Authors: Emily Snow
I rolled my eyes, ready to let him have
it, but then another text came in. This one
was from a familiar, old contact whose
photo popped up when I clicked on the
message. Strawberry blonde hair, blue
eyes, a giant grin, and a shot glass lifted
up high. I still remembered bits and pieces
of the night I took this picture of Jessica.
Speak of the boozy devil.
9:18 a.m.
: Where are you staying???
I was on vacation in Ibiza. I want to see
you, bitch!!!
I began typing a response to her,
barely listening when Miller said, “Hey,
Willow . . . I was wondering if we could
talk about days off.”
“The weekend,” I blurted, and I heard
him shuffle around, probably to turn his
head in my direction. “The weekend
because I don’t need to go out. Seriously,
if I ask to go out, stop me.”
Because my text to Jessica read,
I
wish we could hang out but I’m in
Hawaii for a part! Sorry.
“What? With physical force?” Miller
asked, snorting.
“I’m weak,” I said, adjusting my
ringer to silent. That way she couldn’t tell
me about what she’d done, and who she
partied with, in Ibiza. That way I wouldn’t
get jealous. That way I wouldn’t wish I’d
been with her, getting so fucked up the
universe failed to exist for me.
“I don’t want to go back to rehab or
jail or any of that. I’m not going to go
back,” I whispered.
There should be other reasons why
you don’t want to get screwed up
, my
conscience muttered to me.
I paid attention to the winding road
ahead.
“Nobody wants you to either,” Miller
said quietly. But I closed my eyes and saw
the flashing lights and the headlines
behind my eyelids. He was wrong, so I
didn’t respond.
When he parked the car on Cooper’s
curb, I hesitated before getting out. I
pulled my hand away from the door handle
and gazed back into Miller’s dark brown
eyes. “What are you going to do when
you’re off?” I asked.
He looked surprised. “Something part-
time . . . to help with the expenses when I
move.” Yesterday, during our all-day tour
of Honolulu, he’d told me about his
girlfriend. The assignment as my
bodyguard would be his last before he
moved to live with her on the East Coast.
My gaze slipped to the front of
Cooper’s stucco house, and then back to
Miller’s face. “Another security job?”
Miller opened his mouth to answer
me, but then seemed to think better of it.
His face wrinkled into a frown and he
flicked the tip of his tongue over the tiny
gap in his front teeth. “Willow, are you
stalling?”
Yes. And I wasn’t about to admit
aloud—or even to myself—the reason
why. Letting my shoulders sag, I pinned on
a smile that was probably more creepy
and robotic than bright. “I’ll text you when
Surfer Boy and me are done.”
A second after I stepped inside the
empty shop area a couple minutes later,
Eric padded in through the doors behind
the surfboard counter. He had a half-eaten
energy bar in one hand and a giant bottle
of water in the other. “What if I said
you’re stuck with me today?” he asked,
hitching an eyebrow.
I pretended to be interested in a t-shirt
for sale, though I could still easily see him
out the corner of my eye. “What exactly
are you going to teach me? And by the
way, I met your girlfriend.”
He took a long gulp of water and then
shrugged his shoulders. “Paige knows my
flirting is harmless.” When I rolled my
eyes, he added, “What can I say, I’m star-
struck. What would you do if Brad Pitt
walked into your house?”
I scrunched my face. “Not shit because
he’s two years older than my dad.” Then a
thought hit me, and I shifted an eyebrow
up. “You’re not much of a bum if you’re
up this early each morning.”
“It’s to see your beautiful, famous
face. But really, not even I sleep past
9:30. I’ve got to polish those”—he
pointed to three surfboards resting against
the wall on the far side of the room—“and
go to the grocer. I’m kind of your
boyfriend’s bitch.”
“There is nothing going on between
me and Cooper,” I said through gritted
teeth. Then, taking a long, calming breath,
I walked over to the counter, leaned my
elbows on the smooth boards, and asked
“Where is Cooper anyway?”
Eric scratched the back of his head
and yawned. “He’s a glutton for
punishment. He’s out on the beach because
he swears it de-stresses him.” He bent
down close to me as if to share a secret.
“And believe me, you stress the hell out of
him.”
“Thanks for the heads up. Good luck
with your . . . bitch duties.”
He sighed. “It’s not an easy job, but
somebody’s got to.”
Shaking my head, I left Eric standing
there grinning like an idiot. I went out to
Cooper’s backyard, the way we’d gone
out the day before. He was wadding
toward the shore, his golden hair wet and
clinging to his forehead, his board tucked
between his arm and body, his expression
relaxed.
The moment he saw me, though, that
look immediately changed to a cocky half-
smile, then surprise when his eyes
dragged over the black halter top of my
swimsuit. He gave me a little wave. I
pressed my fist to my mouth to hide my
smile and steadied myself against the
outside of the deck for a moment. Then, I
slowly sauntered down the beach toward
him.
He met me halfway.
“Trying to get out of work by looking
like that?” he asked.
“Oh, please. It’ll take a lot more than a
two-piece to convince you to go easy on
me.”
“Mmmm, good point, Wills. I will
never, ever go easy on you.”
My body heat jumped, but I radiated
perfect confidence as I stepped out of my
yellow shorts and shoes. I tossed them in a
pile a few feet from my board, which he
must have brought out with him earlier.
“How will you torture my ass today,
Boss?” I asked.
