Page 80 of Vicious Obsession


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“Selena Carmichael?” Director Cho asked, glancing up from her notes.

Her voice sounded calm, neutral, giving nothing away.

“Yes,” I said, forcing myself to take a few steps forward, even though my instinct was to hover near the door and make a run for it if things went badly.

“Come in. We’ll try a few different reads today.”

There was no chair this time. Just open space in the middle of the room, like a stage stripped down to its barest form. I moved into it anyway, gripping the script they’d handed me a little too tightly, as if the paper itself might steady me.

“Let’s start with Hero,” Cho said. “Act four. The wedding scene.”

I glanced down at the page, my throat already tightening.

Hero was gentle, soft-spoken—and then suddenly, brutally exposed. Accused. Shattered in front of everyone.Perfect.

“Whenever you’re ready.”

I nodded, though I wasn’t ready at all.

I took a breath, opened my mouth— and nothing came out.

Heat crept up the back of my neck, my fingers tightening around the edges of the script as I stared down at the words, willing them to settle into something I could actually say.

“Sorry,” I muttered. “Just—one second.”

No one rushed me or tried to fill the silence.

They just waited, which somehow made it worse.

I swallowed, forcing another breath into my lungs.

It’s just reading. Just words. Just a room. No one here knows anything about you. They don’tknow.

I lifted my head again, and this time, I started.

“I talked with no man at that hour, my lord?—”

The line came out too subdued, too uncertain, and I felt it immediately, the wrongness of it, like wearing something that didn’t quite fit. My instinct was to stop, to apologize, to ask to start again before I made it worse.

But something in me resisted.No. If I was going to fail, I was at least going to finish.

I steadied myself, forced my shoulders back just a fraction, and tried again, letting the words settle before I spoke.

“I talked with no man at that hour, my lord.”

Better. Still quiet, but steadier, less fragile.

I made myself look up this time, meeting their eyes instead of hiding behind the page.

“They know that do accuse me. I know none.”

My voice caught slightly, not on purpose, but it worked, because suddenly I wasn’t thinking about how I sounded anymore. I wasn’t trying to perform it right.

I was reacting.

Being watched. Being doubted. Being told I was something I wasn’t.

The room blurred at the edges.