Authors: Emily Snow
box of shoes to the floor. I knelt down
beside it. “It’s . . . nice.”
“I don’t like that voice,” Mom said.
“What’s wrong?”
Cooper.
But I wasn’t going to get into
relationships with my mom because she’d
pick me apart with a million questions.
Are you taking your birth control? Are you
using condoms? You’re not . . .
you know
.
. . again, right? I changed the subject. “We
start shooting in like ten days.” It was a
lame change of pace, but her voice perked
right back up.
“I know, aren’t you excited?”
“Why didn’t you and Dad let me know
you had a part lined up for me?” I asked,
shoving a pair of Christian Louboutin
pumps to the back of the closet. One of
them tipped over to the side, its bright red
sole facing up at me.
“We didn’t want to overwhelm you.”
“Mom, you sent me details about the
gazillion lawsuits against me. I could’ve
handled a damn part or, you know, a
script.”
She sucked in a deep breath. “Don’t
be rude, Willow.”
But I wasn’t being rude. Rude would
have been asking my mother where she
was when I was released from Serenity
Hills a few days ago. Rude would have
been asking Mom where she was right
now. I threw another pair of shoes into the
closet and gritted my teeth before asking,
“Is Dad around?”
“He’s getting dressed for dinner, but
he wanted me to tell you to take care of
yourself.”
Meaning he didn’t want to talk to me.
That had always been my father’s solution
to dealing with my screw-ups, and it was
one I had never understood. My counselor
at rehab had told me he’d come around
after I atoned for my failings. Because
according to her, proving myself was the
best way to win my father’s thumbs up. I
couldn’t help but wonder how many
people left Serenity Hills with even more
fucked up Daddy issues than they’d
arrived with.
“You’re being too quiet. Is everything
alright?” she asked.
I slid into the closet, pulled my knees
up to my chest and placed my forehead
against them. “Have you heard from the
lawyer about the case against the agency?”
I demanded.
“These things take time,” Mom said in
a sing-song voice.
Because apparently, three fucking
years wasn’t long enough.
After that, my conversation with my
mother went by quickly. She reminded me
that I needed to get in touch with my
probation officer and start my community
service. I rolled my eyes and told her I
would. When it was time to hang up, Mom
gasped and said, “Damn, before I forget—
have you started your personal training
yet?”
My neck and shoulders tensed up.
“Not yet,” I replied in a clipped voice.
“You know it’s important for you to
stay in shape,” she admonished, and
suddenly, I remembered her putting me on
a diet of grilled chicken salads and water
a few years back. She hadn’t known what
was going on then because I’d been too
afraid to tell her, too afraid of my parents
finding out what I’d done, but it still made
me upset to think about it now.
I just wanted this call to hurry up and
end.
“Got it, Mom,” I said.
“Good. We love you, Willow.”
“Uh huh. You too.”
The moment she disconnected the call,
I found the manila folder Kevin had given
me a few days before. I pulled the
personal trainer’s information from the
back of the folder. And I heard Cooper’s
words from a few days earlier echo in my
head. “Nobody wants to see a sickly-
looking surfer.”
After I ripped the paper into shreds, I
sent Miller a text.
Do you feel like some sight-seeing?
You know . . . this is my first time in
Hawaii.
He responded back five minutes later
with a message that made me heave a sigh
of relief.
1:48 p.m
.: Mine too. Got another
hour of working out then we can hit the
town.
It was going to be my first time out on
“the town” with a bodyguard when I
wasn’t too drunk or too fucked up to
function.
Chapter Six
Though I was still on the verge of
being broke, Miller and I stayed out late
into the evening, walking around a cheap
amusement park. He was a welcome
change from the bodyguards I had before.
Not once did he give me that look that
clearly conveyed he thought I was a
dumbass, or worse, that he was picturing
me naked. I probably would have stayed
out all night, but as Miller and I stood in
line to ride the only decent rollercoaster
in the entire park, he slowly turned to me.
I groaned when I realized he was
nervously working his teeth back and forth
over his top lip and that his skin was
flushed beneath his slowly fading spray
tan.
“I hate when people look at me like
that,” I pointed out, knowing his sheepish
expression meant an end to my night and
the noise.
I wasn’t at all ready for that.
Miller lifted his muscled shoulders.
“Don’t you think we should call it a night?
I mean, this place is thinning out.” He
gestured around us at the handful of tourist
strolling through the muggy darkness.
When we arrived—two or three hours ago
—the place was in full swing.
Shoving my giant sunglasses up on my
nose, I focused my attention to the front of
the line and let the sounds around us wrap
me up. “It’s only nine,” I argued.
Miller snorted. “Yeah, an hour and a
half ago.” Okay, so we’d been here more
than four hours. When I held up my hands
in a so-what motion and gave him an
irritated look, he said in a gentle voice,
“You’re the one who told me two hours
ago to make sure you went home before
eleven to study your lines and go to bed
for your lesson with Billabong,
remember?”
If I wasn’t so irritated about making
that particular promise to Miller, I would
have smiled at his nickname for Cooper.
Instead, my frown deepened. Thinking
about surf lessons with Cooper made my
chest hurt. And the last time my heart or
chest or
anything
hurt thinking about a guy
. . .
Things ended badly.
“One more hour,” I pleaded and
though he looked conflicted, Miller
dipped his head. He stepped forward
when the person in front of us showed his
wrist band to the attendant.