The corner of his mouth tugged up.
“Didn’t take you for that kind of actress,
Wills.”
My torture turned out to be the same as
yesterday, but I was determined to show
him I could handle his training. I spent the
next hour and a half working on my form
and asking him questions about his history
as we worked.
“How long have you been doing this?”
“Since I was six so sixteen—almost
seventeen—years,” he responded. He
stood in front of me, tilted his head to the
side, and then motioned for me to move
my left foot back a little. I slid it back on
the smooth surface of my purple and white
board until he held up his hands for me to
stop.
“How many competitions have you
won?”
He pretended to think and then he
asked, “How many movies have you
starred in?”
I narrowed my eyes. “Too many to
count.”
“Well there you have it.” He walked
in a circle, examining me, and let out an
annoyed sigh before coming up behind me.
Placing his left hand on my hip, he touched
the inside of my right thigh, moving it
forward. My mouth flooded with moisture
as I glimpsed down at his fingertips
gliding across my bare skin. “There,
perfect. Now, bend your knees.” I didn’t
miss the hitch in his voice, or the way his
touch on my skin felt too gentle, too
lingering, for someone tasked with
teaching me.
I thought of the way his hands and
mouth had felt on mine that night in my
living room, and I traced the tip of my
tongue over my lips, dampening them,
before I cleared my throat. “So why’d you
move from Australia?”
He pinched the bridge of his nose,
which was slightly chafed from spending
so much time in the sun. “Show me
everything you learned, starting with
getting up off your board.”
This was the first question of mine
he’d ignored, so naturally, I wanted him to
answer it. “If you tell me about Australia.”
“Why? Planning a visit?”
I shrugged. “Who knows? Maybe.”
“Just . . .” He dragged his hands
through his hair, a look of frustration
suddenly clouding his features. “Go
through the fucking basics, Wills.” The
last few words were clipped and every
muscle in my body went tense.
This was a different side of Cooper—
a vulnerable side—and to my
mortification, I realized I was kind of
turned on by it. Maybe I was more
masochistic and screwed up than I
originally believed myself to be, but if this
is what he felt when he tried to fluster me,
no wonder he did it.
Keeping my eyes locked with his, I
showed him everything he’d taught me
over the last couple days. I lay down on
my stomach, keeping my toes at the edge
of the board, and then popped up,
centering my feet expertly in the middle of
the board.
Tilting my face up at him, I smiled
despite the painful burn in my arms and
ass. “Now, why’d you leave Australia?” I
demanded. I stepped off the board and
crossed my arms over my chest, shaking
the soreness out of my legs.
“My parents divorced when I was
twelve,” he said with a little shrug. “My
mum was from America so . . .”
“You moved here,” I completed and
he nodded. “I bet she knows how many
competitions you’ve won,” I added. My
mom might not pick me up from rehab, but
she could easily tell you my first movie,
the last, and every role in between.
But when Cooper looked up, and I got
a good look at his face, I felt a lurch in my
chest that had nothing to do with attraction
or my own personal shame. His
expression was blank and I already knew
what he was going to say before the first
word was spoken.
“She died when I was seventeen,
Wills.”
“Oh,” I whispered. I lowered my gaze
to the sand, digging my foot into it. I’d
spent so much time being around other
people— being other people—and I still
didn’t know what to say when facing
someone’s loss. “Cooper . . . I’m so
sorry.”
“Don’t do that,” he said, but I shook
my head. A moment later, we were toe to
toe, with his palms pressed gently to
either side of my face as he forced me to
meet his gaze. When he looked at me like
that, I forgot that there were other people
on this damn beach with us. And when he
touched me, I almost forgot that I didn’t
plan to get involved—emotionally or
physically—with this guy.
“I’m not angry at you for mentioning
my mum. It was an innocent question—no
harm, you know,” he said.
My shoulders deflated. “I’m really—”
“Drop it,” he said, this time his voice
hard. I flinched but said nothing.
Our lesson ended a few minutes later.
Paige met us out on the deck again, as I
was putting my clothes back on, and this
time when she asked me to eat with her—
correction: told me I was going to—I
accepted. She clapped her hands happily.
“I’ve got to give a lesson in half an
hour but we’ve got a little time. Holy
crap, I’m going to eat lunch with a
celebrity,” she said. Cooper wiggled his
fingers in mock enthusiasm and she rolled
her eyes at him. “If you want to fire this
dumbass and hire me, I could use the cash.
My shitty Grand Caravan is dying!”
I didn’t know anything about this
woman other than the fact she was a
surfer, dated a horn-dog and that her
parents owned the place I was staying in,
but for the first time in what seemed like
years, I felt a pull toward another female
that had nothing to do with getting fucked
up or blowing money. I cleared my throat.
“I should call my bodyguard and let him
know.”
She opened the door for me, ushering
me inside, and then lifted her eyebrow to
Cooper. “Are you coming?”
He shook his head. “No, you guys go
ahead . . . I’m going to go back out for a
few minutes. I’ll be back to put up your
board and take you home in a little,” he
said. When he saw me hesitate, he gave
me a strained smile. “Don’t worry, she
won’t bite.”
“Not too hard,” Paige added, coming
in behind me. I walked forward, dragging
the soles of my rubber flip flops across
the tile floor. There was a part of me that
wanted to turn back around and cast
another glance at Cooper, to see if what
we’d talked about was still bothering him,
but he was probably already in the sea.