Authors: Emily Snow
remind me.”
“But what I was going to say,” Miller
said, steering the conversation back on
track, “is to be careful. I’ve told you this
before, but you remind me of my little
sister and I don’t want to see you hurt.”
It took me a second to realize he
wasn’t talking about the paparazzi or
getting knocked in the face on set with a
surfboard. He was blatantly referring to
the thing I had going on with Cooper.
Whatever the hell that was. I dragged my
hands away from my face and smoothed
back my hair.
How did I even respond to what he
just said?
On one hand, Miller was someone
hired to work for me. If my old bodyguard
had warned me about a guy I was sleeping
with I would have flipped out on him and
fired him on the spot. But on the other
hand, Miller wasn’t my old bodyguard. He
was the man who’d taken me to the lamest
amusement park ever when I was alone.
He’d sat with me after I had a nightmare.
So, I told him what I would tell any of
my friends if they gave me non-shitty
advice. “Thanks for the heads up, Miller.”
“And now you’re going to fire me.”
Shaking my head, I climbed out of the
Kia. I turned to face him, supporting
myself by holding on to the edge of the
door and the hood of the car. “Nope. I’m
trying to keep from hugging you for giving
a fuck.”
All these feelings today—they were
going to be the undoing of me.
Chapter Fourteen
“Skye from Las Vegas asks ‘Willow,
how did you feel when you learned you
were cast in the reboot of the movie?” the
moderator asked.
Like if I didn’t take the role, I’d
never work again
, I thought.
I cast a glittering smile in his direction
and lifted my microphone to my mouth.
“Excited and—don’t laugh at me, guys—
but terrified. I’m not sure if you’ve ever
carried a surfboard but”—I sighed and
rubbed my forehead for dramatic effect
—“it really, really hurts when it knocks
you in the head.” The crowd of fans lined
up in front of the outdoor stage rolled with
laughter and hundreds of camera phones
flashed simultaneously.
“But really, I can’t wait because this
cast is amazing and the script is so
incredible. I can’t wait to get to work on
such a kickass movie,” I said.
How many more adjectives could I
use this morning without making myself
sound like an idiot?
We were twenty minutes into the
beachfront press conference and for the
last ten of them, Justin Davies, my leading
man, had kept trying to touch my thigh
beneath the table. Once again, I leaned
close to him, keeping my smile plastered
on my face and muttered, “It would be a
shame if I break your fucking nose with a
surfboard when we start shooting
tomorrow.”
He skimmed the back of his hand
across my cheek and the flashing cameras
went berserk.
Asshole.
“Uh oh, is there more than an on
screen romance blooming between Justin
and Willow?” the moderator asked the
fans, and they cheered wildly.
I twisted Justin’s fingers tightly in
mine, and he winked a hazel eye at me.
Once the crowd died down, the
moderator said, “Mitchell from
Greenville, Texas asks ‘how are you
training for your role’? We’ll start with
Justin.”
I nearly rolled my eyes when Justin
tilted his dreadlocked head to the side
(he’d told me shortly after we met that
there were fan pages dedicated to his
hair), stared confidently into the crowd,
and said, “If you’ve seen the original you
know of course that Chad is a
photographer. James Dickson and I
thought it would be interesting if we
added a little twist to the storyline and put
me out there with Willow.”
I kept the surprise out of my face when
I turned to look at him. Had he trained
with Cooper too? As if to answer my
question, Justin winked and said, “I’d
done a little surfing when I was a
teenager, so it was easy to jump back in.
By the way, let’s give it up for Willow
Avery. She’s gorgeous today isn’t she?”
Never in my life had I wanted to
drown someone as much as I wanted to
right now.
The moderator turned his attention on
me. “What about you, Willow?”
I raked my hand through my brown
hair, which the stylist who’d shown up at
my rental house at the ass-crack of dawn
had artfully tousled for at least an hour. “I
didn’t have it quite as easy as Justin. I’ve
spent the last couple weeks training with a
really incredible surf coach here in
Hawaii—Cooper Taylor. I’ve gotten to
the point where I can actually take on a
wave or two. Of course, I fall flat on my
butt two seconds later, but it’s a work in
progress.”
That comment evoked more chuckles
and flashes from the throng of people so I
gave them the pretty smile they expected.
“Speaking of Cooper Taylor,” the
moderator started, and I felt my breath
catch. “How does it feel to be working
with the Hilary Norton’s only kid?”
I blinked. And for a moment, I was left
utterly speechless.
How does it feel to be
working with Hilary Norton’s kid?
And
he was talking about my Cooper?
A shiver raced up my spine the
moment I thought of him as that.
When I answered, I never faltered.
“He’s got this insane work ethic. We
trained for three or four hours a day.” And
not once did he tell me I was playing his
deceased mother’s role. “We still have a
ways to go, but I’m confident that all the
stunt work you see me actually doing is
going to look fantastic.”
The moderator turned his questions on
Justin then, and after that on one of the
supporting actors, but the sharp tingles
creeping down my face and throughout the
rest of my body made it nearly impossible
to hear anything that wasn’t aimed directly
at me.
Cooper was Hilary Norton’s son.
The sad part was that as I sat there,
becoming angrier, I wasn’t sure if I was
even supposed to be pissed. It wasn’t like
it had ever come up in a conversation, but
God, it was hard not to feel duped.
