Authors: Emily Snow
I typed until I couldn’t see anymore
and when I hit send, I pushed my laptop
aside. Then I rushed to the bathroom to
vomit up the remnants of the vodka I’d
drunk the night before.
***
with my eyes closed and drying tears
burning the corners and making the sides
of my face feel as if it was cracking into a
million pieces.
Just like the girl herself
, I thought.
I heard him stumble across the room
and felt his body sink down next to me on
the cold tile. His heart sounded like it was
in his throat as he said over and over,
“Wills. Willow. Wills.”
“I’m not high,” I whispered in a voice
rubbed completely raw from the crying.
He sighed, falling back hard against
something. My eyelashes were sticky as I
pulled them apart to squint over at him. He
was by the tub, his expression tight as he
worked his fingers against his temples.
“But I wanted to be,” I said.
“But you’re not,” he told me, cupping
my face between his hands. He kissed me
hard and desperately. “You’re alright.”
I cried out and he pulled back.
“Cooper, I’m fucked up.”
“Jessica screwed you over. Just
because you wanted to—”
I pushed him away from me, scooted
back to the wall and hugged my knees. For
a long time, our breathing was the only
sound in the bathroom. “Wills?” he
whispered at last, hesitantly.
I dug into my pocket, pulling the bag of
Roxies out and tossing them across to him.
“My birthday present.”
He looked at the bag like it would rot
his hand off if he touched it before he
dragged his hands over his face. “Rick?”
It took me a moment to figure out who
he was talking about and then I realized it
was Eric’s dad, the pill-dealer. I shook
my head. “I’ve never even met the guy.
Jessica brought those for me last night as a
belated birthday gift and left them.”
He clenched his hands, his features,
but he didn’t ask me about Jessica, he
simply said, “What do we do now?”
“I wrote an email to Leah’s blog a
little while ago.” When he groaned and
started to say something, I shook my head
fiercely, cutting him off. “They’ve already
put out everything that could hurt me.
Everything that could hurt you and your da
—Dickson. What else can they do besides
mock my grammar?”
“Wills . . .”
When I cut him off again, I looked
away so I wouldn’t have to see his face
when I asked him my question. “If I go
away—if I go to be fixed—will you still
be here?”
He was quiet for a long time, and I
knew it was over. That he was going to
rip me apart like Tyler, but wouldn’t
leave a single bit of me to salvage. I
wouldn’t cry. I’d already wept so much
that even if Cooper told me to fuck off, I
didn’t think it was possible for me to shed
another tear. I would not cry. I would not.
And suddenly, he was coming over to
me, wrapping his arms around me, and
burying his face into my hair.
“Don’t ever doubt me again, Willow.
The whole time you’ve been here I’ve told
you two things until I was blue in the face
—that I’ll look after you and that I’m not
wishy-washy. If you’ve got to go fix
yourself, nothing I feel for you changes. I
won’t stop loving you.”
I was wrong. There were still tears
left in me.
Dickson sent a car, and an extra
bodyguard, half an hour later and we met
him at a secluded beach house he said
belonged to a friend. The three of us were
tense, as we talked about what would
happen next. When my producer assured
me that he had enough footage of me to
make the movie work, my head popped
up.
“I’m not going to bail on you,
Dickson,” I said. Dickson shook his head
and touched my shoulder.
“You’re not. We’ll give Justin a few
extra scenes if we have to—that kid will
love that. What I want you to do is go get
yourself help, Willow.” Not once did
Dickson look at me angrily, even though
his name was being smeared too, and I
caught Cooper giving him an appreciative
nod when he added, “I know of a good
place in L.A. and I’ll gladly foot the bill.”
That night, once Cooper went to bed
and the cameras outside of his place
finally died down, I slunk away to the
hallway that led out to the deck so I could
call my parents. It was two in the morning
in Los Angeles, but my mom answered
almost as soon as I hit the call button, her
voice anxious.
“Where have you been all day? We’ve
been worried sick. Your dad and I’ve
scheduled a morning flight to come to
Hawaii and—”
“Don’t,” I said, pacing, my bare feet
tapping softly on the cold floor.
“Don’t? Please don’t push us away
this time—” She paused and I heard my
dad say something to her. I heard the
sound of her hand scratching against the
receiver and a second later, my father
came on the line.
“Willow, don’t be difficult,” Dad
said.
Don’t be difficult. Don’t. Be. Fucking.
Difficult.
I bit the inside of my cheek before
telling him, “I wrote a letter to Leah’s
blog.”
Dad sucked in a breath of air. “I’m
aware.” I paused, shaking my head
incredulously. There was no doubt in my
mind that it had been published on the site
almost as soon as I sent it.
“I’m going back to rehab, Dad.
Dickson says he’s gotten everything out of
me that he needs to make this film a
success.”
“Willow—”
“Just listen to me for once!” I snapped,
and then I heard nothing but silence on the
other line. “Cooper’s flying me home
tomorrow or the next day—hell, I don’t
know—but the point is, I’m coming back
to do what I should have done eight
months ago. And hopefully, the next time I
see you, I’ll be okay. I’ll be . . . right.”
Dad murmured something to my
mother and I heard her make a strangled
noise. “What about your career? What
about your acting?”
“Hollywood has survived twice
without me before. I don’t think the
industry will shut down if I disappear.”
