Teleprompter Girl sounds powerful until you realize the job description is basically:
Don't let anyone embarrass themselves live on national TV.
And somehow, Cielo Diaz has become very good at it.
Too good.
—
"Cielo," Kevin says one afternoon, leaning into the booth with his usual half-smile, "you just saved a congressman from saying something politically irreversible."
—
Cielo doesn't look away from the script screen.
"I corrected a timing misalignment."
—
Kevin nods slowly.
"Yeah. You corrected democracy."
—
She pauses.
"That is an exaggerated classification."
—
He laughs. "I'm telling HR you said that."
—
"I will deny authorship."
—
That's how it always goes with them.
He jokes.
She processes.
He laughs.
She… almost smiles.
Almost.
—
But something has changed lately.
It's not loud.
It's not dramatic.
It's worse than that.
It's consistent.
—
Kevin stays longer in the booth than necessary.
Cielo notices.
Of course she does.
She notices everything.
—
"How's IT life?" she asks one day, not looking up.
—
He exhales.
"It's not IT life. It's IT survival."
—
"That is statistically accurate."
—
He leans closer to her console.
"You always talk like you're reading error logs even when you're talking about feelings."
—
Cielo finally looks at him.
"I do not have sufficient data for emotional classification."
—
Kevin smiles softly.
"I think you do. You're just not parsing it."
—
That sentence stays longer in the air than it should.
—
Because there are moments now.
Small ones.
Dangerous ones.
—
Like when their hands accidentally touch while adjusting the same script page.
Or when Kevin fixes her headset without asking.
Or when Cielo doesn't immediately pull away.
—
Those moments feel like system errors neither of them reports.
—
One night, during a late broadcast rehearsal, something goes wrong.
Not small wrong.
Not "adjust timing" wrong.
But live-feed-about-to-break-down wrong.
—
"Script mismatch!" someone shouts.
"Prompter freezing!"
"Cielo, we need backup NOW!"
—
Her fingers move fast.
Too fast to feel anything except logic.
Scroll.
Reset.
Recover line sequence.
Stabilize output.
—
But the system lags.
Just for a second.
—
And the host—
on live rehearsal feed—
starts speaking words that are not in the script.
Improvised.
Dangerous.
Unapproved.
—
Cielo freezes.
Just one beat.
That's all it takes.
—
Kevin is suddenly beside her.
"Hey," he says quietly, "I've got it. You reroute the feed."
—
"I cannot—"
—
"Yes, you can," he says. Softer now. "I trust your system sense."
—
That word again.
Trust.
—
She reroutes.
He stabilizes.
Together, they fix what should have collapsed.
—
Afterward, silence.
Heavy.
—
The director walks in.
"Good recovery."
Then leaves.
That's all.
That's always all.
—
But Kevin doesn't move.
He stays near her.
Too close.
Not enough space.
—
"You hesitated," he says.
—
"I calculated risk probability," Cielo replies.
—
"That's not what I meant."
—
Silence again.
Longer this time.
—
Then Kevin says something he shouldn't.
Or maybe he should have said it long ago.
—
"You're not just the system, Cielo."
—
She looks at him.
Still.
Careful.
—
"That is incorrect," she says.
But her voice is quieter now.
Less certain.
—
Kevin steps closer.
"You don't glitch when things go wrong. You adapt. That's not programming."
—
Cielo's fingers tighten slightly on the edge of the console.
"That is survival logic."
—
He shakes his head.
"No. That's you."
—
And suddenly—
the booth feels too small.
Too bright.
Too quiet.
—
Because there is something between them now.
Not spoken.
Not defined.
But very real.
—
Dangerous in a different way than broadcast failure.
—
The kind that cannot be fixed by scrolling backward.
—
Later, after shift, they walk outside.
Rain again.
Always rain lately, like the city is buffering emotion.
—
Kevin opens an umbrella.
Only one.
Of course.
—
Cielo looks at it.
"I am capable of walking in rain conditions."
—
"I know," he says. "But I'm offering anyway."
—
She pauses.
Processes.
Accepts.
—
They walk too close under the umbrella.
Shoulder brushing.
Breathing synced.
—
Kevin breaks the silence.
"You ever think about how weird this is?"
—
"What is 'this'?"
—
"This," he gestures vaguely between them. "You and me. Scripts and chaos. You saving live TV like it's a math problem."
—
Cielo thinks.
Honest answer:
"I do not categorize it yet."
—
He laughs softly.
"That's fair."
—
A beat.
Then:
"But I do."
—
She turns slightly.
—
Kevin looks at her properly now.
Not joking.
Not teasing.
Just… present.
—
"I think I'm starting to like you in a way that's not professional," he says.
—
Cielo stops walking.
Not because she wants to.
But because her system has no response for that input.
—
Silence.
Rain.
City noise.
Heartbeat she refuses to label.
—
Finally, she says:
"That introduces instability."
—
Kevin nods.
"Yeah."
A pause.
"I know."
—
And that's what makes it worse.
He knows.
He still said it.
—
Cielo looks down.
Then back up.
Careful.
Measured.
—
"If I accept this," she says slowly, "it may affect operational clarity."
—
Kevin smiles faintly.
"I can live with reduced clarity."
—
That almost breaks something in her.
Almost.
—
She exhales.
Small.
Controlled.
—
"Then we proceed with caution," she says.
—
Kevin grins.
"That sounds like a relationship warning label."
—
"It is an accurate system protocol."
—
He laughs.
She doesn't.
But something softer appears in her eyes.
—
Not a smile.
Not yet.
But close.
—
And for the first time since she learned to control systems—
—
Cielo Diaz realizes something terrifying:
—
Not all instability is dangerous.
Some of it… is human.
—
And as they walk under the same umbrella, under the same city noise, under the same unspoken tension—
—
the words between them are no longer just scripts on a screen.
—
They are becoming something neither of them wrote.
