Charles' question hung between them.
Emma swallowed. “Yes," she said. “I accepted the role."
His face hardened. “Without talking to me first?"
“I tried calling," she said. “You didn't answer. I wanted to tell you tonight."
“I was in a meeting," he snapped. “With the producers. Going over the new series."
“About me?" she repeated.
“About the show," he said, frustration sharpening each word. “About locking the female lead. Then I finally check my phone and see a message saying they've found their heroine, and Barbara's call on top of it. Everyone else knew before I did that my own girlfriend was taking that part."
The living room seemed to tilt. “I wasn't hiding it from you," Emma said. “I just needed to decide."
“You decided," he said, jaw tight, “to put us both under a spotlight we can't escape from."
“What are you talking about?" she asked. “It's just a job. A role I worked hard for."
“It's not 'just a job,'" Charles shot back. “It's my show. My set. My name on every poster. And now my secret girlfriend is the lead? Do you have any idea what that looks like from the outside?"
“I got the role because I auditioned," Emma said. “They didn't know about us. You weren't even in the room."
“That doesn't matter once the truth comes out," he said. “You know how people are. They don't care about audition tapes. They care about gossip. Headlines. Scandals."
“You're the one who didn't want people to know," she reminded him. “You're the one who said we had to hide."
“Because I was trying to protect us," he bit out. “We agreed to keep work and our relationship separate. We promised each other that."
“We promised to be careful," she said. “Not to turn down everything that matters."
“This isn't just any project," Charles insisted. “This drama is huge. If we work together, a single photo of us will turn into a scandal. You know that."
“It's also the best role I've ever been offered," she shot back. “And I got it myself. I auditioned. They chose me. Why should I throw it away?"
“Because it puts everything at risk," he said. “You should have turned it down."
Her hands curled into fists. “You expect me to step aside while you stay clean?"
“I expect you to keep your word," he replied. “You said big decisions would be made together."
“I did make it," she said. “I thought about it every night. I'm tired of saying no just so someone else can feel safe."
“Someone else?" he echoed. “You mean me."
“If the shoe fits," she said.
He let out a harsh breath. “Emma, call Barbara tomorrow and drop the role. I'll talk to the producers. We'll find you another project that doesn't put us under a microscope."
“I don't want another project," she said. “I want this one."
Silence dropped between them.
“So you're really choosing this fight," he said.
“I'm choosing myself," she answered. “For once, I'm not backing down."
His jaw tightened. “Then don't expect me to fix it when it blows up. Don't ask me why everyone thinks you're a scandal."
“I wouldn't," she replied. “If you stood beside me instead of hiding."
“Hiding?" he repeated sharply. “You think I'm hiding you?"
“What else is it?" she asked. “You're scared people will know we're together. You're scared they'll say I only got here because of you. You're scared of rumors more than you care about what I want."
“That's not true," he said, but his voice wavered.
“Then prove it," she said. “Tell me you're proud I got this role."
He hesitated. “I can't be proud of a decision I think will ruin everything."
The sentence cut deeper than any insult.
Emma's shoulders sagged. “Then we have nothing more to say tonight."
He grabbed his keys. “We're going in circles. I'm going out."
“You're leaving now?" she asked.
“What else do you want?" he snapped. “To shout until morning?"
She stared at him for a heartbeat. “Go."
He opened the door and slammed it.
The echo rang through the apartment.
Silence rushed in after the slam, thick and heavy. For a long moment Emma just stood there, fingers still curled at her sides, feeling as if someone had reached into her chest and twisted. Charles had always hated the idea of them showing up in the same cast list, the same production stills, the same gossip column. She could still hear the calm, reasonable way he used to say it—*It's better for you, Em. Better if people don't connect us*—as if that made it easier to walk away.
One by one, she had. A prestige cable drama where the director had called her personally. A film that could have taken her to festivals. A streaming series with a director she had dreamed of working with in drama school. Every time Charles had frowned and said it would be “too messy" if they were on the same set, and every time she had swallowed her disappointment and said she understood.
But this script was different. This character had lit something in her from the first page, all sharp wit and hidden bruises, a woman who refused to shrink just because someone else was uncomfortable. Emma had fought so hard to get here, to be more than a convenient supporting actress in someone else's story. She didn't want to back down again—not from this role, not from herself. She had thought, stupidly, that if he saw how much it meant to her, he would understand.
Right now, she couldn't understand him at all.
Emma stood there, chest tight, then slowly sank onto the sofa. The script lay on the table, pages covered in her notes. Her eyes stung. She pressed a hand to her flat stomach.
“You're pregnant," the doctor had said.
“I'll handle it," she whispered to herself, though she had no idea how. “I'll keep you safe."
That night she barely slept. Every time she closed her eyes she heard the door slam again, saw the anger in Charles's face. When dawn finally crept in, his side of the bed was still cold.
He hadn't come back.
Emma dragged herself to the bathroom, splashed water on her face, and tied her hair back. She forced down a few bites of toast and checked her phone.
No calls. No messages from him.
Her screen lit up.
Barbara.
Emma sighed and answered. “Hey."
“You sound like death," Barbara said. “What happened?"
“Charles wants me to drop the role," Emma said. “I refused. He left."
Barbara cursed. “He really said that?"
“Many times," Emma replied.
“There's something you need to see," Barbara said tightly. “Open his social media. His latest post."
Emma's stomach knotted. “What is it?"
“Just look," Barbara insisted.
Emma walked back to the sofa and sat. Her fingers trembled slightly as she opened the app and tapped on Charles's profile.
A new post sat at the top of his feed.
A photo.
Charles sat at a restaurant table, leaning toward a woman with long hair and a bright, gentle smile. Her hand rested on his arm as if she had every right. Two glasses of wine stood between them. The lighting was warm, intimate.
The caption read: “Catching up with an old friend."
Emma's grip tightened on the phone.
“See it?" Barbara asked.
“Yes," Emma whispered.
“Recognize her?" Barbara pressed, her voice sharpening.
Emma zoomed in. She had seen that face in old pictures, heard that name in old stories told in a softer voice.
Jane.
His first love.
The time stamp glowed under the photo.
Last night.
Her pulse roared in her ears.