Page 12 of Flipping the Script

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"Much better," Solen said, close enough now that Quinn caught her scent—something warm and slightly floral that was probably expensive perfume but seemed as effortless as everything else about her. "Actual couples don't conduct relationship strategy sessions from opposite sides of a table like they're negotiating a hostage exchange."

The observation was accurate enough to make Quinn laugh despite her nerves. "Is that really what we looked like?"

"A little bit," Solen admitted, settling more comfortably against the booth's worn cushions. "Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the thorough planning. But maybe we could balance your strategic brilliance with some actual getting-to-know-you conversation?"

Quinn realized Solen was right. For all her preparation, she'd focused entirely on external logistics while completely neglecting the internal foundation. They were supposed to be convincing people they were developing genuine feelings for each other, but Quinn couldn't name Solen's favorite movie or whether she was a morning person or what made her laugh when she thought no one was listening.

"Okay," Quinn said, closing her notebook and pushing it aside. The gesture felt almost rebellious. "What do you want to know?"

"Tell me about this story you're working on. Not the logistical stuff or the market positioning. What made you want to write it in the first place?"

The question caught Quinn off guard with its directness and genuine curiosity. Most people in the industry asked about projects in terms of commercial potential or strategic career moves. Solen was asking about inspiration, motivation, thevulnerable creative impulse that existed before market research and target demographics.

"It started with this image," Quinn found herself saying, surprising herself by answering honestly instead of with her usual professional talking points. "Two women meet at the worst possible moment in both their lives—career disasters, relationship wreckage, all of it—and they're thrown together on this road trip neither of them wants to take."

Solen shifted slightly, turning to face Quinn more directly, and the movement brought them close enough that Quinn could see the gold flecks in her brown eyes.

"And they hate each other at first?"

"Not hate, exactly. They just represent everything the other person is trying to avoid. One is this rigid control freak who has contingency plans for her contingency plans, and the other is this impulsive free spirit who makes decisions based on gut instinct and optimism."

"Sounds like they'd drive each other crazy," Solen said, and something in her tone made Quinn look at her more sharply.

"They do. But somewhere along the way, they realize that what they thought were incompatible flaws are actually complementary strengths. The control freak learns to embrace uncertainty, and the free spirit discovers that some things are worth planning for."

"And they fall in love."

"Eventually." Quinn felt heat rise in her cheeks, suddenly aware they were discussing fictional romance while sitting close enough to be mistaken for an actual couple. "It's about how the right person doesn't complete you so much as challenge you to become a more complete version of yourself."

Solen was quiet for a moment, studying Quinn with an expression that seemed to see more than Quinn intended to reveal. "That's beautiful. And probably terrifying to write."

"Why do you say that?"

"Because it requires believing that kind of love is actually possible. That someone could see all your carefully hidden flaws and imperfections and think, 'Yes, this person is worth the risk.'"

The observation hit closer to home than Quinn was prepared for. She reached for her latte, needing something to do with her hands that didn't involve acknowledging how accurately Solen had identified her deepest creative and personal fears.

Across the café, Diego Santos Rivera raised his phone slightly, the gesture subtle enough to maintain plausible deniability but obvious enough that Quinn's anxiety spiked immediately. They were being photographed, documented, turned into content for public consumption, and here they were having the kind of unexpectedly honest conversation that felt too genuine for performance.

Solen must have noticed Quinn's sudden tension because she reached up, brushing a strand of hair away from Quinn's face with the kind of casual intimacy that suggested they'd been touching each other for months rather than minutes.

"Relax," Solen murmured, her hand lingering against Quinn's cheek just long enough to feel deliberate. "If we're going to get photographed anyway, might as well make sure it's a good picture."

But the touch didn't feel calculated or performative. It felt like comfort, like reassurance, like someone who understood that being watched and documented was part of the price they paid for the careers they'd chosen, but that didn't mean they had to sacrifice every genuine moment to the machinery of public consumption.

Quinn found herself leaning slightly into the contact before remembering where they were and why.

"Is this how you do it?" she asked quietly. "Make everything look so effortless?"

"It's not about making it look effortless," Solen said, her hand dropping back to rest on the table between them. "It's about finding moments of genuine connection even when you know people are watching. The camera picks up on authenticity. If we're just performing for photographs, it'll show."

"And if we're actually getting to know each other..."

"Then maybe we'll luck into some real chemistry along the way."

Quinn opened her notebook again, but instead of consulting her timeline, she found herself writing: "Note: Solen's instincts for authentic connection might be more valuable than strategic planning. Possible script revision: sometimes the best dialogue happens when you stop trying to control every word."

She looked up to find Solen reading over her shoulder, not in a invasive way but with the comfortable curiosity of someone who found Quinn's thought processes genuinely interesting.