Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
Sawyer considered
him
somberly
and then gently offered'
"I'm sure it was absolutely
necessary to do so,
Mr.
Terrell. I sincerely hope you
also view it in such a light and
have no remorse over the course
of events."
"I'm working on it,"
Aiden admitted with a shrug. That
was the one problem with knowing
Sawyer so well; the man
also knew
him.
Rather than dwell on the regrets,
he deliberately moved to
the next phase of his plan.
"But it occurred
to
me in the after-
.
math that I can't adequately
protect
three
people all at once.
If
I'm out and about with Mohan, then Alex is alone in
the
house and Preeya's alone in the
kitchen. I can't very well confine
everyone to one room of the house
to keep watch over
them. The boredom would be
unrelenting. For all of us."
"And you do so loathe being
bored."
Aiden smiled, knowing that
if
Sawyer were
being honest
he'd have to admit to the same
predilection.
"So
what would
you say to being my second for a
few weeks?" he posed, already
knowing that the deal was done
and all but sealed.
"Just during the day. I'd
take full responsibility for Mohan's
safety and you could be a
daunting male presence hovering
along the edges of Alex's and
Preeya's worlds. You could
step in and diffuse any number of
situations that might arise.
At night, we're always together
in the salon until we retire. I
can manage that on my own and you
could come back here
to sleep in your own bed. So what
do you think? Would you
be interested in helping me
protect them?"
"I am hardly a professional
at such efforts, sir."
"And I
am?" Aiden countered with a snort.
"I thought I
might press O'Brien into duty,
but I
couldn't find him.
Which is just as well. He's a bit
rough around the edges.
Then I
went looking for Barrett to see if he had someone else
he could assign to help me. His
secretary says that he thinks
Barrett has gone off to Wales on
a case. Not that he'd know.
Barrett never tells anyone what
he's going to do. The inconsiderate
bastard. I
swear to God, Sawyer, the man will be
dead in a ditch somewhere for a
week before it .occurs to
anyone that he might be
missing."
"You sound slightly harried,
sir."
"That's probably because I
am," Aiden supplied, knowing
that they were mere seconds away
from Sawyer's formal enlistment.
"If
you truly believe that I
would be of more help than
hindrance-"
"Bless you, Sawyer," he
declared, clapping a hand on the
man's shoulder in genuine
gratitude. "I'll make sure Barrett
pays you for your trouble."
"But I
can give of my time only until I
hear word of the
family's imminent return. At that
point, my duties here
'
would have to take precedence
over any others."
"Of course. I
wouldn't have it any other way. Can you
start tomorrow morning?"
"I believe that will not be
a problem, sir. At what time
should I
arrive?"
"Nine?"
"Very good, sir. Nine
o'clock it will be."
"Thank you, Sawyer. You're a
saint Now," he added,
looking back at the house and
sighing. "Let's go see what we
can do about the cats and
salvaging Sera's curtains."
"If
you have any hopes of becoming a saint yourself,"
Sawyer muttered, "you'll
take them home with you. The
cats, I
mean. Not the draperies."
Aiden grinned.
"If
no
one's sneezing or blotting red eyes
when we get in there ... A boy
should have pets, don't you
think?"
Aiden started awake and stared
into the darkness, hearing
only the rasping of his breath
and the frantic pounding of
his heart, feeling only the
searing heat in his shoulder. He
reached up and laid his
fingertips over the scar, letting the
smooth familiarity of the circle
ground him.
As
always,
the burning slowly began to
subside, retreating back into the
realm of his nightmares. And as
usual, the stark, horrifying
clarity of the images started to
fade with it. But not completely.
This time the memory of them
hauntingly remained
and his heart refused to slow.
He swallowed and deliberately
considered the changes.
Her eyes had been blue, her hair
golden in the sunlight.
She'd been a tiny slip of a
thing; so feminine, so delicate,
that he'd called her his china
doll. God, he could remember
all of that so clearly. So why
couldn't he just as clearly conjure
the actual image of her from his
memory? Why had the
crumpled body on the bloody deck
of his nightmare been
raven haired? Why had it been
Alex's hazel eyes that had
stared unseeingly up at him?
He couldn't have forgotten,
couldn't have let such a precious
thing slip away.
It
was
unforgivable. More so than having
failed her that day when the sun
had glinted so brightly off
the sea and
all
the world
had been full of hope and promise.
Aiden sat up and scrubbed his
hands over his face. With a
hard breath, he willed his
awareness on the moonlight
spilling in through the windows
of his room and the world
slumbering around him.
It
took a long
time, longer than it
ever had before, but eventually
the harshness of his breathing
eased and the desperate cadence
of his heartbeat slowed.
He needed a drink. The darker and
more potent, the better .
Not much, he promised himself as
he raked his fingers
through his hair. Just enough to
dull his mind so that he could
sleep without being haunted
.
Maybe Alex
kept something
suitable in the parlor, he
thought, quickly pulling on his
trousers. Brandy, perhaps, for
when she entertained. Most
likely it would be in the chest,
the one with the statue.
Probably
the bottom drawer. He snagged his
shirt as he climbed off
the pallet and onto his feet. He
wouldn't have much of it. But
even if he did, he'd replace it
for her tomorrow.
A flutter of white at the edge of
her vision told Alex he
was there just before she heard
him: gasp in surprise. She
glanced down past her open book
to be sure she was adequately
covered, stroked a kitten once to
calm herself, and
then looked up to smile at him.
"I see that you can't sleep,
either."
For a second he looked panicked
and his gaze darted to
the chest against the far wall.
Then he expelled a hard breath
and moistened his lower lip with
the tip of his tongue.
"Would you mind some
company?"
She should say that she was just
planning to try to retire
again. She really should get up
and let him have the salon to
himself. And she most certainly
shouldn't be noticing the
bare chest clearly visible
between the open edges of his
shirtfront. And neither should
she be so keenly aware of the
roguish tilt of the waistband
around his narrow hips. But,
dear God, it was such a fine
expanse of flesh and well defined
muscle and she was only human.
What harm was
there in looking? As long as she
didn't act on her baser impulses,
there wouldn't be any at all.
"I'd love to share your
company," she assured him, closing
her book and laying it on the
floor beside her. "Please
come in and be comfortable. I can
loan you a kitten if you'd
like one."
His conscience told him that he
was going to be sorry
if
he didn't make some excuse, turn
around and leave. Another
voice, a far more strident one,
countered that one more
regret on the heap wouldn't
matter one whit to either his
happiness or the destination of
his soul.
And, the hedonistic voice went
on, peeking out from under
'
the
hem of that caramel-colored dressing gown was a
bare, delicately curved foot and
a wisp of cinnamon gossamer
silk. All curled up on her side
in the pillows as she
was, her hair unbound and fanning
around her shoulders,
kittens nestled into the curve
beneath her breasts. the flickering
light of the fire, of the candles
... He wasn't dead. Not
by a long shot.
In
fact, at
that particular moment, he was
truly glad to be alive. His
conscience could just be damned
for the next little while. As
long as Alex didn't curl into him,
purr, and ask to be petted,
everything could be kept quite under
control, quite circumspect.
Alex tilted her head, hoping to
give the impression that
she was deeply engaged in
deciding which kitten to offer
him. The truth, however, was that
she didn't want to be
caught openly watching him move
toward her. But there was
no way to keep from doing so
altogether. He was positively
magnificent, a true feast for a
wanton appreciation of sensuous
form and grace. No wonder he'd
had his choice of London's
women. The wonder was that any of
them had ever let
him go.
Not that they'd
been
given any
choice in the matter, she