Authors: Emily Snow
De-stressing.
We walked through the hall into a
small laundry room. Paige moved past me
and motioned me through the door, into an
open kitchen that looked like it belonged
on an HGTV show. “You go ahead and sit
down over there.” She pointed to a
counter with a row of stools in front of it.
As I crossed the room, sending Miller a
text message as I walked, I heard the
refrigerator open. “So how are you liking
it?” she asked.
I glanced over my shoulder. “What?
Surfing?”
She laughed, probably because my
irritation was obvious. “It’ll get better. I
sucked when Cooper started teaching me.”
I slid on the first stool and leaned
forward, supporting my elbows on the
granite countertop. “How long have you
been doing it?”
“Six years.”
Cooper had been a surf instructor
since he was sixteen—practically a kid. I
wanted to be surprised by that, but for
some reason, I wasn’t. Suddenly, though, I
wanted to know if he’d made Paige work
on form and popping up on a surfboard for
two days straight. When I came right out
and asked her, she threw her head back, so
that her short black hair brushed her
shoulder blades, and laughed.
“He made you do that both days?” she
asked. She brought two plates with subs
over to the counter, placing one in front of
me. Then she bent down and fished two
bottles of water out of a cabinet. She
handed me one. “Does he not want you to
walk tomorrow or something?”
I opened the warm water and chugged
quickly to flush down the string of curses I
wanted to direct at Cooper. When I was
finished, I glared at the window. I could
see him—or at least what I thought was
him—a tiny dot riding a wave somewhere
in the distance. Maybe if he’d shown me
more than standing up on a surfboard in
the sand I could’ve floated out there to
push him down.
“You’re going to be good for him,”
Paige said, tilting her head to one side.
“What? The paycheck for him training
me? Right about now I’m tempted to ask
Dickson to hire you.”
She gave me one of those pointed are-
you-fucking-kidding-me-looks and then a
half-smile. “Sure. The paycheck. But if
you want to hire me I’d be cool with
that.”
We ate and talked about surfing for a
few more minutes before Eric popped his
head in to say her client had arrived. She
hopped off the counter, keeping her eyes
on mine. “Gotta go give this group surf
lesson, so make yourself at home until
he’s done. Good luck with studying your
script!”
I waited until she and Eric
disappeared to pull out my phone. If I
waited around for Cooper, I was bound to
say something screwed up that would only
make working with him even more
difficult. I sent Miller a text asking him to
come pick me up.
But before I went to the front of the
house, to the shop area, to wait for Miller,
I left Cooper a note using the blue Post-It
pad on the counter.
Hypothetically . . . it’s kind of hard
to get me into your bed if I’m too sore to
make it there in the first place. Thanks
for spending two days torturing me for
nothing.
-W
Then I folded it, scribbled his name on
the front, and tucked it under the purple
and white surfboard, which was still out
on the deck. Later that night, as I watched
the DVD Dickson had sent me for the
second time, studying the way Hilary
Norton made the role of Alyssa look as
natural as breathing, and waited for a call
from Jessica who’d texted she wanted to
talk, I received a message from Cooper.
10:53 p.m.
: I’m perfectly capable of
carrying you to the bed and doing all the
work.
10:54 p.m.
: And before you bring up
my little rule again . . . you won’t always
be my client.
This wasn’t the first time a guy had
been so blatantly obvious about wanting to
sleep with me, and it wouldn’t be the last,
but I climbed into bed with my script
fifteen minutes later wearing an enormous
grin. I laid in the dark with my phone mere
inches from my face, wondering if he’d
text again. Wondering what he was doing.
Wondering if I’d make a fool of myself
with him, and screw up all over again.
All I knew was that when I fell asleep,
it was the fourth night in a row with no
bad dreams.
Chapter Seven
June 21
“. . . available balance is twenty
thousand, one hundred and eighty nine
dollars and seventy three cents,” the
automated banker droned. This had to be
at least the twentieth time that I’d listened
to my account balance since Miller and I
left the rental house nearly half an hour
ago to head to my probation meeting, and
yet adrenaline still prickled through my
body, making my face and hands numb,
clumsy.
Yesterday evening, I’d come home
from a full day of training with Cooper—
stand up paddle boarding on a different
type of board at early dawn followed by
waxing our regular surfboards with
coconut-scented gunk for what seemed
like an eternity—and had thrown myself
into studying my script. When I finally
dragged myself into bed a little after
eleven, I fully expected to wake up this
morning to the shitastrophic bank balance
I’d had for a while now.
Before I fell asleep, I’d made up my
mind. In the morning I would call my
mother—wherever the hell in the world
she was right now because she hadn’t
been in touch with me since her call—and
if necessary, I would grovel for some of
the money I’d earned before I turned
eighteen.
Instead, I’d awakened to find that
Kevin had come through. My advance was
deposited at some point this morning, long
before I’d rolled myself out of bed.
“You look dazed,” Miller’s said, his
deep voice yanking me back into the
present, into the cramped interior of the
Kia.
I let the monotone voice tell me my
balance one final time before I hit the end
button on my phone and dropped it down
into my cluttered bag. “I’m good,” I
answered.
