Authors: Emily Snow
seventeenth through the twenty-third. I was
set to be released from Seaside on
October 19.
“Why are you so quiet?” he
whispered.
I rubbed my hand roughly across my
chest. “Because I miss you,” I said. Then,
in an attempt to lighten the conversation
because it was all I could do not to
breakdown, I added, “And because I think
your accent is hot when your voice drops
like that.”
I could hear a sound buzzing at the
side of my ear, and it took me a long time
to realize that a staff member was saying
my name—my actual first name—in a soft
voice to let me know my call was up. If I
stayed on track, I’d get another next week.
“I’ve got to go,” I said. “I’ll write,
okay.”
“Mmhmm.” As I prepared to hang up
he dropped his voice again and said
softly, “Wills, I love you.”
I pushed past the lump in my throat to
say, “You too.”
When I hit the round button to end the
call, I gave the cordless phone back to the
smiling woman waiting for it. “You’re on
the schedule for a meeting with Doctor
Nelson in ten minutes. Will you be—”
“Yes,” I answered, thinking of the man
I’d just hung up from. Of his friends
who’d been writing me just as much as he
did and my bodyguard who’d become
closer to me than any friend I’d made
since becoming an actress. I thought of
myself and how I’d spent my last session
with Doctor Nelson in a puddle of tears as
we talked about everything from the baby,
to the lawsuits, to my parents.
We’d talked about Cooper.
I held up the gazillion-page book I’d
been reading over the past couple days.
“I’m just going to put this in my room
before seeing Doctor Nelson,” I said. The
book was the same one that had been
passed around the last time I was in
rehab.
It was so much better than the script
for the movie had been.
***
longer wanted Roxies or anything else to
drown away the pain wasn’t until the end
of September. I woke up at 6 a.m. after a
bad dream and I didn’t want to black out
the memory of it ever happening, of the
baby ever happening. All I wanted to do
was climb into the shower and then go to
breakfast so I could start my day.
When I told Doctor Nelson about my
epiphany at our session at the end of the
week, he beamed, tapping the end of his
pen against the corner of his desk. He
gave me a pointed look before asking,
“Does that mean you’re checking out
early?”
Placing my elbows on the desk, I
rested my forehead against my clenched
hands. God, if this had been eight month
ago, I would have checked myself out as
soon as he asked me that, especially when
I had Cooper waiting somewhere under a
palm tree or on a paddleboard for me.
Instead, I shook my head. “I’ll stick it
out the full sixty days.”
Doctor Nelson nodded his bald head
carefully, his expression never changing.
“Do you know what you’ll do after you
leave here?”
It wasn’t the first time the question had
come up since I’d come to Seaside almost
a month before, but it was mostly in my
parents’ letters.
Will you go back to
acting? Will you come to live with me
and your dad? Are you going to use your
payment for
Tidal
to get your own place?
I’d written them back each time
without answering their questions because
I didn’t want to act. God knew the last
thing I wanted to do was live with my
parents. And to be honest, it really wasn’t
any of their business what I planned to do
with the money I made filming the movie.
“Maybe I’ll go to college,” I told
Doctor Nelson. The moment I said it, I felt
my heartbeat pick up. Felt that thrill of
excitement I used to feel when I scored a
dream role or a glowing review. Maybe I
would go to school. It would be my first
go at a normal education since I was in
fourth or fifth grade.
Doctor Nelson lifted one of his
eyebrows and leaned forward. “You look
surprised.”
“I am. I mean, I didn’t realize I wanted
to do it.”
“Do you know what you want to major
in?”
I lifted my shoulders. “No clue. The
only thing I’ve ever done was act.” But I
remembered what Paige had told me about
her sister Delilah. That she’d told their
parents that she was only 19 and shouldn’t
be expected to know what she wants to
do.
The corners of Doctor Nelson’s lips
twisted in concern. “Have you told your
boyfriend yet?”
Shaking my head, I swallowed in an
attempt to clear the tightness from my
throat. Since our first call, I’d only gotten
to talk to Cooper two more times on the
phone and the last time I’d called he was
in the middle of having dinner with
Dickson and his wife. He’d insisted that
he’d much rather speak to me but after ten
minutes, I lied and said my time was up.
He needed to fix his relationship with
his dad as much as I needed to fix myself.
“I’ll tell him when I get out.”
“He’s coming to pick you up? You’d
mentioned during our first session about
your frustration with your family for never
being around once you reach the end of
your treatment—”
Pulling my arms off the desk, I
dropped them by my side and stared down
at my lap. Mom had written me a letter
last week, swearing that she and Dad
would be here to pick me up on October
19, even if they had to walk. It was
dramatic and typical of my mother, but I
believed her. Flicking my tongue over dry
lips, I said, “No, my mom and dad are
coming to get me.”
I had no plans to tell Cooper because I
wasn’t going to be selfish and make him
choose between me and the competition he
had coming up.
I would be okay if I had to wait a
week more to see him.
And as I sat in front of my therapist
talking about how I’d handle the paparazzi
once I was released in a couple weeks, I
knew that even though what had happened
three years ago would always remain one
of those what-ifs for me—even though I’d
probably always have nightmares and
would never be able to get rid of the scar
in my heart—that I’d live.
