Chapter 0226
Chapter 0226
Abby
Five minutes feels like an eternity. I pace Karl’s kitchen as he quickly gets ready in the other room, not
even taking a moment to take in the fact that this is Karl’s apartment, and I’m here for the first time
ever. The whole place is awash with his scent in an almost intoxicating way, the leather chairs and brick
walls a perfect representation of his taste: dark, understated, and professional.
Finally, after what feels like hours, Karl finally steps out of his room. Surprisingly, despite the time
crunch, he looks… good.
His hair is combed neatly, and he’s wearing a professional button-down shirt with black slacks and a
pair of loafers. Somehow, even in his haste, he always manages to look put-together. I wish I could say
the same; I feel like a trainwreck right now.
However, as he puts on his blue surgical mask, I glance at the clock. My eyes widen in horror.
“Oh my god, we have only fifteen minutes to make it!” I exclaim, my throat feeling dry from the hectic
morning.
“We’ll make it, Abby. Trust me,” he says, his words muffled behind the mask.
I swallow. “We have to run to the subway. Maybe we can still—”
Karl holds up his car keys with a chuckle that says he has everything under control. The keys jingle
against each other as he wiggles them back and forth. “Who needs a subway when you have four
wheels?” he asks.
“Drive? Through morning city traffic?” My voice leaps an octave. “Karl, we’d be stuck forever! We’re not
making it if we drive. We’re better off on foot.”Belongs to © n0velDrama.Org.
He gives me a look that I’ve seen so many times before. It’s his ‘trust me, I got this’ look. “Just trust me,
Abby.”
“Okay, fine,” I say with a sigh. “I trust you.”
With my heart in my throat, we rush downstairs and jump into his car. The engine roars to life, and Karl
zips out of the parking space moments later like a man on a mission.
“Seatbelt,” he barks.
I click the seatbelt just in time as he swings into traffic, cutting between a taxi and a delivery van with
inches to spare. I grip the edges of the seat, white-knuckled, my other hand clutching the pendant of
my necklace.
“Karl, are you trying to get us killed?”
“Just trying to get us there on time,” he says, his eyes never leaving the road.
I glance at the clock on the dashboard, my stomach lurching. Thirteen minutes to spare. I can’t believe
we’re really attempting this right now. It’s terrifying, and yet I can’t help but feel a surge of invigorating
adrenaline that I haven’t felt since the day Karl and I ran from those poachers through the forest.
We approach an intersection, the light teetering dangerously between the edge of yellow and red. Karl
pushes the pedal to the floor, and I swear time slows. The light flips red, and another car enters the
intersection, horn blaring, coming straight at us.
“KARL!”
He swerves, tires screeching, missing the other car by a hair’s breadth. We come to a screeching halt,
the other driver laying into his horn and shouting obscenities from his window.
“Go, Karl, just go!” I urge, my eyes widening even further as other drivers begin laying on their horns.
Karl speeds off, and once we’re out of the intersection, I punch his arm with a force that surprises even
me. “Are you insane? Be more careful! Nothing is worth risking our lives over!”
He looks at me, his eyes meeting mine through the rearview mirror. “And if we didn’t make it on time
because I didn’t take that risk?” he asks.
“What if we got hit?” My voice is a shaky mess, but I can’t help it.
“But we didn’t,” he says. I groan.
But then we turn a corner, and suddenly, there it is—the TV studio. Karl pulls up to the front, and I
glance at the clock again. Five minutes to spare. My heart is racing and my body is trembling, but we
made it.
“You’re insane,” I breathe, my fingers still gripping the seat.
“Maybe insane is what you need,” he says.
A few moments later we’re bursting through the double doors, out of breath from sprinting up the steps
two at a time.
Inside, it’s like stepping into another world—a world that doesn’t appreciate tardiness. People stare.
Whispers fill the room.
The other contestants are already in their uniforms, milling around their stations to familiarize
themselves and begin prep work before the show begins. They all look up as we burst in the doors, and
I can see it in their gazes, especially Daniel’s: judgment.
“Abby!” The voice booms from across the studio. It’s Mr. Thompson. “What on earth—”
He quickly strides over to us, his eyes squinting in disbelief. When he’s close enough, he yanks us
aside like we’re kids caught doing something we shouldn’t.
“Where the hell have you been?” He hisses, his eyes drilling into me. “And where’s your sous chef?”
“John got sick,” I stammer, “so Karl’s stepping in.”
“Sick? Now?” His eyes narrow further, if that’s even possible.
“It was an emergency,” I quickly explain. “He got food poisoning, of all things.”
“Food poisoning?” Mr. Thompson’s eyebrows leap up. “And you’re telling me this now?”
“I didn’t have much of a choice, did I?” I reply, my own frustration bubbling over. “We didn’t exactly have
time for chit-chat!”
Mr. Thompson glances at Karl, who’s still breathing hard from our sprint. “And what about you?”
“Call me ‘Ken’ today,” Karl blurts out, his voice low.
“‘Ken?’” Mr. Thompson repeats incredulously, staring at Karl’s blue surgical mask. “Is that going to stay
on?”
“Yes,” Karl affirms. “For personal reasons, if that’s okay.”
“Look, I know it’s last minute,” I admit, “but I’m here, despite the circumstances. Isn’t that enough?”
He sighs deeply, pinching the bridge of his nose. “Alright, fine. You’re here. That’s something. But you’d
better make it worth it, Abby. You too, ‘Ken.’”
“Absolutely, Mr. Thompson,” Karl—Ken—says.
“Good. Now the two of you have to hurry to hair and makeup. There’s no time to get familiar with your
station,” Mr. Thompson explains, a reluctant sort of acceptance settling over his features. Read at
“Hair and makeup?” Karl whispers to me. “I didn’t sign up for a makeover.”
“It’s not negotiable,” I whisper back.
Mr. Thompson overhears. “Of course it’s not negotiable.”
Karl nods.
“I wasn’t planning on it,” I assure him. I can practically hear my own heart pounding, but what matters is
that we’re here, we made it, and hopefully, everything will be okay.
“I won’t, Mr. Thompson,” I say. “I promise.”