Family Matters

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Authors: Barbara White Daille

BOOK: Family Matters
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Matt tugged on the clipboard. “What's that?”

Kerry looked down in dismay. During her daydreaming her hands had taken over and sketched his face.

“Oh, that,” she said, forcing a grin. “I saw the dartboard in the game room and thought it needed a new target.”

“Very funny.” He tried to glare, but the slight curve of his mouth gave him away. “That works both ways, you know.”

He leaned closer, smiling, and she pressed against the ticket counter behind her. “W-what do you mean, ‘works both ways'?”

“If you make me a target, I can also set my sights on you.”

 

Dear Reader,

If you're at all like me, you enjoy books that have a special connection to your own life, whether it's through a heroine's occupation, a setting in a place you once visited, or a character who is dealing with a tough situation you've had to handle, too.

Family Matters
is special to me in many ways.

I love the knight-in-mirrored-sunglasses hero, the conflicted but committed heroine and the quirky townsfolk who play key roles all through the story.

I also love the setting, which creates a whole list of problems in the book. Don't blame me! The characters wanted to buy their own amusement park, and how could I turn them down?

Most of all—and where
Family Matters
really hits home for me—I love that the heroine comes from an Irish family, which ties in to my own Irish roots. Kerry's family is one of a kind, though. It's large. It's crazy. And it's filled with a bunch of eccentrics you'll soon get to meet.

I hope you have as much fun reading this book as I did writing it! Feel free to drop me a note and let me know. You can reach me at P.O. Box 504, Gilbert, AZ 85299 or through my Web site, www.barbarawhitedaille.com.

All my best to you!

Until we meet again,

Barbara White Daille

Family Matters
B
ARBARA
W
HITE
D
AILLE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

When she was very young, Barbara White Daille learned from her mom about the storytelling magic in books—and she's been hooked ever since. Now thrilled to be an author herself, she hopes you will enjoy reading her books and will find your own magic in them! Originally from the East Coast, Barbara lives with her husband in the warm, sunny Southwest, where they love the dry heat and have taken up square-dancing.

Books by Barbara White Daille

HARLEQUIN AMERICAN ROMANCE

1131—THE SHERIFF'S SON

1140—COURT ME, COWBOY

In memory of Dolores F. White, for giving me both the love of reading and my Irish roots

And, as always, to Rich

Many thanks to Johanna Raisanen for her keen eye and thought-provoking comments

Chapter One

As always, willing or not, Kerry MacBride came soaring to the rescue. When her final paycheck for the school year arrived, she really should splurge on a pair of bright tights and a cape.

Heart thumping in time with her sprinting footsteps, she rushed down the all-too-familiar main hallway of Lakeside Village's clubhouse, the center of this age-fifty-plus planned community and, in fact, the social hub of the entire town.

As if the future residents of the community had planned it that way—and knowing Gran and some of the other residents, they probably had—the Village sat smack in the middle of her tiny hometown of Lakeside, Illinois. From various vantage points on the property, you could look in all directions and see just about everything worth seeing.

Right now, all
she
wanted to see was both Gran and Uncle Bren safe inside the facility's game room, where the volunteer at the front desk had told her she would find them.

She had her doubts, though. Who wouldn't, after the message she'd heard on her voice mail earlier that afternoon?

Well, Kerry,
Uncle Bren had rumbled into her ear in farewell,
the next time you see me, it might be behind bars.

She should know better than to fall for this. Or to get involved in another one of his crazy schemes. Or even to drop
everything—on a Thursday, no less—and head for home on the off chance he was telling the truth.

With one more day of school left, she hadn't planned to come down until the weekend. She should be home right now, packing for her dream-of-a-lifetime trip. She, who had never left Illinois, would be spending the summer in Europe! It still dumbfounded her to realize she had been chosen for the art fellowship.

But, though the plea went unspoken, she'd heard the desperation beneath Uncle Bren's words. That fact had her making the drive from her apartment in Chicago to Lakeside in less than three hours. Under the speed limit, too, of course. Barely.

Kerry also knew better than to risk a run-in with a police officer. But Uncle Bren? And Gran? Much as she loved them both, it wouldn't surprise her to find either of them in trouble.

She burst through the doorway into the game room, skidded to a halt on the polished tile floor, and confronted chaos.

The room overflowed with people, all yelling at once. The loudest roar came from a dark-haired man tall enough to dwarf Uncle Bren's near-six-foot frame. The man, slim but muscular in a pearl-gray suit, looked ready to split the jacket's seams with his wide-armed gestures.

Thank goodness, Gran stood safely out of his reach. But Uncle Bren, hemmed in by the crowd, faced the brunt of the stranger's anger.

