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  Return to Bittersweet, Oregon, for the heartwarming second book in the reader-favorite Forever Family series from #1 New York Times bestselling author Lisa Jackson

  Tiffany Santini has no need for a man. Least of all her stubborn, powerful brother-in-law, JD, who suddenly shows up on her doorstep declaring that the single mother, recently widowed after a tragic car accident, needn’t raise her kids all alone.

  Feisty, independent Tiffany can’t believe the disturbingly attractive lawyer thinks he has a right to invite himself into her home and into her life. Well, she has plans to send JD packing. Tiffany thought she did, anyway. Until he showers her heartbroken kids with the fatherly attention they’d missed—and favors her with seductive kisses that wreak havoc with her heart...

  “You can’t just forget the past.”

  Suddenly Tiffany’s throat constricted and she wanted to call back the words, but it was too late.

  “It would be better if we could sometimes,” J.D. said, and she knew in a heartbeat that he, too, was fighting unwanted memories, forbidden, painful recollections of something that, if acknowledged, would only cause more hurt. “It’s a tough load. Teenage boy, little girl, part-time job and running this place.”

  “Not a problem, J.D. Well, at least not yours.” Tiffany forced a confident smile. No reason for him, or any of the Santini family, for that matter, to know of her troubles.

  “It looks like you could use a man around here.”

  “Excuse me?” she said. “A man? Let’s get one thing straight, J.D. I don’t need a man. Not now. Not ever. I—we’re—just fine.”

  “Are you?”

  Also By Lisa Jackson

  The McCaffertys: Slade

  The McCaffertys: Matt

  The McCaffertys: Thorne

  The McCaffertys: Randi

  Lone Stallion’s Lady

  Proof of Innocence

  A Twist of Fate

  The Millionaire and the Cowgirl

  Sail Away

  Tears of Pride

  Secrets and Lies

  Million Dollar Baby

  Obsession

  A FAMILY KIND OF GAL

  LISA JACKSON

  To Mom and Dad

  You are the best.

  CONTENTS

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Epilogue

  CHAPTER ONE

  So this was the place.

  With a jaundiced eye, J.D. Santini studied the immense house with its apron of drying lawn and Apartment for Rent sign posted near the street where he’d parked. Gray clapboard accented with bay windows, black trim and a smattering of white gingerbread, this was where Tiffany had run.

  Wonderful. Just damned great.

  His gut twisted, and he told himself that he wasn’t throwing her out of her home. Not really. And certainly not right away. What he was doing was for her own good. In her kids’ best interests.

  Then why did he feel like Benedict Arnold?

  “Hell.”

  Pocketing his keys, he climbed out of his Jeep. The dry heat of southern Oregon in mid-July hit him square in the face.

  Bittersweet. A fitting name for the town, he thought; as good a destination as any if a person wanted to turn tail and run. Which is what she’d done.

  His jaw tightened when he thought of her. Tiffany Nesbitt Santini. Sister-in-law. Gold digger. Lover.

  Damn, he hated this.

  Get over it, Santini. What did you expect when you took the job with the old man? You dove headfirst into this mess, and your eyes were wide open.

  He reached into the back seat of his Jeep Cherokee for his beat-up duffel bag and briefcase.

  It was now or never.

  Damn, but “never” sounded appealing.

  His leg still pained him when he walked, but he hitched the strap of his bag over his shoulder and made his way up a brick walk that needed more than its share of new mortar.

  He tried not to notice the crumbling caulking around the windows and the trickle of rust that colored the downspouts as he climbed the two steps to the front door.

  This house and its sad need of repair are not your problem.

  Right, and the Pope wasn’t Catholic.

  Everything Tiffany did affected him. Whether he wanted it to or not. She was the widow of his brother, mother of his niece and nephew, and the only woman whom he’d never been able to forget.

  And trouble. Don’t forget the kind of trouble she is.

