Share

Day Two

Author: EmmelineT
last update publish date: 2026-04-14 03:07:53

She does not sleep particularly well.

This is not new information about herself — she has never been a good sleeper, not in the first life and apparently not in the second — but the specific quality of this sleeplessness is different from the usual kind. It is not anxious. It is alert, the way you are alert when something has shifted in the room and you're still working out what it was.

She lies in the dark of the apartment on 49th and runs the conversation back. Not obsessively — she is forty-five years old in the ways that matter, and obsessive replaying of conversations is something she aged out of around thirty-eight — but with the careful attention she gives to anything that requires accurate reading.

The moderator comments. The two minutes of comfortable silence. Off the record. Always. The four inches. The two seconds.

The way he said Barcelona, like it was a place he'd seen, not just a destination on a client itinerary.

She turns onto her side and looks at the window, where the city's ambient light makes the curtains glow a faint amber.

He is twenty-four years old.

She is twenty-one. In this life. Which means the gap is three years, not five — she graduated a year early in her second run, quietly, without making it a statement, because she had the time and the knowledge and no patience for courses she'd already mastered. So, by the calendar of this life, the age difference between them is three years, not five.

Not that it matters. She is not twenty-one. She is also forty-five. She contains both and neither simultaneously, which is the central impossible fact of her existence that she has stopped trying to resolve and started trying to simply carry.

What she knows — from the first life, from the long dinner at twenty-nine that she refused to let mean anything — is that the age difference was never the actual problem. The actual problem was that she had already decided, before he finished his first sentence, that she didn't deserve something that felt that uncomplicated.

She is working on that.

The afternoon session on investment thresholds is, as advertised, worth attending.

The moderator is a woman named Dr. Reyes who has the rare ability to make financial frameworks feel like narrative — she builds her argument the way a good story builds, so that each point makes the next one inevitable. Valentina sits in the third row and takes notes with genuine attention, which is not something she did often enough the first time around.

Ethan Cole is six rows back on the left side. She knows this because she checked when she sat down, which she acknowledges to herself with the clarity of a person who has stopped lying about small things. She checked. He is there. She is not going to spend the session thinking about it.

She spends approximately forty percent of the session thinking about it.

The remaining sixty percent she gives to Dr. Reyes, who earns it.

When the session ends, and the room begins its shuffle toward the exit, she does not turn around. She collects her notebook, checks that her badge is still clipped to her jacket — a habit from years of conferences where losing the badge means losing the room — and stands.

"Dr. Reyes was right about the threshold recalibration."

He is beside her. Of course he is. She turns with an expression she has spent approximately eight hours calibrating toward neutral and finds him looking at her with an openness that she had forgotten — or again, refused to register — the first time.

"She was," Valentina says. "The 2019 assumptions don't hold anymore. Most people are still building models on them."

"Including us," he says, with the frankness of someone willing to include himself in a problem. "I've been trying to make that argument internally for six months."

"Does it land?"

"Slowly." A pause. "My brother Marcus thinks I'm being pessimistic. My other brother Daniel thinks I'm right but that right doesn't matter if the clients aren't ready to hear it."

"Daniel sounds practical."

"Daniel is the most practical person I know." Something in his expression shifts — affectionate, she notes, not complicated. He likes his brother. The uncomplicated kind of liking. "What about you? Do you have siblings?"

"Only child," she says. "Just me and my mother."

"Is she in Barcelona?"

"Sant Andreu." She catches herself and adds, "It's a neighborhood in the northeast of the city. Working-class, very residential. Not the part tourists see."

"The part where people actually live," he says.

"Exactly."

They are moving with the crowd toward the lobby now, not quite walking together and not quite separately — the ambiguous proximity of two people who haven't decided yet what they are to each other. Valentina is aware of this with the whole surface of her attention and keeps her pace even and her expression interested, and her internal landscape carefully quiet.

In the lobby, the crowd disperses. The natural end of the conference — people exchanging cards, making dinner plans, drifting toward the revolving doors in ones and twos. The melancholy of a professional gathering concluding, all that temporary intensity folding back into ordinary life.

