Before You Read online




  Formatted by E.M. Tippetts Book Designs

  Other Books by Jenna Bennett

  Savannah Martin Mysteries

  A Cutthroat Business

  Hot Property

  Contract Pending

  Close to Home

  A Done Deal

  Contingent on Approval

  Change of Heart

  Kickout Clause

  Tall, Dark and Divine

  Same Time Next Year

  Fortune's Hero

  The Boddy in the Snowbank

  Island Getaway

  Virginia Creeper

  Dear Reader,

  Prepare yourself for Sex on the Beach, a trilogy featuring BETWEEN US (Jen McLaughlin), BEYOND ME (Jennifer Probst), and BEFORE YOU (Jenna Bennett). Three separate novellas. Three different authors. One literary world. Read them all, or just read one. It’s up to you! No matter which route you choose, these standalone novellas are sure to satisfy your need for sizzling romance and an emotion packed story.

  Happy Reading!

  Jen, Jenna, and Jennifer

  Praise for BEYOND ME:

  "I loved this book, I very much enjoyed getting to know James and Quinn, and I wanted to step into their world of sun and water and love. This book made spring break even more fun, even with the intense feelings, I want to head to Florida now! I give this book 5 huge sunny and sandy stars!" –Sizzling Book Blog

  "Jennifer Probst does it again in Beyond Me with another amazing hit. From the first chapter I was captivated immediately and couldn’t put it down. The chemistry between James and Quinn had my heart racing, soaring, and dropping on more than one occasion. I found myself lost in their story, not wanting it to end." –NYT & USA Today Bestselling Author Kelly Elliott

  Praise for BETWEEN US:

  "The sweet good-girl looking to be a bit naughty and the sexy bad-boy looking to be thought of as good…Jen gives us another winning story with BETWEEN US. Drool worthy and devourable with plenty of emotion, I adored this book from start to finish! A must read!" –Jillian, from Read, Love, Blog

  "Anything that Jen McLaughlin writes is gold, in my book. BETWEEN US is no different. Set in the sweltering heat of Key West, it has all the passion, friendship and drama that made it impossible to put down. Go read this book. You won’t be disappointed!" –Casey, Literary Escapism

  Praise for BEFORE YOU:

  "The story felt fun, as Cassie enjoys the sunshine, and things develop and start to sizzle when she meets Ty. It kept me on the edge of my seat...and I was curling my toes at the romance." –Bella, from A Prairie Girl Reads

  "A thrilling mystery mixed with romance and some much needed humor and wittiness, Before You is an enjoyable and gripping story." –Stella, Ex Libris

  It’s all fun and games

  I had a simple plan for spring break.

  Sun, sand, and a hot guy. Sex on the beach with no strings attached.

  A chance to get rid of this pesky virginity once and for all.

  And when I met Tyler McKenna, I thought I had it made.

  Until someone gets hurt

  But then girls started turning up at Key West landmarks. Girls who looked like me, but with one crucial difference: They’d all been drugged and relieved of their virginity.

  The virginity I still have. The virginity Ty refuses to take.

  And now I’ve begun to wonder whether there isn’t more to him than meets the eye.

  Suddenly, sex on the beach doesn’t sound so good anymore...

  For Jen and Jennifer, or Jennifer and Jen.

  It’s been great working with you.

  Here’s to much success, and the chance to do it again!

  THIS WAS the life. Sun, sand, and hot guys, plus an unlimited supply of alcohol, thanks to Mackenzie Forbes, who was bound and determined that her friends have a good time.

  Spring break in Key West. What could be better?

  I put my half-empty glass on the bar and turned to survey the room.

  It was only Sunday night. We’d been here just over twenty-four hours, and Mackenzie had already homed in on the guy she’d decided to spend the week with. He was local, not one of the college guys down for spring break. Older than us by a few years, and dressed in ripped jeans with tattoos visible under his shirt. All the things America’s Sweetheart should stay far away from, but didn’t.