  He jabbed on the bell, heard the chimes peel softly from the interior and waited impatiently. What could he say to her? That, unbeknown to her, he owned part of this old house, because her dead husband, his older brother, had been an inveterate gambler? That he thought it would be better if she sold the place, bought something newer and more modern, that it would be best if the kids were…what? Moved again? Uprooted to live close to the Santini enclave? He snorted at that thought. For years he’d avoided being roped into the tight-knit-to-the-point-of-strangulation clan, but then he was a man. It was different for him, wasn’t it? He didn’t have kids.

  A black cat darted through the shadows of overgrown rhododendrons and azaleas. Footsteps dragged through the house, and the door was opened just a crack.

  “Yeah?” Suspicious thirteen-year-old eyes peered out at him through the slit.

  “Stephen?”

  The eyes narrowed. “Who’re you?”

  J.D. felt a shaft of guilt. The kid didn’t even recognize him. That wasn’t Stephen’s fault so much as it was his. “I’m your uncle.”

  “Uncle? You mean—?”

  “J.D.”

  “Oh.” Stephen’s voice cracked, and his skin, olive in tone, was instantly suffused with color. A flicker of recognition flashed in his eyes. He opened the door farther, standing aside as J.D. hitched his way into the foyer.

  “What happened to your leg?”

  “An accident. Motorcycle. The bike won.”

  “Yeah?” Stephen’s eyes gleamed, and the hint of a smile slid over his lips. He would be a good-looking kid in a few years, but right now he was a little rough around the edges. Soon his jaw would become more defined, and his face would catch up with his nose. The boy reminded J.D. of himself and his own misdirected youth. “You’ve got a motorcycle?” Stephen asked, obviously awed.

  “I did. It’s in the shop.”

  “What kind?”

  “A Harley.”

  “Cool.”

  He couldn’t have impressed the kid more if he’d claimed to be a millionaire. “It doesn’t look so cool now. Funny what plowing into a tree does to a bike.”

  Stephen managed the ghost of a smile. J.D. noted that Stephen’s black hair was shaggy, his brown eyes filled with distrust, and his muscles so tense that J.D. half expected him to make a run for it at any moment.

  “Is your mother here?”

  The kid’s gaze fell to the floor, and he seemed to be studying the intricate floral patterns of a throw rug at the foot of the stairs. “She’s...she’s not around right now.”

  “She’s in jail!” a little voice chirped from the landing. A pixieish face, pink-cheeked and surrounded with black curls, was stuck through two balusters.

  “What?”

  Stephen shot his sister a killing look. “Hush, Chrissie.”

  Jail? J.D. eyed the boy. “What’s she talking about?”

  “Nothin’. Chrissie doesn’t know what she’s talkin’ about.”

  “Do, too!”
the imp retorted indignantly.

  Stephen worried his lip for a second, then shrugged, as if he didn’t care one way or the other. “Okay. Mom’s down at the police station.”

  “Why?”

  “Dunno,” he mumbled, obviously lying. “I just got stuck babysitting.”

  “I’m not a baby!” Christina dashed down the stairs on her chubby legs. The blue-black curls bounced, and her eyes were wide with wonder.

  “You’re here alone?” he asked.

  “Ellie’s downstairs.” Christina dashed across the hall and through a swinging door leading into the kitchen.

  “Who’s Ellie?”

  “Mrs. Ellingsworth.” Stephen shifted uncomfortably from one foot to the other. “She lives in one of the apartments downstairs, and when Mom has to work, Ellie looks after Chrissie.”

  “And you?”

  Stephen’s spine stiffened. “I don’t need a babysitter.”

  This was getting him nowhere fast. J.D. set his bag and briefcase on to the floor. “So…when will your mom be back?” Something was up—something the kid didn’t want him to know about.

  “Dunno. Soon, I guess.” Stephen was prickly but must have heard the rudeness in his voice, because he added, “You can, uh, wait for her here or in the parlor, if ya want...or—”

  Christina barreled out of the kitchen and ran to one of the narrow, beveled-glass windows flanking the front door. “Mommy!” she cried with delight. She threw open the door and raced down the steps.

