"Shadow Game" - читать интересную книгу автора (Feehan Christine)

for dinner, and we can go over everything after we eat. I want your own
impressions."
"Based onЕ"
Ryland didn't hear a hint of sarcasm, but it was there in her mind. She was
angry with her father but Ryland couldn't read why. That part of her mind was
closed off to him, hidden behind a thick, high wall she had erected to keep him
out.
"Go over my notes, Lily, and see what you make of the process. Maybe you'll see
something I didn't. I want a fresh perspective. Colonel Higgens might be right.
There may be a way to continue without reversing what we've done." Peter Whitney
refused to meet his daughter's direct gaze, but turned to Ryland and asked, "Do
I need to leave an armed guard in this room with my daughter, Captain?"
Ryland studied the face of the man who had opened the floodgates of his brain to
receive far too much stimuli. He could detect no evil, only a genuine concern.
"I'm no threat to the innocent, Dr. Whitney."
"That's good enough for me." Still without looking at his daughter, the doctor
left the room, closing the door to the laboratory firmly.
Ryland was so aware of Lily, he actually felt the breath leave her lungs in a
slow exhale as the door to the laboratory closed and the lock snicked quietly
into place. He waited a heartbeat. Two. "Aren't you afraid of me?" Ryland asked,
testing his voice with her. It came out more husky than he would have liked. He
had never had much luck with women and Lily Whitney was out of his class.
She didn't look at him, but continued to stare at the symbols on the screen.
"Why should I be? I'm not Colonel Higgens."
"Even the lab techs are afraid of me."
"Because you want them to be and you're projecting, deliberately enhancing their
own fears." Her voice indicated a mild interest in their conversation, her mind
mulling over the data on the screen. "How long have you been here?"
He swung around, stalked to the bars, and gripped them. "They're bringing you
onboard and you don't even know how long my men and I have been locked up in
this hellhole?"
She turned her head abruptly. Tendrils of hair, fallen loose from the tight
twist at the back of her head, swung around her face. Even in the muted blue
light of the room, her hair was shiny and it gleamed at him. "I don't know
anything at all about this experiment, Captain. Not one small fact. This is the
highest-security compound this corporation has and, while I have clearance, this
is not my field of expertise. Dr. Whitney, my father, asked me to consult and I
was cleared to do so. Do you have a problem with that?"
He studied the classic beauty of her face. High cheekbones, long lashes, a lush
mouthЧthey didn't come like this unless they were born rich and privileged. "You
probably have an underpaid maid whose name you can't even remember, who picks up
your clothes when you throw them on your bedroom floor."
That bought him her entire attention. She crossed the distance from the computer
to his cage in a slow, unhurried walk that drew his attention to her limp. Even
with her limp she had a flowing grace. She made every cell in his body instantly
aware he was male and she was female.
Lily tilted her chin at him. "I guess you were brought up without manners,
Captain Miller. I don't actually throw my clothes on the bedroom floor. I hang
them in the closet." Her gaze flicked past him to rest briefly on the clothes
strewn on the floor.