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“Si compro todos los dulces, ¿te casarás conmigo?” — dijo el Millonario y ella se quedó sin palabras

“If I buy all the candy,  you will marry me,” said the millionaire, and she left him speechless. Before the story begins, tell us in the comments where you’re joining us from.   Alejandro Vega canceled everything at 3 p.m. on a Tuesday. Not the coffee, not the 5 o’clock meeting, everything.  Mr.

Vega, Patricia said from the other end of the line. The board has been waiting 40 minutes for their confirmation of Lon’s contract. What do you expect?  Sorry.   Let them wait, Patricia, or let them sort it out on their own.  That’s what I pay them for. Silence on the other side.  Long, uncomfortable. Are you  okay?  Alejandro looked out the car window.

Paris at 3 pm in September. Light from another world.  People walking leisurely through the marai. A man with a baguette under his arm, a couple arguing with their hands, a dog looking at a butcher shop window with more dignity than any executive in a boardroom. Alejandro came down without a coat, without a briefcase, without any plan.

The September air hit his face.  It smelled like bread and something else he couldn’t identify, but which somehow reminded him of being a person.  He just walked.   He had spent 6 years building the Vega Industrial group from the desk his father had left empty. 6 years of contracts, shareholder meetings, decisions that moved jobs and  fortunes.

For six years he carried the promise he had made to a man who could no longer hear him. 6 years being Mr. Vega.  No, Alejandro, Mr. Vega. That afternoon something inside him refused to keep pretending that things were the same.  He turned a corner and stopped. The stall was between a flower shop and a picture frame shop, a red and cream striped awning, trays of perfectly aligned macarons, brownies with nuts wrapped in waxed paper, cookies of impossible shapes, glass jars  filled with candies that caught the light like

stained glass. Alejandro didn’t see any of that.  He saw her behind the counter.  A woman with her hair tied in a messy ponytail was writing prices on a small chalkboard. White apron stained with chocolate, simple t-shirt, making no effort to look like something he wasn’t.  And that’s precisely why it was impossible to look the other way.  Alejandro approached.

The woman did not look up.   Just a moment, he said  without stopping writing.  Alejandro blinked. In 6 years nobody had said a word to him.  The managers stood up when he entered.  The partners cancelled their own meetings to attend to him. The waiters were running.   He was just another customer waiting.  Twenty seconds passed, then thirty.

He cleared his throat.   “ I said one moment,”  she repeated with such measured patience that it sounded pedagogical. “One moment has 60 seconds, 15 more.” A man from the flower shop next door burst out laughing.  Alejandro felt a warmth in his ears. When the woman looked up, he understood why she had stopped.

She had the most direct eyes he had ever seen . The kind of eyes that had heard every argument in the world and hadn’t been swayed by any of them. “What can I get you ?” Alejandro asked. He looked at the sweets, then at her, then at the sweets again. His brain, trained to negotiate contracts in four languages, completely overloaded.

“Did you do them ?” “All of them. I get up at 4 a.m. for this. At 4. At  4. That’s inhuman. It’s called dedication. I understand that some people don’t know the difference.” Someone nearby murmured something. Alejandro Río, genuinely surprised, always treats his clients this way, only those who  They look instead of buying. She crossed her arms and waited for him.

No hostility, just limited time and absolute clarity about her own worth. Alejandro looked at the entire display case, the macarons, the brownies, the jars of candy, and then he had an idea, an idea he should have kept forever silent about in retrospect. How much does it all cost? She blinked.  Everything.

Every single sweet, every single candy,  every cookie. How much? The woman studied him as if trying to decide whether she was joking or if someone had genuinely lost their mind. Something like €700, maybe a  little more. Alejandro pulled out his wallet with the casual gesture of someone paying for a coffee. Her eyes widened a fraction, just a fraction.

Then they returned to their usual expression. You’re serious. I’m always serious about sweets. Nobody is serious about sweets. Alejandro rested his elbows on the counter. He lowered his voice as if he were about to share a secret. Let me rephrase that. So, if I buy all the sweets, will you marry me? Silence. Exactly two seconds.

The passing tourists slowed their pace. An elderly couple turned to look at each other. The man at the flower shop left the bouquet unfinished. The noise of the Marais traffic seemed to lower in volume. And then Isabel Montoya did something Alejandro Vega didn’t expect. She laughed. It wasn’t a flattered laugh.

It wasn’t the nervous laugh of someone intimidated by money. It was the laugh of someone who had just heard the most absurd joke of the year and couldn’t believe anyone had the audacity to say it out loud. “My God,” she said, wiping the corner of her eye. “Does this work on anyone?” Alejandro’s smile froze.

“What’s that strategy again?” The purse on the counter, the perfume ad look, the marriage proposal as if it were an irresistible offer. He leaned towards the counter, mimicking her posture exactly with surgical irony.   “It works normally for me,” he stuttered, something that hadn’t happened since he was 16 .

“Let me explain something, charming prince with a generous wallet,” she said, each word clear and unhurried.   You just learn that not everything can be solved by buying it. Absolute silence. First it was the florist  who burst out laughing so loudly that he dropped the bouquet.  Then, a group of students passing by on the sidewalk began to applaud.

An elderly lady with shopping bags said without any shame.  Very well, my dear. A teenager picked up the phone. Alejandro Vega, the man who negotiated deals worth hundreds of millions without blinking, felt his face burning as if he had put his head in an oven.  I didn’t mean to say he tried. Yes, I wanted to.

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