Falling Into Love with You (The Hate-Love Duet Book 2) Rowe, Lauren (read aloud TXT) đ
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My stomach twists. âOkay.â
Laila takes a deep breath. âI kept this from you because I didnât want to burden you with it, or make you change the way you acted on-camera. I thought if you knew what Iâm about to tell you, you might act differently on-camera, in a way that didnât seem natural.â
âSpit it out, Laila.â
She bites her lip and exhales. âThereâs a termination clause in my contract. A buy-out clause, by which the show can send me packing, at their sole discretion, at any time, without prior notice, by paying me a hundred grand.â
âA hundred grand? Jesus, Laila. No.â
She nods.
âA hundred grand is peanuts to them!â I whisper-shout, running my hand through my hair. âNo wonder youâve been so stressed out about what Nadine said yesterday.â
âIâm obviously on the chopping block, especially after we didnât deliver today.â
âYou should have told me about this the minute Nadine left my dressing room last night, Laila!â
âI didnât want to force you to do anything you didnât want to do. Plus, I thought I could handle this on my own. But after today, when you were so sweet to me and I didnât have the heart to be anything but sweet back to you, I realized I canât do this alone. Everything depends on me delivering âVintage Savage and Lailaâ tomorrow. Itâs my last chance to hit a homerun before the long break. After shooting was over for today, Nadine popped into my dressing room while I was changing and made it clear she was pissed about our âhappy coupleâ routine today. She didnât say this, explicitly, but her demeanor made me think theyâre going to fire me during the break if we donât hit it out of the ballpark tomorrow, exactly like sheâs requested.â
My heart feels like itâs exploding. âThey canât fire you. Theyâre contractually obligated to let you perform in the finale, remember?â
âOkay, so maybe theyâll invite me back to let me sing. Yet another chance for huge ratings.â
âBut weâre picking four teams tomorrow. The whole audition process has been built around you being one of the judges.â
âThatâd be an easy fix. They could fire me during the break, say we broke up and I didnât want to return to the show. And then, theyâd parcel off the contestants on my team to the three remaining judges and finish out the season with three judges, like always. Just think about the ratings if they did all that, Savage! Theyâd have a self-created âscandal.â A big âmessâ theyâd have to scramble to fix. Donât you think everyone would tune in to see that? Not to mention, to see how poor Savage is doing after his breakup with Laila? I havenât slept a wink since Nadine talked to us in your dressing room, and Iâve looked at it from every angle. Iâve decided Iâm not paranoid. Theyâre going to fire me during the break, Savage. I can feel it. Unless we deliver what Nadine asked. And even then, I might be toast, regardless.â
âWell, fuck that. I wonât let them fire you,â I say, my jaw tight. âIf thatâs what they ultimately decide to do, then Iâll tell them I wonât do the show without you.â
Lailaâs face melts with affection for me. She touches my cheek gently and smiles ruefully. âThank you, but Iâd never let you do that. Youâre contractually obligated to do the show. Youâd have a lawsuit on your hands.â
âI donât care. Iâm not doing the show without you, Laila. That was a basic condition of me doing the show. Doing it with you.â
âNo, it wasnât. You agreed to do it, long before you knew Iâd be anything but Alohaâs one-episode mentor. Plus, the whole reason you signed onto the show was for Mimi. And that reason still stands today, more than ever.â
I feel flooded with panic. But I manage to say, âOkay, letâs not panic here. Iâm not supposed to tell you this, but I know something you donât. Something that proves, beyond a shadow of a doubt, they wonât fire you, whether we deliver âVintage Savage and Lailaâ tomorrow or not.â
She looks at me hopefully, her blue eyes wide and brimming with hope.
I glance toward the front of the vehicle, to make sure our driver and bodyguard canât overhear me, despite the loud music. And when itâs clear theyâre enmeshed in their own conversation, I return to Laila and grab her hand. âThereâs a dangling carrot in my contract, baby. Theyâll pay me a fat bonusâa quarter millâif I get down on bended knee and propose to you, right after we perform our duet in the finale.â
Laila gasps. âNo.â
I nod. âThey didnât want me telling you about it, to ensure you had an âauthentic reactionâ on-camera. And, honestly, Iâve never told you about it, anyway, because thereâs no way Iâm going to do it. But the mere fact the bonus is hanging out there proves youâve got nothing to worry about. Why would they offer me a bonus to propose to you in the finale, if theyâre not planning to keep you around until the finale?â
Lailaâs shoulders slump. The hope in her eyes a moment ago fades. Clearly, she doesnât find my logic as compelling as I do. âI donât think we can rely on that clause to protect me, honey. I think theyâre preserving themselves all sorts of potential storylines, depending on what happens, from week to week. You know, hedging their bets. If Iâm still around for the finale, then maybe youâd choose to earn that bonus. But if they donât keep me around, then thatâs fine, because theyâve got a Plan B that will work, too. Thatâs what Rhoda told me they do on The Engagement Experiment, all the time. She worked on that show with Nadine for five seasons, remember? When she came to the house and spilled all the tea,
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