WebNovels

Chapter 40 - Love Affairs That Fade Fast

In television, even love has a shelf life.

Shorter if there's a deadline.

Shorter still if it happens between editing breaks.

Cielo Diaz learns this from observation—not participation.

As always.

"Two weeks lang 'yan," someone says near the makeup room.

(That will only last two weeks.)

Cielo pauses behind a stack of cue sheets.

Not intentionally eavesdropping.

Just… stationed in a high-gossip traffic zone.

"Scriptwriter at assistant director," the voice continues. "Cute at first. Pero lagi naman 'yan."

(Cute at first. But that always happens.)

Cielo processes silently.

Relationship duration: statistically unstable.

Kevin appears beside her like he always does—quietly, as if he is also just another background process in her system.

"You look like you're diagnosing romance again," he says.

"I am analyzing lifecycle patterns."

"Of relationships?"

"Yes."

Kevin nods seriously.

"That's… actually accurate in this building."

Inside the station, love affairs behave like temporary productions.

They have:

casting.

chemistry.

conflict.

and sudden cancellation.

No official announcement.

Just… fading.

A couple stops talking after a script revision disagreement.

Another starts whispering again after pretending they were never together.

Someone else transfers departments entirely "for professional reasons."

But everyone knows.

Everyone always knows.

Except Cielo.

Who knows differently.

Not socially.

Systemically.

That afternoon, she sees one of the rumored couples sitting apart.

Not fighting.

Not talking.

Just… distance.

Kevin follows her gaze.

"Oh. Yeah," he says quietly.

Cielo asks, "What happened."

Kevin shrugs.

"Same thing that always happens."

She looks at him.

"That is not an explanatory answer."

He smiles faintly.

"Feelings happened. Then work happened. Then both couldn't exist in the same frame anymore."

Cielo processes that.

"…Frame conflict."

Kevin laughs.

"Sure. Let's call it that."

Later, during break, Cielo sits with her notebook.

She writes:

Love affairs in the station have short runtime cycles.

They begin with high engagement and end with silent deactivation.

She pauses.

Then adds:

No rollback available.

Kevin sits beside her.

"You ever think you do that too?" he asks.

Cielo looks up.

"I do not engage in temporary emotional programs."

He raises an eyebrow.

"You sure?"

She hesitates.

That hesitation is new.

Kevin continues softly:

"You don't let things stay undefined for long. You either classify them or you step away."

Cielo closes her notebook slightly.

"I prefer clarity."

"And me?" he asks.

Light tone.

Heavy question.

Cielo pauses.

Longer than usual.

Then carefully:

"You are currently unclassified."

Kevin smiles.

"That sounds worse than 'complicated.'"

"It is more accurate."

Silence sits between them.

Not uncomfortable.

Just… loaded.

Then Kevin leans back.

"You know," he says, "people here think we're also going to fade."

Cielo looks at him.

"Define 'fade.'"

He shrugs.

"Lose interest. Get busy. Realize it's too complicated. Get reassigned by life."

She processes that.

Each option stored.

Each possibility weighted.

"…Probability unclear," she finally says.

Kevin laughs softly.

"That's your way of saying you don't want it to."

Cielo doesn't answer.

Not immediately.

Because the truth is not structured enough yet to speak.

That night, a couple in the station officially "ends things."

No announcement.

Just absence.

Less talking.

Less eye contact.

More distance that everyone feels but no one documents.

Cielo watches it happen from the teleprompter booth.

Silent.

Still.

Kevin stands beside her.

"You okay?" he asks.

"I am observing termination of a social system."

"That sounds cold."

"It is accurate."

He looks at her.

Softly:

"But you're not cold about it."

That makes her pause.

Because he is right.

Annoyingly right.

After shift, they walk out into the night.

City lights reflecting off wet pavement like broken signals.

Kevin speaks first.

"Do you think we'll fade too?"

Cielo stops walking slightly.

That question is not theoretical.

Not anymore.

She looks at him.

Careful.

Precise.

"I cannot predict long-term emotional persistence," she says.

Kevin nods.

"That's fair."

A pause.

Then she adds, quieter:

"But current stability indicators are not declining."

Kevin looks at her.

Smiles.

Small.

Real.

"I'll take that as a good sign," he says.

They walk again.

Side by side.

Not defined.

Not declared.

But no longer invisible either.

And somewhere behind them, the station continues its cycle:

new couples forming, old ones dissolving, stories beginning and ending between cuts.

Because in television—

love is just another segment.

But with Cielo and Kevin…

something refuses to fade on schedule.

Something that keeps buffering.

Staying on screen longer than expected.

Not resolved.

Not cancelled.

Just… continuing.

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