Chapter 162: Alexandra’s problem!
Chapter 162: Alexandra’s problem!
"Alexandra, come over."
The director’s voice cut through the controlled chaos of the movie set. The lights still burned hot above the stage, assistants moved around with clipboards tucked against their chests, the camera crew reviewed footage near the monitors, and the makeup team waited at the edge of the set for the next order.
Alexandra turned her head.
Adrian Morningeve, the director in charge of adapting her favorite novels, stood near the monitor with his arms folded. He did not raise his voice because he never needed to. Everyone on set knew that when Adrian spoke, people listened, especially the actors.
Without saying a word, Alexandra walked over to him.
Usually, she would have approached with her chin slightly raised and a faint smile on her lips, carrying herself as if the entire set had been built around her presence. Confidence came naturally to her. So did control. Wherever she stood, gazes gathered, and she knew exactly how to hold them.
Today, she had lost that effortless rhythm.
She stopped in front of Adrian and waited.
For a few quiet seconds, he studied her face. "Everything good on your end?"
"Yes. Why?" Alexandra asked.
"You’re underperforming," he said without hesitation.
The words landed bluntly enough that a few nearby crew members immediately pretended not to hear. That was another unspoken rule on Adrian’s set. People minded their own business unless he dragged them into it.
Adrian Morningeve was a lean man in his late forties, broad-shouldered and neatly put together, with dark hair graying at the temples and eyes that seemed trained to catch mistakes before anyone else noticed them. He did not rule the set like a loud tyrant. His authority was quiet, precise, and much harder to ignore.
He was known as a man who never let an actor’s popularity sway him. Fame, awards, magazine covers, fan clubs, and public adoration meant little to him once the cameras started rolling. He cared about the work more than the name attached to it, and anyone who failed in front of his camera heard about it. On his movie set, the final authority belonged to him, not to the actors, the investors, or an audience that had not even seen the film yet.
"You fought hard for this character," Adrian said. "The passion you had when you argued with me about the villainess was there. I could feel it. I could still feel it a few days ago."
Alexandra stayed quiet.
The rolled script in his hand tapped once against his palm.
"But today, there’s nothing. I’m looking at you, and it feels like there’s an empty shell standing in front of the camera, waiting for applause. You know the lines, the posture, and the angles. Technically, you’re doing everything right, which is exactly why it bothers me. The performance is polished on the outside, but there’s no life behind it."
Alexandra’s fingers curled slightly.
Adrian noticed, but he continued anyway.
"You might be one of the top actresses in the industry, but that won’t cut it here. This role needs a woman who can make the audience understand why the villainess believes the world belongs under her heel. You fought me on that interpretation. You insisted she should not be played as some shallow, arrogant woman. You said she needed conviction."
His eyes sharpened.
"So where did that conviction go?"
Alexandra had no answer, and that irritated her more than his criticism.
If Adrian had been wrong, she could have brushed him aside. If he had been jealous, incompetent, or too proud to accept her interpretation, she could have looked down on him and moved on. Unfortunately, he had seen through her. He had noticed the flaw she had felt all day but refused to acknowledge.
The moment she looked at the male lead across from her during the scene, something inside her rejected him.
His acting was not the problem. Neither was his face, nor even his obvious interest in her. She had dealt with those kinds of men before. She knew how to smile at them, how to keep them useful, and how to make them feel seen without giving them anything real.
But today, the sight of him reaching for her hand in character made her want to step back. The sound of his voice calling her beautiful made her want to laugh in his face. The way he gazed at her as if he understood her made her skin crawl.
Her personal feelings had leaked into her work, and Adrian had caught it.
After looking at her for another moment, Adrian turned away.
"I’ll use a double if this continues."
Alexandra’s eyes narrowed.
Being scolded was one thing. Hearing that Adrian might use a double was worse, because it meant he no longer trusted her to carry the scene herself.
Adrian then raised his voice toward the rest of the set. "We’re done for today!"
The tension broke at once. Staff members exhaled, thanked one another for the day’s work, and began packing up their equipment. The artificial world built for the scene slowly dissolved back into cables, props, lighting rigs, and tired workers eager to go home.
Alexandra remained where she was, still feeling Adrian’s words press against her pride. Empty shell. Beautiful statue. Polished on the outside, dead on the inside. Those phrases stayed with her, each one irritating her more because he had earned the right to say them.
"Alexandra!"
A bright voice called out from the side.
She turned as Bobby Vale, one of the leading actors, hurried over with a worried look on his handsome face. He was playing the protagonist in the upcoming movie, and he had the kind of body producers loved to put on posters. Tall, fit, and broad in the shoulders, with a clean-cut face, styled brown hair, and a smile practiced enough to look sincere from a distance. Up close, Alexandra could see how carefully he used it.
He stepped a little too close, close enough for Alexandra to notice the expensive cologne clinging to him, and smiled as if concern had been written into his contract.
He was exactly the reason she wanted to leave the set as quickly as possible.
"I heard a little," Bobby said, lowering his voice as if that made his interruption more intimate. "He really went at you."
Alexandra smiled automatically, her expression perfect, controlled, and completely empty.
"Did he?"
"Don’t listen to him," Bobby said quickly. "You were dazzling as always. Seriously. I’m really happy to have you on set."
"Thanks. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about, right?" Alexandra asked.
The bait was not even subtle.
His cheeks reddened slightly, and he agreed at once. "Exactly! He’s letting his fame get to his head. That’s what it is. You completely took over the stage today, like you always do. I could barely keep up with you."
Every other word from his mouth was praise.
Alexandra listened with the same smile on her face while her mood sank lower and lower. There it was, the blind admiration, the complete lack of observation, the eagerness to flatter her without even trying to judge her performance honestly.
Bobby had not noticed the weakness in the scene. He had not noticed her distance. He had not realized she had failed to meet him as an actress. All he saw was Alexandra, the beautiful star he wanted to impress, and somehow, that insulted her more than Adrian’s criticism.
"Haha. You’re flattering me." Alexandra covered her face and laughed brightly. "See you tomorrow."
"Ah, wait!" he said, stepping closer again. "I wanted to ask you out to dinner tonight."
"I told you I’m not interested," Alexandra replied matter-of-factly.
The warmth disappeared from her voice.
Before he could answer, she fished out her phone and turned her attention away from him.
I’m not interested in dogs who agree with every word I say, let alone a man who can’t even see that I really did underperform today.
Bobby froze for a second, clearly unsure whether to push or retreat. Alexandra did not care which one he chose.
While ignoring a man whose fame could rival her own, she tapped her phone a few times and called her elder sister.
The call connected.
"Kate? I need you tonight. Come over to my house."
She paused.
"Yes. It’s urgent."
Another pause followed, and her eyes flicked toward Bobby, who was still lingering nearby.
"No, I’m not dying. Worse. My career is at risk."
Then she ended the call.
Bobby looked as though he wanted to say something else, but Alexandra slipped her phone away, smiled politely, and walked past him before he could open his mouth.
That was enough for today.
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