  Looking at Mackenzie, I was very glad I was just plain Cassie Wilder from Nowheresville, Ohio. Fame and fortune sound great on paper, but try losing your virginity with the paparazzi breathing down your neck. Try falling in love and having your relationship splattered all over the tabloids.

  Try breaking up and having everyone in America weighing in on whether he cheated or you did, and how you’re coping with being dumped again.

  No thanks. If Mackenzie had found a guy who wasn’t gonna sell her out to the press, more power to her.

  Quinn had already left, with some Ivy League dude hot on her trail.

  He’d been staring at her for an hour, from the table where he’d been sitting with his friends, and when she got up to go, he took off after her. Neither of them had come back, so either he’d talked her into going somewhere with him, or she’d made it back to the hotel in one piece and was up in her room spending quality time with her television boyfriend. With Quinn, it could be either.

  That left me here by myself.

  Luckily, there were still plenty of guys to choose from, and plenty of time left. Key West was stuffed to the gills this week, and I had five and a half days of vacation to go.

  This was it. I was going to find a guy and join Quinn among the ranks of the devirginized.

  The Ivy Leaguers didn’t appeal, though. Nor did the guys with tattoos. And I’m not that big on jocks. It didn’t leave a whole lot of options.

  I turned back to my glass. But before I could reach for it, someone whisked it away. “How about I get you a fresh drink?”

  It went into the hand of the bartender, who carried it away.

  The guy who had spoken had green eyes and hair that straddled the line between dark blond and light brown. The streaks through the front could have been sun, or just expensive highlights. He was wearing jeans—good quality but not designer, faded but not ripped—and a navy blue T-shirt, one that said FBI in big white letters across the chest. I had to lean closer to see that below, in much smaller letters, it said Female Body Inspector.

  “Nice shirt,” I said.

  He glanced down and up again. “Thanks. I’m Ty.”

  Good name. Cute guy. Sense of humor. Check, check, and check.

  I smiled. “Cassandra Wilder. Wanna inspect my body?”

  He grinned. “Maybe later. Where d’you blow in from, Cassie?”

  “Chicago,” I said. “University of. You?”

  “Washington.”

  “State?”

  He shook his head. “D.C. But I’m from Florida originally.”

  “Key West?”

  “Jacksonville. North Atlantic coast.”

  “I’m from Ohio,” I said. “Small town in the middle of nowhere. Lots of cornfields and cows. Chicago’s a lot more exciting.”

  “Sounds like.” He folded his arms on the bar. Nice arms. Nice smile. Good teeth and a dimple. “So how long have you been in Key West?”

  I told him we’d flown down the day before and arrived in the afternoon. “We’ve been here about,” I checked my watch, “thirty-two hours.”

  “You come down with friends?”

  I nodded. “There are three of us. Mackenzie is over there in the corner. Quinn already left.”

  His brows lowered at that. “Alone?”

  “She had some guy following her. Part of that group over there.” I pointed to where some of Ivy League Dude’s friends—just as Ivy League, Abe
rcrombie and Fitch all the way—were still hanging out, knocking back shots of tequila like there was no tomorrow.

  Ty watched for a second and then turned back to me. “How long ago did they leave?”

  “I don’t know. Twenty minutes? Why?”

  He shrugged. “No reason. There’s a lot of people in town this week. Safer not to go off alone.”

  “She wasn’t alone. Ivy League Dude followed her.”

  He tilted his head, and a hank of blond hair fell across his forehead. “But she doesn’t know Ivy League Dude, does she?”

  “Same way I don’t know you,” I said.

  Dammit, was he just talking to me as an excuse to find out about Quinn? I mean, I know she’s pretty and all, but I’m not that bad. Am I?

  He grinned. “Wanna see my driver’s license?”

  “I’ll show you mine if you’ll show me yours.”

  “Deal.” He fished in his back pocket and pulled out a wallet. I dipped my fingers into my mini-purse and pulled out all the glossy cards, sorting them on the counter.

  “Room key, credit card, license.” I pushed the license toward him.

  He picked it up. “Nice picture.”

