As the song reached its climax, Julián stopped writing. He realized that the phrase "¿Qué se yo?" (What do I know?) wasn't just a question—it was an acceptance.

The city was quiet, but for Julián, the silence was loud. He sat at his small kitchen table with a record spinning—the scratchy needle tracing the grooves of a song he had heard a thousand times. He looked at a blank piece of paper, then at the phone, then back at the paper.

Leo Dan’s hit song "" is a classic of the Nueva Ola movement, telling a poignant story of doubt, nostalgia, and the lingering questions after a relationship ends.

He began to write, the words mirroring the questions that had been haunting him:

Here is a story inspired by the lyrics and the melancholic spirit of the song. The Midnight Letter

: He described the way the house felt. How every corner held a memory of a shared laugh or a quiet morning. In the song, Leo Dan sings about not knowing if she still thinks of him; Julián felt that void physically, as if the air in the room was waiting for an answer that would never come.

: He wrote about the day she left. He didn't ask why anymore; he asked if she ever looked back. "What do I know about your life now?" he scribbled. It was the central mystery of his existence—whether the person who once knew his every thought was now a complete stranger.

Like the song, the story doesn't end with a reunion. It ends with a man in a quiet kitchen, realizing that some chapters are meant to end with a question mark, and that the music of the past is sometimes best left as a beautiful, fading echo.