Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
leave her. Common sense could be
damned, right along with
his conscience.
He grinned roguishly, knowing
full good and well that
she always melted in the face of
it. "Just how appreciative
are you?"
Oh, the master was truly at his
best. Alex quickly considered
her choices and daringly
discarded all but one of them.
Two could play the game and while
she certainly didn't have
the worldly experience he did,
she did have the element of
surprise to her advantage. It was
a reckless gambit, to be
sure, but somehow that didn't
matter
to
her nearly as much
as the chance to gently rattle
his cool composure.
Studiously avoiding his gaze, she
reached out, slowly
trailing her fingertips along his
shirt collar before moving
down ever so slightly and taking
the open edge of the front
gently but firmly in hand.
Deliberately drawing him toward
her, she leaned forward and
lifted her gaze to his lips.
He swallowed. Or rather tried to.
His breath came shallow
and quick, from between slightly
parted lips. And then,
just before she touched his lips
with hers, he stopped breathing
altogether. She lingered purely
for the pleasure of it;
fully savoring the softness of
his lips and the sweet taste of
his absolute acceptance. Only
when he murmured her name
and slipped his hand up the
length of her arm did she stop
and draw away.
''Thank you, Aiden," she
whispered, releasing him, her
pulse racing and her senses
overfilled. "For being here."
Aiden knew it was the moment, the
quality of the light.
It
wasn't real. And he didn't care.
He was consumed by a
hunger, a desire so compelling
that it took his breath away
and left him quaking with need.
His conscience prickled, reminding
him of how he'd vowed just that
morning that he'd
be a gentleman and close the door
with Alex. Now ... It was
irrational. Unjustifiable and
indefensible. Nevertheless, he
had to know if there was a
chance. Even the slimmest one
would be enough. He could be
patient if he had to be.
"May I ask you a very
personal question, Alex?"
"You may ask anything you
like as long as you understand
that I reserve the right to
refuse to answer."
"Do you see yourself ever
marrying?" he asked without
further prelude.
"Honestly? No." She
shrugged a slim shoulder and gave
him
a shy smile. "Oh, from time to time, I dream
about being
swept away by a handsome prince
on a white charger.
But I know that it's never going
to happen."
"It
could."
With a soft laugh she replied,
"On the very remote chance
that it does, he'll promptly drop
me. I don't have the temperament
to be a good wife, Aiden. I'm
stubborn, opinionated,
rigid, and far too independent.
And as
if
that's not bad
enough, I've never learned how to
flutter my lashes, faint in
a timely fashion, or dither
helplessly over minor decisions.
The world is full of women who
are far more suitable for
marriage than I am. There's no
reason for a man to choose
me over them."
He disagreed but it wasn't in the
interest of his more
immediate hopes to share that
with her. "Does the idea of
being alone forever bother you?"
"I'm never truly
alone," she blithely countered. "Here in
London I have Preeya and Mohan.
Emmaline. You. And starting
tomorrow, Sawyer as well. And in
India
.
..
It's a very full
and busy household."
"That's not exactly what I
meant," he grumbled, frustrated
but unwilling to risk shocking
her by more clearly stating the
question.
"Does the idea of never
lying with a man bother me?"
He blinked, stunned. ''That was
... "
"Frank?" she supplied
impishly. "Indians are much more
open about such matters than the
English are, Aiden. And
the answer is sometimes yes, but
most of the time no. And
this is the point in our
conversation where I refuse to say
anything further."
Everything he really wanted to
know lay on the other side
of "further," beyond
the current limits of her trust. "Fair
enough," he acceded. But
only because he really didn't have
any other choice.
"Do you hope to someday
marry?"
"No," he replied,
feeling oddly dispassionate about the
assertion. Of course, he reminded
himself, it was a decision
he'd made quite some time ago and
then put away from further
consideration.
It
was done
and it was final. There really
wasn't any great emotion wrapped
up in it anymore.
