She shakes her head slowly, as if to tell him she's fine. She's not fine.
of course it counts. diego, of course it does
i didn't say i don't love you. i said i don't know if i love you the same as before
although i understand it sounds just as bad
yes. it sounds just as bad
...
how long have you been feeling this way?
Valentina looks at the question. She starts writing. A single word. Four letters. She deletes it before pressing send.
On Diego's screen, the dots appear. And they disappear. The chat remains in silence. He is still in the street, with the Valencia cold coming through his shirt collar, waiting for a response that doesn't arrive.
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