Authors: Emily Snow
“You beautiful girl, you fuck with my head
like no other.”
I didn’t tell him that I was glad.
That I wanted to be the only girl on his
mind.
Chapter Sixteen
The next two weeks passed by in a
blur of work, surfing, more work, and
Cooper.
Copiously delicious amounts of
Cooper.
I didn’t even realize it was my
birthday until my mother called me first
thing in the morning on the fifteenth to sing
her rendition of Happy Birthday in a
horribly off-key voice. When she was
finished performing, she said, “I know you
asked me not to come there, but your dad
and I are so proud of you!”
Mom and I had been talking every few
nights, and when she’d called me on the
fourth of July, she had brought up coming
to Honolulu to spend my birthday with me.
I’d told her I already had plans even
though I only had my probation meeting.
“Thanks, but Mom, its 6 a.m. here and
I’m not filming today.” I didn’t add that
I’d been out late with Paige the night
before, at a Hibachi grill that she’d sworn
was the best on the Island. My mother
would ask me a million questions about
who Paige was and then warn me about
the dangers of being around an open
flame.
I stifled a sleepy laugh as I imagined
Mom saying, “
You’ll burn your damn
face off and then where would you be
?”
Mom didn’t take my hint about the
time because she continued to talk. “I
wanted to call with a birthday present,”
she said.
I pulled a pillow over my face and
groaned. “Please don’t sing again,” I
begged.
“Clay called early this morning,” she
said. My breath caught as soon as I heard
my lawyer’s name, and I threw the pillow
away from my face. It hit the wall and then
fell somewhere beside of the bed.
“And?” I asked.
“And he’s got a court date for your
case against that agency scheduled for the
middle of next month.” I could tell by the
shrillness in her voice that she didn’t
actually believe this was good news—in
fact, it probably scared the hell out of her
—but she must have known how much it
would mean to me, especially on my
twentieth birthday.
My heart hammered in my chest, and I
pressed the palm of my hand flat against it,
reminding myself that I needed to calm
down and take a deep breath.
“Does he think I have a chance?” I
asked, my voice sounding fuzzy in my
ears.
“Absolutely.”
One word. That one word somehow
managed to send a flood of emotions
rushing through me. Fear and pain and
hope all sliced through me at once, and as
I sat there shaking, tears trickled down my
face. “That’s a start, huh?” I asked,
keeping my voice calm, level.
“I knew you’d be happy to hear that,”
Mom said. I heard an inaudible voice
murmur something to her, and she laughed.
Then, to me she said, “One sec, your dad
wants to speak to you.”
I hadn’t heard my dad’s voice in
months—since the court date where I was
sentenced to Serenity Hills to be precise
—so when he came on the line, I had to
press the back of my hand against my
mouth to hold the sob in. “Happy birthday,
baby,” he said.
I couldn’t decide if I was more excited
to speak to him or angrier that it had taken
this long for him to pull his head out of his
ass, but regardless, I was crying. Pulling
in a deep breath to gather my bearings, I
said, “Thanks.”
“Looks like you’ve been staying out of
trouble,” he said, which meant he’d been
scouring the gossip columns to see if I’d
stepped out of line.
I hadn’t.
“Yes, I’m—” I thought of the past
month and everything that had happened
and gave a tiny sigh. “I love Hawaii,” I
whispered at last.
He made a little noise in the back of
his throat. “Your mom and I would love to
come see you when you’re ready to have
us,” he said in a tentative voice.
But I wasn’t ready for my parents to
visit me. Not now when things were going
so well.
I tangled my hands into the corner of
my sheets. “Thanks, Dad, I’ll let you
know.” My voice was polite, but firm
enough to let him know that probably
wouldn’t be anytime soon.
Our call ended a few minutes later,
and I swung out of bed, suddenly high
from the news Mom had given me at the
beginning of the call. I was too happy to
even let the fact Clay had called her
instead of me bother me. What my mom
had told me was hands down the best
birthday present anyone had ever given
me. It was three years too late, but I’d take
it.
I was a jittery mess for the remainder
of the morning, running on very little food
and too much Red Bull and adrenaline, so
when I went to my probation meeting in
the middle of the afternoon, I was shaking.
Officer Stewart narrowed her eyes at
me from across her desk and straightened
a stack of papers before saying, “Have
you had any run-ins with the police since
our last meeting?”
I swept my hand across my forehead,
shaking my head. “No,” I said. I didn’t
mention the fact one of Justin’s fans—a
girl he already had a restraining order
against— had snuck onto the set a couple
days before and the police had questioned
me along with other members of the cast
and crew after they arrested her.
Stewart tapped her long, French-
manicured nails against the hard surface of
her desk. “And everything else is still the
same?”
I nodded.
“Nothing special planned for your
birthday?” The way she said the word
special, like I should automatically insert
my drug of choice there, made my muscles
tense up.
I cleared my throat a few times before
answering her. “I’ve got work in the
morning.”
She tilted her head to one side
thoughtfully, to gauge whether or not I was
telling the truth. I wanted to let her know
that I’d been too busy to even think about
getting messed up, and that the few times it
had entered my mind for even a flicker of
a moment, I’d automatically flushed the
thoughts out and reminded myself of how
well I was doing without going numb.
I had friends.