“Do you need—”
“I don’t need money,” I said and then I
sat down on the floor across from the
laundry room door and told him about
Dickson finding me a rehab and paying for
it. When I was finished, I sighed. “I’ll
call you. Or write you. And Dad?”
“Yeah, kiddo?” he asked, his voice
heavy with emotion.
“For once, it would be nice if you
didn’t have something planned when I
come out. If you could just let me ease
back into regular life. If you could give
me that respect..”
When I placed the phone down on its
screen a moment later, a sound from the
end of the hallway startled me, and I
looked up to see Cooper leaned against
the wall, looking so much like he did that
first night a couple months ago when he’d
kissed me senseless in the doorway at my
rental.
I smiled sadly as I got to my feet and
gravitated to him. Our bodies were flush,
and he threaded his fingertips into the hair
near my temples.
And then, he kissed me again, like it
was the last time we’d say goodbye.
Chapter Twenty-Two
My new home for the next sixty days
was called Seaside, even though it wasn’t
anywhere near the sea. The rehab Dickson
had paid for was nowhere near as
luxurious as the first one I’d been to, nor
was it as plain as Serenity Hills. The
Monday after
Leah Dishes Hollywood
first broke the story about me and Tyler,
and Dickson and Cooper, Cooper helped
me check in. After I filled out a packet of
paperwork that was a good two inches
thick, we stood in front of the staff station
because he wasn’t allowed beyond that
point.
“A couple months ago I never thought
I’d say this,” he said in a low voice, his
fingertips skimming the sides of my face,
“but I’m actually going to miss you,
Wills.” He was grinning, but it didn’t
reach his eyes, and I knew he was just
trying to make me smile.
This will be hard.
I refused to say that aloud. So I forced
the corners of my lips up into a smile and
dragged in a deep breath between my teeth
to keep from crumpling. I didn’t want to
be here. Two months ago I’d sworn to
myself that I’d never go back to rehab and
now here I was again checking myself in.
All I knew was that I needed help—I
didn’t want to feel like I needed to drown
my sorrows every time I read about
myself online or whenever I had a bad
dream. I could do this. It was only sixty
days.
People had been separated for so
much longer.
A desperate exhale slipped from my
lips as I pulled his mouth down to cover
mine. The kiss was entirely too short and I
shivered when our mouths broke apart. A
member of the staff called my name and
Cooper cast a grim look in his direction,
tightening his grip on my fingertips.
“I feel like—” he started and then
dragged his free hand through his blonde
hair.
“Like what?”
The corners of his lips quirked up for
a moment into a painful grimace. “Like
I’ve failed you, Wills.”
He hadn’t. He’d done just the opposite
and I shook my head from side to side.
“This will be worth it,” I said. Then,
reluctantly, I pulled away from Cooper
and went in the direction of the man saying
my name.
“I can do this,” I said under my breath.
“I’ll be fine.”
I quickly discovered that I wasn’t a
celebrity at Seaside. The staff didn’t treat
me like I was a god or like an idiot
assigned to them by a judge or like
anything other than a patient. My room had
a window and my roommate, Nora, wasn’t
famous—she was a hairdresser whose
wealthy grandparents were paying for her
to be here. When I introduced myself to
her she’d cocked an eyebrow and bit her
bottom lip before reaching out to take my
hand.
“I’d hoped I wouldn’t get a roomie,”
she’d said.
I’d smiled. “Sorry. You can pretend I
don’t exist if you want,” I replied. She’d
winked and stopped chewing her lip long
enough to give me a half-smile.
“I was already planning on it.”
When I was given phone privileges
two weeks after I arrived, and I called
Cooper, I told him that Seaside was the
baby bear of rehabs.
“I don’t get it, Wills,” he said, but I
could tell he was smiling.
I slid down on one of the floral-
printed couches in the empty common
room. “They don’t have fables in
Australia?” I teased, squeezing my eyes
shut as I listened to the sound of his
breathing. He’d sent letters—everyday—
but parting with a voice I’d heard every
day for months had been difficult.
He cleared his throat. “I was pretty
sure the bear one was a fairytale.”
“Same difference,” I choked out.
His voice grew serious. “How are you
holding up?”
So I told him, as fast as my fifteen
minutes would allow. I told him about
Nora. I didn’t add that she’d been in and
out of rehab for the last 16years—since
she was 18—or that she had a family who
never wrote her. I’d started getting letters
from my parents a week ago and I hid
them under my pillowcase because I
didn’t want to see the hurt look on her
face.
“She’s good to you?”
“One of the sweetest people I’ve ever
met,” I said honestly.
I heard noises in the background and
then Paige’s voice came on the line. “I
miss you, Avery!”
Swallowing hard, I said, “I miss you
too. And Eric. Your piece of shit Grand
Caravan still holding up?”
She made a noise that sounded like a
hybrid of a laugh and a hiss. “You shut
your dirty mouth.” Then she said.
“Cooper’s flailing—and no I’m not even
kidding—for the phone. We love you,
Willow. Me and Eric and the boy with
the coconut shampoo.”
I wasn’t used to friends telling me they
loved me when we weren’t drunk, so
when I said it back to her, it sounded
awkward. “Love you too, Paige.”
It was the truth, so that was all that
mattered.
I had three minutes left when I heard
Cooper’s voice return to the line. We
spent all of it talking about his surfing
competition in October, the one he’d told
me about earlier in the summer. As he
gave me the dates, I felt something sink in
the pit of my stomach.
He’d be in the Canary Islands from the