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The Doctor's Pregnant Bride? / The Texas Billionaire's Baby. Susan CrosbyЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Doctor's Pregnant Bride? / The Texas Billionaire's Baby - Susan Crosby


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bad. Come on. Let’s just go. He’s doing important work, and we shouldn’t disturb—”

      Lisa entered her security information, turned the doorknob and stepped inside. Sara Beth sighed and followed.

      “Good afternoon, Dr. Bonner,” Lisa said as she drew close.

      He didn’t startle, but Sara Beth saw awareness click in. For one thing, he blinked. He held up a hand briefly then continued to type.

      Sara Beth glanced around the lab. The two waist-high lab tables were neat and orderly, even loaded with equipment as they were—microscopes with projection screens, computers, other high-tech pieces she couldn’t identify. Then there was the low-tech, standard lab equipment—stainless-steel sinks, glass vessels and tubes. Everything seemed to have its place, all order, no chaos.

      Why aren’t you on a date tonight, Dr. Gorgeous? she wondered. He was young, handsome and gainfully employed. She’d always assumed he played the field as much as his inveterate-flirt research partner, Dr. Demetrios, did.

      “Ms. Armstrong,” he said finally, turning toward Lisa. “And Ms. O’Connell. What can I do for you?” His gaze zeroed in and held on Sara Beth in an unnerving way as he gave her the same kind of complete attention he had given the computer just moments ago.

      Not a multitasker, she decided, fascinated, as he took off his glasses and set them on the tabletop then shoved his fingers through his rich brown hair. She itched to do the same.

      “I know you’ve been frustrated, Dr. Bonner,” Lisa said, “at being unable to find answers to the protocol problems.”

      “An understatement.”

      “Well, I’ve brought the cavalry.” Lisa turned toward Sara Beth. “We’ve decided to free up Sara Beth from some of her regular assignments and let her help you and Dr. Demetrios with your investigation.”

      For a few long moments he stayed silent, his expression giving away nothing, then he said, “Her help is gratefully accepted.”

      That was way too easy, Sara Beth thought. Which was a good thing, right? If they could work without dissension, they could cover a lot more ground more quickly. Maybe she wouldn’t feel as if she was spying, either. And maybe her pulse would stop pounding so hard.

      “On one condition,” he added. “Call me Ted. You, too, Sara Beth.”

      Sara Beth waited for Lisa’s reply. Lisa’s father, the institute’s founder, had always insisted on using titles. But then, not only was he retired, he was almost completely bedridden. He never came into the institute anymore.

      Lisa’s shoulders relaxed. “Except in front of patients or VIPs.”

      “Fair enough.”

      “Should I call Dr. Demetrios or would you like to tell him?”

      Ted pulled a cell phone from his pocket and pushed one button, then waited. “I hope I’m not disturbing you, Chance.” His brows went up at whatever Dr. Demetrios’s response was. “I’ll make it quick, then. I just wanted you to know that Ms. O’Connell will be assisting us for a while so that we can get to the bottom of the issues around here.… Yes, Sara Beth.… Yes, the one with the long, dark red hair. How many other Ms. O’Connells are there? You work with her every—Oh. A joke.”

      He tipped the phone down. “When are you starting?”

      “Immediately,” Lisa answered.

      Pride made Sara Beth not want him to know she didn’t have a date for Valentine’s Day, so she started to say she would start the next day, but he spoke first.

      “Is tomorrow okay?” he asked Sara Beth. “I have plans tonight.”

      So. He did have a date. “That’d be fine.”

      “Tomorrow,” Dr. Bonner said into the phone. “Yes, I’ll do that. Bye.”

      He slid his phone back into his pocket. “Chance extends his thanks.”

      “I’ll leave you two to work out a schedule.” Lisa headed toward the door. “Sara Beth, you can plan on giving ten to fifteen hours a week to the project.”

      Then she was gone, and Sara Beth was left with Dr. Bon—Ted. Without Lisa as a buffer, they would have to talk.…

      “I’m looking forward to working with you,” she said, twining her fingers. “I hope I can help you find the answers you need.”

      “Me, too. It’s been frustrating. I’m a scientist. Discovering the truth is what I do.”

      The way he said that made him seem like a superhero, a man whose ethical core was the heart and soul of him, as if truth mattered more than anything in the world.

      “What can I do?” she asked.

      “Nothing that you’ll find exciting. In fact, it’s tedious and painstaking, but it’s the only way to get the answers. We need to know if previous doctors implanted too many embryos or manipulated the statistics to boost the institute’s success numbers and therefore increase funding. So far we’ve been working with our more recent computerized records, but in order to dispute some of the claims, you might spend time reading old files from the archives vault, cross-checking and rechecking test results from before the institute switched to the new computer system.”

      The archive vault? Whatever else he said was lost. The archive vault. The vault. She would have reason to go inside it.

      Her heart thundered, a deafening pounding in her chest. What had been denied her all her life was within her reach—because in the vault was her mother’s medical file, detailing her artificial insemination.

      A hundred times Sara Beth had almost asked Lisa to help her find that file, and a hundred times she’d decided not to risk their friendship by asking. Lisa never could have allowed it, even for her very best friend.

      And now, if Sara Beth was lucky, she could find a reference to the name of the man who’d donated the sperm that had given her life.

      Forget paper hearts. This could be her red-letter day.

       Chapter Two

      Ted stopped talking when he saw Sara Beth tune out, something that usually only happened to him when he was explaining data or experiment results, which wasn’t the case this time. He’d only been telling her what tasks in the investigation she could take on in order to speed things up.

      She was looking straight at him, her dark brown eyes glazed over. Should he wait for her to refocus or try to snap her out of it?

      He decided to give her a moment, noting that she looked different today. Younger.

      Her hair was down and loose—that was it. She usually had it pulled back in a braid as no-nonsense as her personality. Not that she was cold, but professional. Always. At least with him. He’d perceived her as shy at first, then had seen her interact with others and was bewildered by how she always seemed to avoid him.

      She’d caught his eye, of course, during the months he’d been working at the institute, but he’d seen what could happen when coworkers got involved romantically, so he’d avoided even engaging her in conversation, taking away any possibility of temptation at all.

      When he and Chance had accepted the offer to come to Cambridge to continue their research, he’d vowed to himself that he would try to be more aware of the world around him, to be more social, but that plan had been foiled almost immediately. He’d questioned the institute’s various protocols, finding some statistics that didn’t seem feasible, exaggerating the institute’s success rate. Although he and Chance hadn’t been involved in or responsible for the questionable issues, it was up to them to find the answers.

      For Ted, work was all consuming. His research to find a reliable way to treat male infertility took precedence, but clearing up the protocol issues came a close


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