Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
work at that when I remember
to, I'll allow you that one
as being fairly accurate."
"I also thought that you
were a brazen rogue, an unabashed
hedonist."
"I certainly can be,"
he admitted, his eyes twinkling.
"If
you're attracted to that sort
of man."
Had temptation ever been
wrapped in a package more
handsome and captivating than
Aiden Terrell?
"You are, aren't
you?"
Her heart shot into her throat
as her blood sang with hope
and desire. Dear God, when he
smiled like that her good
judgment turned to pudding.
"No," she managed to lie. She
moistened her lower lip and
then raggedly, honestly, added,
''Not as a general rule."
"If
you also assumed that I'm exceptional," he whispered
with a wink, "you'd be
right."
She didn't have a doubt. Not
even the tiniest one. Not
about him. "I'm sure you
are," she agreed breathlessly.
"However, such magnificent
abilities would be utterly
wasted on someone like
me."
She saw astonishment flicker in
his eyes, saw him swallow
and take a slow, even breath.
The roguish edge slipped
away from his smile.
"If
Barrett
wasn't likely to come back
through that door at any moment
looking for me," he said
softly, "I'd prove you
wrong right here on the spot."
Alex summoned every shred of
her tattered common
sense to keep her arms at her
sides. "No one is ever going to
accuse you of lacking
self-confidence."
His good humor unaffected, he
shrugged and eased away,
saying, "We'll address
your lack of it when I get back."
A vivid image, intoxicatingly
carnal, instantly filled her
mind. "No we won't,"
she countered hastily. "I'll bid you
good night now, Aiden."
He stopped and slowly turned.
The look in his eyes stole
her breath and filled her with
heart-thundering certainty.
"What about Barrett?"
she reminded him as he came back
to her.
"He can wait," he
replied, slipping one arm around her
waist, the other around her
shoulders. He drew her closer
and, his gaze searching hers,
lowered his head.
It
wasn't a light, tentative kiss as the others had
been.
No, this one was slowly,
heatedly deliberate and undeniably
possessive. Her senses
instantly, blissfully reeling, Alex
wrapped her arms around his
waist and melted against him,
abandoning reserve and surrendering
conscious thought.
When he traced her lips with
his tongue, she sighed with
pleasure and granted him
admission. When his arms tightened
around her and he tasted more
deeply, she clung
to
him, reveling in waves of heady
sensation. And when she
boldly sought a taste of him in
return, his moan swept
through her like liquid fire,
igniting a hunger that pulsed and
flared through every fiber of
her being.
From the farthest recesses of
his awareness came the tiny
voice of reason warning that he
was teetering on the edge,
telling him that he had to do
the right thing, had to let her
consciously choose to tumble
into oblivion with him. It hurt
to heed the wisdom, but he
forced himself to ease his claim
to her mouth and shift her in
his arms. Holding her close, her
head tucked under his chin, he
sucked in greedy breaths and
marveled at the furious beat of
his heart.
God, she was the most amazing
woman. His abilities
wasted on her? He closed his
eyes and breathed in the scent
of her hair. Never. Such
genuine acceptance, such a complete
lack of artifice. It was so
utterly, extraordinarily foreign
to his experience. He craved
more of her. All of her. He
could only hope that she didn't
reduce him to a pile of smoldering
ash. And if she did ... Aiden
smiled, knowing that
she was worth that risk and
ever so much more.
But his conscience spoke the
truth. The choice to give was
hers to make. Sweeping her
unknowingly past the point of no
return wasn't right. She
deserved respect and he'd honor her
even
if
it killed
him
to let
her go. He opened his eyes and deliberately
focused on the world around
them, on the reality of
where they were and the tasks
needing to be done.
"I have to leave.
Now," he whispered, his voice rough, his
hands gentle as he set her from
him and steadied her on her
feet. He trailed his fingertips
along the curve of her shoulders,
up the slim column of her neck.
Her pulse thrummed
beneath them and almost undid
his resolve. Clinging to the
tattered remnants of it, he
stepped away and let his hands fall
to his sides.
