Lucas sat at the scarred wooden table, his phone face down. He didn't need to check it anymore; he knew the silence on the other end was his answer. For months, he and Clara had been drifting like two ships in a storm, and tonight, the anchors had finally snapped.
Lucas raised his glass to the empty chair across from him. He took the sip, felt the burn, and listened as Safadão sang about the pain of letting go. When the song ended, Lucas didn't order another. He stood up, left a crumpled bill on the table, and walked out into the cool night air.
The "Último Pedido" had been served. He was leaving the heartache behind in the bottom of that glass, finally ready to face a morning where her name wasn't the first thing he whispered.
"One more," Lucas said, his voice sandpaper-dry. "And then I’m done."
He closed his eyes and could almost feel Clara there, the way she used to laugh before the arguments took over. The song wasn't just music; it was his biography. It was about that pride you swallow when you realize you'd rather have one last night of pretend than a lifetime of "what ifs."
The neon lights of the roadside bar flickered, casting a tired glow over the half-empty glasses of whiskey. In the corner, the jukebox hummed a low tune, but all anyone could hear was the echo of a heart breaking in real-time. This was the setting for the "Último Pedido" (The Last Request).