Authors: Emily Snow
“Your full name is Brittany Willow
Avery?” she asked, lifting her eyebrow
slightly as she read my first name.
“Yes.”
“And your birthday is July 15, 1993?”
“Uh huh,” I said.
“Are you still living at the same
address as the other day?” I shook my
head, only murmuring a “yes” after she
glanced up at me impatiently.
“Are you actively employed?” she
questioned. I knew these were standard
questions—I mean, I’d heard them dozens
of times—but that didn’t stop me from
gritting my teeth. Officer Stewart lifted her
gaze up as I was rolling my eyes. “Is there
a problem with your employment, Miss
Avery?” she asked, emphasizing each and
every word.
“No, I’m . . . working,” I said, but I
couldn’t hold back the exasperation in my
voice. Suddenly, I felt defensive—like I
had to prove myself to this woman I didn’t
even know because of the way she was
staring at me.
Officer Stewart tilted backward in her
rolling chair, so far that it touched the two
filing cabinets behind her. She linked her
fingertips together, rubbing them back and
forth and picking me apart with her blue-
green eyes. I just knew that a question that
would make me feel like shit was coming,
and I braced myself for it.
Sure enough, a moment later, she said,
“My case notes say that you’re not
scheduled to begin shooting your film
until”—She took her eyes off mine long
enough to squint at the laptop screen
—“July first.”
“That’s right.”
“So why are you here so early?”
Glancing at the clock as if it would
help this meeting go by faster, I clenched
my hands together between my knees.
“Because I’m training with a surf
instructor for my role.” I flicked the tip of
my tongue nervously across my top lip and
dropped my gaze to my lap. “I play, ah, a
surfer.”
Saying it aloud sounded like such a
fucking joke.
“Original,” Stewart murmured.
Bringing her chair back to the ground, she
typed something into her computer, her
fingers making a rapid click, click, click
noise that annoyed me. I imagined what
she was typing, but then I stopped myself.
I shouldn’t care. I’d be done with
probation soon enough and I’d never have
to see Officer Stewart again. “Who are
you training with? Lots of good ones in
Honolulu.” She never looked up or
stopped jabbing at the keys.
“Cooper Taylor at Blue Flame
Academy,” I said. Stewart’s shoulders
stiffened and her fingers clenched. A
second later, she regained her composure.
What the hell was that about?
“You’re filming the remake of the”—
She coughed—“Hilary Norton movie,
right?”
I was pretty sure she already knew
that, but I nodded anyway. “Yes, I’m her
—I mean, I’m playing the character she
played.”
“Ironic,” she said, and tilted her head
to the side. I flushed. It didn’t take a
genius to figure out she was comparing me
to Hilary Norton. The woman who’d
originally played my part had been a
class-A junkie. I was almost certain that
eventually, the gossip columns would
point out that similarity, and I was already
dreading the day. “And you’re working
with Cooper. He’s a good one, that’s for
sure,” she added, a tight smile clawing at
the corners of her mouth.
And though I knew it was bitchy and
childish and probably even sluttish, I half-
grinned and said, “Definitely. Cooper’s
the best.” There wasn’t anything
suggestive to my voice but Stewart must
have taken it that way because she looked
up and gave me what could pass for either
a nod or a twitch. Before I could stop
myself, I asked, “Do you take surf lessons
with him?”
Grabbing a Styrofoam coffee cup off
the corner of her desk, she downed a long
gulp and shook her head. “He and my kid
sister dated for a few years. They’re still .
. .
friends
.”
I didn’t like the bright red spots that
pranced in front of my vision any more
than the way she cleared her throat before
saying friends. Pressing my lips flat, I sat
back, wanting this meeting to end as
quickly as possible. Stewart had known
exactly what to say to get to me, and I felt
like an idiot for trying to one up her. Now
the only thing I’d think about during my
lesson with Cooper was whether or not he
was sleeping with my probation officer’s
sister.
At least that would keep my mind
away from the money in my account and
what disasters I could blow it on.
The meeting with Stewart lasted
another few minutes, and then she set up
our next appointment—in a month on, no
surprise, my birthday. As she walked me
toward the front of the building, she turned
to me and said, “I called Dave to verify
your community service hours this
morning and he said you haven’t checked
in yet.”
When I didn’t reply, instead feigning
interest in a tattooed guy slurping down
water at the fountain outside of the
bathroom and sweating profusely, Stewart
handed me a business card with an
address scribbled on the back.
“I’ve set you up an appointment with
him, today at noon.” She shrugged and
gave me a little smile. “Just so you can
meet him.”
“I’ve got a surf lesson,” I said
automatically, and her polite smile
faltered a bit.
“I’m sure Cooper will understand.
He’s the best, after all.”
Right. The best. With her fucking
sister.
But when I gulped in the taste of fresh
air a few minutes later, not sparing the
probation office another glance as I rushed
to the Kia, I didn’t know what Cooper
would think. Yesterday during our lesson,
he’d been quiet, focused only on work.
There had been no flirting, very little
touching, and I’d found myself confused
and wanting both.
Today, the moment I stepped into the
front of his shop and he gave me a
dizzying smile from behind the counter
where he was going through a surfboard
catalogue with a couple around my parents
age, I realized I would leave just as
frustrated as I’d been yesterday.
“Give me a few,” he mouthed,
gesturing his head to the back of the house.
