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Available 4.15.24


Family Affair

Family Affair, January 2011
by Debbie Macomber

William Morrow
Featuring: Lacey Lancaster; Jack Walker
112 pages
ISBN: 0061997129
EAN: 9780061997129
Kindle: B003ZSHUOS
Hardcover / e-Book
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"Purrfectly charming romance!"

Fresh Fiction Review

Family Affair
Debbie Macomber

Reviewed by Sharon Galligar Chance
Posted February 4, 2011

Romance

Sometimes it take a little nudge from our furry friends to get love moving in the right direction, and for Lacy Lancaster that shove came in the form of a combined effort from her beautiful purebred Abyssian cat Cleo and a ragtag cat named Dog. In Debbie Macomber's latest book, FAMILY AFFAIR, it takes a couple of felines to light the spark of love between their owners in a charming story that only Debbie Macomber can write so well.

Lacey was devastated by a particularly nasty divorce and had sworn off having anything to do with men, maybe forever. Even if men included her incredibly handsome and suave next-door neighbor Jack Walker. But Lacey is forced to communicate with Jack after Jack's cat, a cat named Dog, begins pitching woo and Lacey's cat Cleo ends up becoming a momma-to-be.

Jack has admired his neighbor for nearly an entire year from afar, and uses this new situation to insist on being partially responsible for Cleo's welfare. He also uses this excuse to visit and flirt with Lacey, but Lacey is determined not to fall for his charms, especially since she can hear him fighting with his girlfriend through the thin apartment walls. But when that girlfriend turns out to be Jack's sister Sarah, the doors to the romance department swing wide open and Jack becomes even more determined to win Lacey's affections.

As the couple gets to know each other and grow closer, outside influences from work, Jack's flaky sister, and well- meaning friends threaten to divide them, but with a little luck, a lot of hopes and dreams, and batch of new kitties will encourage love to prevail.

Originally released as a magazine story in 1994, FAMILY AFFAIR is a classically sweet, enchanting tale of romance that is consistent for the Queen of Contemporary Romance, Debbie Macomber. This short, but "purrfectly" pleasing story will delight Macomber's fans as well as pet admirers everywhere.

Learn more about Family Affair

SUMMARY

Rediscover the joy of #1 New York Times bestselling author Debbie Macomber's delightful tale of unexpected love, second chances, and a cat named Dog.

Lacey Lancaster has always longed to be a wife and mother. However, after a painful divorce, she decides it's time to lay low for a while in her charming San Francisco apartment with her beautiful Abyssinian cat, Cleo.

Everything would be wonderful, except for her utterly impossible neighbor Jack Walker. When he's not arguing day and night with his girlfriend, begging her to move in with him, he's chasing down his cat named Dog, who seems determined to get Cleo to succumb to his feline advances.

Then Lacey discovers the awful truth - Cleo is in the family way and Dog's to blame. She's furious that neither Jack nor his amorous animal seem too upset about the situation.

But Lacey learns that things are not quite as they seem. Jack's "girlfriend" is really his sister - and his intentions toward Lacey are very honorable. And though she's not quite sure about Dog, Lacey begins to discover the tender joy of falling in love all over again.

Excerpt

CHAPTER ONE

"I've got the backbone of a worm," Lacey Lancaster muttered as she let herself into her apartment. She tossed her mail onto an end table and glared at Cleo. "I didn't say a word to Mr. Sullivan, not a single word."

Cleo, her Abyssinian cat, affectionately wove her golden brown body between Lacey's ankles. Her long tail coiled around Lacey's calf like a feather boa, soft, sleek, and soothing.

"I had the perfect opportunity to ask for a raise and did I do it?" Lacey demanded, kicking her feet so that her shoes sailed in opposite directions. "Oh, no, I let it pass by. And do you know why?"

Cleo apparently didn't. Lacey took off her bright green vinyl raincoat, opened the closet door, and shoved it inside. "Because I'm a coward, that's why."

Walking into the kitchen, she opened the refrigerator and stuck her head inside, rooting out some sorry looking leftovers, two boxes of take out Chinese, and the tulip bulbs she'd meant to plant in her balcony flower box last October.

"I'm starved." She opened the vegetable bin and took out a limp stalk of celery. "You know my problem, don't you?"

Cleo meowed and wove her way between Lacey's ankles once more.