They stop near the window where they sat yesterday, the two abandoned chairs now occupied by a pair of women deep in conversation. There is a beat — the kind of beat that means: this is where it ends, or this is where it continues, and someone must decide.

"I'm going to be in Barcelona in September," Ethan says. "Client site visit. Probably three days."

Valentina looks at him. September is six months away. He is telling her this now, at the end of a two-day conference, which means it is not incidental information.

"Barcelona is a good city in September," she says. "The tourists thin out. The light changes."

"Better at night, though," he says. A reference to yesterday, deliberate, watching her face for recognition.

She lets the recognition show. Just slightly. "Most good cities are."

He takes a card from his jacket pocket — actual cardstock, not a phone tap, which she files as a detail that tells her something — and holds it out. "In case the Algarve brief develops into something worth a follow-up conversation."

She takes it. She has her own cards — Patricia had them made for the conference, Mercer & Cross logo, her name in clean sans-serif — and she gives him one.

He looks at it with the attention people usually reserve for things they intend to keep.

"Safe travels, Valentina Serra," he says.

"You too, Ethan Cole."

He puts the card in his inside jacket pocket — not the outer one, not the card holder, the inside pocket, which is where you put things you don't want to lose — and walks toward the revolving doors.

She watches him go. Not two seconds this time.

Longer.

She calls Patricia from the cab back to the office.

"How was it?"

"Good," Valentina says. "I listened. I know who's in the room and what they're worried about."

"And?"

"The 2019 investment threshold models are still being used by at least sixty percent of the players in mid-luxury hospitality. It's creating a gap between what properties think they need and what the market will support. If we position the Q3 campaign around recalibrated thresholds — show clients we're working from current data — we'll be the only agency in the conversation doing that."

A pause on Patricia's end. The specific silence of someone doing rapid mental arithmetic.

"Where did you get that?"

"Dr. Reyes's session this afternoon. And a conversation yesterday."

"With whom?"

Valentina looks out the cab window at Lexington Avenue scrolling past, all intention and motion, the city doing what it always does.

"Someone worth knowing," she says.

Patricia makes a sound that means we'll talk about this tomorrow. Then: "Good work, Serra."

The call ends. Valentina holds the phone in her lap and looks at the card she is still holding in her other hand.

ETHAN COLE. COLE FAMILY PARTNERS. A Washington D.C. address. A direct line. His email — first name only, no last name needed, which means he's the only Ethan they have.

She has his card from the first life somewhere in a box in a Barcelona apartment that no longer exists. She never used it. She told herself she would, and then she didn't, and then enough time passed that it became a different kind of decision.

She slides this one into her jacket's inside pocket.

September is six months away.

She has work to do between now and then. She has the Q3 campaign, and Patricia's Thursday deadlines and Sunday calls with her mother and five more months in a city that is teaching her, day by day, what she is capable of when no one who knew her before is watching.

Six months is enough time to become exactly who she needs to be.

She is already most of the way there.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Second Bloom   What the Grandchildren Receive

    She knew it was coming.Not from Jordi — Jordi does not announce things in advance when the thing is still in its becoming. But from the quality of the Thursday dinners since October, when Marta arrived with the specific attending quality that Valentina has learned to recognize in people who are receiving something significant and choosing to be present for the receiving.She mentioned it to Ethan in December."Something is happening with Jordi and Marta," she said."Yes," he said. "They told me in November. They were waiting until the first three months were confirmed.""Of course you knew," she said."They wanted someone to know," he said. "I was the right someone."She received this with the equanimity it deserved. Ethan is often the right person for the things that are not yet ready to be said to everyone. That is one of his spe

  • Second Bloom   What the Second Life Was

    The birthday has been a Tuesday for sixty-four years of the second life.The framework, which Ethan developed and revised and eventually confirmed over forty years, holds without exception: Tuesdays are the native habitat of things that matter. Sixty-four consecutive October Tuesdays. The framework is not wrong. The data is solid.She wakes at six-fifteen. She walks the Ciutadella — no longer running, hasn't been for six years, the knees having made their position clear and she having respected it. The Faculty of Law door. Still there. It will outlast her. She will outlast many things she expected to outlast her and not outlast others. That is the right order.She comes back to the apartment at seven-fifteen. The twenty-ninth notebook is open on the desk — she opened it in September, the twenty-eighth filled in August, the pace of notebooks slightly faster now that the fourth book is done and the notes are mo

