Authors: Emily Snow
away at the smooth digital keyboard. He
still hadn’t mentioned what had happened
back in Los Angeles but it was bound to
come up at some point during the next
several weeks when he bitched about
disliking the film industry. What would I
even say?
My stomach rolled. I needed to clear
the air between us and I needed to do it
right now.
“Cooper,” I started, and he lifted his
chin a little. “Look, I—”
“I don’t think it’s going to be what
you’re used to,” Miller said loudly from
behind us. I turned, shoving away my
frustration at having been interrupted, as
my bodyguard wiggled a set of car keys
high in the air.
“It’s a moped, isn’t it?” Cooper said,
laughing in earnest for the first time in
hours. “Fuck me sideways, no private jet
and now a moped.” Miller shot him a dark
glare and shook his head.
“No, it’s the”—he punched the key fob
a few times, and I whipped my head back
around to see the headlights of a compact
Kia flashing rapidly, illuminating the
place. He was right, it wasn’t what I was
used to, but I didn’t care. There was so
much more to worry about than what car
took me to point A to point B.
Like the migraine that was gradually
forming in the center of my skull.
Like my parents still not calling me
back; like the money that would be
deposited into my account in a few days
and the fact I was going to start shooting
the remake of a movie in a couple weeks.
Like Cooper.
“It’s small,” I said, sticking my hands
into the pockets of my tight denim shorts. I
looked up at my bodyguard and cocked my
head doubtfully. “Can you even fit in that
thing?”
Miller paused at the curb, lifted his
eyebrow at me. “I’ve fit in smaller.” Then
he grabbed our luggage and ambled to the
Kia.
I didn’t know how to take that, so I
just nodded.
Cooper began to walk away. Frantic
to make things right, I grabbed his upper
arm, curling my fingers around muscle.
“Wait, I need to talk to you,” I said. His
eyebrow shot up, but he lagged behind.
“Look, what happened in L.A. with that
kid . . . it wasn’t what you thought,” I said.
A smile quirked the corners of his
lips. “I know it’s not. It’s not even about
that. It’s just you. You’re going to bring
out the worst in me.”
The worst in him? He was at least a
half foot taller than my five foot six, so I
tilted my head back to stare up into his
blue eyes. “Because I’m an actress?” I
demanded.
Cooper’s halo of golden hair drifted
when a hot breeze whispered through the
garage, and he moved his head slowly
from side to side. He pulled his arm out of
my grip then placed his hands on either
side of my shoulders. Tossing a quick
glance at Miller, who was waiting quietly
inside the idling Kia and glued to his
phone, Cooper dropped his voice to an
uneven whisper. “Because I can already
tell you’re going to give me a hard time,
Wills.”
“You don’t even know me enough to
judge,” I snapped. He grimaced.
“Stop jumping to conclusions,” he
said, his jaw tightening. “I don’t care what
you’ve done in the past, okay? I’m
worried about what’s going to happen in
the future.”
I scraped the bottom of my foot
anxiously across the concrete as I waited
for him to explain. It was the least he
could offer me since that lip-numbing kiss
I’d craved—correction: was still craving
—was obviously out of the equation.
“I make it a point not to hook up with
people I’ve been hired to work with,” he
said.
My head spun for a moment, and I just
stared up at him, letting his fingertips dig
into my shoulders. Could this guy get any
cockier? “Okay, for starters, you’ve
known me for, like, two seconds. Two . . .
what makes you think I’d even go for it?”
“Don’t be ridiculous. You’re Willow
Avery—everyone knows you.” When I
sunk my teeth into my bottom lip to hold
back a rude reply, he added, “And
besides, you wear your emotions on the
sleeve of your”—he dropped his gaze to
my blouse, plucking a piece of fabric
between his fingertips—“flannel shirt.”
I scoffed, finally breaking away from
his grip. I leaned back and crossed my
arms over my body. “Thought you said I
was mechanical.”
“Not when you’re flustered.” He took
a couple steps backward, making his way
in the opposite direction of our rented
Kia. “Goodnight, Wills,” he said once he
reached the exit.
“Wait—where the hell are you
going?” I called out, frustrated.
He opened the door, glanced over his
shoulder, and then said in what could only
be described as a Hollywood exit, “I live
here, remember? Long term parking,
where I left my car.”
No, I didn’t remember that he lived in
Honolulu because he’d never told me. Up
until now I’d assumed he’d come to Los
Angeles from Australia, because of the
accent. I watched his body disappear
around the corner then stalked across the
concrete, to the Kia. When I slammed into
the passenger seat, Miller shot me an
amused glance that clearly told me what
he was thinking.
“It’s not even like that,” I snapped.
“No idea what you’re talking about,”
he answered immediately, stifling a laugh.
He stared straight ahead, but the big ass
smile threatening to slide across his face
said it all.
Once we escaped the airport chaos,
traffic was scarce. I spent the entire ride
drinking in the sights as the sun slowly set
and chewing a piece of gum Miller gave
me. Thirty minutes later, he parked the Kia
into a driveway belonging to a small,
wood-framed home that was more garage
than house. I opened the car door and the
moment I slid out, I heard the rush of the
sea nearby. I could smell and taste the salt
hanging in the air, even though this place
wasn’t oceanfront.