"Oh, sorry. You're probably hungry too." Lacey reached inside the cupboard and pulled out a can of gourmet cat food. To her surprise, Cleo didn't show the least bit of interest. Instead, she raised her tail and stuck her rear end in the air.

"What's going on with you? Trust me, Cleo, this isn't the time to go all weird on me. I need to talk." Taking her celery stick with her, she moved into the living room and fell onto the love seat.

"I work and slave and put in all kinds of overtime-without pay, I might add-and for what? Mr. Sullivan doesn't appreciate me. Yet it's my decorating ideas he uses. The worst part is, he doesn't even bother to give me the credit." She chomped off the end of the celery and chewed with a vengeance. The stalk teetered from the attack and then slowly curved downward.

Lacey studied the celery. "This might as well be my backbone," she muttered. Unable to sit still any longer, she paced her compact living room. "I haven't had a raise in the whole year I've worked for him, and in that time I've taken on much more responsibility and completed projects Mr. Sullivan couldn't or wouldn't do. Good grief, if it weren't for me, Mr. Sullivan wouldn't know what was going on in his own business." By this time she was breathless and irate. "I do more work than he does, and he's the owner, for heaven's sake!"

Clearly Cleo agreed, because she let out a low, wailing moan. Lacey had never owned a cat before, but after a devastating divorce she'd needed someone. Or some thing. The thing had turned out to be Cleo.

She'd first spotted Cleo in a pet shop window, looking forlorn. Cleo's brother and sister had been sold two weeks earlier, and Cleo was all alone. Abandoned, the half grown kitten gazed, dejected and miserable, onto the world that passed her by.

Lacey had been suffering from the same emotions herself, and once they met the two had become fast friends. No fool, the pet store owner knew a sale when he saw one. He'd made some fast soft shoe moves to convince Lacey what a good investment Cleo would be. If she bred her and sold off the litter, within a year or so, he claimed, her original investment would be returned to her.

Lacey hadn't been so keen on the breeding aspect of the deal, but it had sounded like something she should try. She wanted companionship, and after her disastrous marriage she was through with men. A cat wouldn't lie or cheat or cause hurt. Peter had done all three with bone cutting accuracy.

Good ol' Peter, Lacey mused. She should be grateful for all the lessons he'd taught her. Perhaps someday she would be able to look back on her marriage without the crushing pain she felt now. He'd vowed to love and cherish her but then calmly announced one Sunday afternoon, without warning, that he was leaving her for someone else.

Someone else was a tall blonde with baby blue eyes and a voluptuous figure. Lacey had sized up the competition, decided she didn't stand a chance, and signed the divorce papers. Oh, there'd been some haggling, but she'd left that to her attorney and stayed out of it as much as possible. As soon as her divorce was final, she'd uprooted herself, moved to San Francisco, located a job she loved, and started life all over again.

Sort of.

This time, she was playing it smart. Men were completely out of the picture. For the first time, she was supporting herself. For the first time, she didn't need anyone else. Because it could happen all over again. Another blonde with a Playboy figure could disrupt her life a second time. It was best to play it safe. Who needed that kind of grief? Not her!

Lacey wasn't discounting her assets. With her straight brown hair sculpted around her ears, and equally dark eyes, she resembled a lovable pixie. She was barely five feet tall, while her brother, who was five years older, was nearly six feet. Why nature had short changed her in the height department, she would never understand.

After the divorce, Lacey had felt emotionally battered and lost. Bringing Cleo into her life had helped tremendously, so much that Lacey figured she could do without a man. Her cat provided all the companionship she needed.

"Okay, okay, You're right," Lacey said, glancing down at her fidgeting feline friend. "I couldn't agree with you more. I'm a gutless wonder. The real problem is I don't want to quit my job. All I'm looking for is to be paid what I'm worth, which is a whole lot more than I'm making now." She'd come out of the divorce with a hefty settlement; otherwise she'd be in dire financial straights.

Cleo concurred with a low wail, unlike any sound Lacey could ever remember her making.

Lacey studied her cat. "You all right, girl? You don't sound right."

Cleo thrust her hind end into the air again and shot across the room to attack her catnip mouse. Whatever was troubling her had passed. At least Lacey hoped it had.