Chapter Twenty-Three
October 19
On the day of my release from
Seaside, I woke up a few minutes after 8
a.m., smiling.
My parents had sent me a care
package with new clothes the week before
and I tried to get dressed quietly, hoping
not to wake Nora. She woke up anyway,
flipping on the little light above her twin-
size bed to stare across the room at me.
“You scared?” she asked.
She and I had stayed up late the night
before talking about everything from her
kids—her oldest was a few years younger
than me—to movies and finally to surfing.
I’d spent the last couple months gushing
about it and she said that once she left
Seaside next month, she might give it a
try.
I pulled on one of my long leather
boots and shook my head. “Not this time.”
“Excited?”
I glanced up at her and smiled. “More
than anything.”
She slid up into a sitting position and
crossed her arms over her thin chest. “You
should have told your boyfriend you were
getting out,” she said, and I shot her a
look. She’d been on my ass since last
week, when Cooper and I had spoken, and
I still hadn’t said anything to him about my
release date.
“It’s not a big deal.” I said despite the
lump in my throat. “I’ll fly out to Hawaii
next week to see him.”
Nora shook her head but gave me a
wistful smile. “I hate surprises.” My
roommate was the type of person who
read the last chapter of books first and
refused to watch a movie without spoiling
it, so I rolled my eyes.
“I’ll keep that in mind,” I said, the
edges of my lips pulling up. I stood and
buttoned my skinny jeans and grabbed my
bag from atop the dresser. Then I crossed
the room and sat on the corner of her bed.
“Personal space,” she reminded me,
but she was laughing.
“I’m going to miss you,” I said.
Groaning, she demanded. “You’re not
going to cry all over me, are you?”
But when I hugged her, she squeezed
me tightly. It was only when I reached the
door to our room that she asked in a husky
voice, “You’ll write?"
My throat felt dry. Nora’s family still
hadn’t written her—she said they were
trying to teach her a lesson this time
around. I pushed past the discomfort and
turned partially around to glance at her.
“Every day, if you want.”
She snorted and rolled her light brown
eyes. “Don’t be a lame ass. You be good,
Mouse Ears,” she said even though I’d
told her a hundred times I’d never acted in
a Disney movie in my entire life.
“I will. Try not to harass the hot
counselor anymore, okay?”
She didn’t respond until I stepped out
into the cold hallway. “Yeah, probably
not.”
I hugged myself close as I walked
toward the staff’s station. When I turned
the corner, I half expected to see Kevin,
waving at me with news that my parents
couldn’t make it and a new part but then I
saw my mother. She was pacing, her heels
clacking hard on the linoleum floor, and
biting her bottom lip.
“Mom,” I said, and though I’d thought
I’d accepted the fact that she might not
show up, my voice cracked.
She stopped, turned to me and her face
stretched into a Botox smile. She rushed
towards me, meeting me just outside the
staff station and wrapping me in a tight
embrace. “It feels like it’s been years
since I saw you!” she exclaimed when she
finally let me go.
I gave a little laugh. “Yeah, well, me
too.” Frowning, I looked over her
shoulder. “Where’s Dad?”
Mom took a couple steps back,
smoothing her hand over her highlighted
hair. “He was on a trip in Boston, but
we’re picking him up on the way home.”
She checked her watch and cringed.
“Right now, actually.”
“I’ve just got to check out and—”
She took my bag from me, sliding the
strap onto her shoulder, and nodded. “You
do that and I’ll call your dad to let him
know we’ll be there soon.”
I was grinning like an idiot as I signed
out of Seaside. The counselor in
admissions gave me my phone back, I
signed a few forms and the staff wished
me the best of luck. The whole process
took all of fifteen minutes, and then Mom
and I went out to the parking lot where her
red Cadillac CTS-V was waiting. I slid
into the passenger seat, immediately
reaching for the radio dial as she cranked
the engine.
I sighed when I caught the middle of a
Jason Mraz song and sung along off-key,
sounding as horrible as my mom had when
she called me on my birthday back in July.
She shot me a look as she navigated the
Cadillac into traffic.
“Jesus Willow, I don’t remember you
being like this at 9 in the morning ever,”
she said.
“It’s a good feeling,” I admitted,
resting my head back against the headrest
and looking out the window at an orange
Metro bus a couple lanes over. Seeing it
brought back the memory of myself back
in June and I slid my phone back and forth
between my hands, wishing I could call
Cooper.
The song switched to Paramore and I
nearly choked when my mother joined in
with me, singing loudly. Our eyes
connected across the center console and
though I knew we had a long ways to go,
this was a start. When the song ended, she
brought up my attorney and where he was
in the appeals process. Clay had flat out
told Mom that he didn’t think we stood a
chance but he was willing to keep trying.
I was silent for a long time and then I
nodded. “I’d appreciate it if he did.”
When we arrived at LAX twenty
minutes later, Mom gave me an apologetic
smile. “I’m going to park.” She glanced
down at her phone, flipped through her
messages and told me the American
Airlines flight number, before saying,
“He’s already here. Can you go in and—”
I was already getting out the car,
grabbing a pair of sunglasses out of the
center console as I did so. “Got it.”
It was the first time in years that I’d
been in this airport without a bodyguard
standing over my shoulders and as I made
my way to the gate, I felt like a million