Because Hilary Norton—Cooper’s
mom—had OD’d on the same crap that
sent me to rehab.
By the time I reached Cooper’s house
for my lesson, which Miller insisted he
had to stay for now that the press had me
on their radar, my anger had reached the
boiling point. As Cooper and I strode out
to the beach, with Miller tailing behind us
a few feet, I put as much distance as I
could between our bodies.
He gave me a sympathetic smile. “I’m
guessing your press conference went
badly?” he asked.
Narrowing my eyes, I snorted and
picked up my pace. “Where should I start?
First there’s my horny costar who
introduced himself by asking if I’d fuck
him in his trailer to test out the new
couch.”
Cooper caught up to me, his face dark.
He placed his board down by the
shoreline in slow controlled motions. “He
touched you?”
“Don’t worry, I threatened to hit him
with a surfboard on set,” I said. Cooper
smiled, murmuring something under his
breath. Crossing my arms over my chest, I
stared down at him and asked, “Why
didn’t you tell me who your mom was,
Cooper?”
His toned body went taut and he
glanced down at the emblem on the head
of his board before meeting my gaze.
“Because it’s not a big secret,” he said,
shrugging indifferently.
I sank down on my knees beside him
in the sand, not caring that Miller was
lounging close by or that there were other
people around us on the beach. I squinted
at him and realized it wasn’t because the
sunlight was beating down on my face—it
was to hold the stupid tears back.
I pretended to clean something off my
board with the end of my beach towel. “I
didn’t know,” I finally said in a low
whisper.
He scoffed. “Then, how’s this? Hilary
Norton was my mum but I don’t broadcast
it. Because I don’t like talking about her.
Because they tore her apart until she tore
herself down.”
“I don’t know who
they
are.”
A sound of frustration bubbled up in
the back of his throat and he leaned close
to me. “Don’t be ridiculous, Willow. You
of all people know exactly who they are.”
“And Dickson knew who you were?” I
demanded.
He scoffed, nodding.
“God, I feel like an idiot,” I said.
“Why?”
I stopped fidgeting with my board and
looked him directly in the eye. “Because
I’ve been studying your mom’s movies
and working with you and—”
He touched his fingertips together in
front of his mouth and shook his head. “It
doesn’t change anything.”
So why did it feel like it did? When I
started to push my board out into the
water, he caught up behind me, tugging on
the strap of my swimsuit. I whirled on
him.
“Who my mum was doesn’t change
anything,” he repeated.
“Why’d you agree to train me?” I
demanded. “You hate Hollywood and I’m
working in your mom’s most popular
movie. That’s got to hurt, Cooper. I mean,
fuck
, I hurt for you.”
He started to speak and then he
hesitated. When I tightened my hold on the
edge of my board and nodded for him to
continue, he demanded, “You want to
know why I agreed to train you?”
“Please.”
“Because Dickson said nobody else
wanted to work with you.”
I felt as if someone had struck their
hand across my face. When I flinched, he
muttered a string of curse words. “Look,
Wills, that didn’t come out like I wanted it
—”
“No, I appreciate your honesty,” I
said, shoving my board further out into the
white water.
“Where are you going?” he called
after me.
“We’ve got a lesson, don’t we?”
Chapter Fifteen
The tension between Cooper and me
during my lesson was almost unbearable,
and when Miller waved at me from the
beach a couple hours into training, I was
relieved.
“I’ve got to go,” I said to Cooper,
laying down on my board and
maneuvering it around to face the
shoreline. “It’s almost five and I’ve got
this meet and greet with the crew and cast
tonight at seve—”
He came up beside me, so that our
elbows knocked against each other. I
gripped the sides of my board tighter and
glanced down at the Channel Islands logo.
“I know,” he said softly, his voice hoarse.
“Dickson’s asked me to come.”
My gaze popped up. “Really?”
Cooper’s brows pulled in and he
pinched his lips together. Then, he gave
me a sarcastic smile. “Guess my mum
made me important enough to invite,” he
said.
I flinched and took a deep breath to
keep my voice from cracking. “I didn’t
mean it like that. And I’m so sorry about
what happened to your mom. I just—”
When the words wouldn’t come, I paddled
my arms to nudge my board forward.
He came up right beside me, unwilling
to let me go. “You just what?” he
demanded, his nostrils flaring.
“I wish I’d known who she was before
we started this.” I arched my body
slightly, staring through blurry eyes at the
shore. “I wish I’d asked or something. I’m
so sorry,” I whispered. I needed to get
away from him. I needed to get away
before I shoved my foot further down my
own throat.
He released an agitated sigh. “It
wouldn’t have changed what happened to
her.”
No, it wouldn’t have.
“You want to know what the sad part
is?” he continued, as he moved his board
past mine. He looked over his shoulder
and waited for my response.
“What?”
“I still want to take you into my place
and bury myself inside of you until I—”
I sat up on my board, straddling the
middle of it. “Until you what?” I
questioned. He pushed himself up into a
sitting position and yanked the front of my
surfboard next to his. I gripped the edges
firmly between my thighs to steady myself.
“Until I forget myself,” he murmured.
“Or fuck, get this taste for you out of my
mouth.”
We were still several feet from
reaching the shore, so nobody would be
able to see the way his fingertips skimmed
my breast through my tankini or how my
nipple instantly responded to his touch,
hardening. I flushed, held my breath for a
drawn out moment, and then relaxed.