  J.D. turned and saw Tiffany climbing out of a sedan she’d parked in the shaded driveway.

  Tall and slim, with shoulder-length black hair that framed an oval face, she was more than attractive; she was downright gorgeous, the kind of woman who expected and received more than her share of male attention.

  “A male magnet,” his mother used to say.

  Folding some papers into an oversize bag, she looked up, saw Christina flying across the yard and offered her daughter a smile that froze as her gaze landed directly on J.D. Her eyes, a gold color J.D. had always found disturbing, hardened, and the skin stretched taut over her high cheekbones was suddenly suffused with color. “Hi, honey!” she said to her daughter as she scooped the three-year-old up from the ground.

  “Lookie who’s here.”

  “I see.” She seemed to steel herself in her sleeveless white blouse, still crisply pressed and stark against her tanned skin. She walked toward the front door, and the slit in her khaki-colored skirt moved enough to show off her long, well-muscled legs.

  Yep. There was a reason his divorced brother had fallen so hard and fast for Tiffany Nesbitt. The same reason that had nearly done J.D. in. Nearly.

  From the foyer, Stephen cleared his throat. His voice cracked again. “Mom... Er, Mom, Uncle J.D. is here.”

  “So I see.” She lifted a finely arched brow. White lines of irritation bracketed her lips. “Jay.”

  “Tiff.” His damned pulse elevated a fraction.

  “Looks like your timing is impeccable as always,” she said with more than a trace of sarcasm.

  “What’s going on here?” J.D. asked.

  Still carrying her daughter, she walked into the house and shut the door. “A misunderstanding.”

  “With the police?”

  “The juvenile authorities,” she corrected, her gaze skating to her son for an instant before returning to J.D. She flashed him a look that warned him not to dive too deeply into these murky waters. Whatever was going on, it was serious. Christina wriggled, and Tiffany set her daughter on the floor. “You know, J.D., of all the people I expected to run into today, you’re the last.”

  “I should have called.”

  She lifted a shoulder as if she didn’t give a damn, but barely restrained fury snapped in her eyes. “Not your style.”

  His jaw tightened, but he supposed he deserved the blow. “No.”

  Stephen glanced up through the shaggy bangs. “I’m takin’ off. Me and Sam are goin’ fishin’ and swimmin’.”

  “Sam and I,” Tiffany corrected as if on automatic pilot. “You’re supposed to be grounded.”

  “I thought we had a deal.” Stephen rubbed his nose with the back of his hand. “I did all the chores and my homework.”

  “Isn’t school out for the year?” J.D. asked.

  Tiffany shot him another harsh glance. “Summer school.”

  “Yeah, and it’s dumb,” Stephen grumbled. “Look, I just want to go swimmin’.”

  Tiffany glanced at her watch. She looked about to argue with the boy, then thought better of it Probably because J.D. had shown up. “Okay. But be back by five.”

  “Ah, Mom. Come on, it’s summer—”

  “Five or don’t go at all,” she said firmly.

  Stephen obviously wanted to take her on but thought better of it and chewed on the corner of his lip instead.

  In J.D.’s opinion, the odds were better man ten to one that the kid wouldn’t make curfew. He knew what the boy was thinking; he’d been there.

  “And your room is clean?”

  “Clean enough.”

  “Stephen,” she reproached gently.

  “Clean enough for me and it’s my room, okay?” He was already through the front door and grabbing a beat-up skateboard that was propped against the side of the house. The board sported peeling decals of what J.D. assumed were the names of alternative rock bands. “I’ll see ya later.”

  “Five. Remember.”

  “Yeah, yeah.”

  Watching him leave, Tiffany worried her lower lip between her teeth. “Teenagers,” she said in a tone so low he almost didn’t hear the concern in her voice.

  J.D. didn’t blame her for being apprehensive. Stephen needed to be sat down on, and hard. The kid had an attitude, and it wasn’t going to get any better over the next couple of years.

