Maluma_borro_cassette

He remembered the flash of a white smile across a crowded VIP booth. He remembered the smell of expensive perfume—something like vanilla and sandalwood—and the way the light caught a pair of dark, piercing eyes that seemed to see right through the smoke. They had danced, his hand finding the small of her back as the DJ dropped a heavy reggaeton beat. They had whispered things into each other's ears, secrets that felt like the most important truths in the world at 3:00 AM.

But as the sun began to peek over the jagged edges of the Andes, the details started to dissolve. maluma_borro_cassette

The next afternoon, Mateo woke to a pounding headache and a single notification on his phone: a blurry photo of him and a woman he didn't recognize, laughing like soulmates. He remembered the flash of a white smile

The neon lights of Medellín blurred into streaks of violet and gold as the bass from the club began to fade, replaced by the rhythmic hum of a late-night taxi. Mateo leaned his head against the cool glass of the window, his mind a hazy, flickering film strip of the last six hours. They had whispered things into each other's ears,

By the time Mateo reached his front door, the girl’s name was gone. By the time he hit the pillow, the color of her dress had vanished. It was as if his brain had hit a "reset" button the moment the lights came up.