Even without her years of artistic training, Kerry would have seen something wrong with this picture.

“Excuse me,” she said, using her project-to-the-back-of-the-classroom tone. “What do you think you're doing?” The question drowned out every voice in the room. The shouting subsided and every head turned her way.

As she moved forward, people parted, allowing her to pass.

A slim older woman stood beside the man confronting Uncle Bren. She put her hand on his arm. “Matthew, sweetheart—”

“It's all right, Mom, I'll handle this.”

As Kerry approached, the woman glanced at her, frowned anxiously in Bren's direction, then took what looked like a reluctant step back.

The man now faced Kerry, his eyes dark with anger. She caught her breath at the fury in his expression but didn't break stride until she'd reached him.

Looking up—way up—she met his gaze. “What's going on here?”

After a long, tense silence, he answered, his tone level. “We're holding a meeting.”

She widened her eyes. “It sounded to me more like you're having an argument.”

Behind him, Uncle Bren stood unmoving but nodded in confirmation. Trust him to let her pick up the problem and run with it.

The man took a deep breath, which now strained the buttons on his immaculate white shirt, and traced his thumbnail across one eyebrow. “I only argue before a jury. As we're not in court—
yet
—that doesn't apply here.”

She swallowed a wave of panic. “You're a lawyer?”

“Yes.”

Great.
A lawyer who had just stood ranting at Uncle Bren. Things couldn't get any worse. Or could they? And did she really want to know? “You look like you could use a little assistance with this…meeting.”

He smiled. Despite the situation, she couldn't help but notice how it changed his entire expression, easing the hard frown lines bisecting his forehead, even lightening the color of his eyes from near black to a dark greenish-gray. An interesting transformation.

She didn't trust the change in him for a minute.

Still, she squinted at him and found her head tilting slightly, her fingers curling around an imaginary paintbrush. With an effort, she blinked, bringing herself back to harsh reality.

“I could use a warrant and a padded cell.” He gestured over his shoulder. “If you think you've got any chance of knocking some sense into that scam artist, go right ahead.”

She squinted again, not in pleasure this time. “Wait a minute—”

“You've got no call to say that,” Uncle Bren interrupted, glaring at the man.

He sounded intimidating enough, but Kerry knew the real threat would come from her grandmother, always famous for jumping into any brawl.

Kerry looked over her shoulder. Sure enough, here Gran came, pushing her way through the crowd, barreling toward the lawyer and Uncle Bren. Kerry moved hastily toward her. Fortunately, as she closed in, the crowd surged around them both.

“Out of my way, Kerry Anne. I don't let anyone use such talk to my family, children nor grandchildren.” She added ominously, “And you know what happens when I get my Irish up.”

“I
do
know, Gran,” Kerry agreed.

“Maeve, we need you here,” one of the residents called.

Gran started pushing again, heading in that direction. Kerry breathed a sigh of relief but couldn't help looking fondly after her.

Kerry had spent most of her childhood living down what happened when Gran's temper got the better of her—though, she had to admit, the results were sometimes all to the good. Such as the time Mom and Dad, both archaeologists, had wanted to leave their offspring permanently with Gran and Grandpa to head off for parts unknown. Children weren't
allowed to spend more than brief visits at Lakeside Village, but Gran had fixed that.

The story Gran told about taking on the raising of her grandkids had been repeated so often, it now had the flavor of family legend.

The nerve of them, trying to keep my grandchildren out of the Village and my own home, too.
At that point, Gran would smile wickedly and add,
All it took was me getting my Irish up—and threatening to share more local scandals than you'll ever see on those daytime television shows.

Kerry didn't doubt Gran would have done it, too, if necessary. Luckily, everything had worked out, and she and her brothers had grown up with Gran and Grandpa—with occasional long visits from Uncle Bren.

Thinking of him and this situation made Kerry sigh.

The crowed shifted, buffeting her aside. Reluctantly, she turned back to the lawyer and found him standing in front of her.

Glowering, they stared each other down.

Before Kerry could speak, a deep voice called out, “All right, now, folks, let's settle down and regroup.”

She recognized Albie Gardner, leader of the residents' association, on the fringe of the crowd. He stood wider than he was tall, his bare scalp just visible to her above the heads of the people between them. Albie's baritone cut through the high pitch of emotional outrage even more effectively than she had done.

“Matt Lawrence,” he bellowed, “you called this meeting to order—not that we've seen a lot of orderliness around here yet. But it's only fair you get a chance to speak. You were gearing up to state an opinion.”

“I was,” the lawyer said emphatically.

When Matt turned away, Kerry took the opportunity to slip around him and stand closer to Uncle Bren.

“You've all got to see a project like this one is risky at best,” Matt told them. “At worst, it's doomed from the start.”