Muttering to herself, Lacey returned to the kitchen and reexamined the contents of her refrigerator. There wasn't anything there she'd seriously consider eating. The leftover Chinese containers were filled with hard, dried out rice and a thick red sauce with what had once been sweet and sour pork. The meat had long since disappeared, and the sauce resembled cherry gelatin. The only edible items were the tulip bulbs, not that she'd seriously consider dining on them.

She'd hoped to treat herself to something extravagant to celebrate her raise. Domino's Pizza was about as extravagant as she got. But she wasn't doing any celebrating this night. If she wanted dinner, she'd need to fix it herself.

Her cupboards weren't promising: a couple of cans of soup mingled with fifteen of gourmet cat food.

Soup.

Her life had deteriorated to a choice between cream of mushroom soup and vegetarian vegetable. Blindly she reached for a can and brought out the vegetable. The freezer held a loaf of bread. Her choice of sandwiches was limited to either peanut butter and jelly or grilled cheese.

"Sometimes I think I hate you!" The words came through the kitchen wall as clearly as if the person saying them were standing in the same room.

Lacey sighed. Her neighbor, Jack Walker, and his girlfriend were at it again. She hadn't formally met the man who lived next door, which was fine with her. The guy suffered from severe woman problems; from what she'd heard through the wall, it sounded as if the pair was badly in need of therapy. Lacy avoided Jack like the plague, despite his numerous attempts at striking up an acquaintance. She was polite but firm, even discouraging. She had to give him credit. He didn't accept no easily. Over the months, his methods had become increasingly imaginative. He'd tried flowers, tacked notes to her door, and had once attempted to lure her into his apartment with the offer of dinner. Of all his tactics, the promise of a meal had been the most tempting, but Lacey knew trouble when she saw it and resisted.

As far as she was concerned, dating Jack was out of the question, especially since he was already involved with someone else. Lacey had lost count of the times she'd heard him arguing with his girlfriend. Some nights she was forced to turn on her stereo to block out the noise.

But being the polite, don't cause problems sort of person she was, Lacey had never complained. She might as well throw herself down on the carpet and instruct people to walk all over her.

"I wasn't always a worm," she complained to Cleo. "It's only in the last year or so that I've lost my self confidence. I'd like to blame Mr. Sullivan, but I can't. Not when I'm the one who's at fault. You'd think it'd be easy to ask for a little thing like a raise, wouldn't you? It isn't, yet I'm left feeling like Oliver Twist. At least he had the courage to ask for more.

"Mr. Sullivan should thank his lucky stars. I'm good at what I do, but does he notice? Oh, no. He just takes me for granted."

Having finished this tirade, she noticed that Cleo had disappeared. Even her cat had deserted her. She found Cleo on the windowsill, meowing pathetically.

Lacey lifted the cat in her arms and petted her. "Have I been so wrapped up in my own problems that I've ignored you?"

Cleo leaped out of the embrace and raced into the bedroom.

The arguing continued in the other apartment.

"Sarah, for the love of heaven, be reasonable!" Jack shouted.

"Give it to him with both barrels," Lacey said under her breath. "I bet you didn't know Jack was dating on the side, did you? Well, don't get down on yourself. I didn't know what a womanizer Peter was either."

Sarah apparently heeded her advice, because the shouting intensified. Jack, who generally remained the calmer of the two, was also losing it.

If she listened real hard, she might be able to figure out the cause of their dispute, but frankly Lacey wasn't that interested.

"I saw him with someone new just last week," she added, just for fun. Lacey had bumped into Jack at the mailbox. There'd been a woman with him and it wasn't Sarah. But it was always Sarah who came back. Always Sarah he quarreled with. The poor girl apparently cared deeply for him. More fool she.

"I'm having vegetarian vegetable soup," Lacey informed Cleo as she strolled into the room, thinking her pet would want to know. "It isn't anything that would interest you, unfortunately." Whatever had been troubling her cat earlier was under control for the moment.

Dinner complete, Lacey set her steaming bowl of soup and her grilled cheese sandwich on the table. She'd just sat down when something hit the wall in the apartment next door. Instinctively, she jumped.

Angry voices escalated. Jack was no longer calm and in control. In fact, it sounded as if he'd lost his cool completely. The two were shouting at each other, each trying to drown the other out.

