Authors: Emily Snow
and I moved to Hawaii.”
“Whatever.” I kicked my shoes off
with my feet. “Goodnight, Cooper,” I said,
echoing his final words to me in the
airport.
“I’m picking you up in fifteen
minutes.”
“Wait—what?” I demanded, bolting
up into a sitting position. Suddenly, my
heart was pounding wildly and my mouth
went dry. I raked my hand through my dark
brown hair. “No. I mean, for
what
?”
“You’ve got to eat, Wills—nobody
wants to pay to watch a sickly-looking
surfer. And besides, it’s my job to look
after you.”
“Don’t you think you’re taking what
Dickson’s paying you to do a little too
far?”
“Nothing to do with Dickson.”
“What happened to your rule about
clients?” I pointed out, my voice coming
out in gasps. “You change your mind?”
He paused for a moment, and I heard a
door slam shut. The engine to his car
revved up, a Bruno Mars song about
getting locked out of paradise blasting my
eardrums. I flinched but then he cut the
sound so that I could hear him laughing
quietly.
“Getting dinner with you isn’t
breaking my rule . . . as long as we both
know when to quit,” he said.
Hugging my free arm around my lower
stomach in an attempt to still the
butterflies that were beating their wings
violently inside of me, I flicked my tongue
over dry lips. “Haven’t you heard? I don’t
know when to quit.”
Which was probably why I was
having a hard time resisting the urge to
flirt with Cooper.
He was silent again. I listened to his
breathing, and what sounded like wind
sifting through a cracked window, as I
raveled my hands into the fabric of my
tank top. Even though I didn’t want to have
dinner with him, I wanted him to talk. I
needed words and noise.
Cooper sighed. “So I lied.”
“About your rules?”
“No, about the fifteen minute thing. I’m
pulling into your driveway.”
“You’re kidding,” I said.
“Nope . . . I’m the one who suggested
the place to your parents. My friend
Paige’s parents’ own it.” As if to prove
his point, I saw headlights flash multiple
times through the wooden blinds.
Fucking stalker.
Anger compelled me up, and off the
couch. I reached the front door just as he
was lifting his hand to knock. There were
tiny grains of sand stuck to the tip of his
straight nose and his hair was wet,
disheveled. I wanted to tangle my hands
into it and pull him inside and—
Thinking like that is what started all
your problems three years ago
, a nasty
voice in the back of my head snarled.
“You’re my coach,” I said in a
warning tone that was directed more at me
than him. “And we’ve already established
you have rules. I’m not going out to dinner
with you.” I disregarded the pangs of
hunger in the pit of my stomach. There
was plenty of food in the refrigerator that I
could eat.
“Point taken. I just—ah, fuck it.” And
then, he pulled me to him, roughly,
pressing me up against the door frame, and
pinning my hands above my head so that
the uneven wood scratched the tips of my
fingers. His lips were soft and tasted like
salt, and I moaned against them as his
tongue spread mine apart. When
somebody passing by honked their horn
and yelled out “Take that shit indoors!”
our bodies moved inside in unison,
slamming the door shut with our sides.
“Wanted to test a theory,” he growled,
putting my back up against the door. He
raced his hands up my body, leaving a
trail of heat wherever they touched, until
he reached the sides of my face.
What the hell kind of theory was he
testing?
“I’m not screwing you,” I groaned.
Then, he kissed me again, this time harder.
He sucked my lower lip between his teeth,
tugging gently until my breath came out in
short, choppy pants, until I was about five
seconds from coming undone. Shakily, I
reached up and ran my hands through his
damp golden hair, and yanked his head
back until my gaze was level with his blue
eyes. “I’m not going to fuck you,” I
repeated, my voice stern.
“I don’t have any intention of trying,
Wills. I just needed to get this out of my
head before tomorrow.”
My breath caught on an exhale, and I
just looked at him for a long moment. I’d
wanted the exact same thing and now that I
had it, it was going to be a pain in the ass
to let go. He went in for another kiss, but I
tightened my clench on his hair. He
winced but grinned.
“And now that you’ve done what you
came here for . . .?” I demanded.
Since obviously it wasn’t only
because he wanted to make sure I ate
dinner.
He rubbed his thumb across my lips
before reluctantly backing away from me.
He sat on the arm of the burgundy recliner
a few feet from the door, gazing at me
intensely, and pushed his hand through his
wavy hair.
“Well?” I asked, as I adjusted my tank
top. It had ridden up to my belly button
and I pulled it down, stretching it over the
waistband of my shorts.
“You taste like bubble gum,” he
whispered, and I slumped backward.
Bubble gum and salt, I thought. What a
screwed up combination. He stood and
slowly came back to me. I clenched my
fists by my side so I wouldn’t reach out to
him.
I absolutely cannot get involved with
this guy.
He placed a soft kiss at my temple,
trailing it across my high cheekbone. I
would have called the gesture demure—if
he hadn’t captured my lips with his one
final time, kissing me almost desperately.
But God, Surfer Boy has a mouth on
him.
I was the one who pulled away,
gasping for air as I shoved him from my
body. I kept my gaze directed at the floor
when I opened the door for him. I pointed
outside. “I think you’ve gotten it out of
your head. Goodnight, Cooper,” I said.
“Goodnight, Willow. See you first
thing in the morning, bright and early.”
“I’ll be waiting,” I said as dryly as
possible, wishing my pulse would slow
down and that I didn’t feel that infuriating
pull between my legs.
