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Chapter 39 - Office Gossip and Hookups

In television, nothing stays off-air.

Not mistakes.

Not secrets.

Not feelings people swear they don't have.

Cielo Diaz learns this the same way she learns everything else in Manila:

by observing it before anyone explains it.

It starts in the hallway.

Where scripts are printed.

Where deadlines are born.

Where gossip spreads faster than Wi-Fi.

"Alam mo ba?" someone whispers near the coffee station.

(Do you know?)

Cielo doesn't mean to listen.

She is just standing there waiting for cue sheets to print.

But in broadcast environments, walls are optional.

"Yung scriptwriter… may something daw sa director."

A pause.

"Hindi daw 'something.' Something na talaga."

(Not just something. Something real.)

Cielo processes silently.

Relationship status: unconfirmed. Operational impact: unknown.

Kevin leans beside her, coffee in hand.

"You're doing that thing again," he says.

"What thing."

"The internal system audit face."

"I am not auditing."

"You absolutely are."

Inside the station, relationships behave like unauthorized subplots.

No one assigns them.

They just… appear.

The assistant director dating a scriptwriter.

The production guy flirting with a makeup artist during live breaks.

The editor who mysteriously takes longer breaks when a certain camera operator is on shift.

And somehow, everyone pretends it is normal.

"It's TV," Jessa says over text when Cielo asks.

"Chaos with lighting."

Cielo stares at her phone.

"That is not a production model," she replies.

"Girl, it is reality."

Kevin notices she is unusually quiet that day.

"You okay?" he asks.

"I am processing workplace social behavior patterns."

He laughs.

"Of course you are."

But then she sees it.

Not gossip.

Not rumors.

Actual evidence.

A scriptwriter and a production staff member holding hands behind the editing bay.

Quick.

Hidden.

Then not hidden enough.

Cielo freezes.

Not judgment.

Just… analysis overload.

Kevin follows her gaze.

"Oh," he says softly.

Cielo doesn't respond.

He adds, "Yeah. That's been going on for a while."

"Why is it not documented in HR systems?"

Kevin almost chokes on his coffee.

"Because HR is trying to survive too."

The truth of television production is this:

Everything runs on deadlines.

And everything else runs underneath them.

Feelings.

Fights.

Secret relationships.

Quiet breakups that happen between takes.

And somehow—

the show still goes on.

Later that night, during a late shift, chaos hits.

A script issue.

Again.

But not technical this time.

Emotional.

The assistant director and scriptwriter are arguing in the hallway.

Not whispering anymore.

Not hiding.

"Hindi mo na naman inayos yung version ko!" (You didn't fix my version again!)

"Wala akong time sa drama mo!" (I don't have time for your drama!)

The word "drama" lands badly in a TV station.

Irony is always on duty here.

Cielo stands frozen near the teleprompter console.

Kevin appears beside her.

"Want to fix that too?" he jokes softly.

"I do not have authority over interpersonal conflict resolution."

"That might be the first thing you've ever said no to fixing."

She looks at him.

"I am learning limits."

He smiles faintly.

"Progress."

The conflict escalates.

Someone cries.

Someone leaves.

Someone else pretends nothing happened and still goes back to editing footage.

Because broadcast life doesn't pause for heartbreak.

Cielo watches it all.

Then quietly says:

"Emotional instability affects production efficiency."

Kevin nods.

"Yeah."

A pause.

"But it also makes people human."

That sentence stays longer than expected.

After shift, they walk outside.

The air is heavy with rain that hasn't started yet.

Manila always feels like it is about to say something it never fully says.

Kevin breaks the silence.

"You're not judging them."

"I am not qualified."

"That's not what I mean."

She looks at him.

"I mean you're observing without assuming."

Cielo thinks.

That might be true.

"I do not fully understand attachment behaviors yet," she says.

Kevin smiles softly.

"You're literally surrounded by it."

A pause.

Then he adds:

"You know people talk about us too."

Cielo turns slightly.

"Define 'us.'"

He grins.

"Exactly."

But then his expression softens.

"Not gossip-us," he says. "More like… observation-us."

Cielo waits.

Kevin continues:

"They think we're already something."

Silence.

Cielo processes.

Fast.

Too fast.

"That is incorrect classification," she says finally.

Kevin raises an eyebrow.

"Oh?"

"Yes."

A pause.

"…Currently undefined relationship state."

He laughs.

"That's the most Cielo answer you've ever given."

But then her voice lowers slightly.

"But stable variables are still forming."

Kevin stops walking.

Looks at her.

For once, no joke.

No buffer.

Just him.

"I'll take that," he says quietly.

The city hums around them.

Unbothered.

Unaware.

Always moving.

And inside the TV station—

people continue loving, breaking, arguing, fixing, and pretending nothing is happening.

While Cielo Diaz learns something important:

Not everything broken is meant to be corrected.

Some things are meant to be witnessed.

And Kevin Valdez—

still quietly choosing a life away from inheritance rooms—

is one of those things she is no longer trying to delete from her system.

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