Authors: Emily Snow
shoes. While I found out that I wasn’t
scheduled to do any community service
today, Dave, my boss, took me on a two
hour orientation of the shelter. By the time
we went through our third rotation of the
grounds, I was caught between wanting
desperately to kick off my shoes and
wondering if Cooper had given up on me
and gone home.
I hoped not because I’d stupidly left
my bag and phone sitting on the front seat
of his Jeep.
“So do you think you’ve got a grasp on
what you’ll be doing?” Dave asked.
I nodded. “Kitchen duties.” Cleaning,
serving, and helping unload deliveries, to
be exact. I glanced around the massive
dining room one final time as we shuffled
through it. To be honest, it reminded me of
the one at my court-ordered rehab—
bleach-scented, with three rows of plain,
scuffed wooden tables and chairs, and a
kitchen with a serving window at the front
of the room.
Thinking of rehab brought a swell of
hysteria into my throat, but I gulped it back
because of the group of kids huddled at the
end of the table at the other side of the
room. They were staring at Dave and me,
whispering loudly, and I gave a tiny wave
in their direction.
“It seems you have fans,” Dave said,
as we left the large room. The sound of
excited giggling followed us. “We’ve got
quite a few of your older movies on
DVD.”
Back before you turned into just
another party girl,
I added for him.
“It’s the first time I’ve been
recognized since coming here,” I admitted.
He belly laughed, and walked me
outside to the front of the building.
Cooper’s Jeep was still parked across the
street, thank God. “With your movie about
to start, I’m sure you’ll be recognized
everywhere you turn,” Dave said.
I knew he didn’t mean anything by it,
but my muscles went rigid anyway. “I
can’t wait,” I said in a voice that was
detached.
Robotic.
“Do you have any idea when you’ll be
able to begin working at Harmony
House?” Dave asked.
“Monday,” I answered quickly. I
wanted to knock out my community
service as quickly as possible. And I
wanted something to focus my attention on
other than surfing and work and being
alone. “I’ll have my bodyguard drop me
off after work.”
He looked pleased with my response.
Pumping my hand in his, he said, “We’ll
see you then.” As I walked to the edge of
the sidewalk, he cleared his throat. I
turned, shifting one of my eyebrows up.
“You should probably wear . . . work
clothes.”
I nodded my understanding. “I will.”
When I got into Cooper’s Jeep he cast me
a questioning look. “How do your feet
feel, Wills?”
“Like I could paddleboard all day,
Billabong.”
A grin crept its way across his face,
and his shoulders shook slightly. “Nice,
but I’m cancelling the lesson for today.”
“What—why?”
He raked his hand across his chest,
ruffling the front of the gray Alternative
Apparel shirt he wore. “Because I’ve
been thinking about you too much.”
“You’re getting paid to train me,” I
pointed out.
He paid attention to merging onto the
highway, and the Incubus song playing on
the radio. I crossed my arms over my
chest because I was more interested in
hearing what Cooper had to say than listen
to Brandon Boyd sing about picturing
someone’s face in the back of his mind.
The lyrics were way too close to my own
dilemma with the guy sitting beside me.
When the song ended, and a commercial
for a night club replaced it, Cooper
sighed.
“There’s a forty year old cougar
paying me to train her and I don’t give her
a second thought after our lessons,” he
told me.
“Cooper, I—”
“I’m not going to beg you to be with
me, Wills. I’m not going to chase you or
do any of that. But just know that I want
you, and before you say it—fuck the rule.”
He cast a tight grin in my direction. “Not
that I’ve broken it.”
“You don’t know anything about me,”
I said.
Just like I don’t know anything
about you other than I want to throw
myself at you every time we see one
another,
I thought.
“And I’ve told you before that I don’t
have to know you to want you. Sex
between us would be . . .”
When he didn’t answer, instead
clenching his hands on the steering wheel
and squinting at the road as he struggled to
come up with the perfect word, I was sure
he was thinking the same thing I was.
Amazing.
Shattering.
Catastrophic for my heart.
A moment later we were parked in the
empty driveway of my rental and he turned
off the engine. “Cooper, what exactly do
you want from me?” I asked. He offered
me a strained look that made my chest
ache and my throat tighten.
“Nothing. Dammit, everything. I
needed to get it out there, Wills—how I’m
feeling about you. Yeah, I’m your coach
but I’m also a guy and you’re digging your
way under my skin.” He laid his head
back on the leather rest, lifting his chin
and squeezing his eyes together. Before I
could stop myself, I was out of my
seatbelt, pressing my lips to the column of
his throat. He groaned. “Don’t. Fucking.
Tease.”
“I’m trying to spend this summer
focusing on my career,” I whispered, and
Cooper opened his blue eyes to take me
in. He brushed strands of my hair back
from my face. “I just got out of rehab and
I’m not—”
“I get it.”
“You don’t,” I said firmly. “I don’t
like being attracted to you. And if you
think I’m getting under your skin, just
imagine what you’re doing to me. I
haven’t . . . I’ve not been in a relationship
in a long time, Cooper. But here you are
and you scare the shit out of me.”
A look of understanding and then pity
entered his eyes. A deep burn scorched its
way through my stomach, up to my chest,
and I reached for the door handle. He
closed his hand around my wrist, jerking
me back to him.
“Somebody fucking hurt you,” he said
in a dangerous voice.
