The Quiet Between Storms
Valentina removed her headset. The faint echo of the General Assembly's floor, Portuguese, then English, then Spanish still hummed in her bones. She had just spent six hours shuttling between a climate minister from Brazil and a trade delegate from Chile, her mind a finely tuned machine of syntax, tone, and cultural nuance. She was, by all accounts, the most in-demand Spanish-English interpreter in the UN's Latin America and Caribbean division. Ambassadors requested her by name. Crisis sessions were rescheduled around her availability. Today was empty. No flights to Bogotá. No back-to-back negotiation marathons. No 4 a.m. calls to patch through a last-minute press conference. Her colleague, Marco, had texted: "Café? There's a networking thing. Could be good for your career." Valentina glanced at her reflection in the dark window of her small Panama City apartment. The lines around her eyes were faint but honest. She typed back: "Not today. Today I choose sile...