One sentence. One farewell. Bir vedanla harcadı. She had spent three years of his life in three seconds.

Should Emre her again, or should he move on to someone new ?

He started walking toward the Bosphorus, the song still humming in his head. He realized he wasn't just mourning her; he was mourning the version of himself that believed love was permanent. He had given her everything, and she had treated his heart like a disposable thing.

“Insan biraz sevmez mi?” the voice pleaded through the speakers.

He closed his eyes. Every time he heard that line, he was back in the rainy driveway of three months ago. Leyla hadn't even stepped out of her car. She had just looked at him through the glass, her engine still idling, and said, "I'm done, Emre. Don't call."

The club was a blur of neon and sweat, but for Emre, the world stopped when the beat dropped. It was the —the one with the high, echoing synths that sounded like a heart breaking in digital time.

He didn't need an answer anymore. The answer was in the silence she left behind. With a steady breath, he hit Delete . The song in his head finally faded, replaced by the quiet, rhythmic lap of the water against the stones. He wasn't "wasted" yet—he was just beginning to find the pieces she left behind.