
After My Protector Kissed Me in Front of My Ex
Chapter 2
He was there on Tuesday.
I spotted him through the coffee shop window before I pushed the door open — same worn canvas jacket, sketchbook already open on the table, a cup in front of him that looked like it had been there long enough to go cold. The place was three blocks from the studio and I'd been coming here since my second week on the production. It was not a famous spot. There was no reason for him to know about it.
I went in anyway.
He looked up when I ordered, gave me a small wave, and went back to his sketch. Didn't call me over. Didn't perform surprise. I took my coffee — black, one sugar — and sat down two tables away with the script pages I'd been meaning to annotate, and we existed in the same space for forty minutes without it becoming anything.
It was the not-pushing that got me. I knew that. I knew exactly what it was doing and I let it work on me anyway.
By Thursday he was telling me about London — a story about getting catastrophically lost on the Tube with a cello case he was transporting for a friend, the kind of story that only works if you're willing to make yourself look genuinely ridiculous. He was. I laughed before I meant to, the real kind, and he looked pleased in a way that wasn't smug. Just glad.
"You always laughed like that," he said. "Like you were surprised by it."
I looked back down at my script. "Don't do that."
"Do what?"
"Remember things out loud."
He was quiet for a moment. Then: "Okay."
He went back to sketching. I went back to my pages. The coffee shop hummed around us and I told myself this was nothing. Just two people who used to know each other, occupying the same square footage. Harmless.
I almost believed it.
---
My agent called on Friday afternoon while I was still in the makeup chair.
"The Hargrove project," she said, and something in her voice told me before she finished the sentence. "Shaw's office reached out. They're going in a different direction for the supporting lead."
I watched my own face in the mirror. Renata was blending something along my jaw and she caught my eyes in the reflection, reading me the way she always did — fast and accurate.
"Different direction meaning Danna Moreno," I said.
A pause. "They haven't announced."
"But yes."
"Calliope —"
"What's the reason they gave?"
Another pause, shorter. "Scheduling conflicts. Shaw's been telling people you're difficult to lock down."
I set my phone face-down on the counter and stared at the mirror. Renata put down her brush.
"Don't," she said quietly.
"Don't what?"
"Whatever face you're about to make. The one where you decide to handle it alone."
"I'm not making a face."
"You're making the face."
I picked up my phone again. The Hargrove project was a period piece — a real one, the kind with a script that had actual weight to it. The supporting lead had a breakdown scene in the second act that I'd been quietly rehearsing in my apartment for three weeks. It was the kind of role that changed what directors thought you were capable of. It was the kind of role that could stop me from being the woman who always needed someone else's name attached to hers to get a meeting.
Danna knew that. That was precisely why she'd moved on it.
I could fight it. I knew how to fight things — quietly, through the right channels, with the right amount of patience. But the right channels, in this case, ran directly through Xavier Kennedy's office, and asking Xavier for anything directly was a line I had been carefully not crossing for three years. Every favor had been a negotiation. Every rescue had been framed as a transaction. Asking him to intervene in my career because a rival actress was outmaneuvering me felt different. It felt like admitting something I wasn't ready to admit.
I told my agent I'd think about it. I went back to set and hit every mark perfectly and didn't think about it at all.
---
The gallery was in Silver Lake, tucked into a converted warehouse space with bad lighting and good wine and the kind of crowd that was genuinely there for the work rather than to be seen at it. Dawson's friend painted large-scale abstracts — all tension and color, nothing resolved. I stood in front of one for a long time.
"He paints arguments," Dawson said, coming to stand beside me. "That's how he describes it. Not the fight. The moment right before."
I looked at the canvas. All that suspended energy, everything about to break open. "I like it."
"I thought you would."
We moved through the rest of the show slowly, stopping where something caught us, moving on when it didn't. He didn't try to explain the pieces to me or perform having opinions. He just looked, and occasionally said something true, and let me do the same.
Outside, the night was cool and the street was quiet. We walked back toward where we'd parked, a block apart, and somewhere in the middle of that block his hand found mine.
Just for a moment. Fingers closing briefly around mine, warm and certain, and then releasing. Like punctuation. Like he was marking something without making a claim on it.
He didn't look at me when he did it. He didn't look at me after. He just kept walking, hands back in his jacket pockets, and said something about the cello story having a second act he hadn't gotten to yet.
I drove home with both hands on the wheel and the windows down and the city moving past me in long streaks of light.
I knew what he was doing. I'd known from the coffee shop, from the London stories, from the way he asked about my work like the answer was the most important thing in the room. I knew the architecture of it — the patience, the restraint, the careful accumulation of small moments that added up to something that felt inevitable.
Knowing didn't help.
I got home and stood in my kitchen and made instant noodles because it was the only thing I knew how to make, and I thought about the Hargrove role, and Danna's hand on Xavier's sleeve, and the way a canvas full of unresolved tension could be the most honest thing in a room.
The moment right before.
Everything about to break open.
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