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“Why does it matter? You going to
break his legs with a surfboard?” I
demanded, but when Cooper pressed his
lips together determinedly, I heaved a
sigh. “Tyler Leonard.” Even now, three
years later, my voice cracked whenever I
said his name. I didn’t watch his movies. I
pretended not to notice whenever his
picture made the cover of
US Weekly
.
And yet I still couldn’t let him go.
“The actor?” Cooper asked.
I nodded, using every acting chop
within me to hide the disappointment. “We
met during filming.”
Into the Dark
. My
first and only horror movie and my last
successful film before my fall.
“He’s what—ten years older than you?
What did you have a crush on him and he
turned you down?” Cooper’s voice was
hopeful, and for a second, I thought about
giving him what he wanted to hear but then
I gripped my free hand into the fabric of
my dress.
“When you’re in Hollywood, you’ve
got all these people who think that you’re
so fucked up, that you’re so jaded, even
when you’re just a kid, you know? But I
wasn’t back then. I mean, yeah, I went to
parties with my friends, but I hadn’t . . .”
“He was your first.” When I didn’t
answer, he growled a curse. “And that’s
what started . . .”
The drugs.
“No. And yes. Part of it was what had
happened between me and him. And part
of it was just myself.” I’d wanted a
permanent anesthesia to numb away the
short memories of what I’d given up.
“Willow,” Cooper said, dropping his
fingers from around my wrist so he could
rake his hands through his blonde hair.
Anxiety pulsed through my veins again,
but this time, instead of making a run for
it, I pulled him close to me, dragging his
lips down on mine to hush out any more
pity.
I knew that the center console was
jabbing into the small of my back—that
the top of my head was shoved up against
the Jeep door handle—yet all I could feel
were Cooper’s fingertips cupping my face
and caressing my skin. His lips on my
mouth.
Every hard line of his body on top of
my own.
“Wills, don’t do this if—” He started
to pull away, but I shook my head and
wrapped my arms around his neck, pulling
him into me. As his tongue parted my lips
and his hand squeezed my breast, I
skimmed my fingers beneath the top of his
gray t-shirt. My hand brushed over the
scar on his shoulder, and he shivered.
He pulled back and the light filtering
around him made him seem so ethereal my
head spun. “Why are you doing this?” he
demanded in a low voice against my
mouth.
You take the nightmares away, I
wanted to tell him. Because I don’t
fucking know you but when I’m with you, I
want to feel again. I don’t need pills or
noise or a distraction.
Instead, I whispered, “Because you
said you’d always look after me.”
His Adam’s apple bobbed. “I’m not
going to take advantage of you.”
“Because of what I told you about
Tyler.”
“Because you’re using me to flush him
out of your system. When you come to me,
when we do this, I want it to be because
you’re thinking about me. Not some
perverted shit who fucked you over when
you were a kid.”
I straightened, smoothing my dress and
keeping my eyes wide so I wouldn’t cry. I
refused to. “You sound like a movie,” I
said in a thick voice.
He raked his hands through his hair,
and held it back for a long moment before
releasing it. Then he gave me a long, hard,
unnerving stare. “Good. Guess sometimes
Hollywood does make sense.”
“I’m going in now, Cooper,
He didn’t argue or beg, but he’d said
that much himself. He wasn’t going to
chase me. Before I reached the front door
to the rental house, his Jeep was halfway
up the street.
***
slow, but full of dreams that rocked me so
hard, I woke up screaming. The first one,
Saturday night, Miller had come bolting
down the stairs, barging in with the spare
set of keys to find me hunched over the
toilet.
“I’m fine . . . just go away,” I’d
muttered, placing the side of my cheek on
the cool surface of the tile floor. But when
I came out of the bathroom to get a drink
of water, I’d found him sitting on the
brown suede couch, with his elbows
rested against his thighs.
“I said I’m fine,” I said, clenching my
hands and he’d glanced up at me, his eyes
tired and full of worry.
It was weird to see someone as tall
and muscled as Miller look so helpless,
but he did. “You’re . . .
sure
?” And I
knew what he was implying. He wanted to
know if I was high. Sighing, I sat down
next to him.
Drying the dampness from my face
with the back of my hand, I’d nodded. “I
swear I am.”
But I wasn’t. Because the entire time
I’d had my head in the bowl, I was trying
to remember Eric’s father’s name. The
resident lazy, pill-dealing douchebag, Eric
had called him on the day we first met.
But as I vomited, I didn’t care what he
was—only that he had something to help
me.
It wasn’t until today—the ass crack of
dawn on Tuesday morning—that I was
reminded of what his name was as Cooper
and I moved, side by side, sitting on our
boards with our legs stretched out in front
of us, as we paddled through the flat
water.
“Where’s Eric at?” I asked. He hadn’t
been around yesterday and his truck
wasn’t in the driveway when Miller
dropped me off earlier.
“Someone broke into Rick’s house, so
he’s been trying to help him find a new
place.”
Rick. If I had remembered that a
couple nights ago what would have
happened? Would I even be here now or
catatonic, watching my world float by in
slow motion?
“Oh,” I said, switching my oar to the
other side and flexing my foot. There was
a cramp running up the side of my leg, and
I wanted to straddle the board, but every
time I did that Cooper shook his head. He
claimed it was because it would take us
forever to get where we were going, but I
swore it was because he wanted to torture