I had a job.
Holy fuck, I had Cooper.
And now, if everything went right with
my attorney—
I let out a shake sigh because for the
first time in years, I was golden.
Officer Stewart typed something on
her laptop keyboard, twisting her lips to
the side as she worked. “You know that if
you fail another drug test I’ll have no other
choice but have you arrested.”
Now it was my turn to narrow my
eyes. “I’m not on
anything
.”
“You know I’ve got to make sure,
right?”
I’d loaded up on energy drinks and
water for that very reason.
After I passed my screening with
flying colors, she ushered me back to her
cubicle where she brought up the subject
of my community service. “Dave says
you’ve not been back for the last couple
weeks,” she pointed out.
I linked my thumbs together in my lap,
settling my palms on the stiff fabric of my
new Rag & Bone skinny jeans. I’d
splurged on them a week ago when Paige
had dragged me away—with Miller in
tow, of course—to go shopping when her
younger sister Delilah was in town. To
date, the jeans and fluttery chiffon shirt I
was wearing was the only thing I’d spent
any of my work advance money on, aside
from food and basics.
Thirty days down and no drugs. It was
a record for me.
“Do you plan on finishing your
community service?” Officer Stewart
asked in a soft voice.
I took a deep breath before answering.
“I’m planning on going back once things
die down with work. We’ve been shooting
quite a few of my scenes because—”
Because I’m unreliable and Dickson
probably thinks I’ll bail.
Stewart shook her head slowly, her
light brown hair swinging back and forth
around her shoulders as she did. “I
understand that, but don’t forget that if you
don’t complete your community service,
I’ll—”
“Have to report me to the courts. I get
it,” I answered in a sharp voice.
She sighed and dropped her chin for
several seconds. When she lifted it, she
was nibbling the corner of her lip. “I’m
not doing this to be mean, Willow. This is
my job. While you’re a very . . .
nice
girl, I have to be thorough when it comes to my
career because I like having an apartment
and food.”
I understood Stewart had to look out
for her career, but at the same time, I
couldn’t help but wonder if some of her
coolness towards me had anything to do
with her sister and Cooper. I couldn’t
exactly come right out and say anything to
her. For starters, Stewart was my
probation officer and I wasn’t going there
with her and secondly, confronting her
would out my relationship with Cooper.
I wanted him to myself a little longer
before that happened.
But as Stewart escorted me out to the
lobby she brought up her sister herself,
“Miranda said she met you.”
“If you count her saying three or four
words to me, yes,” I said. I clenched my
nails into the hem of my thin top. “I’m
pretty sure I could get you fired for talking
about a client to your family members.”
Stewart’s glossy red lips quirked into
a shadow of a smile. “Actually she has no
clue I’ve ever met you. We were talking
about Willow Avery the actress, not the
girl with the criminal record. But if it
helps, Miranda said you were nice.”
My eyebrow shot straight up. “Nice?”
I asked, choosing to ignore her comment
about me being the girl with the criminal
record.
She shrugged. “For Cooper.
Personally, I wouldn’t be able to stand it
if the guy I loved fell for another girl, but
Miranda and I are very different people.”
My breath caught but I shrugged it off.
I was so used to dealing with jealous ex-
girlfriends—like Gavin’s psycho ex
whose friends had started a nasty
YouTube channel blasting everything from
my weight to my clothes and even my
shade of fingernail polish—that it was a
bit of a shock to get a thumbs up from
Cooper’s ex-girlfriend.
“Tell her . . . thanks,” I said, and
Stewart shook her head.
“I can’t discuss my clients,
remember?” When I gave her a half-smile,
she continued, “I’ll see you again in
August and don’t forget to finish your
community service before then. I’d hate
for you to ruin the work you’ve put in by
not following through with the terms of
your probation.”
I nodded my head understandingly.
Since I’d been given the day off
filming, Cooper and I had planned a surf
lesson to work on a technique I needed to
master for a shot my stunt woman and I
would be working on at the end of the
week. But when I arrived at Cooper’s
house, and Miller told me he had to run an
errand, I knew something was up. My
bodyguard had made it a point to stick
around for all of my surf lessons ever
since production began. I told him I’d see
him soon, but as I walked into Cooper’s
place alone, I noticed that Eric’s truck
was gone too.
The moment I stepped into Cooper’s
shop, I smelled candle wax intermingling
with the usual scent of plugins and Banana
Boat. Cooper was shirtless when he
appeared around the corner, and smiled as
soon as our eyes met, making me go a
little crazy with the way he was looking at
me. “What day is today, it’s—”
“Not the singing,” I groaned, “My
mother already—”
He yanked me to himself, bringing our
lips together as he reached behind me to
lock the front door. “Don’t be a party
pooper,” he murmured against my mouth
as he effortlessly lifted me into his arms
and carried me through the house into the
kitchen. There was a tiny, homemade
birthday cake with lavender icing sitting
on the counter with two thin birthday
candles plunged deep into the frosting.
“Cooper?” I asked when he left me
sitting on top of the granite. He glanced
over his shoulder as he adjusted the
kitchen blinds to make sure they were
view proof. “What are we doing?”
“Can you forget yourself for a day?”
“Like you forgot how old I am?” I
asked when he returned to me. I leaned
over and blew out the candles before