Weeks 9–10 of Filming
The studio lot looked different now.
Not physically—there were still tangled cables, buzzing walkie-talkies, and coffee-stained call sheets fluttering like tired flags—but something had shifted. There was a current running through the air, the kind that hummed in the final moments of something that had mattered.
Ayaan sat in the makeup trailer, getting one last touch-up for a close-up pickup shot. Zoey was perched beside him, legs swinging, sketchbook open. She wasn't drawing scenes anymore—she was sketching people. The lighting guy's slumped shoulders, the sound girl's focused eyes, even Rishi's half-smile as he leaned against the monitor cart.
It was almost over. But not quite.
The final shooting days weren't grand—they were surgical.
Pickup shots. Reaction close-ups. A quick insert of Dev adjusting a trap. A blink from Rishi's character as he notices the empty house. Nothing dramatic. Just fragments, but the fragments mattered. These were the cuts that would hold everything together.
The stunt team packed up quietly. The Christmas lights were dimmed one last time. The prop team carted out the BB gun, the sledge, and the hand-painted family portrait, which now looked worn from use—and love.
By day three of pickups, the production began winding down like an old clock. Ayaan still gave each take his full attention, but there was a softness now—a confidence he hadn't had ten weeks ago. He wasn't chasing the camera anymore.
He belonged in front of it.
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Rishi sat in a darkened tent behind the sound stage, squinting at dailies on a small screen with John Hughes beside him. The two had grown into a surprisingly fluid partnership—Rishi brought instinct and emotion, Hughes the timing and structure of decades.
They watched a cut of the rooftop zipline escape, then one of Ayaan's slow, silent walks through the empty house. Hughes didn't speak immediately. He just leaned back, arms crossed.
"…You seeing what I'm seeing?" he asked.
Rishi nodded. "I think so."
"That kid," Hughes muttered, "was born to be on screen. He's got it. Not just the timing—he's got the soul."
Rishi said nothing. Just smiled.
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That afternoon, the phone rang. It wasn't a green light. But it wasn't nothing either.
An executive from distribution had seen a raw cut from the second week of filming—Dev tricking the robbers with the feather fan and cooking flour. "There's something here," the voice on the phone said cautiously. "If test screenings go well, we might have a holiday sleeper."
It was enough.
Enough to bring new energy into the editing bay and just sufficient to make Rishi start thinking about the premiere.
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Zoey, of course, had planned something.
Between takes, she and the costume designer wheeled out a cart covered in frosting-heavy cupcakes and balloons made from leftover fake snow. One said, "It's a Wrap!" and another said, "Happy Birthday, Sorta!" because she insisted this counted as a second birthday for the film.
The crew gathered, clapping and laughing. Someone uncorked sparkling apple cider. A PA played music from a boombox that had survived three production assistants.
Ayaan stood on a crate and held up a plastic cup.
"I was nervous every day," he said honestly. "But it never felt like work. It felt like telling a story we already knew."
Zoey clinked her cup against his. "To Left Behind!"
Everyone echoed it—cheesy, chaotic, but real.
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Someone nudged Rishi forward. He rubbed the back of his neck and cleared his throat.
"I came to LA a long time ago to chase someone else's dream. It's a casting call. A part I never got. It didn't go anywhere."
He looked at Ayaan. At Zoey. At the crew.
"And now I'm standing in front of a dream that wasn't written in a script. Two kids, one wild idea, and a team that said yes when they didn't have to."
He paused. "This wasn't just a film. This was a second chance. For all of us."
They applauded. Not out of formality. Because they felt it.
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And yet… all wasn't settled.
Rishi knew they were still short on post-production funds. Special effects costs had ballooned, the snow rigs ate more of the budget than expected, and one producer who promised to invest had pulled out.
He was juggling favours, calling in debts, and even mortgaging a future paycheck from another gig. But he never let Ayaan or Zoey see it.
Because they'd done their part.
Now, it was his turn to make sure their dream crossed the finish line.
That night, after everyone had gone, Rishi stood alone on the fake snow-covered street.
He watched a soft breeze scatter a bit of glitter still stuck to the cobblestones. The lights were dimmed, but the magic hadn't left.
He could still hear them—Ayaan shouting in Hindi, Zoey yelling "CUT!" like she owned the world.
He smiled, slow and full.
Maybe he hadn't been the actor he dreamed of.
But he had produced something far rarer: a legacy.
And it was only just beginning.
End of Chapter 22