Authors: Emily Snow
happened to him? What if—
“Willow, Clay called a little while
ago.”
My heart slunk its way from where it
was lodged inside of my throat, and for a
moment, it felt like it dropped out of my
body completely.
Because the moment Mom had said my
attorney’s name—even before she started
saying things like
agency
and
appeals
process
and
new court date sometime
next year
—I knew that it was over.
Chapter Twenty
The first drink that I took that night
scorched the back of my throat, making me
choke, making my eyes water. I didn’t
know if the tears were from the pretty blue
bottle of SKYY vodka or the sobs I’d
been swallowing back ever since Miller
had picked me up and I told him my plans
had changed for the night—that I wanted
to go back to Jessica’s hotel room.
So since I couldn’t figure it out, I took
another shot and then one more, just to be
sure.
Jessica lay beside me, her blue eyes
glazed as she stared up at the recessed
lighting above our faces, which cast a
reddish glow. “You sure you don’t want
it?” she whispered, gesturing her hand out
to the nightstand, to where the other half of
the blue pill she’d downed an hour ago
sat.
Of course I wanted it, but I shook my
head. My phone vibrated in my back
pocket—probably Cooper again. I ignored
it.
She traced her tongue over her lips
and sat up for a moment to look at the door
to her room. Miller was on the other side,
waiting for me as I’d asked. “We can still
get him to take us to that club,” she said,
dropping back down and giving me a little
smile. She scooted her hips across the
memory foam, closing the space between
us until our hips brushed. “It’ll be fun.”
“I’m fine here,” I argued. But I wasn’t
fine. My head was spinning and my
stomach pitched violently because I’d left
my dinner untouched and I felt myself
slowly slipping further under.
And yet, I caught myself sitting up,
swinging my legs over the side of the bed
to pour yet another shot.
Because I’d lost.
Because I wanted to escape.
Jessica murmured something inaudible
and I half-turned to see that she’d closed
her eyes. “My show isn’t going to work
out,” she said at last, referring to the pilot
she’d been shooting earlier in the summer.
I lost. I’m never going to see him
again. I
lost
.
I massaged my temples, trying to get
that thought out of my head. I’d think about
it tomorrow or the next day. I’d think
about it when it didn’t hurt so bad to think.
Instead, I’d focus on Jessica. “You don’t
know that,” I said and she opened her
eyes, turning her head to me to give me a
cold look.
“Let me Willow it down for you—I
got fired. I’m not going anywhere with it,”
she said, and my mouth pinched together. I
crossed my arms tightly over my chest,
turning my back to her once again, as she
continued, “You’re lucky.”
Sucking in a harsh, nauseating breath, I
clenched my hands into the fabric under
either side of my arms. “I’m not.”
She snorted, and then coughed, and I
saw her come up on her elbows again in
my peripheral vision. She gave me the
most incredulous look she could manage.
“Of course you are. You’ve got a good
role and—” Then she paused, laughter
taking over her body as she rolled over
onto her stomach. Placing her cheek on the
smooth comforter, she reached out and
hooked her fingertip in one of my belt
loops. “You’ve got a boy with more
daddy issues than you’ve got.”
I flinched the moment she mentioned
Cooper, snapping my gaze around
completely to meet her eyes full on.
“Don’t talk about him like that, Jess.” She
could say whatever she wanted about me
but I didn’t want his name mentioned
tonight. Not when I was doing this.
Jessica wouldn’t drop it. “Oh come
on, I’m sure Sunday dinner has been a
fucking disaster at his place when you add
you and James Dickson to the equation.”
She resumed her glaring match with the
ceiling and the lighting, waiting for me to
say something.
“What are you talking about?”
She made a hysterical sound that was
part laugh, part sob, before demanding,
“Don’t you see it?”
She was talking in circles and the
vodka was making its way to my head, to
the rest of my body. The only thing I saw
were the spots that would eventually
become the darkness I wanted so badly.
When I didn’t answer her she rolled
her eyes. “James Dickson’s his dad.”
I rolled off the bed, stumbling a little
on one of the shoes she’d left at the foot of
it. My breathing was harsh and labored
when I steadied myself, gripping one of
the wooden posters for support. “Don’t be
an idiot, Jess. You’ve never even met the
guy.” And she never would as long as I
had anything to do with it.
She sat upright in the middle of the
bed and hugged her knees. She raked her
hand through her strawberry blonde hair,
making each movement seem like it was
an effort. “There was a picture of them
together on
Leah Dishes
.” When I slid my teeth together, giving her a hard look, she
added, “But let me guess, you’ve been too
caught up in Willow problems to even
notice the resemblance.”
I turned my back to her. “I’ve got to
pee.”
The moment I slammed the bathroom
door behind me, I pulled my phone out,
exiting out of the missed text messages
from Cooper and my mother. I stood in the
center of the enormous bathroom, fumbling
through pages of a shitty gossip site I
never visited, but once I found what I was
looking for, I sank down on the side of the
oversized bathtub staring down at it.
The photo had been taken at the meet
and greet we’d done the evening after I
found out who Cooper’s mother was.
Cooper and Dickson were side by side,
smiling, and the caption under the picture
read:
Tidal
Producer (James Dickson)
Greets the Man Behind the Surfer
(Cooper Taylor)
.
I would have shrugged Jessica’s
comment off and immediately turned off
my phone if I hadn’t stared closer—if I
hadn’t realized just how tense their body
language was.
