The second: (1981). He wrote it with a trembling hand. 1981 was the year he fell in love with Clara, a woman who painted with coffee and whispered poetry into his ear while he slept. They danced to this song in a kitchen flooded with moonlight. "Tudo que se move é sagrado / Tudo que respira é um ser." (Everything that moves is sacred / Everything that breathes is a being.) Clara was gone now — cancer, '99 — but every time he heard the first acoustic guitar notes, she was there, barefoot, spinning in the kitchen.
"Yes," Tomás said, his voice soft as worn vinyl. "That’s the point. A life isn’t measured in years. It’s measured in the songs that make you close your eyes and say: 'I was there. I felt that. I survived.' " geraldo azevedo as melhores
He picked up a guitar-shaped pen and added one more line at the bottom of the page: The second: (1981)
"I'm not sick, child. But when I go, I don’t want flowers. I want these songs. Each person who comes will hold a card with one song’s name. When the priest finishes whatever he has to say, they will press play. All at the same time. Thirty different songs, thirty different memories. A beautiful chaos." They danced to this song in a kitchen flooded with moonlight
He smiled, pushing the paper toward her. "I’m making a list. Geraldo Azevedo: as melhores. For my funeral."