  Sighing softly, Tiffany shook her head as if she were having a private conversation with herself and losing. Badly.

  “Since you’re here, I assume you wanted to see me.”

  He tensed at her choice of words.

  “Come into the kitchen,” she said curtly. “Christina, you, too.” Sandals clicking in agitation, she marched down the hallway, throwing herself through the pair of swinging doors.

  J.D. hauled his bags with him and followed, catching one of the doors as it swung back at him. The kitchen was at the back of the house and looked like something out of Better Homes and Gardens. Sunlight spilled through the windows, giving the room a warm, golden glow. Shining pots and pans hung from the ceiling over a center island while bundles of fragrant herbs, suspended from hooks, scented the air. The refrigerator was adorned with a three-year-old’s artwork, notes about repairs that needed to be done to the house, and emergency phone numbers.

  Homey.

  Charming.

  And as phony as a three-dollar bill.

  Tiffany reached into the windowsill for a bottle of aspirin and shook two white tablets into her hand.

  “Headache?”

  “At least.” She turned on the tap, grabbed a glass from a nearby cabinet, filled it and tossed the pills and a huge gulp of water down her throat. “Now, what is it you want, Jay?”

  J.D. set his bags on the floor and leaned a hip against one of the cupboards. A needle of guilt pricked his conscience as he thought about the deed to this house tucked into a pocket of his duffel bag. As much as he disliked Tiffany Nesbitt Santini, he didn’t relish adding to her problems.

  “There must be something. You didn’t drive all the way down here from Portland just to say hello.”

  “No, but I did come to see you.”

  He noticed the slight catch of her breath, the widening of her eyes, but the look of anticipation was quickly masked. “Why do I have a feeling this isn’t going to be something I want to hear?”

  An older woman wearing oversize coveralls, a straw hat and gardening gloves appeared at the back door. Sunglasses covered her eyes, and in one hand she held clippers and a bouquet of r
oses.

  “I thought I heard voices,” she said as she shouldered open the screen door. She stopped short at the sight of J.D. “Oh, I didn’t know you had company.”

  “Roberta Ellingsworth, this is my brother-in-law, J.D. Santini.”

  “Pleased to meet you.” J.D. offered his hand.

  The woman chuckled as she, still holding the roses, extended her gloved fingers.

  “You, too. Call me Ellie. Everyone does.”

  “Ellie, then,” J.D. replied.

  “I brought these in for you,” she said to Tiffany as she released J.D.’s hand.

  Tiffany was already reaching for a vase. “Thanks. They’re lovely.”

  “I helped pick them!” Christina announced.

  “That you did, honey,” Ellie acknowledged, handing Tiffany the roses and winking at the little girl. “You were a big help.”

  “So were you,” Tiffany said, sniffing the fragrant blooms. “Thanks for pinch-hitting with the kids.”

  “Any time, honey, any time.”

  “Would you like something to drink? I’ve got iced tea or coffee—”

  “Oh, not right now, but I’ll take a rain check,” the older woman said, wiping her brow and lifting her sunglasses as if to peer at the strange man in Tiffany’s kitchen more closely. “It’s about time for my program.” Her eyebrows rose a fraction as she looked at J.D. “I try not to miss my soap.”

  Tiffany grinned, and her eyes sparkled with sudden merriment “Don’t tell me—Derek’s evil twin has kidnapped him and is going to marry Samantha in his place.”

  Ellie laughed. “Close enough, honey, close enough. On This Life Is Mine you never know what can happen. I’ll see you later.” She was peeling off her gardening gloves. “Nice meeting you,” she said to J.D. before leaving.

  “My pleasure.” J.D. watched her slowly descend the steps, then round the corner to disappear from sight.

  “Ellie watches the kids for me when I’m at work, and believe me, she’s an absolute godsend,” Tiffany said, her smile fading a bit, and then, as if she’d belatedly realized that she’d been a little blunt earlier, she added, “So how about you? I’ve got coffee or iced tea.”

  He shook his head.