Her eyes were inviting shadows
as she looked up at him
and his heart wrenched at the
sacrifice. "Yes, now," he said,
more for himself than her.
"Or I won't be able to go at all.
Good night, Alex."
Alex choked back a cry of
protest. Then there was only
the thundering of her heart and
the desperate, aching want in
the center of her soul as she
watched him leave. And in those
moments a realization budded
and bloomed full. For as long
as she could remember, she'd
lived one day at a time, fulfilling
the expectations of others as
best she could and always
assuring herself that someday
there would come a reward
for enduring. That reward, a
tangible thing she could hold,
would magically make all the
loneliness, all the emptiness
of the days that had gone
before,
.worth
bearing.
Alex stared into the shadows of
the hall. She'd never
known, never guessed that it
was possible
to
feel as magnificently
alive as she did now. How
incredibly naive she had
been. The reward wasn't a thing
at all; it was a feeling from
deep within her. It was joy and
wonder and a wanting to dare
to reach for more.
It
was in
discovering a vibrant path, in
making the journey. Where it
ended ... Alex took a steadying
breath. Where it ended didn't
matter nearly as much as
being able to travel along
it-even for just a short while with
John Aiden Terrell.
Chapter 12
The peacocks, Aiden resolved as
he strode down the upstairs
hall, were going to die. The
means by which early-morning
peace and tranquility was
restored was all that remained to be
decided. Wringing their necks
promised more satisfaction
than putting a bullet in them,
but it would take longer. And
considering the hue and cry
rising from the rear yard for the
second time that morning, the
speed of their dispatch was all
that truly mattered.
By
the time he
got there, Preeya would be
done feeding them and back in the
kitchen. Which was good;
it would go much faster if he
didn't have to shoot around her.
He was on the third step down
when a tiny streak of butterscotch
shot past his right foot.
Instinctively, he hopped to
the left. And would have landed
on a streak of calico if he
hadn't immediately and
desperately thrown his entire body
.
back to the right. He froze,
barely on his feet, just as three
more blurs of color dashed past
and downward.
"They're out!" Mohan
shrieked from behind him, testing
Aiden's grip on the banister as
he bounded past in pursuit of
the kittens.
Gazing after the reckless parade,
he saw Alex in the front
shop, a kitten in each hand, her
head tilted back as she
laughed at the chaos racing
around the hems of her skirt and
cloak. The center of his chest
clenched, trapping his breath
and warming his blood. And then,
out of the blue, a wave of
melancholy washed through
him.
How he'd
missed the sound
of laughter. How he'd missed the
brightness of hope and the
thrill of little, unexpected
joys. He wanted to go home. He
wanted to pack up Alex and Mohan
and the kittens and Preeya
and her damn peacocks and take
them home. Today. On the
evening's tide.
And it wasn't going to happen, he
sadly admitted. It
couldn't happen. Not today. Not
tomorrow. Not ever. And,
he sternly added, only a fool
would spend another moment
thinking about it. Resolved, he
focused his sight on the present
reality, noting that Alex had
placed the kittens in a shawl.
She was smiling, trying to
transfer the squirming bundle to
Mohan while keeping the
determined kittens from popping
out the folds.
His chest tightened again and he
quickly looked away,
forestalling another painful bout
by doing a quick appraisal
of the shop. He blinked and
frowned. Where the hell had
everything gone? And when had it
disappeared? There were
a few things left, certainly, but
the vast majority of her merchandise
had vanished. He glanced toward
the rear of the
house and into the blue fabric
room. The shelves were practically
stripped.
"Good morning, Aiden."
He looked back at her as Mohan
raced up the stairs with
his lumpy sack of cats.
''Were you robbed?" he
asked, resuming his trek downward.
"When did it happen? And why
didn't you say something
to me?"
"You've spent the last three
days teaching Mohan to ride,"
she supplied, her smile radiant.
''And when not answering
the blacksmith's endless
questions about the window grates,
I've spent them dealing with a
flood of customers.
It
happens