Zaida- Montse- Jordi -el Ni O Polla May 2026
One Tuesday, under a sky the color of a dirty mop, the four crossed paths.
In the dusty outskirts of L’Hospitalet, three names were whispered in the same breath: Zaida, Montse, and Jordi. But the fourth— el niño polla —was the one that made the old ladies cross themselves and the stray dogs bark at noon.
was the mechanic. She could take apart a Renault 12 with her eyes closed and rebuild it before the tortilla de patatas finished curdling. Her hands were always stained with grease and bad decisions. She had a heart that clanked like a loose piston, and she loved only one thing: speed. Not in cars—in endings. She liked to finish fights, friendships, and affairs before they got boring. Zaida- Montse- Jordi -el ni o polla
Zaida needed a getaway driver for a heist she’d invented just to feel alive. Montse needed a corpse—she’d always wanted to arrange funeral flowers around a real dead body. Jordi needed a problem to solve, and el niño polla needed a way out of a debt with a man who collected teeth.
Zaida smiled. Montse lit a cigarette. Jordi began counting the cracks in the ceiling. One Tuesday, under a sky the color of
So they sat together in a bar called El Último Round . No one spoke for ten minutes. Then the kid laughed—a dry, sharp sound like a can being punctured.
was the accountant. He counted everything: steps, sighs, the seconds between raindrops. He lived in a basement full of ledgers and old lottery tickets. Jordi believed that chaos was just math that hadn't been solved yet. He was afraid of Zaida’s smile and Montse’s silences, but most of all, he was afraid of the boy they called el niño polla . was the mechanic
was the florist. Except she hated flowers. She sold them, but each rose was a small betrayal, each lily a funeral she hadn't been invited to. Montse wore black every day, not out of mourning but because it matched her soul. She spoke in proverbs that made no sense. “A knife doesn't argue with the tomato,” she’d say, handing you a wilted daisy.