and dribbling, when you can burn rubber at 220 an hour?”
“Bikes are all right, I s’pose,” Luke retorted with lofty condescension, “but I’d drink the grog if I won. Who wants the good stuff poured all over your head?”
“Hey, mithter, do you like Barbieth?”
Belatedly, Mitch noticed someone was tugging at his shirt. He looked down to the source of the little, lisping voice.
Oh, dear God. Living proof of Tim and Lissa’s love. A sweet sprite gazed hopefully at him, a child with Tim’s riotous blond curls and an angel’s face. Lissa’s face.
“You must be Jenny.”
Jenny rolled her eyes, reminiscent of her mother. “Mithter, I thaid, do you like Barbieth?”
Oh, yeah, this was Lissa’s daughter all right—with her one-track mind. The boys were sniggering already. “Watch out, or she’ll get you into the dollhouse.”
Jenny’s brow lifted; she stared Matt down, her childish lisp adorable and impatient. “ You play with me all the time, so don’t you talk!” She turned back to Mitch. “You gonna play or not?”
“Jenny.”
The quiet word brooked no denial. Jenny sighed dramatically. “Sorry, Mummy. Sorry, Mister. Please are you gonna play with me?”
Lissa put a hand on Jenny’s pigtail. “Jenny, this is Mitch. He’s Matt and Luke’s daddy.”
“No!” Jenny’s sweet, flushed face drained white; those lovely china doll’s eyes filled right up with tears and spilled over. “Don’t take my bruvers. Don’t take Matt and Lukey away from me!”
“Jenny.”
The little girl’s tiny, flower-like face lifted, drenched with tears. “No, Mummy, no!” she sobbed. “Don’t let him take them, Mummy! Make him go away!”
Lissa squatted before the sobbing child as Matt and Luke stood either side of her, patting her in awkward affection. “Mitch is a friend of mine, and Matt and Luke’s father. Would you like it if Matt and Luke told your Daddy to go away?”
Jenny sniffed and gulped. “But he’s gonna take them away from us, Mummy! Stop him, stop him!”
, I’m not, Jenny,” Mitch cut in quietly, aching for the child’s pain. So much like her mother…
Jenny’s eyes grew round. “You’re goin’ away? Yay!”
But the twins gasped, forgetting Jenny’s grief in an instant. “Dad?” Matt’s voice quivered.
“D-don’t you want us?” Luke whispered.
Oh, damn. This was a delicate minefield he had to walk—especially with Luke—and he wasn’t any good at careful balance with words. Or with saving people’s feelings.
There was too much at stake here. Either way he could lose. How the hell could he explain the situation—what he wanted for them all—without either betraying Lissa’s trust, making the boys resent her, or looking like he wanted to dump Matt and Luke with the first available caregiver?
Just like Kerin—even after she went to the trouble of stealing them from me.
“Of course he wants to be with you both,” Lissa answered for him, caressing Luke’s curly mop of hair with exquisite tenderness. “He wouldn’t have come for you if he didn’t. He means that he’s moved here, to Breckerville, so he can be near us all. And you guys have the choice. You can go with your Dad, or keep living here if you want to, and he’ll be—”
Watching her founder, he supplied the first words that came to his mind: “Right next door.”
Lissa whirled to face him. “N-next door? You bought Old Man Taggart’s place?”
“All two hundred and fifteen acres of it, rotting fences and all.” Well, he would by tomorrow. He’d be the master of the place he’d once worked at for nothing. The For Sale sign he’d passed was so rusted and sagging he knew he’d get a bargain—and guaranteed a quick sale. Old Man Taggart must’ve died ages ago. The house and land were in such a state of disrepair—
He saw the flash of anger in Lissa’s gaze before she looked away. “You have it all worked out, don’t you?”
He shrugged, hiding the quick spurt of pain. Was