Falling Into Love with You (The Hate-Love Duet Book 2) Rowe, Lauren (read aloud TXT) đ
Book online «Falling Into Love with You (The Hate-Love Duet Book 2) Rowe, Lauren (read aloud TXT) đ». Author Rowe, Lauren
I sigh with relief and grab Savageâs hand. âThank you. Iâm so glad youâre happy.â
âWeâre thrilled. Youâve been selling the romance beyond our wildest dreams. Youâre either amazing actors, or . . .â She raises her eyebrow and lets her facial expression finish the sentence: Or youâre not acting at all.
I look at Savage, who isnât looking at me, and canât help noticing his breathing has become noticeably stilted and his jaw tight. I return my gaze to Nadine, my cheeks radiating with heat.
âEither way,â Nadine continues, âweâve been blown away by how convincing and authentic you two have seemed, both here on-set and in your behind-the-scenes videos from home. When the first episodes begin airing in a few weeks, nobody could possibly doubt the authenticity of your relationship. Which, of course, was initially our primary goal.â
Initially.
Oh, fuck.
Something about the way she emphasized that word unsettles me. If that was only the initial goal, then whatâs the goal . . . now?
âNow that weâve got our initial bases covered so well,â Nadine continues, once again emphasizing that same word, âweâre going to shift course. Add a little conflict to the love story, to make all the sweetness and happiness feel all the more special for the audience.â
Fuck.
Fuck.
Fuck!
In a flash, I know Aloha was right. Weâve given the suits too good a love story, right out of the gate, with nowhere to go but a live birth in the finale . . . or, in the alternative, a little trouble in paradise.
Nadine leans forward in her armchair. âRemember how you two were at each otherâs throats during our very first conference call? Thatâs the dynamic we want to see during the last batch of auditions tomorrow, and then during Draft Day and Mentor Day, too. Sound good?â Her question is rhetorical. She barrels ahead without pausing. âDuring our break for the holidays, my team and I will pour over all the footage while editing together the first batch of episodes, and at that point, weâll decide what direction we want to go next during the âliveâ singing competition.â
I look at Savage, my heart crashing and my eyes wide with panic, and discover heâs every bit as poker-faced and cool as a cucumber as I am freaking out. Which makes sense, I suppose, since he has no idea about the early termination clause in my contract. To him, this is all white noise. A request he isnât going to grant. While to me, this is catastrophic. Plainly, the producers are trying to figure out the best storyline for The Savage and Laila Showâwhich actually means, when you boil it down, theyâre trying to figure out if maybe The Savage and Laila Show should become The Savage Show, sans Laila, like theyâd initially wanted in the first place.
Nadine says, âWe want to see âhate-lustâ from you guys! We want to see the same âI want to fuck you to death!â energy that was in your famous meme! Bring us some of the fire from that viral video of you two fighting on the sidewalk. Bring us heat. Anger. Danger!â She chuckles with glee. âWe want sniping, banter, and combativenessâthe kind of hostility thatâll make our audience imagine you fighting at the judgesâ table by day . . . and having angry but amazing hate-sex by night!â
My mouth hangs open. âBut . . . Nadine, we donât hate each other anymore. We did all that stuff when we did.â
âI never hated you, Laila,â Savage says, speaking for the first time during this conversation.
âIt doesnât matter what you feel. Fake it! The truth is that every passionate relationship straddles a thin line between love and hate. Or lust and hate.â She raises an eyebrow, letting us know she thinks the word âlustâ is a far more appropriate descriptor than âlove,â when it comes to Savage and me.
âBut . . .â I say. I look at Savage again, but heâs no help. So, I return to Nadine. âAre you sure thatâs what the audience will want to see from us? During that first conference call, you said it was your top priority to make sure our romance was totally believable. You wanted something that would make the audience âswoon.â And I think we can agree thatâs what weâve delivered.â
âAbsolutely. Although, to be clear, our top priority was never making the romance believable. That was a means to an end. Our actual top priority was, and still is, and always will be, supplying a show that captures maximum ratings. Now that weâre confident the initial footage weâve gotten will convince everyone your relationship is real, we feel the next batch of episodes should offer a plot twist that will keep viewers glued to their TVs and coming back for more. We want the audience to worry a bit that your relationship might be on the rocks. We want them rooting for you to find your way back to each otherâand tuning in, breathlessly, each week, to see if, in the end, you two make it to a happily ever after.â
I press my lips together, feeling flabbergasted.
In the face of my silence, Nadine addresses Savage. âDo you understand what we want?â
Savage snakes his arm behind me on the couch in an apparent show of solidarity. His jaw muscles pulse briefly, before he licks his lips and says, âI understand the meaning of your words, yes. But as far as Iâm concerned, Nadine, Iâm contractually obligated to be a judge on a reality TV singing competition and Lailaâs devoted boyfriend. Iâm not, however, contractually obligated to become, nor am I interested in becoming, a pawn on a dating show. Iâm not a contestant on The Engagement Experiment, Nadine. That was never the deal.â
Nadineâs dark eyes flicker. âYou both signed on to âsellâ the romance to a television audience. And, trust
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