She started to turn away when her practical side kicked in. This was her shot, mysterious text or not. If someone was trying to scare her away from an opportunity, that was exactly why she needed to go in.
Taking a deep breath, Lucy walked through the glass doors.
"Miss Martinez?"
A tall woman in an expensive suit approached her with a warm smile.
"I'm Jennifer Walsh. Ready for your audition?"
The casting director looked nothing like the harsh woman from yesterday who'd dismissed her without a glance. This Jennifer was professional, with kind eyes that seemed genuinely interested in Lucy's success.
"I'm ready," Lucy said, sliding her phone into her purse.
Inside Sinclair Studios, the atmosphere was electric with the kind of energy that came from big money and bigger dreams. Lucy had been in plenty of casting offices, but nothing like this. Everything screamed prestige, from the marble floors to the original movie posters lining the walls.
"The role we're considering you for is Elena," Jennifer explained as they walked down a long corridor. "She's the female lead's younger sister. Naive but determined."
They stopped outside a conference room with floor-to-ceiling windows. Through the glass, Lucy could see several people seated around a polished table.
"Just be yourself," Jennifer said, opening the door. "Show us what makes you special."
Lucy walked into the room and immediately felt the shift in energy. Three people sat at the table, but her attention was drawn to the woman at the head. Sandra Kim, the film's director, was a legend in the industry.
"Miss Martinez," Sandra said warmly. "Please, sit."
Lucy took the chair across from her, trying to project confidence. To Sandra's left sat a man she recognized as the casting coordinator. To her right, an assistant with a tablet.
"Thank you for coming in on short notice," Sandra continued. "I understand yesterday was disappointing."
Heat flooded Lucy's cheeks. "Yes ma'am, it was."
"Sometimes the universe has different timing than we do." Sandra leaned back in her chair, studying her with professional interest. "Tell me about your training."
For the next fifteen minutes, Lucy answered questions about her background, her approach to character development, her availability for the filming schedule. She'd expected this part, but she could feel nervous energy building toward the actual reading.
"I'd like you to read something," Sandra finally said, sliding pages across the table. "This is a scene between Elena and Marcus."
Lucy scanned the dialogue quickly. Elena was trying to prove her independence while Marcus, older and more experienced, was trying to protect her from making a dangerous mistake.
"David will read Marcus," Sandra said, nodding to the casting coordinator.
They moved to the center of the room. Lucy tried to focus on the script, channeling Elena's mix of vulnerability and determination.
"Whenever you're ready," David said.
Lucy took a breath and became Elena. "You can't keep treating me like I'm made of glass."
"Some people are worth protecting," David replied as Marcus. "Even when they don't want it."
"I'm stronger than you think."
"Are you? Because you're shaking right now."
Lucy let Elena's defiance show. "I'm not afraid of you."
"Maybe you should be. I'm not someone you should trust blindly."
The scene continued for several pages, building tension between characters who were clearly meant for each other despite the obstacles. Lucy lost herself in Elena's journey, feeling the character's confusion and growing attraction.
"Excellent," Sandra said when they finished. "That was exactly what we were looking for."
Lucy's heart soared. "Really?"
"Really. We'll be making our final decisions this week, but I can tell you that was one of the strongest auditions we've seen."
As Lucy gathered her purse, Sandra walked her to the door. "One piece of advice? This industry can be cutthroat. People will try to psych you out, spread rumors, make you doubt yourself. Don't let them."
Lucy thought about the mysterious text. "Has that happened with this role?"
"Every role worth having comes with competition. Just stay focused on your own work."
In the elevator, Lucy pulled out her phone and stared at the warning message again. Maybe Sandra was right. Maybe someone was just trying to psych her out.
Her phone buzzed with a new text from the unknown number.
"You went in anyway. Big mistake. They're replacing someone else with you. That someone has friends. Watch your back."
Lucy's excitement dimmed. This wasn't about protecting her or scaring her away from opportunity. Someone was angry about potentially losing a role to her.
The elevator doors opened on the ground floor, and Lucy stepped out into the lobby, looking around nervously. Was the person texting her here? Watching her?
She walked quickly toward the exit, just wanting to get outside and call Tiana.
Thirty floors above, Caleb Sinclair stood at his office window, watching the street below through high-powered binoculars. He'd been tracking Lucy's progress through the building via security cameras, something that should have felt strange but somehow didn't.
He'd seen her hesitation outside, the way she'd almost turned away. Then her moment of decision, the straightening of her shoulders before she walked in. Determination looked good on her.
His assistant knocked and entered. "Sir, casting just finished with Lucy Martinez. Sandra thinks she's perfect for Elena."
"Good," Caleb said, still watching the street. There she was, walking out of the building with a spring in her step that hadn't been there yesterday.
He'd told himself this was just business, just giving an unknown talent a chance. But watching her now, seeing the hope in her posture, he knew it was becoming something else entirely.
His phone rang. Theresa.
"Hey," she said, distracted. He could hear voices in the background, probably her team.
"How was the shoot yesterday?" Caleb asked, genuinely interested.
"Exhausting. Look, I can't do dinner tonight. My publicist scheduled three more interviews and I have that charity gala."
"What about this weekend?"
"I'm flying to New York for the magazine cover shoot, remember? I told you last week."
She had, but it stung anyway. "Right. Of course."
"I have to go, the photographer's calling. Love you."
The line went dead before he could respond. Caleb stared at his phone, feeling the familiar hollow ache in his chest. He loved Theresa desperately, had for two years, but lately it felt like loving a beautiful ghost who was never quite there.
He turned back to the window, but Lucy was gone. For a moment, he'd forgotten about the distance between him and Theresa, forgotten about being second priority to her career.
His assistant knocked again. "Sir, there's been a problem with the Martinez audition."
Caleb's attention snapped back. "What kind of problem?"
"Someone leaked her callback to the press. There are photographers outside her apartment building."