Authors: Emily Snow
go for an evening lesson before Eric
returned with pizza.
But if I thought the grief over my
relationship with Cooper ended with
Dickson, I quickly found out I was
mistaken.
The next afternoon Jessica, who hadn’t
spoken to me since before my birthday,
called to let me know that A, she thought
Cooper was “a delicious piece of
Australian goodness” and B, she was
calling dibs on him once I was through.
I told her I was busy and that I’d call
her back to avoid telling her to fuck off.
At the end of the week just when
Dickson had stopped looking at me like he
thought I’d crumble apart at any moment
and Kevin had stopped leaving voicemails
about tabloid damage control, I returned
home after a long day of filming to find an
Escalade with a Hertz rental sticker on the
rear window parked in my driveway. I
steadied myself before I climbed out of
the Kia, because I already knew who was
on the other side of the tinted windows.
Cadillac’s are my mother’s weakness.
I held my breath as she got out of the
SUV and walked toward me on tall heels
that hoisted her up to my height. Fun-sized
was what my dad had always called her
but there was nothing fun about her
expression right now. Even though she
was smiling I felt like she’d swallow me
whole at any moment. When Mom stopped
in front of me, she pulled me to her,
hugging me tight, and I coughed,
suffocated by the scent of her strong
perfume.
“I’ve missed you, Willow,” she said,
sighing.
I lifted my arms from my side and
awkwardly returned her embrace. When
she pulled back, she held my shoulders
and examined me closely. I studied her
too. With her dark, highlighted hair,
wrinkle-free skin, and toned arms thanks
to the scary trainer she worked with four
times a week, my mom hadn’t changed a
bit.
“Miller,” I said in a distant voice as I
heard his heavy footsteps coming nearer,
“this is Tiff . . . my mother.”
Miller flicked his hand in an
uncomfortable wave and gave me a
pitying look. “I’m just going to—” He
pointed up at the apartment over the
garage, and I lifted my chin, silently
praying he’d insist that he needed to stay
with me instead.
“I’ll call you if I need you,” I said.
As soon as Mom and I stepped inside
of my rental house, she decided to insult
him. “Well, he did a great job escorting us
in to make sure there wasn’t someone
who’d broken in to—”
“Don’t start,” I snapped. I counted to
twenty and then motioned to the couch.
She wobbled over to it, smoothing her
knee-length skirt as she sat. “Do you want
anything?”
Like to tell me why the hell you’re
here.
But in my heart I already knew, so
when she shook her head, I slid down
numbly on the edge of the recliner and
faced her with my palms rested on my
knees.
She started talking, reciting the same
spiel addicts’ families used on that
intervention TV show. “Your dad and I
are worried about you, Willow,” she said.
This wasn’t the first time she’d said as
much to me, but dammit, this time I hadn’t
done anything to deserve to hear it.
“You shouldn’t be,” I said calmly.
Mom’s back stiffened and she
released a heavy sigh. “Every time we
open an entertainment article online your
face is there with that actress’s son.”
I sucked in a hiss through my teeth.
Had she really just said that? Curling my
lips into a sneer, I said, “In case you
haven’t noticed it, I’m an actress too. And
if it bothers you so much, don’t read trashy
ass gossip magazines.”
“Don’t you think you should be
focusing on your career instead of
relationships right now? Do you want
what happened the last time to happen all
over again?”
I dragged my hand down my face,
frustrated. “You are unbelievable. I
am
working and focusing on my career but
that’s not the only thing in my life. You
can’t expect me not to date or have”—I
cringed before I said the next word—“sex
or fall in love and—”
Mom’s green eyes widened. “You
don’t love him, Willow.” She shook her
head slowly to each side, as if doing so
would convince me that she was right.
“How can you tell me what I care
about and love? You and dad have
avoided me like the plague since I fucked
up.”
Mom winced but effortlessly slid on
her poker face again. “We offered to fly
out here for the fourth of July,” she
reminded me.
“And I didn’t want you to because I
was fine and happy. I’m still happy. Why
would I want you here just so you can tell
me what I’m doing wrong every five
minutes?”
She threw her hands up in the air and
released a sound of frustration from the
back of her throat. “You would turn this
around on me and your dad, wouldn’t you?
You’re the one who’s unbelievable.”
I stood up, pacing the length of the
small living room frantically as I spoke.
“If you want to play the blame game, here
we go: Mom, what you did to me when I
needed you, sending me away so that
nobody had to find out about my little
problem, that was fucked up.” Mom began
to say something but then pressed her lips
together into a thin, colorless line.
I wished I had the energy to scream at
her, to cry.
The corners of Mom’s mouth
tightened. “You left out that you waited
several months to tell me and your dad.”
I dragged my hands through my hair.
“God, Mom. Seriously?”
She took a deep breath and then
another. “Willow, I’m sorry for hurting
you. I’m sorry for what happened, but
please don’t ruin yourself again over a
boy you barely know.”
I sat back down on the recliner, this
time relaxing all the way back. “I’m not
ruining myself,” I said, emphasizing each
word in a dangerous tone.
“I’m planning on staying at the Four
Seasons so I can—”
I knew exactly where this was going,
and I also realized that I needed to end it
right now.
