Crashed Out (Made in Jersey, #1)

She shifted in her heels. “Strawberries. Why are you asking me this?”

“Not sure. I think I’m kind of enjoying how impossible small talk is between us.” He took one more step closer, bringing them less than a foot apart. God, what he wouldn’t have given to knock the box out of her hand and shove her up against a parked car. It wouldn’t take much to get that dress up around her waist, would it? Somehow, though, he maintained the scant distance separating them. “Nice weather we’re having, right?”

“Stop it.”

Sarge leaned back, allowing his gaze to travel up her stocking-clad legs, over the curve of her hip. “I think we’ll have snow for Christmas.”

A white cloud of air puffed from her cranberry lips. “I’m going inside.”

Jasmine took one step to bypass him, and just a simple brush of their shoulders seemed to break them both. She made a small sound, heels scuffing on the concrete. Sarge snagged an arm around her waist and dragged her back around, into the warmth of his body. Right where they fit. Right where she belonged. The pastry box plonked onto the ground, but neither one of them moved to pick it up as Sarge walked them back, using a van to hide them from view.

“You’re so angry.”

Hardball pitches, one by one, landed in his midsection, hearing those whispered words. But denying the accusation in them would be a lie. “Of course I’m angry. You looked nervous to see me. You know how much I hate that?”

“Not nervous.” She wet her lips. “Okay, maybe a little nervous.”

His forehead dropped to rest on hers. “Baby, you want my mouth.”

It hadn’t been posed as a question, but it was still for her to answer. “I don’t…know if that’s wise. I haven’t—”

“Changed your mind. I know.” Or he did now, anyway. Sarge ignored the drilling pain and focused on her eyes. She shook her head and started to speak again, but he pressed a thumb to her lips. “We can go back to bullshit and small talk afterward. I’ll just need your taste on my tongue to get through it.”

Her eyelids fell. “We can’t keep doing this.” She struggled a little in his grip. “After what you told me, I have no excuse. I would be leading you on.”

“Lead me on, then.” He lifted her off the ground, planting her backside against the nearest car trunk and fusing their bodies together. “I’m asking you to lead me on. There’s your permission. Make me believe this is real.”

“You can’t ask me to do that—”

Sarge kissed the words off her mouth. He could almost feel them crumbling under the impact of his lips and tongue. The occasional raking of his teeth over her full lower lip. Wind whistled past, but couldn’t drown out their mutual heartbeats. His galloped like a runaway horse in his ears…and Jasmine’s. He could hear it, would hear it a country away, wouldn’t he? It sounded like he’d heard it eight thousand times, when logic told him that was impossible. Her body shifted between him and the car trunk, her hands tugging him closer…then pushing him away. Away. Away?

“Sarge.”

He’d been expecting Jasmine’s voice, but it was Adeline, calling him from the church entrance. He and Jasmine traded breaths for a heavy moment before he turned his head and called, “Yeah?”

A low chuckle. “Your band is ready, but they have no lead singer. Know anyone who could help them out?”

“Be there in a minute.” He returned his attention to Jasmine.

“Go,” she whispered.

He hated that word coming from the swollen mouth he’d just kissed. “I smeared your lipstick.”

“I know.” Her tits were lifting and falling so fast. Up and down. Dragging over his chest. “It’s all over your mouth.”

Sarge couldn’t resist. “Wipe it off.”

She looked to be considering it, but shook her head. “No.”

“Wipe it off or I’ll be wearing it on stage.”

“Jesus.” Jasmine actually laughed, and it calmed some of the thunderheads clashing in his brain. Using her thumb, she wiped away the cranberry coloring, pulling away quickly when his tongue licked out to taste her. “You’re good to go.”

Cursing church people for being so damn punctual, Sarge backed away. “I’ll find you afterward.”

She didn’t say anything for a long beat. “I don’t doubt it.”

There was something unusual in the way she said it, but Adeline shouted his name again, giving Sarge no choice but to solve the puzzle of Jasmine later.



If Sarge would’ve given Jasmine a minute to speak, she would have told him.

She wouldn’t be letting him go.