  Not so much. Official photographs are rarely that good. And I’d had a zit on my chin that day. Although the picture was so small it didn’t matter too much, I supposed.

  I looked at his. Tyler Jackson McKenna, with an address in Washington, D.C. Born a year before me. Probably about to graduate, unless he’d skipped a year somewhere, or was taking things slowly.

  Hair: Brown. Eyes: Green. Height: 5’11”. Weight: 174.

  The picture matched. It was definitely him.

  I handed it back. “Thanks.”

  “No problem.” He put it back in his wallet, and the wallet back in his pocket, before nudging my room card, with the hotel logo prominently displayed. “This where you’re staying?”

  I nodded.

  “Nice digs.”

  “Mackenzie is paying,” I said, my tongue a little looser than usual from the drinks. Not that I was drunk or anything, just a little tipsy. “Quinn and I wouldn’t be able to afford it on our own.”

  Going to Key West for spring break had been a last-minute decision. All the cheap places had been sold out. Quinn and I had talked about sharing, to cut costs, but Mackenzie had put her foot down on that idea. If we had any hope of getting laid, she told us, we needed separate rooms.

  Ty peered into the corner again. “That’s Mackenzie Forbes, isn’t it?”

  I nodded.

  “You go to school with her?”

  Yes, I did. Mackenzie had become a country music star at sixteen, and by the time eighteen rolled around, she was ready for some peace and quiet out of the public eye. So she’d enrolled at the University of Chicago, just like a normal person. We’d bonded in English 101 and been close ever since.

  “She can afford it, I guess,” Ty said.

  Yes, she could. She’d just finished up her new album over Christmas break, and now she was in the process of finalizing her summer tour schedule. All she had to do to recoup the cost of Quinn’s and my rooms, was sell a handful of extra tickets to one of her concerts.

  That didn’t mean I wasn’t grateful, of course. She was going above and beyond the call of friendship. After all, she could have gone to Key West by herself. She didn’t have to bring Quinn and me along.

  “And I guess it makes sense that she’d want somewhere with good security,” Ty added.

  I hadn’t thought about that, but yes. Sure. She’d told us stories about some of the more persistent of her fans, and I didn’t blame her at all for wanting to feel safe. If someone was willing to break and enter to get his hands on my underwear, I’d want good security, too.

  “D’you think maybe you should try to get in touch with your friend who left,” Ty said, “and make sure she got there safely?”

  Here we were, back to Quinn again. He seemed happy to talk about both my friends, but not so much interested in talking about me.

  “What if she’s with Ivy League Dude?” I said. Naked, in bed?

  “Unless he’s a total asshole,” Ty answered, “he’ll understand.”

  “Even a nice guy might object to being disturbed under those circumstances.”

  But I fumbled for my phone anyway. It couldn’t hurt to make sure. I hadn’t been worried before—I wasn’t really worried now—but Ty seemed so concerned about everyone’s safety that I’d gotten a little concerned, too.

  And besides, until I made sure, he probably wouldn’t stop asking me to, so I may as well get it out of the way.

  Usually we text each other—it’s easier—but this time I actually dialed and waited for the phone to ring. If that didn’t work, I’d try texting later. Although to be honest, Ty might not be satisfied until I’d actually heard Quinn’s voice and made sure she was OK.

  The phone rang twice, and then Quinn picked up. “Cassie?” She sounded worried. “Are you OK?”

  “Fine,” I said. “You?”

  “Sure. Why?”

  “Just checking. I met this guy—” I slanted a look at Ty across the bar; he grinned, “and he convinced me to call and make sure you got back to the hotel in one piece.”

  “Oh.” There was a pause. I could tell she wanted to ask me more about the guy, but wasn’t sure whether now was a good time. With him standing right next to me, I’d have to say it wasn’t. “He must be pretty special,” she said instead, “if he’s checking up on your friends.”

  “Shut up.” I glanced at Ty, guiltily. He winked. I made a half-turn away from him, in an attempt at a little more privacy. “So are you back at the hotel?”