I nodded. I walked out to the deck, where
I began stripping down to my suit.
I was unbuckling my high, wedged
Steve Madden sandals when I heard him
come outside. I didn’t immediately
acknowledge him, but I could feel the heat
from his gaze running from my ankles, and
up my bare legs. When I felt it skim past
my breasts, I lifted my chin. If he was
ashamed at being caught watching me, he
didn’t show it. Instead, I was the one who
blushed all over as I folded my sundress
into neat creases and sat it on the deck
bench.
“I’m impressed, Wills. You’re on time
and I didn’t even have to ca—”
I cut him off. “I’ve got to leave early
today.”
I expected a smart-ass “would-you-
leave-shooting-with-Dickson-early”
response, but he slid down on the bench
next to me, draping his arm around the
wooden handrail, and looked into my
eyes. “You’re alright, aren’t you?” There
was a genuine concern in his voice that
caught me off guard. Nodding, I tucked a
loose strand of hair behind my ear,
suddenly conscious of his scent—coconut
and sunblock.
My voice was husky when I said, “I
had my first probation meeting this
morning with Officer Stewart.” I paused
to let her name sink in for him, but his
expression didn’t change and his body
stayed relaxed. “I’ve got to go meet my
community service boss this afternoon.”
He nodded his head slowly and started
to drag his shirt over his head. “What
time?”
“Noon.”
He half-laughed, half-groaned,
shrugging his shirt back down. I gave him
a blank look and he said, “Then why did
you have your bodyguard drop you off?
It’s 10:45 now.”
Honestly? Because I hadn’t paid the
slightest bit of attention to the time. I’d
been too rattled by the meeting with
Stewart and the money in my account. I
reached for my bag where I’d slid it under
the bench. “I’ll call Miller and—”
Cooper’s hand closed around my
wrist. A shiver raced through me and my
fingers tightened. I took one breath—and
two more just to be sure of myself—then I
met his gaze full on. The way his blue
eyes alternated between confusion and
want and astonishment made me want to
melt into him.
Made me breathless all over again.
His lips parted. “Don’t.”
“Why?” I whispered in a voice that
was too heavy and pleading for my own
good.
“I’ll take you.”
Our lips were inches from connecting.
I glanced away and tried to focus on the
vacationers lounged out in beach chairs
several feet from his deck, but even then
the sound of their radio became fuzzy, the
sight of their Corona bottles clinking
together became a haze. The only thing
that was vivid was Cooper’s face when he
tucked his finger under my chin and
compelled my gaze back to his,
whispering my name in that accent.
“You’ve got work,” I said, but my
words were more for myself. He had a
rule about clients. I was his client and at
the end of the summer, my movie would
be shot and I’d have to leave. I
couldn’t
want him like this if I didn’t want to have
my heart ripped out when that time came.
Holding my chin steady, he traced his
other hand from my wrist up to my elbow,
and from there to my shoulder. He bent
forward, dipping his head a little, so that I
could feel his breath hot against my
throat.
“I’m my own boss, Willow.” One of
his fingertips brushed over my lips, and—
I couldn’t help it—I flicked my tongue out
over the rough skin. His grip on my
shoulder tightened and he cursed against
the delicate skin at my collarbone.
“I can call Miller.”
“I’m taking you.” His voice was more
determined than before.
“What the hell makes you think I want
you to take me anywhere?”
He drew away from me and my chest
deflated. I struggled to keep the
uninterested look on my face as he linked
his hands behind his head. I was anything
but bored and by the way he was grinning,
he knew that too. “Because of the way
you’re looking at me right now.”
“And how is that?”
“Like if Eric and Paige hadn’t come
back just before I walked out here, I’d
have your legs wrapped around my waist
in five minutes.”
“Your confidence makes me want to
blow chunks all over you.”
He dropped his hands from behind his
head. “Get dressed before—”
“Before what?” I challenged.
He pulled me down onto the deck
floor with him, like he didn’t care whether
or not anyone could see us or that we
were out in the open or that he’d known
me for all of a week. And while his lips
and tongue probed mine, my brain
screamed at me, begging me to remember
that it
had
only been a week.
Shoving his chest hard with the palm
of my hands, I stumbled backwards and to
my feet. Turning my back to him, I
grabbed my clothes from the bench and
angrily began yanking them back on. My
breath came out in ragged little gasps and
I was trembling. I was mad at him for
making me want more and with myself for
being stupid enough to let him affect me.
When I was calm enough to face him,
he was still on the floor of the deck and
his eyes were gleaming.
“Why are you laughing?” I snapped,
plopping down in a patio chair to shove
my feet into my sandals.
He stood, staring down at me like he
wanted nothing more than to tear my
clothes off. “Because you didn’t puke on
me and because you’re going to break
your neck cleaning gum from park benches
in those shoes.”
I rose to my feet and smoothed down
my sundress. His breath hitched as I shook
my long, dark hair out before knotting it at
the top of my head. “Ready?”
“You’re not going to argue with me?”
he asked and I glared at him, evoking a
grin that made me want to run my lips
across the dimple in his left cheek. “God,
I love when you come undone, Wills.”
Chapter Eight
Cooper was wrong about me having to
clean gum off park benches—the card that
Stewart had given me took us to a
homeless shelter for women and children
—but he sure as hell was right about the