“Mom, I don’t want you here. You
want me to work? You want me to be
normal? Then let me do what normal
adults do; they don’t have their parents
overseeing every aspect of their life. I’m
not above asking Miller to remove you or
having you banned from coming anywhere
near the set.”
She gasped and her entire body
trembled. “You don’t mean that.”
I gave her a pointed look. “A long
time ago you told me I needed to learn to
make adult decisions,” I said. I
remembered the day well because it was a
phone conversation we’d had a few days
after I’d been released from the hospital
when I could barely move. “Let me do
that. And if you love me, if you really
want me to be happy, don’t try to get
custody of me. Because I know that’s what
you want to do next,” I said.
There were giant tears gliding down
Mom’s high cheeks, and when she swiped
them away she took a handful of makeup
along with it. “What happens when you get
hurt again?” she asked in a quiet voice.
“Do you go back to the drugs and the
partying?”
“I—” When I paused, my words
catching in the back of my throat, she gave
me a sad smile.
“That’s what I thought.” She stood
and hobbled to the front door, never
looking behind her when she said, “If you
want to grab lunch before I leave to go
back to Los Angeles tomorrow, call me.”
Then she left, and I curled up into the
corner of the couch, hugging myself close.
Wanting nothing more than to forget
this moment had ever happened.
Wanting to drown quickly.
***
later, and when I told her to go away, she
shook her head and held up a handful of
DVDs—a season of
Adventure Time
and
both volumes of
Kill Bill
. “Don’t ask me to leave or I’ll sit outside blasting the
Gears of War soundtrack.” I lifted my
eyebrow and she nodded slowly, her hazel
eyes gleaming. “And yes, I’ve actually got
it inside of my van.”
I shuffled aside so she could come in,
crossing my arms as she tossed the DVDs
on the coffee table and sat down in one
corner of the couch.
“Miller called you?” I asked, dragging
myself across the room to sit on the
opposite end of her.
She cricked her neck to one side and
then raced her fingers through her short
black hair. “Don’t be mad at him,” she
said.
My upper lip curled. “My bodyguard
is calling my friend to come sit with me to
make sure I won’t do something stupid and
you’re telling me not to be mad at him.
I’ve been burnt enough already by people
I trust and now he’s going behind my
back.” I clenched my hands by my side
and glared up at the ceiling, in the general
direction of Miller’s apartment. “I should
fire him.”
“Now you’re just being a bitch. He
called someone he knows won’t throw a
ninja star into your back the moment you
turn around. You should be thankful.”
I turned my dark gaze on her. She
narrowed her hazel eyes, challenging me.
Frustrated and dizzy, I raked both hands
through my brown hair. There was no
point telling her the entire story of what
had happened with Mom so I leaned
forward, burying my face in my hands, and
went for the Cliff Notes version. “My
mom brings out the worst in me,” I said,
my voice catching. “She likes to bring up
the very worst of me hoping it’ll help me
change.”
And like always, I’d let it get to me to
the point where I’d brought up her very
worse, hurling it back at her angrily. When
I told Paige she nibbled her lower lip
thoughtfully for a few seconds and then
stood up, disappeared into the kitchen, and
returned a moment later with two Diet
Cokes that she wrinkled her nose at. She
handed me one and then sat down, popped
hers open and took a long swig.
“You know that most people ask
before making themselves at home, right?”
I demanded, running the hem of my t-shirt
across my sweaty forehead.
She leaned forward, placed her can on
the coffee table, then sat back to scratch
one of the tattoos on her shoulder—a
vintage pinup on a surfboard. “Does it
work?” she asked.
“What? Not rifling through someone
else’s refrigerator?”
She snorted. “No. Turning the tables
on your parents.”
I shook my head slowly. “If anything it
just makes me realize what a fucked up
mess I’ve made of things.” When she
raised her eyebrow in concern, I released
a frustrated groan. “I’m not taking pills
again if that’s what you’re wondering. I
just—”
She released something that sounded
like a sigh and a groan. “What?”
“It’s hard. When they bring Cooper
into it. And it’s not just my parents—it’s
the paparazzi and my friend Jessica and
hell even my producer.”
Her lips curled downward
sympathetically. “Cooper told me what
happened with Dickson.”
“See. Shit like that just makes me want
to black out.”
Her breath caught and she moved
closer, trying to get a good look at my face
so that she could gauge my expression.
“Willow, it scares me when you say things
like that.”
“It’s the truth,” I said, dipping my head
so I didn’t have to meet her gaze. “That’s
what you wanted from me, right? I’ve
been acting since I was a kid. I’m tired of
the bullshit that comes along with it
sometimes. Ninety percent of the world
thinks I can handle anything they sling at
me and the rest— everyone who knows
me—believes I’ll relapse at any moment.”
“What do you think?”
“I think I’ll be alright,” I lied. “But it
still doesn’t make me feel any better that I
can’t even go for a fucking burger with my
boyfriend without getting my weight
picked apart. It doesn’t make me feel
better to see old pictures of myself sloppy
drunk and kissing some stranger reposted
on gossip sites for shits and giggles.”
“Quit acting then,” Paige suggested.
She took another sip of her Diet Coke and
shuddered. “At least for a little while until
you fix
you
.”
A bitter laugh came from my throat.
“The whole time I was in my last rehab I
kept promising myself that I wouldn’t do
any acting anymore and the day I came out
I accepted this role. I can’t let Dickson