El Amor Al Margen -
She would tell him about the video she had to watch that morning—a man saying goodbye to his daughter via a frozen screen before a missile hit. Lucas would underline it mentally and write in the margin: See also: the silence of the surviving parent. Page 42.
The love al margen.
His love life, predictably, mirrored his profession. He never dated the protagonists. He never fell for the heroines with their cascading hair and their unshakeable moral compasses. Instead, he fell for the footnotes. For the waitress who brought the coffee to the protagonist’s table in Chapter Three, the one who had a chipped tooth and a theory about why birds sing only in minor keys. He fell for the man in the background of a photograph, the one everyone cropped out because his eyes were too close together and he wore last year’s shoes. El amor al margen
“I know,” he said.
They never went to restaurants with tablecloths. They went to diners where the menus were sticky and the coffee tasted like rust. They never exchanged grand declarations. They exchanged footnotes. He would tell her a story about his mother’s funeral, and she would add a footnote in her mind: 1. He cried only when the priest mispronounced her name. This is the only detail that matters. She would tell him about the video she
Lucas was offered an early retirement. The publishing house was finally going bankrupt. His marginalia would be pulped.
They became connoisseurs of the invisible. He loved the way she held a coffee cup—not by the handle, but by the ceramic body, as if warming her hands over a dying campfire. She loved the way he mispronounced the word “archive” (ar-cheev, like an Italian dessert). These were not the plot points of a romance novel. These were the annotations. The love al margen
“And you?” she asked.