  “Just walked in,” Quinn confirmed. “What about Mackenzie?”

  “Found her hot musician with the tattoos and dumped me. Did you find someone to replace Ivy League Dude?”

  “Yeah,” Quinn said. “Ivy League Dude.”

  “He followed you?” I mean, obviously he had. I’d seen him go. But it seemed he’d also caught up to her and talked to her, not just done the weird, creepy, stalkery thing. Good.

  “Yeah,” Quinn said. “But he was OK.”

  I couldn’t help but laugh. “Your tone says better than OK. I guess you forgave him, huh?”

  “Guess so.” I could tell she didn’t really want to talk about it, and she wasted no time in changing the subject. “Go back to your really considerate hot guy. You know Mackenzie will never leave you alone if you don’t get laid this trip.”

  Sure. I glanced at Ty and tried to imagine getting naked with him. It was surprisingly easy, if a little scary. “I’ll catch up with you tomorrow,” I told Quinn.

  “Stay safe.”

  Oh, sure.

  I dropped the phone into my bag and turned to Ty. “She’s fine. Mostly sober, and back at the hotel. Alone.” Or so I assumed. She hadn’t sounded like she wasn’t. Surely she wouldn’t have told me I needed to get laid if she had Ivy League Dude with her?

  Ty nodded. “What about you?”

  “What about me?”

  “Don’t you think you should think about getting back to the hotel, too?”

  “It’s still early.” Only ten thirty. “And I didn’t come to Key West to sleep.”

  He smiled. “I’ll go with you.”

  Oh, really? Well, that was a different matter, wasn’t it?

  I slid off the bar stool and onto the floor—it only heaved a little—and turned to catch Mackenzie’s eye. She was wrapped up in her new guy, but not so much that she didn’t see me standing there. I hooked my thumb toward the door. She nodded. And gave Ty a quick up and down and me a discreet thumbs up.

  I grinned and turned back, and caught Ty grinning too. “That mean she approves?” he asked me.

  I ducked my head so my hair covered my cheeks. “Seems that way.”

  “If we have Mackenzie’s approval, let’s get outta here.” He nodded to the bartender as we headed for the exit. The bartender nodded back, busy swiping a wet rag
over the bar.

  “Friend of yours?” I asked, when we were outside in the street.

  “I’m a friendly guy.” He grinned, and then nodded to a cop hanging out just outside the door. “Evening, Officer.”

  The officer nodded back, and I could feel his eyes following us as we walked down the street.

  There were plenty of cops out and about. Every block or so, we passed another. I had no idea why Ty was so worried. Key West during spring break looked like the safest place on earth.

  He took the lead through the streets, and I hoped he knew where he was going, because I wasn’t too sure. It was my first time in Key West, and with a glass of Sex on the Beach inside me, I wasn’t thinking as clearly as maybe I should have been.

  “I guess you’ve been here before?”

  It looked like he hesitated before he answered. “Spring break last year. And a couple times with my parents growing up.”

  “It’s my first time.”

  He slanted a look at me, lips curving. “No kidding?”

  I flushed, and hoped the darkness hid it. “You know what I mean.”

  He laughed. “Sure.” Another cop was standing on the corner, and he nodded again, before taking my arm to steer me across the street. “The hotel’s just another block this way.”

  I nodded. “Are you studying criminal justice, or something?”

  The fingers holding my arm tightened for a second, although his voice didn’t change. “No, why?”

  “You seem to like cops a lot. You’re saying hi to all of them.”

  “Oh.” He chuckled. “My dad’s a cop. I’ve had respect for authority beaten into me.”

  “My dad’s a minister.”

  He slanted me a look. “What’s a nice girl like you doing in a dress like that?”

  I’d thought my dress looked pretty good when I put it on, but suddenly I wasn’t so sure. “It’s Mackenzie’s.” Seeing as I didn’t have anything so short or tight in my wardrobe.

  “Then let Mackenzie wear it,” Ty said. “And you dress like Cassie.”