Lacey sighed. Enough was enough. Setting her napkin aside, she went over to the kitchen wall and knocked politely. Either they didn't hear her or they chose to ignore her, something they did with increasing frequency.

She'd just sat down again when an explosion of noise nearly jerked her off the chair. One or the other of the disgruntled lovers had decided to turn on the radio. Full blast.

The radio was turned off as abruptly as it had been turned on, followed by a tirade from Jack.

The radio was switched back on.

Off.

Once again, ever so politely, Lacey tapped the wall.

They ignored her.

Then, for whatever reason, there was silence. Blissful silence. Whatever had plagued the two was settled.

Either that or they'd murdered one another. Whichever it was, the silence was bliss.

When Lacey had finished her dinner, she washed the few dishes she'd used. Cleo continued to weave her sleek body between Lacey's ankles, meowing and wailing all the while. "What's wrong with you girl?" Lacey asked again.

Squatting down, she ran her hand over the cat's spine. Cleo arched her back and cried once more.

"You don't seem to be yourself," Lacey commented, concerned.

It hit her then, right between the eyes. "You're in heat! Oh, my goodness, you're in heat." How could she have been so obtuse?

Leaving the kitchen, she rooted through her personal telephone directory, searching for the name the pet shop owner had given her. If she was going to breed Cleo, she needed to talk to this woman first.

"Poor, poor Cleo," Lacey said sympathetically. "Trust me, sweetie, men aren't worth all this trouble." She quickly located the phone number and punched it out.

"I'm Lacey Lancaster," she said hurriedly into the receiver. "The owner of Pet's World gave me your number. I bought an Abyssinian several months ago."

No sooner had she introduced herself than the arguing in the next door apartment resumed.

"I'm sorry, dearie, but I can't understand you." The woman on the other end of the line spoke with a soft Irish accent.

"I said I purchased an Abyssinian cat-"

"It sounds like you've a party going on."

"There's no party." Lacey spoke louder, close to shouting herself.

"Perhaps you should call me back when your guests have left," came the soft, Irish brogue. With that the line was disconnected.

Something snapped in Lacey. Her never cause a scene upbringing went down the drain faster than tap water. She slammed the phone down and clenched her fists.

"I've had it!" she shouted, And she had. With men who didn't know the meaning of the words "faithful" and "commitment." With employers who took advantage of their employees. With Neanderthal neighbors, who shuffled one woman after another through their apartments without a second thought.

Lacey walked out her door and down the hall, her strides eating up the distance in seconds. However, by the time she reached Jack's apartment the fire had died down. Her anger would solve nothing. She tapped politely and waited.

The arguing stopped abruptly and the door flew open. Lacey was so astonished that she leaped back. Sarah leaped back, too, and glared at her. It was apparent the other woman hadn't heard Lacey knock.

"Hello," Lacey said, her heartbeat roaring in her ears. "I was wondering if you two would mind holding it down a little bit."

The woman, young and pretty, blinked back tears. "You don't need to worry. I was just leaving!"

Jack appeared then, looking suave and composed. He brightened when he saw it was her. "Lacey," he said, flashing her an easy grin. "This is a pleasant surprise."

"With all your fighting, I couldn't even make a phone call," she explained, not wanting to give him the wrong impression. This wasn't a social visit.

"I apologize." Jack glared at Sarah. "It won't happen again."

Sarah's chin shot into the air as she jerked her purse over her shoulder. "I . . . I don't believe we have anything more to say to each other." She hurried past Lacey toward the elevator,

"Sarah." Jack placed both his hands on Lacey's shoulders and edged his way past her. "I'm warning you . . . just don't do anything stupid."

"You mean, like listen to you?"

"Dammit to hell," Jack muttered. He stared at Lacey as if this were all her fault.

Lacey opened her mouth to tell him exactly what she thought of him and then abruptly changed her mind. Jack wouldn't listen. Men never did. Why waste her breath?

With nothing more to say, she returned to her apartment. To her surprise she realized she'd left the door open. Her immediate concern was for Cleo, and she rushed inside in a panic.

She stopped cold in her tracks at the sight that greeted her.

"Cleo!" Her cat was in the throes of passion with a long haired feline she didn't recognize.

Placing her hands over her mouth, Lacey sagged against the wall. She wasn't going to need the Irish woman after all. Cleo had already found her mate.


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