A pulse ticked in warning at Kerry's temple.
Something
had to account for an extreme statement like that one. And much as she hated to admit it, she could hear the concern beneath Matt Lawrence's words.

“You can't know how things'll end up,” a woman called out.

“I can make a good assumption, though, based on how they began. Did you do any market research before you made your decision? Did MacBride show you any safety reports on the property? Or any kind of paperwork at all?”

The pulse in Kerry's head started banging away like the fire alarm bell in her classroom at school.
What
had Uncle Bren gotten these poor people into?

A woman across from their tight circle shook her head. “He's Maeve's son—he wouldn't steer us wrong.”

“You're right about that,” Gran put in smugly.

“Is that so?”

Matt's glare would have pinned Uncle Bren in place—if he'd noticed. Kerry couldn't miss it. Forget a trial and sentencing and time off for good behavior. This lawyer wanted a lynching. And it looked as if he wanted it now.

Almost unconsciously, Kerry took her uncle's arm.

“What's going to happen if the project never gets off the ground?” Matt pressed.

A few of the people around them shifted position, their faces crumpling into worry lines.

“It will,” someone from the back of the room called.

Other voices chimed in.

“That's right.”

“We'll see to it.”

“Things will be fine.”

“And if they're not?” Matt persisted. “Your investments will be gone.”

“He does have a point,” one trembling voice said.

Someone added agreement.

As the shouting rose again, Kerry felt her uncle jump. She shot him a glance and leaned close to whisper, “What's this all about, Uncle Bren?”

She could feel him stiffen, sense his reluctance to speak. Trying to force the words through her suddenly tight throat, she repeated, “Uncle Bren?”

“Well,” he whispered, “I—I've up and bought Rainbow's End.”

“You've
what?
” Shock made her speak out loud, but with all the commotion around them, no one noticed. Except Matt Lawrence, who narrowed his eyes and focused on her mouth as if wanting to read her lips. A tremor of dismay rippled through her.

Turning sideways to block Matt's view, she blurted, “Uncle Bren, are you…?” Biting off the words with an effort, she felt helpless to do anything but shake her head at him.

He looked crestfallen—for all of three seconds. Then he rallied, announcing with the usual Brendan MacBride aplomb, “Kerry, me girl, it was a steal.”

She prayed he didn't mean those words literally. Already, the news was more than she could bear. How could
anyone
have supported Uncle Bren in buying a derelict amusement park? All of Lakeside knew he belonged to the eccentric MacBride clan. Yet, if what Matt Lawrence had said was true, her uncle had persuaded this roomful of people—many of them retirees on limited incomes—to invest their savings in his wild idea.

“Uncle Bren,” she said fiercely, knowing the uproar around them drowned out her voice, “you've got to give them their money back.”

“I haven't got it,” he admitted.

Swallowing a groan of frustration, she brought her trembling hand to her mouth. Uncle Bren had gotten into scrapes on a regular basis, for as far back as she could remember. They were always harmless, well-intentioned ideas that just hadn't worked out. They'd never involved anything on a scale like this. He'd really let himself in for trouble now.

Which meant Kerry was in trouble, too.

She had to stall. Had to buy
Uncle Bren
some time so
she
could find out what had happened to the money and figure out how to get him out of this predicament. She couldn't question him here, with that angry lawyer still watching.

As Albie joined their inner circle, the voices around them hushed. “I'm sure Bren has answers to all our concerns,” he said to the crowd.

“Of course,” Uncle Bren replied glibly.

Of course not,
she would bet. But on the off chance he might be able to give her something to fight with, she grabbed at his words.

“Yes, he has answers,” she announced firmly, focusing on Albie and trying not to notice Matt's narrow-eyed glare. “He'll just need some time to pull them together.”

Matt made a choking sound indicating disbelief. She ignored that, too.

“Seems reasonable,” Albie said. “Bren, why don't you take the next couple of days and come up with a proposal that will address everyone's concerns.”

“Hold on,” Matt said. “If he didn't have all the answers up front, what was he doing signing a contract?”

“I'm sure we'll find out. Bren, give us a rough idea of where we stand with the project. And where we're going with it.”

“Not a problem.” Uncle Bren grinned.

“Not at all,” Kerry confirmed. What choice did she have?

The plane for Europe took off in a week. She was going to
be on it. You didn't give up the chance of a lifetime…second time around. Right after college graduation, she'd received a fellowship offer, too—and another family disaster had upset all her plans. That wouldn't happen now.

A week gave her plenty of time to save Uncle Bren.

“What makes you qualified to draw up a business plan?” Matt Lawrence asked him.

“Me,” she said flatly, before Uncle Bren could reply.

Matt turned her way. “You?”

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