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Chapter 68 - Too Close, Too Unreal

There's a difference between noticing someone…

and not being able to ignore them anymore.

Cielo realizes this on a night that should have been ordinary.

Long shoot.Delayed schedule.Everyone too tired to care about anything beyond "wrap up and go home."

"Last scene na!" someone calls.

"Let's make it quick!"

Nothing is ever quick.

Not when emotions are involved.

Not when pressure is high.

And definitely not when he's in the frame.

Lee Shung-Ho

Tonight's scene is quiet.

Two characters sitting across from each other.

No shouting.

No dramatic breakdown.

Just tension.

The kind that sits in the air and refuses to leave.

"Action."

He doesn't move immediately.

Just looks.

Listens.

Waits.

And somehow—

that stillness carries more weight than any line he delivers.

Cielo stands behind the monitor, pretending to focus on timing.

On cues.

On continuity.

But her eyes keep drifting.

Because she recognizes it now.

That kind of presence—

is not acting.

It's control.

The ability to feel something…

and choose exactly how much to show.

"Cut."

The director nods.

"Good. Again."

Reset.

Repeat.

But something changes on the second take.

Not the script.

Not the blocking.

Him.

His gaze lingers longer than it should.

Not on his co-actor.

On her.

Cielo feels it instantly.

Like a shift in temperature.

Her fingers tighten slightly around her clipboard.

Don't react.

Don't move.

Don't make it real.

"Action."

The scene continues.

But now, every second stretches.

Every silence feels intentional.

And every time his eyes flicker—

she knows.

This is no longer just performance.

"Cut!"

The director claps once.

"That's it. Moving on."

The tension breaks for everyone else.

Not for her.

"Cielo, notes!" the assistant director calls.

She walks forward, controlled as ever.

Professional.

Measured.

Safe.

"Continuity is consistent," she says.

"Timing improved by two seconds."

Her voice doesn't betray anything.

But her chest—

does.

Later, the set finally clears.

Lights dim.

Crew disperses.

Exhaustion settles in like a quiet agreement.

Cielo gathers her things quickly.

Routine.

Leave before conversations start.

Leave before moments linger.

"Leaving early?"

She stops.

Of course.

Lee Shung-Ho

She doesn't turn immediately.

"I'm done for the day."

"So am I."

That's not comforting.

She finally faces him.

Keeps distance.

Always distance.

"Then you should rest," she says.

He studies her.

"You always answer like that."

"Like what?"

"Like you're closing a door."

Her jaw tightens slightly.

"It's called ending a conversation."

A faint smile.

"It's called avoiding one."

Silence.

Dangerous silence.

Because it's no longer about work.

Or systems.

Or roles.

It's about them.

"You're reading too much into things," she says.

He steps closer.

Not enough to touch.

Enough to feel.

"I don't think I am."

Her heartbeat betrays her.

Faster now.

Sharper.

"This isn't real," she says quickly.

There it is.

The line she has been holding onto.

His eyes don't leave hers.

"What isn't?"

"This," she gestures slightly between them.

"This… whatever you think this is."

He tilts his head.

"And what do you think it is?"

She doesn't answer immediately.

Because the truth is—

she doesn't know.

And that scares her more than anything.

"It's temporary," she says instead.

"Work. Proximity. Pressure."

A pause.

"It ends when this project ends."

She expects him to argue.

To challenge.

To push.

He doesn't.

He just looks at her.

Too calmly.

Too knowingly.

"Then why does it feel like it started before we got here?"

That hits.

Hard.

Her breath catches.

Just for a second.

Because she knows—

he's right.

"You're making this complicated," she says, but her voice is softer now.

"No," he replies.

"You're trying to make it simple."

They're closer now.

Not physically dramatic.

But enough that she can feel the warmth from him despite the cold air.

Too close.

Too real.

Too unreal.

"Cielo."

The way he says her name—

not rushed, not casual—

makes something inside her shift.

"You don't have to decide anything," he says quietly.

Her eyes flicker.

"Then what do I do?"

A small pause.

Then:

"Just stop pretending you don't feel it."

Silence crashes into them.

Because that—

that is the one thing she has been avoiding.

Feeling.

Not observing.

Not analyzing.

Feeling.

Her voice drops.

Barely above a whisper.

"And if I do?"

He steps just a little closer.

Close enough now that distance is no longer protection.

"Then at least it's real."

Her heart is loud now.

Too loud.

Like it's trying to be heard over everything she has built to keep it quiet.

She should step back.

She should end this.

She should return to control.

But she doesn't.

And that—

that is the most dangerous part.

For a moment—

they just stand there.

No script.

No direction.

No system.

Just two people

standing too close

in a reality that suddenly feels too fragile to define.

Then—

Cielo finally exhales.

Shaky.

Unfamiliar.

"This is a mistake," she whispers.

He nods slightly.

"Probably."

A beat.

"But you're still here."

Again.

That truth.

This time—

she doesn't argue.

She just looks at him.

And for the first time—

she doesn't hide it completely.

Not everything.

But enough.

Enough for him to see.

Enough for her to feel.

And that's when she realizes:

This isn't something that will disappear when the project ends.

This isn't proximity.

Or pressure.

Or timing.

This is something that found them—

before they even knew where to look.

Too close.

Too unreal.

And dangerously—

too real to ignore anymore.

End of Chapter: Too Close, Too Unreal

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