Authors: Emily Snow
behind him. I shut the door and counted to
ten to calm myself, so I wouldn’t say
anything I’d regret. When it came to Kevin
and my parents, I was infamous for doing
that.
I turned around to face him wearing a
sarcastic smile. “Good morning to you,
too” I said, hugging my chest and pressing
my back against the wall.
Dropping the bag on the center of the
bed, Kevin started, “I’m guessing you—”
When he glanced up at me, taking me in,
he stopped mid-sentence. “Is everything
okay, Willow?”
So he wouldn’t see how much his
surprise to see me still clean stung, I
rolled my eyes dramatically and shoved
myself off the wall with the back of my
foot. “I don’t always have to get high.”
But I’d wanted to
, I silently added,
feeling my body flush with humiliation.
And nobody called me back.
I slid onto
the edge of the bed, curling my toes into
the carpet.
He shook his head approvingly.
“Sober looks good on you.”
I chose not to respond to that. Instead,
I flicked the bag’s silver zippers with the
tip of my thumb. They dangled back and
forth, making a tinkling noise as they
knocked against each other. “What’s this
for?”
“Tiff wanted you to have some of your
clothes to carry along with you. She’s
arranged for everything else you’ll need,
to be sent ahead to your rental house in
Honolulu.”
“Fun. My mom can call you, but can’t
even leave me a voicemail saying she’s
glad I’m out of rehab?” My voice broke
on the last few words.
“Their phone hasn’t been getting half
of their calls.”
It was a shitty excuse, especially for
someone like Kevin who could come up
with a lie without so much as twitching,
but I brushed it off. He’d only try to
maintain the bullshit, and I’d just get
irritated. It was way too soon to start up
our cycle of butting heads.
“What about—” I began.
“They gave you a twenty thousand
dollar advance on the two-fifty you’ll be
paid when filming is complete,” he said,
walking over to the armchair to sit down.
“After I took out my percentage that left
you—”
“Just over 17 grand,” I said. I’d been
doing this for so long that the fifteen
percent math was permanently ingrained
in my mind. “And it’s in my account
already?”
Kevin shook his head. “No, but by the
end of the week.”
I felt my heart sing a little, felt my
body come alive as a thrill raced through
it. Everything would be better once I was
in Hawaii. With Surfer Boy. Sexy and
completely hostile Surfer Boy. I
swallowed hard, hoping that the flicker of
attraction I’d felt yesterday when we
touched was nothing.
I couldn’t let him be an obstacle.
“I see the wheels in your pretty little
head turning. Don’t do anything stupid to
ruin yourself,” Kevin said, whipping me
out of my thoughts. There was a pitying
edge to his voice that matched the look in
his gray eyes. He’d been looking at me
like that for years now, but today when I
was so clear-headed—so raw—it rubbed
me the wrong way. Today, it was
impossible not to vividly imagine the
warning Kevin had given me three years
ago.
“You’re not responsible enough for
this, Willow. Any other choice and you
will
ruin yourself," he had told me.
And yet somehow, even after I’d taken
his advice, I’d done just that anyway.
“Pretty as she drowns and ruined
when she resurfaces,” I whispered under
my breath, remembering a poem I’d read
while in rehab. Kevin cocked an eyebrow,
but I shook my head. “What time does my
flight leave?”
He reached out the folder he was
holding. When I didn’t immediately get up
to take it, he wiggled it back and forth.
Groaning, I skulked over to him and took
it, sifting through the contents as I returned
to my spot on the bed. There was
information about my community service
in Hawaii, the probation officer I’d need
to report to, and the address of a personal
trainer. Even at my smallest—late last
year when I wasn’t eating because I’d
always forgotten to—I was never
Hollywood’s definition of “thin.”
I was tall and C-cupped and wide-
hipped.
“Got to make sure I get rid of the ass
fat. Let me guess—it’s going to be a part
of my final contract?” I asked
sarcastically and Kevin made a strangled
sound in the back of his throat. “No need
to lie to me about this, too. We’ve been
doing this too long.”
Thankfully, Kevin opted to keep his
mouth closed. I flipped the personal
trainer’s information over, reaching the
last document in the folder. I studied my
ticket carefully, silently. In less than four
hours, I would take off from LAX, and I
was nowhere near ready. As if on cue, my
stomach rumbled.
Kevin waved his hand to the suitcase.
“I’ll settle your bill while you get
dressed?”
“Thanks,” I murmured, watching him
as he quietly left the room.
I showered and dressed quickly, in a
pair of tiny denim shorts that constricted
my thighs, a white tank top that was too
tight across my breasts, and an oversized
flannel shirt. As I yanked the brush that I
found in the front pouch of the bag through
my wet, tangled hair, I forced my feet into
a pair of high top black Converse shoes.
For a long time afterward, I stood in front
of the bathroom mirror, studying my
reflection. It was the look I’d always
sprung for before rehab, minus the
baseball cap my mother loathed, but it
didn’t seem so careless anymore.
Now, I felt like I was trying too hard
to be myself.
“Suck it up,” I whispered to the girl in
the mirror with the green eyes that seemed
too big for her face and the pale, drawn
skin. “Everything will be better soon.”
Then, grabbing my bag off the hotel
bed, I left the room and went in search of
Kevin.