And the dimple in Dickson’s left
cheek.
I slid my cell phone away from me, to
the far corner of the porcelain tub, so I
wouldn’t hurl it against the wall. Cooper
had lied to me. He had fucking lied and—
And then I remembered the scar on his
back. The long, jagged scar that he’d told
me his father had given him when he was
a kid.
My hands trembled as I grabbed my
phone and sent him a message.
I’m
coming over. Are you home?
He responded quickly.
11:23 p.m.:
I’m here. Are you okay?
I didn’t answer, shoving the phone
inside the back pocket of my tight jeans.
Taking a deep breath to clear my head, I
walked out into the bedroom to face
Jessica, who now lay back on a mound of
pillows with her legs crossed, eating from
a plate of fries that had gone cold hours
before.
“I’ve got to go home,” I said.
The corners of her lips quirked up but
she never moved, never even turned her
gaze on me. “I won’t see you after this,
will I?”
I reached the door. And I didn’t stop
to look back at her when I said, “No, you
won’t.”
***
Cooper’s front door, his gaze never
meeting mine. He’d been quiet as he drove
me from Jessica’s hotel, opening his
mouth and then slamming it closed every
couple minutes, and I knew he was
disappointed in me. Hell, I was
disappointed in me. And I was furious.
Furious at Cooper and at Dickson and
at myself.
Eric answered the door in his boxers,
holding a remote control and scratching
his beard. He propped one arm up against
the wood frame to support his tall, lanky
frame. He started to make one of his usual
remarks but Miller shook his head. Then
Eric leaned forward a little and inhaled.
His easygoing expression slipped
from his face, giving way to the worry I’d
seen hundreds of times, and Eric dropped
his gaze to the foyer floor. He moved
aside so that I could step inside.
“Cooper’s upstairs showering.”
I turned to Miller, holding my
stomach. “Wait for me in the car.” The
order sounded harsh when it came out so
shaky and unsure but he lifted his chin.
Before Eric could say another word, I
stalked past him, stumbling up the stairs
and into Cooper’s bedroom which was
steamed up from his shower. He was
coming out the bathroom with a towel
wrapped around him when I lunged at him,
shoving him square in the chest with the
palms of my hand. He barely budged, and
when I went at him again, he grabbed my
wrists in his hands, not seeming to care
that the towel fell to the floor.
“Goddamn it, Wills, calm down. Calm
down and”—his body froze and he
dragged me closer to him, despite my
struggling. “You’re drunk. Holy fuck,
you’re drunk.”
I didn’t deny it. “You lied to me.”
He released me, scooping up his
towel. Turning his back to me, he leaned
up against the dresser sliding his hand
back and forth over his forehead. “You’re
drunk and you’re accusing me of lying?”
I backed up against the wall next to the
dresser, sliding down it until I crumbled
on the floor. “Is James Dickson your
dad?” I demanded. When Cooper’s eyes
went hard and the muscles in his neck
tightened, I balled my hands into my
flannel shirt. “So he beat the shit out of
you and you decide to work for him? You
let me go on believing he’s this good guy
after he did that to you?”
Letting out a frustrated moan, he
pushed away from the cherry wood. He
kneeled in front of me a second later, to
touch my face, and I flinched. “He’s not
the one who hit me, Wills.” Then, raking
his fingers through his wet blonde hair, he
took a deep breath. “My mother was
married to Colin Taylor when she got
pregnant with me, Wills, and James
Dickson . . . he’s had the same wife
forever.”
I bit the inside of my cheek, but said
nothing, compelling him with my eyes to
continue.
“Mum passed me off as Colin’s for
years but he always knew. He knew the
whole damn time and tortured me for it.”
My lungs constricted, making it hard
for me to catch my breath. “Did Dickson
know?” I asked in a hoarse voice. When
he didn’t immediately answer, I spoke
louder, more desperately. “Did he?”
Cooper shook his head and sat down
beside me. “Not until after the shit with
the fishing pole and even after that I didn’t
meet Dickson until I was seventeen, at
Mum’s funeral.” Cooper raised one of his
knees as he stared at the wall across from
us. “I wanted to hit him. I wanted to kill
him that day.”
I gave him a pained look. “Cooper—”
“She loved him. And all she ever got
from him were a million excuses.”
And suddenly, what he’d said to me
days, weeks, ago about his mother loving
him and everything he’d represented to her
made sense.
“I’m so sorry,” I stuttered.
Cooper held up his hand, shaking his
head. “Don’t be. Dickson and I’ve been
trying this father-son bullshit for years. It
probably won’t ever work but I’ll keep
trying because despite what a selfish ass
he’s been, Mum genuinely loved him.”
Then he reached out, cupping my face
with his damp palm. Our eyes touched,
and I suddenly felt like the room was
closing in on us. “Wills, why are you
drinking?” When I started to climb to my
feet, he locked his fingertips gently around
my wrist. “You wanted me to spill my shit
so I did. There’s no way in hell I’m letting
you leave this room tonight without you
coming out with yours.”
And though I wanted to fight him,
though I just wanted to escape, I eased
back down on my bottom, feeling every
inch of my body numb as I said in a
monotone voice, “I lost my baby.”
He dropped wide blue eyes to my
stomach. “What?”
“Tyler and me. We had a baby and I
lost him.”
He was quiet for a long moment, a
muscle twitching in his jaw. “So he got
you pregnant and you had a miscarriage?”