As he walked out to a newish Jeep
Wrangler, I stared after him for far too
long. Our eyes connected once more
before he drove off and he gave me a half-
smile. I slunk back inside, resigning
myself to an evening of loneliness with
whatever healthy bullshit Kevin had had
delivered to the house.
At least tonight, for the first time,
Cooper had called me Willow without
mocking me. That had to count for
something.
Chapter Four
True to his word, Cooper showed up
at my rental at 5:30 in the morning.
Wiping the sleep from my eyes with the
backs of my hands, I met him at the door
wearing nothing but a signed t-shirt that
had belonged to Gavin, my pre-rehab
boyfriend who’d broken up with me via a
letter sent by someone working for the
network that aired his lame boy band TV
show. The shirt barely covered my thighs
and as Cooper’s bright blue eyes combed
over my body—starting at my bare feet
and working his way up—I snapped
completely awake.
Snorting, I pulled the door completely
open. “Not very discreet, are you?” It was
still dark outside, and I groaned out loud
as I gestured for him to come in. He shook
his head from side to side and took a step
backward onto the veranda. I stretched my
neck to see his Jeep was still cranked.
Frowning, I asked, “In a rush?”
“Overslept,” he said. “So yeah, guess
we are.”
I leaned my weight against the door
frame. “Sleep is good for you sometimes.”
He worked his jaw back and forth.
“Didn’t get too much of that after I left
here.” Those blue eyes seemed to stare
right into me, as he waited for some kind
of response. Did he mean that he couldn’t
get our kiss off his mind or that he went
somewhere else? To sleep with someone
else?
“Hard night of partying?” I asked in
the most nonchalant voice I could muster,
pulling my fingertips through my messy
hair. Then, I yawned into my palm to show
I didn’t care. Because I shouldn’t care. I
shouldn’t be drawn to Cooper when I
needed to focus on getting myself back on
track.
But the idea of him saying he’d left my
place to screw some other girl made my
stomach harden.
Crossing his arms over his chest, he
shrugged. “Not really. Listen, I’m going to
wait in the Jeep. Meet me out here in ten
minutes.”
I narrowed my eyes and, tugging the
hem of my t-shirt down, stalked barefoot
across the lanai until I was so close to him
our toes touched. Though he sucked in a
gasp of air, his relaxed expression never
faltered. “You’re enjoying this, aren’t
you?” I demanded. One of his eyebrows
lifted up high.
“What?”
I pursed my lip, biting the inside of my
lower one. He raked his bottom teeth over
the corner of his mouth, and my mind was
immediately pulled back to the way he’d
done the same to mine last night. The
weight in my stomach changed from
jealousy of thinking he’d spent the night
with another girl to something entirely
different.
Need.
God, I was a wreck. I’d spent so many
years dulling away emotions, going
through the motions without feeling, that
now I couldn’t even handle being attracted
to someone. “Nothing,” I said, spinning
around to head back inside. When I turned
to close the door, he stood right in front of
me, with a confused look on his face.
“What?” he asked once again.
I rolled my eyes. “You figure it out.
I’ll be out in fifteen minutes and you can
—”
Cooper shoved his foot into the house.
“Stop,” he ordered. He pushed the door
open far enough to step inside. Anger
mixed with the need I still felt, surging
through my body, compelling me forward.
I pointed past him, at the idling Jeep.
“I thought we were running late.”
He glanced down for a second, as if
he was trying to come up with just what to
say, and when his head popped back up,
there was laughter in his blue eyes. Screw
him for mocking me.
“We
are
running late, but the answer
to your question about me enjoying this is
no. No guy enjoys getting worked up just
to have to go home and lie in bed with a
hard-on.”
My mouth fell open, but I quickly
recovered. “That was your own damn
fault. Shouldn’t have gone testing
theories,” I said.
He was holding back a grin—I could
tell by the way his lips quivered. Giving
me an intense look that made the edges of
my senses blur, he said, “You’re right.”
He was agreeing with me. What. The.
Fuck? Before I could say anything, he
curved his hand around the back of my
head, drawing me in to him. “Don’t,” I
whispered. But the sad part was I wanted
Cooper to kiss me again, just like last
night.
Except, nothing happened. He and I
just stood there, our bodies practically
wrapped around each other, our lips an
inch or two from crushing together. He
tangled his fingertips gently into the hair at
my nape, and the pit of my belly flooded
with warmth. I sighed, twisting my head
slightly to one side.
“You’re right, I shouldn’t. We’ll do
this when there’s not work to be done,” he
whispered, his breath fanning my mouth.
Then he pulled away. “See you in ten
minutes.”
I watched as he jogged to his Jeep,
angry at myself for being so disappointed
he hadn’t kissed me. When he climbed
into the front seat and flashed me a grin, I
finally slammed the door, rattling it on the
hinges.
Pull it together, Willow,
I warned
myself.
Twelve minutes after I changed into a
one piece swimsuit, a neon green tank top,
shorts, and flip-flops, I shuffled outside.
Cooper’s Jeep smelled like coconut; like
his hair, and I shivered as I thought of the
way I’d pulled my fingers through it the
night before.
“You look nice,” he said, putting the
SUV into reverse and backing out the
narrow driveway. When we reached the
mailbox, something hit me.
“Hey, stop,” I said, and he slammed
on the brakes. I pointed up at the little
apartment over the garage. “I should tell
my bodyguard where I’m going.”