Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
every day. I trust you to pay
him
appropriately."
"What was wrong with O'Brien?"
Working a brush over the
animal's back, Aiden shrugged.
"I considered him and then
decided against it. I wanted
someone suitable for being
inside the house. O'Brien isn't
exactly the coat-and-stock
variety."
"True enough. Why do you
need the second man? You're
only guarding the boy."
Aiden paused. How to put it all
into words? He hadn't
tried before this moment. Just
knowing it was out there was
enough for him. For Barrett,
though ...
He'd put two scoops of grain
and an
armload
of hay into
the stall feeder before he
crossed to Barrett's side of the stable,
leaned his arms on the top
rail, and admitted, "Something
isn't right about all of this,
Barrett. I've spent days
parading Mohan around London in
plain sight. If someone's
after that child, I haven't
caught so much as a hint of his
shadow. The one assault was on
Alex and by the two thugs
she hired to stand watch over
the boy the morning she came
to us. At least that's what
it
appears
to
be
on the surface."
"Quincy saved me the
Times
account
of it all," Barrett
replied, running his hand over
the combed coat. He stepped
out of the stall, handing Aiden
the brush and asking, "What
makes you think that it's
something more than
an
overly
complicated attempt at
robbery?"
"In the aftermath, I
happened to glance to the front window
of the
shop,"
Aiden
supplied as he took the brush back
to the tack room. "There
was an Indian man standing there,
looking in. The instant I met
his gaze, he was gone."
"Maybe he happened to
be
passing
by," Barrett suggested,
"heard the gunshots, and
couldn't resist a morbid curiosity."
"He wasn't curious."
"Then what was he?"
"Well, not coolly
detached," Aiden mused aloud, returning
with feed for Mohan's horse.
"Resolved, maybe."
"Might you be stretching
it just a bit? You'd just killed
two men, you know. The brain
tends to be slightly overactive
when under such stresses."
"Perhaps," he offered
noncommittally.
"But you don't think
so."
Aiden leaned his back against
the stall, crossed his arms
over his chest, and stared down
at the toes of his boots. "Mohan
tells me that there are members
of the royal court who
oppose Alex's presence."
"Because she's
British?"
Aiden frowned. "I think
it's more complicated than that,
but being a Brit is probably at
the root of it. Alex hasn't
come right out and bluntly said
so, but she's strongly implied
that her mother wasn't just the
royal tutor."
"She was also one of the
raja's consorts?" Barrett said,
clearly intrigued. "Is
Alex their daughter?" .
An image flashed though his
mind, a memory of sun kissed
skin and inviting eyes in the
flickering candlelight.
If
it had been the only one he had
of her ... Aiden shook his
head, dispelling the exotic
fantasy. ''They were taken into
the royal court when Alex was a
child," he supplied. "Mohan
seems to think that when they
return to India his father's going
to either make Alex one of his
mistresses or another of
his wives. Either that or marry
her off to someone else."
"So tell me, did hearing
that bit of news put a kink in your
tail?"
He heard the amusement, the
friendly taunt in Barrett's
tone. ''That's neither here nor
there," he answered, refusing
to
be drawn into a personal
discussion. "All I'm looking at are
the puzzle pieces and trying to
understand the whole picture. I
can
see
why there would be some opposed to Alex's returning.
Say he made her a wife and they
had children, a boyar two.
There would be a half-British
heir in line for the throne."
"Way
down the line, though," Barrett countered,
beginning
to pace, his hands clasped
behind his back. "Any children
she might have with the raja
would hardly be a
significant threat to the older
heirs."
"I know. That's why it
doesn't make sense to consider
Alex an imminent threat in any
way. Hell, you can't even really
make the argument that she imposes
strict British standards
on their way of life and makes
them uncomfortable
from that standpoint. In many
ways, she's really more
Indian
than she is British."
''That could be interesting in
certain respects."
He wasn't about to share any of
those particular details
with Barrett. Keeping to his
professional concerns, he asked,
"So why would anyone be so
opposed to her return that
they'd travel to London and
try
to kill
her?"
Barrett shrugged. "You're
assuming that they are, John
Aiden. You don't have any proof
that it's actually happening.
All you have is the boy's
assertion that there are some who
don't like her presence in the
court and don't want her to
come back."
"And an Indian stranger
peering in the window the morning
someone tried to kidnap
her."
"Which could simply be a
coincidence. Have you seen
him again?"
No, he hadn't. And the fact
that he'd been keenly looking
somehow reinforced the sense
that all wasn't right in Alex's
world. "All right, I don't
have any proof. I'll give you that.
But I've got a feeling,
Barrett. It's crawling under my skin."
Barrett stopped his pacing and
sighed. "It's called lust,
John Aiden," he said, his
tone a mixture of both patience and
amusement. "The more you
resist it, the worse it gets. Bed
the woman and you'll feel ever
so much better."
Aiden considered ignoring the
comment but decided that
Barrett wasn't likely to
abandon the issue until it had been
squarely addressed.
"In
the
first place," he said coolly, meeting
his friend's gaze, "I know
the difference between the
feelings of lust and danger.
And in the second, Alex isn't the
sort of woman you toss down,
thoroughly rumple, and then
leave with a tip of your hat
and a pleasant thank-you."
"My," Barrett
drawled, his brow cocked high, "a little
touchy about that, aren't you?
It
would
seem that you have
some genuine feelings for
her."
"Whatever they might
be," Aiden replied
easily, firmly,
"they're none of your
business. The only reason I'm mentioning
any of this to you is that I'm
hoping to pick your
brain as to why she's in
apparent danger and how the hell
I'm supposed to protect
her."
Barrett smiled.
"And I don’t
h
a
ve the
slightest notion that
would be of any help to you
other
than
to suggest that you
keep her tied to your hip and
ankle
while
clutching a loaded
gun in your hand. Sleeping with
one eye
open might not be a
bad idea, either."
As though, with Alex physically
tied to him, he would
sleep at all. "Why does
anyone ever
spend good money to
hire you?" he mused aloud.
"Hell if
I
know,”
Barrett admitted
,
his grin broadening.
"But they do. Time after
time. Amazing, isn't it?"
Aiden snorted in disgust.
.
"And speaking of
investigations
,
"
Barrett went on. "What
have you been able to learn
about her silver trading? Or have
you even bothered to make an
effort in that direction?"
The inquiry had been couched in
just the tone and terms
he'd known it would be. Aiden
was ready with the answer.
"Alex doesn't trade with
street people. Every transaction she
makes is with those she
knows-mostly the trusted servants
of people we're likely to meet
at one of your mother's social
affairs. It's discreetly done,
but it
'
s
always aboveboard and
perfectly legal."
"You're absolutely
certain?"
That Barrett would even think
to question his assertion
and Alex's inherent honesty was
profoundly irritating. "Absolutely."
Prod again,
he silently threatened,
and I'll put
your ass on the floor.
Barrett considered him, his
brow slowly rising. "Do you
think," he finally
ventured, "she'd know where to get stolen
silver if she were of a mind to
acquire it?"
As insults and implications
went, it was borderline. "Why
are you asking?"
Barrett checked a smile.
"I hear the distinct notes of suspicion
in your voice, John Aiden
.
I'm
thinking
about
being
offended."
"Go right ahead and be
offended.," Aiden countered. "I
don't give a damn
if
you
are.
Why are
you asking?"
Apparently deciding that
matters would go much more