''That's truly a pity. You'd make
a wonderful husband and
father. You've done wonders with
Mohan. He's become a
completely different, much
happier child."
"I had my chance. And I
destroyed it."
She considered him in silence for
a long moment and
then nodded slowly. "I can
see how you'd feel that way. My
mother's marriage was a painful
disaster in every sense. Like
you, she thought that her chance
for happiness was lost
forever." A smile lifted the
comers of her mouth ever so
slightly.
"Life
and
the raja proved her wrong."
Aiden chuckled. "Is there a
lesson in that for me?"
"I hope so."
''To keep my eyes open for a
raja? No, thank you."
The smile ebbed away. ''The
lesson, Aiden,"-she said gently,
"is that sometimes what you
least expect comes to you
from where you least expect it,
when you least expect it."
It
was a lovely sentiment, but she'd missed the point.
"I
don't want anything to come my
way," he countered. "Expected
or otherwise."
"So deliberately living your
life without hope is your
penance for not being God?"
she posed, het brow arched.
"For not being able to lift
up your hand and brush aside the
salvo that killed the woman you
loved?"
"More or less," he
agreed, disliking the way she'd put it
and sensing something ominous
closing in around him.
"How very British of you:'
she remarked somberly,
openly studying him.
"If
you
were an Indian, a Hindu,
you'd view
it
completely
differently. You acted in the belief
that you were doing a good deed,
a true and loving kindness
for another human being whose
soul was in pain. Your good
intentions, however, were
thwarted by the gods and the
power of the universe through no
fault of your own. To love
and to lose was your fate. To
rise above the failure and engage
in further good deeds, to risk
failing again, is your
challenge."
"But I'm not Indian or
Hindu. I'm British to the core;' he
pointed out, trying to tamp down
his inexplicably rising
irri
tation.
"Blaming the outcome of
something on fate is nothing
more than an excuse for the lack
of sufficient will. Fate
is mine to shape as I
desire."
"So you didn't truly, in the
heart of your heart, want to successfully
run the blockade?" she asked
gently. "You didn't
strongly enough want your Mary
Alice to live and become
your wife?"
He didn't like the way she'd
framed that issue, either, but
he supposed that it was the
fundamental truth of how he
looked at it all. "And there
you have the foundations of an
abiding guilt."
She hummed softly, looked down at
the kittens, petted
one, and then looked back up at
him to ask, "So now your
great challenge in life is to be
as alone and miserable as humanly
possible?"
Damn if she didn't have a way of
making the most rationally
arrived-at decisions seem
downright featherbrained.
And, he had to admit, there was
the tiniest kernel of truth
to the point she was making.
Being with her, kissing her,
definitely didn't fall in the
category of human misery and he
certainly wasn't the least bit
interested in abandoning either
pleasure. Accepting that reality,
he willingly conceded, "Not
all the time."
Her smile bright and her eyes
twinkling, she replied, "Well,
that's a relatively healthy sign.
Apparently you haven't given
up the struggle altogether. Which
might suggest-to an open
mind-that you're not really fated
to spend this lifetime wallowing
in regret."
He didn't like the culmination of
her logic any more than
he had the process of getting
there. The promise he'd made
was a solemn one, a noble,
honorable sacrifice for his having
failed. While he could still make
the argument that it was
well within the bounds of noble
and honorable, he wasn't
quite so sure anymore about the
fundamental intelligence of
it. Lord knew the qualities
didn't necessarily go hand in
glove. The world was full of
honorable, noble fools. And he
didn't particularly relish the
notion of being one of them.
Alex and her way of looking at
the world ... He hadn't
had a single second thought about
his course until he'd met
her. Not one
.
Not so much
as a twinge of doubt. But, having
spent less than a week with
Alexandra Radford, his world
was, if not turned fully upside
down, then at the very least
severely tilted on its axis. Had
she done it to him deliberately?