  • Second Bloom   The Morning Practice

    The body at eighty-one has its own intelligence.She has been learning this for three years — since the knees began their negotiation. Not loss. Reconfiguration. The body that could run the Ciutadella for sixty years knows what it is doing when it decides, at seventy-eight, that running is no longer the right form for the practice. The body understands the practice. It is adjusting the vehicle to what the practice now requires.She does not grieve the running. She never grieved the things the practice adjusted: the first years of writing at the commission desk, the early briefs that were finding their form, the practice when it was new and she was new to it. None of those forms were the practice. They were the practice in that phase. The walk is the practice in this phase.And the walk, she has discovered over three years, gives her something the run did not. Slower, she sees differently. The same path — the

  • Second Bloom   Begur, One Last Time

    Rosa died in March.Not unexpectedly — she was ninety-nine years old and the body at ninety-nine communicates with a clarity that leaves no ambiguity about direction. But not, for Valentina, with the quality of prepared grief. Prepared grief is for people who have been rehearsing the loss. She had not been rehearsing. She had been, as she has been in all things, present: with Rosa at the Sant Andreu kitchen on the Sundays, with Rosa when the forty-seventh bowl was finished, with Rosa in October at the Begur Christmas and in March at the end.Rosa's last word was in Catalan: bé. Good. The right word. The only word. Pep beside her, the photograph of Jordi Serra above the television, the forty-seven bowls on the shelf.She has been carrying the March since then, through the spring and summer and autumn. Not grief in the sense of something to be resolved — grief in the sense of something to be held, the wa

  • Second Bloom   The Last Morning

    She has been practicing being simply here since the first year of the second life.Not from instruction — from necessity. The second life began with the understanding that the first life had been lived in the future tense: always building toward, always reaching for, always the next thing. The practice of being simply here was the correction the second life required. Not a technique. A reorientation. Sixty-five years of reorientation.She is very good at it now.Not because it became easier. Because the practice of it accumulated into something that does not require effort. The way the bowl made correctly enough times becomes the bowl made without effort — the correctly is inside the maker, not in the making.Being simply here is inside her.She wakes at six-fifteen and she is simply here.She wakes at six-fifteen.She has bee

  • Second Bloom   What the Practice Gives Back

    She has received other letters.Not many — the practice has never marketed itself and the books found their readers slowly, which meant the letters arrived slowly. But over the years since the first book: letters from practitioners who recognized the methodology, letters from people who read the second book and understood the transmission argument, letters from researchers who read the third book and found in it the framework they had been looking for.This letter is different from all of those.Those letters were from people who recognized the argument. This letter is from someone for whom the argument was not an argument — it was the word for something she was living and had no word for.She reads it twice before she puts it down.A woman at forty-five. The fourth book. The first movement. The description of the woman who was not unhappy.The sp

  • Second Bloom   The Fifth Valencia Gathering

    The Poblenou building is right.She knows it when she walks in — the specific quality of a space that has been converted rather than replaced. The industrial bones still present: the high ceiling, the iron columns, the specific quality of light from the clerestory windo

  • Second Bloom   Rosa at Sixty-Seven

    Pep tells her in January that Rosa is working on something different.He does not say different as in better or more ambitious. He says it the way he says things about ceramics that he wants her to understand correctly: with the specific precision of someone choosing the word

  • Second Bloom   Clara at Eighteen

    Clara turns eighteen in August.The last year before university. The secondary school years are completing themselves with the organized thoroughness that has characterized everything Clara has done since she was nine — the geology notebooks, the developmental logs, the

  • Second Bloom   The Second Book, Complete

    The last chapter arrives on a Saturday in September.Not arrived — she does not experience it as arrival. She experiences it as inevitability: the thing that was always the last chapter revealing itself as the last chapter. She has been writing around it for six months

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status