***
Junction, Kevin quickly complied. I
wasn’t sure if it was because he wanted to
keep me happy or if he just wanted to get
rid of me as easily as possible. He had
driven himself today, in a sleek metallic
Audi sports car that I didn’t remember him
having before. I couldn’t help feeling a
little jealous when he opened the door for
me—I’d lost my license over a year ago,
right before I turned nineteen. Getting my
driving privileges restored didn’t seem to
be anywhere in my near future.
After lunch, which felt rushed, Kevin
and I went to his office so I could sign
paperwork. We were halfway through the
documents when a giant of a man showed
up. As I gazed toward the front of the
office, watching him interact with Kevin’s
assistant, I already knew he was a
bodyguard hired for me. My new
babysitter. When Kevin caught me staring,
he motioned the man back to his office.
“Willow, this guy’s been hired by the
studio. Have to keep the rabid fans off,
you know,” Kevin said.
Which was translation for camera-
happy tabloids.
“Tom Miller. But everyone calls me
Miller,” the man said, and I stared up at
him and muttered a hello.
Towering over me by several inches,
Miller was smooth-faced with a buzz cut,
as orange as the cast of that skull-grating
show about the upper east coast, and
probably steroided out of his mind, with
what Jessica had always called “bear
shoulders.” I was guessing he was in his
late-twenties, but I could never tell with
the gym junkies.
“Willow,” I said at last, half-
expecting Miller to give me Cooper’s
smart ass “everybody knows Willow
Avery” remark. He didn’t, and I was glad
he wasn’t a total jackass.
After I finished signing the paperwork,
Kevin gave me his “behave yourself”
spiel and then volunteered his assistant to
drive Miller and me to the airport. We
were quiet the whole ride over to LAX,
and once I was alone with him, I felt
intimidated. I should have been as used to
strangers being hired to protect me as I
was to paparazzo cameras flashing in my
face, but it was unnerving to sit next to a
stranger who was at least twice my size. It
always would be.
As we waited quietly in the terminal, I
flipped through an old fashion magazine
someone had left in the airport, trying my
best to be inconspicuous. Miller’s phone
rang and he answered, recited a string of
numbers and letters, and hung up in thirty
seconds flat. I glanced over at him
curiously.
“My little sister.” Miller shrugged
sheepishly. “I had to tell her the password
to my bank.” Then, he smiled, showing off
a tiny gap in the front of his top teeth. His
relaxed expression lifted a weight from
my chest. He probably wouldn’t hover
once we reached Hawaii, so long as he
was receiving a steady paycheck.
One down
, I thought. An image of
Cooper flashed in my mind.
One to go.
God, one mocking, confident, asshole-ish
—
“Careful, Wills, overthinking is
dangerous,” someone said from a few feet
away. In that soft voice that sounded like
the sexy love child of a British and a
Southern accent. I inhaled a sharp gasp of
air and every muscle in my body went
taut.
Speak of the blue-eyed devil.
My new bodyguard was on high alert
and came up out of his seat, but I touched
his arm, shaking my head quickly. “He’s .
. . with us,” I mumbled before turning
sideways in my seat to get a better look at
Cooper.
Standing a few feet away, with a black
duffle bag slung over his shoulder, he
looked confident and relaxed in a black t-
shirt that accentuated his tall, toned body
and frayed jeans. And he was smiling—a
heart-stopping, panty-dropping smile. I
was torn between wanting to pop him in
the mouth or kissing him until our lips
were so freaking numb I could get this
damn attraction thing out of the way.
One taste before I decided whether or
not I needed to dull my reality.
I dug my fingers into the wrinkled hem
of my flannel shirt. No, no, no—I didn’t
need to dull anything except my bad
habits. I just needed to get my work done
and get on with my life. I could have the
chaos I craved in my life without getting
fucked up.
Cooper waited for a noisy, groping
couple to pass between us and then he
crept closer, so that he was right next to
my seat. I glared up at him. “You could try
not to be a dick,” I said. He rubbed his
tongue over his teeth, and I felt something
sharp twist in the center of my chest,
between my ribcage.
God, why were all the good-looking
ones complete jerks?
“Why? I think I like you when you’re
all flustered,” Cooper replied, winking.
He glided his palm along the high back of
my chair, and when the heel of his hand
brushed between my shoulder blades, I
shivered. “You’re less inhuman, much
more . . .” His voice drifted off, as if he
couldn’t quite find the right word to
describe me.
Right now, I needed him to say it.
Wanted to know what he really thought of
me. “I’m much more what?”
He cocked his head to one side, sizing
me up. Beside me, Miller snorted, but said
nothing. At last, Cooper bent down and
whispered into my ear, “Beautiful.”
I’d been a performer, a liar who could
mask her emotions, for as long as I could
remember and yet his words made me
burst into flames from head to toe. As he
went to sit across from Miller and me,
slamming his duffle bag on the resin floor,
I gave myself a mental shanking for having
yet another knee-jerk reaction to Cooper.
He is an ass. He is your coach. Slow
the fuck down, dumbass, before you get
in trouble again.
So I decided to focus on the negative
in what he said. “Glad to know I’m not
quite human,” I said in an icy voice.
Cooper’s smile faded into an
apologetic look. “Maybe I worded that
wrong. You don’t seem so . . .
mechanical.”
I released a tiny groan from the back
of my throat. Where had Dickson found
this guy? Narrowing my eyes into tight
slits, I leaned forward, resting my
forearms on my bare thighs. “Maybe you
should just stop using words, period,” I
suggested.
He raked his hand through his floppy
blonde hair. “Ah, Wills . . .”