Dark Abyss Kaitlyn O'Connor (best fiction books of all time .TXT) š
- Author: Kaitlyn O'Connor
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She felt betrayed in every sense of the word, belittled by what heād done.
She realized abruptly that she did believe every awful thing theyād said about Miles Cavendish, as hard as it was to accept. It was accepting that his blood ran through her veins that she was having trouble with.
She hadnāt believed him when heād spun her the tale about her mother. She hadnāt wanted to believe it and therefore sheād tried to keep an open mind. Deep down, sheād felt the entire time that he was a liar. She didnāt know him, but she knew her mother. There was just the two of them. Theyād been close enough that she felt like she knew her mother better than anyone. The very fact that her mother had never said one word about him seemed proof positive that he was a liar. She didnāt believe her mother wouldāve stayed on the run throughout her life without a reason.
And that reason had to be that she was terrified of the man sheād married. If it had been a āmisunderstandingā as he claimed, she might or might not have reconciled with him, but it seemed probable that she wouldāve vented about itāat least at some point.
Sheād never understood why her mother kept them on the move. Thereād been many times when sheād resented it, become angry and argued with her mother and just generally been a pain in the ass. She had a hard time making friends. She didnāt fit in easily and it had made her miserable every time she made a friend and then had to give them up until sheād finally ceased even trying to connect. Sheād nursed a lot of resentment toward her mother because of it.
And to think all that time her mother was just trying to protect her!
She was so sorry sheād doubted her mother, angered that her mother hadnāt trusted her enough to explain it.
She must have found out what he was doing, Anna thought abruptly. She must have discovered he was a terrorist!
* * * *
Anna was huddled in a tight ball in the middle of his bed when Simon entered the room. He checked momentarily, his gaze flickering over her, and then continued inside.
Grabbing his easy chair, he pushed it closer and settled in it, studying her, trying to read her ātellsā as he generally did with prisoners. He discovered she was much harder to read than his usual suspect, mostly because he was having trouble putting it out of his head that she was in his bed. She was still shaken. He could see that, badly, but was it only shock? Or was guilt, at least a little, behind her nervous movements?
āWhere am I?ā
āIāll ask the questions.ā
Her lips tightened. The show of spirit, minor though it was, surprised him.
āJust tell me one thing. Are you ā¦ some sort of ā¦ thug? Are you after him because he cheated you? Or ā¦ what?ā
Anger washed through him. He supposed, given the way theyād taken her, he deserved it, but it still pissed him off. āIām High Guardianāhead of the Watchmen.ā
She frowned, turning that over. āThatās territorial lawmen, right?ā
āIt is.ā
She lifted her head and looked around. āThis isnāt a jail.ā
And this interview wasnāt going the way heād expected either! āThe Watch Center was damaged when the bomb went off. I was in it at the time, so I think you can probably understand that Iām pretty fucking pissed off.ā
Her gaze flickered over him. He didnāt doubt she was assessing the damage. She looked away after a brief appraisal. āIām sorry, but I didnāt have anything to do with it. I didnāt even know about it.ā
āI guess itās unanimous, then. Air-breathers donāt give a fuck what happens here.
One wouldāve thought it would warrant at least five seconds on the news considering the death toll.ā
She blinked at him, turning red, and cleared her throat. āI donāt actually watch the news. Itās always depressing.ā
āThatās a little dangerous in this day and time, isnāt it? Not keeping abreast of the weather at least.ā
She shrugged. āWater City always sounds the early warning if thereās dangerous weather headed our way. In any case, Iād notice if my neighbors broke their moorings and moved away.ā
āWould you?ā he asked dryly.
āMaybe not,ā she admitted uncomfortably. āBut I always have an assistant to keep me informed.ā
āTell me about Paul.ā
Anna felt her face heat with embarrassment. āI donāt really know much about him. When I fired my last assistant, the research center sent him overāthe company funding my project. He had all the right papers. I just assumed heād been thoroughly checked out.ā
āYou said youād found out that your father was your patron and heād sent Paul.ā
She shrugged. āEither he was lying about being my sponsor or he owns the company or some part of it. I donāt know. I donāt even know if what he said about Paul was true. Although ā¦.ā
āAlthough?ā
She lifted her hands to her cheeks. āHe ā¦ uh ā¦ I thought he liked me, you know? He acted like he did. Anyway, he told me he was a member of Humans for Humanity and kept trying to talk me into joining them. Iām not really much for socializing, though, you know? And I also didnāt think it was a very good idea to get personally involved with my assistant, but he said they were having a get together, a party, to welcome new members and talked me into going with him. I actually
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