“It’s empty,” I murmured, feeling a
surge of panic rush through me. It was just
after eight and there was practically
nobody outside, except for a few kids
playing basketball at the end of the cul-de-
sac. This place was empty and organized
with none of the commotion that I craved.
Pulling in a deep breath, I forced myself to
calm down, to focus on the positives. Like
the sound of the waves.
Loud and distracting, just the way I
liked it.
If I was lucky, that noise would be
what lulled me into a dreamless sleep
tonight, and every other night after it while
I was here. That sound would be just
enough to drown out the what-ifs and
images that met me whenever I closed my
eyes—enough to keep me from sinking
myself into something else that I’d never
emerge from.
No more fucking myself over
, I
silently promised.
Miller cleared his throat, drawing my
attention to where he stood a foot away,
leaning against the hood of the car. In the
shadows of the sunset, he looked
absolutely menacing, but he wore that
laid-back smile that had kept me from
getting too pissed when he’d silently
teased me about Cooper.
“Guess you’re not used to this either?”
he asked. I followed his eyes back to the
front of the tiny house and exhaled.
“At least it’s not rehab,” I whispered
so softly I wasn’t sure he heard me.
He walked around the car and opened
the trunk. When he closed it a moment
later, my rolling bag, as well as his own
luggage, was enveloped between his
massive arms. I tried to take my suitcase
but he grunted stubbornly.
“This is my job,” he said.
I lead the way to the house. “You
make me feel like a runt.”
“That’s my job too,” he replied.
I nodded, though I didn’t turn around.
The sad part was I hadn’t always needed a
bodyguard. There’d been a time, about
four or five years ago, where I was well-
known enough to get amazing parts but not
so famous that I needed to be protected.
To be honest, it sucked to have fallen far
enough to get the parts nobody else
wanted and yet still be
that
actress, the one who was so notorious the studio had
to hire bodyguards, aka babysitters. Miller
was probably getting paid more than me.
I felt my smile slip.
His own look faltered and he took a
hesitant step forward. “Are you okay?” he
asked.
Bobbing my head a little too
enthusiastically, I turned back toward the
front door and opened the lockbox with
the code Kevin had given me. There were
two sets of keys, and I dropped one into
Miller’s outstretched palm.
“Don’t bust through the ceiling, Lurch.
The tabloids would be all over me for
trashing a rental house,” I said, trying to
lighten the mood. Miller tossed his head
back and howled with laughter, but the
inside of my chest felt hollow, clenched. I
focused on unlocking the door so he
wouldn’t see the look on my face.
“I’ll do my best,” he replied seriously.
I waited to go inside the house until I
heard the sounds of his feet scraping up
the wooden stairs that led up to his
apartment. The moment I opened the door,
I felt sick to my stomach. It was
suffocatingly hot. I stumbled a few steps
backward so I could stand in the doorway
and get fresh air. Gripping the wooden
frame, I gasped in deep breaths of air,
taking each one in as if it were my last.
I needed to pull myself the hell
together.
I needed to walk into that house and go
to bed because tomorrow morning, I
would have to face Cooper. I needed—
My cell phone vibrated in my back
pocket, indicating a text message and
broke my erratic thought process. As I
finally stepped inside, shutting the door
behind me with the back of my foot, I
pulled my phone out. I found the
thermostat and adjusted it to the lowest
possible setting, then sunk down on the
worn, brown suede sofa to check my
missed messages.
There were three. Two from my
mother—one to tell me the fridge had been
stocked with my favorites (I already knew
that because Kevin’s assistant had told
Miller who had told me hours ago) and the
other to say a mover would be dropping
off several of my things in the next two
days and that she and Dad missed me.
“Phone not working my ass,” I said,
thinking of the lie Kevin had told me this
morning in my hotel room, as I typed
Thanks. Can’t wait to talk.
I expected the other message to be
from Jessica since she’d yet to call or text
me, but it came from an unknown number
with an 808 area code. A Hawaii area
code, I realized, as I glanced at an
outdated calendar across the room that
advertised a local insurance agency. I
opened the message, 99 percent sure who
sent it, despite the fact that I never gave
him my phone number.
8:14 p.m.:
Let’s try this again . . .
I’m sorry, Wills. Want to do something
together? Neither of us wants to be alone
tonight.
“You confusing, crazy boy,” I
whispered, shaking my head
disbelievingly. I positioned my fingers
over the smooth keypad, ready to tell him
off—to let him know I’d been dealing
with his type for years—but then I thought
better of it. I called him instead.
“I took you for more of a texter,” he
said the moment he picked up. I could hear
the sound of waves crashing behind him.
“Some things come out better if
they’re said aloud.”
“Like?”
“Like hi Cooper, this is Willow.
Thanks for the invitation but I’m not
fucking you tonight.”
A low growl came from the back of
his throat, and I heard him thud down on
something heavily. “That’s why I sent the
other message, Wills,” he said in an
admonishing voice. I looked at the screen,
and sure enough, there was a second text
sent around the time I dialed him.
8:19 p.m.:
That sounded like I was
trying to get into your panties, didn’t it?
I’m not.
“I call bull. And besides, I thought you
called them knickers,” I said. He
chuckled. Ugh, even his laugh had a sexy
accent. I stretched out on the couch, letting
the pitiful AC unit fan my face as I
shrugged out of my long-sleeved, flannel
shirt.
“I don’t sleep with clients,” he said.
“And I’ve not lived in Australia for ten
years, since I was twelve when my mum