“You’re just like my kid sister. Okay,
one more hour and then I’ll carry your ass
out of here if I have to.”
If any of my friends back in
Hollywood knew I was hanging out with
my bodyguard as friends, that he was
talking to me like we’d known each other
for years, they’d make a smart ass
comment. They’d ask me if we were
sleeping together. Luckily, I wasn’t in
Hollywood. Besides, my friends’ opinions
weren’t exactly at the top of my list of
things to give a shit about since I still
hadn’t heard from any of them—not even
Jessica, who was supposed to be my best.
Giving Miller a smile which coaxed a
gap-toothed grin from him, I crossed my
fingertip over my heart. “I promise, only
one more hour,” I said.
Of course, when my phone rang and
woke me up at 8:45 the next morning, I
immediately wished I’d chosen to turn in
much earlier. Apparently, I was losing my
party girl touch. I answered without
opening my eyes to check the ID, letting
my fingers wander over the smooth
surface of the screen until I found the right
button.
“Hello?” I mumbled.
“Hi, I’m trying to reach Willow
Avery,” a female voice said.
I flew up into a sitting position,
brushing my hair out of my eyes. “It’s me.
Anne?” I asked, thinking it was Kevin’s
assistant on the line. Now, I was fully
alert—wide-eyed and expecting good
news.
“No, sorry. This is Officer Stewart
from probation.”
Fuck my life.
“Oh,” I said, unable to hide the drag of
disappointment from my voice.
“I was calling to set up your first visit
to our office—and to confirm your
address.”
As I copied down the information
Stewart gave me on the back of a scrap
piece of paper I found in one of the
nightstand drawers, and answered all her
questions in a monotone voice, I felt a
chill claw down the middle of my chest. It
wasn’t like I was in danger of failing a
random pee test—and I’d failed my fair
share of those in Los Angeles with my old
probation officer who overlooked them
because Kevin represented his son—and
yet I felt like the walls were closing in
around me. I felt trapped.
“When are you planning to start your
community service?” Office Stewart
questioned.
I grimaced. I should have known that
one was coming. Swallowing back the
lump in my throat, I croaked, “I’m not
sure. What am I supposed to be doing,
exactly?”
“You’ll be working at Harmony
House,” she said. Then she gave me the
name and number of the person who’d be
supervising me. “So, I’ll see you Friday
morning, at 9:30?” she confirmed.
“I’ll be there,” I said slowly, thinking
of how embarrassing it would be to have
my bodyguard take me to probation
because I didn’t have a license. It could
be worse, I reminded myself. Like asking
Miller to escort me to the gynecologist or
making him wait for me while I hooked up
with someone in a hotel. I’d never been
one for random hookups but I had friends,
like Jessica, who had no problem having
sex with a new guy every weekend while
her bodyguard waited in the car or outside
her hotel door.
I looked down at my phone, wincing
when I saw the time. It was 8:58 a.m. and
I was supposed to meet Cooper in two
minutes. I shot him a message letting him
know I was running late then I sent Miller
one telling him I’d be ready to go in five
minutes. I changed quickly—today in a
modest two piece that had been delivered
with my things yesterday. Somehow, it
managed to hide the telltale scar and
accentuate my boobs at the same time.
One of my hands was working on the
button of my tiny yellow shorts and the
other was cramming my face with a whole
wheat waffle that tasted like overcooked
cardboard as I ran outside to where Miller
was waiting by the Kia. He shook his
head, grinning and got into the driver’s
side. My phone vibrated in my pocket and
I held my waffle between my teeth to
check it.
Cooper had messaged me back.
9:08 a.m.
: You know that James
Dickson won’t be so lenient when you
stay out too late partying, right?
I didn’t want to care what he thought I
spent my spare time doing, but I found
myself hesitating before getting inside the
car to text him back.
Thanks for the heads
up, smartass. If my body wasn’t so tired
from your “basics” I’d probably have
gotten up on time.
I slid the phone back into my pocket.
The look on my face must have said it all
because when I dropped down next to
Miller, he cocked a dark eyebrow and
scratched the back of his buzz cut. “You
look like you just told someone off,” he
said, as he began to drive.
“Oh, I did.”
“Let me guess, Billabong?” he asked,
chuckling. When I shot him a look, he
cringed and said in a serious tone, “Sorry,
I keep forgetting that you decide whether I
have a job or not. You’re just not what I . .
.”
“Expected?” I asked. My phone
buzzed against my thigh again, and I felt
my heart jump.
“You can say that,” Miller said.
“I’m actually quite charming,” I said.
Then, I gave him a grin that was forced but
sincere. “And you don’t have to worry
about getting fired. As long as you don’t
try to sell my dirty panties to
Sleaze
Police
, we’re good.”
“Gross.”
“It’s happened before,” I said as I
fished my phone out. It was still buzzing
from incoming text messages. “You
wouldn’t believe what some of these
dickwads will pay for.” I didn’t add that
the panty incident had happened to Jessica
and that she’d been sleeping with the
bodyguard who did the deed.
I was more interested in Cooper’s
newest responses.
9:15 a.m.
: So you’re saying you
spent the night in bed with sore muscles,
thinking about me?
9:16 a.m.
: I’ve got to say Wills, I’m
pretty turned on.