But even as I spoke, I could hear my
breath coming out in choppier gasps. My
hand slid up the front of my light blue
sundress to pull at the neckline. God, why
did it feel like it was slowly closing
around my throat to choke me?
The answer was clear and it had
everything to do with my own issues and
what I’d just heard on the phone. I’d spent
so much time stressing over the advance
money that I hadn’t stopped to consider
how I would react once it arrived. I
should have been ecstatic. I should have
been jumpy because I was happy to be
working and getting paid again, not
because I had a history of blowing all my
money on Roxies and partying even before
the online deposit status changed from
pending.
But I wasn’t stupid. I knew better than
anyone that telling myself I was too strong
to mess up again wasn’t enough to keep
from doing what I’d done to myself
repeatedly.
I smoothed back strands of dark brown
hair from my damp forehead and said
aloud, “I’m fine.” Because that was the
only thing I could be, right?
“
Right
,” Miller drawled.
I shrugged and sucked in another long
breath, wheezing as soon as the chemical
taste of air freshener collided with the
back of my throat. “You know you’d
accomplish the same thing with one of
those, right?” I jabbed two fingers at the
evergreen-scented clips crammed into the
center air vents.
“I only bought them because the car
was—” Miller paused mid-sentence and
though he kept his gaze focused on the
highway, I saw his brown eyes narrow
into thin slits. “For an actress you’re not
too good at changing the subject. Or
keeping up the poker face.”
So I’ve been told
, I thought. I checked
my reflection in the visor mirror so he
wouldn’t see me cringe. “How’s the Porn
Star Dancing gig going?” Miller had
landed a second job as a bouncer at a strip
club without even trying, and I’d heard
him dragging into his apartment at some
point in the middle of the night.
“At least you’re not denying that
you’re purposely trying to change the
subject.” Smirking, he added, “If lessons
with Billabong are getting to you this bad,
why not ask for a day off or better yet, a
slower pace?”
My feet froze mid-shuffle, and my toes
curled. Miller thought my sudden
discomfort was only because of Cooper.
A quick flush raced through me, eventually
settling in my ears until it felt like there
were flamethrowers being held to either
side of my head.
Was it that obvious that I was attracted
to the guy?
“It’s got nothing to do with him,” I
said hotly.
“If you say so.”
Miller and I said little else because a
minute later, he pulled the car into the
parking lot of the probation office and
nudged the Kia into a spot between a
police car and a giant Hummer. “See you
in a few,” I muttered, grabbing my bag.
Although the outside of the building
was a lot smaller than the ones like it I’d
been to before, the moment I stepped
inside, shivering under the cold blast of
air conditioning, I felt disgustingly and
completely at home. I checked in with the
woman at the front desk—who looked at
me curiously when I whispered my name
—and then took a seat on one of the vinyl
chairs in the waiting room.
“You don’t look like you belong
here,” a croaky female voice said from
beside me. Startled, I turned my gaze on
her. She was young—maybe a year or two
older than me young—but with a faded
look in her eyes. She lifted one of her
thinly plucked eyebrows high and asked,
“Let me guess? Drunk in public at your
country club?”
By the way she was looking at me, it
was obvious she didn’t know who I was,
and more than anything else, I was
relieved. The anonymity I’d found since
coming here was the best thing about
doing this movie.
Besides the money, I thought.
And your hot Australian surf coach
,
the voice in the back of my head added.
The girl’s eyebrow cocked even
higher, and she twisted her head forward,
as if she was waiting for an answer.
“Sure,” I said. “Why not.”
She raked her bottom teeth over the
corner of her lower lip and tilted her head
to the side, the motion sending her dyed
red hair flying backward and with it the
odor of sweat and stale cigarettes.
“There’s no point lying to me. I mean,
we’re both here, right?”
Yes, and probably for the same
reason
, I wanted to say. Instead, I
shrugged and said, “You called it. Just
giving you what you want to hear.”
Her lips curled into a sneer and I saw
her dig her shimmery-painted fingernails
into the armrests. She glared at me for
another few seconds, then turned her head
and slammed back in her seat.
A moment later, my name was called.
As I walked to meet the man waiting for
me in the open doorway, I felt the redhead
girl’s dark eyes following me. I caught her
confused expression just before I
disappeared behind the door. She was
mouthing my name slowly, squinting and
wrinkling her nose.
Hopefully, she wouldn’t make the
connection until much later, if she ever
did.
“This is Officer Stewart’s desk,” the
man said, tapping the top of the fifth
cubicle we came to. “You can go ahead
in.”
I was surprised to find that Officer
Stewart was years younger than my probie
in California and model pretty, with light
brown hair styled in a knot on top of her
head, a starched white shirt and high-
waisted pants and pumps that made me
feel like I was going to fall flat on my face
just looking at them. She gave me a bored
onceover as I took a seat on the other side
of the desk, and a few minutes later, stared
at me entirely too long when she escorted
me to pee in a cup.
After I passed the drug test—to her
surprise I was sure, because she glanced
between me and the cup several times
before tossing it in a huge trash bin—we
returned to her desk. She opened her
laptop and began asking me a series of
questions.