Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
well, don't you?"
"If
your idea-" He blinked and looked back. The man
at
the rear of the carriage was
gone.
"Aiden? What is it?"
"I'm sorry." He
summoned a chagrined smile and a lie as
he searched for another glimpse
of the man. "I
was looking
for Barrett's carriage and driver
and thought for a moment
that I
saw them. Would you like to get something to eat now
or after we do a bit of silver
hunting?"
"I'm not really all that
hungry."
He had to be there somewhere. He
couldn't disappear
into thin
air.
"Then
we'll be dutiful for a while."
''There he is," Alex
exclaimed, sending his heart into his
throat. “The carriages past St.
Bart's Tavern."
The driver. Aiden swallowed down
his heart and made one
last sweep of the line. Nothing.
Not so much as a shadow.
''Where shall I tell him to take
us?"
"Whitechapel Road."
A good choice, he decided as he
and Alex made their way
down the walk. Whitechapel was
poor, but it was decidedly
Anglo. An Indian man would be far
more likely to stand out
in a crowd there. He'd slipped
twice now. There was bound
to be a third. And when that
happened, the bastard was going
to find himself staring down a
gun barrel and answering
some hard questions.
"Since I don't know anything
about silver," he began,
handing Alex into their vehicle,
his plan made, "I think you
should take charge of the
search."
"Sensible," she replied
as she settled onto her seat.
"I'll pretend to be your
beleaguered, utterly bored husband
and spend my time gazing
longingly out the shop windows."
Laughing, she took up his game.
''And at what will you be
gazing, my poor, dear
husband?"
Hopefully a startled Indian face.
But until then ... Damn,
if
she didn't have the most lusciously inviting smile.
Lips
made for kissing and an openness
that always made his blood
sing. God, what he wouldn't give
to say to hell with the Westerham
silver, have the driver take them
to Haven House and
spend the rest of the day making
love to her. Which, now that
he thought about it, might, with
the right touch, be within the
realm of possible.
''The hope," he said,
grinning roguishly, "of being wildly,
passionately rewarded for my incredible
patience."
Her smile was instant and
brilliant, her laugh full and
throaty. Delight shimmered in her
eyes as she wagged a finger
at him and declared, ''That,
Aiden, is exactly the same
wicked look as your
father's."
"It
worked for him on my mother. How do you feel about
it?"
"You are
such
a
temptation."
"And you're not? I'll
surrender if you will."
"We have silver to find. We
promised Barrett."
But if he pressed, she'd abandon
it. He
knew
it. "All right,
my dutiful darling," he
teased. "We'll look for a couple of
hours so that your conscience
isn't bothered. After that, the
rest of the day is ours to spend
as we want."
"What do you have in
mind?"
"We'll think of
something," he answered, knowing the
value in letting her imagination
run on its own. With a grin
and a wink, he added, "We're
both resourceful people."
She laughed and in it he swore he
heard the angels sing.
He'd done just fine with his
pretending for the first forty-five
minutes or so. He'd followed her
into one shop after another
and in each one done the same:
he'd milled around a bit and
then stationed himself by the
front window, crossed his arms
over his chest, and rocked back
and forth between his heels
and his toes while gazing out on
the street and the people.
And for a while he had seemed
genuinely interested in life
on Whitechapel Road.
It was at the forty-five-minute
mark-and after the sixteenth
shop by her count-that he'd
sighed, struggled to
smile, and suggested that they
were wasting their effort, not
to mention their very precious
time.
At the hour, his hands were
stuffed in his trouser pockets
and he'd abandoned the effort to
smile altogether. At an hour
and fifteen, he not only gave up
the milling around part of his
performance, he quit the rocking,
too. He simply walked in
behind her, stalked to the
window, and stood there glowering
out, apparently giving serious
consideration to turning
Whitechapel Road into smoldering
rubble.
Alex, for her part, was giving
serious consideration
to
killing him. Not that he'd noticed
her increasing frustration,
she privately groused, moving
along the walkway with him in
reluctant tow. She passed a tiny
doorway and slowed just
enough
to
give a
passing glance to the clutter on the other side
of the rippled, thickly hazed
front window. Two steps beyond,
an object registered in her
brain. Whirling around, she headed
for the door.
"No, Alex. Please,"
Aiden practically moaned, spreading
his arms to block her access to
the door. "It's nothing more
than a junk shop."
''There's a silver teaspoon in
the window," she countered.
"Where there's one piece,
there could be more."
"A
pathetic
junk
shop."
"With a silver spoon in the
window."
He sighed and dropped his arms.
"This is the very last
one, Alex. I mean it," he
announced as she stepped around
him and pulled open the door for
herself. ''This is a complete
waste of our day."
Alex silently disagreed. She'd
learned something of incredible
importance in the last hour or
so. Aiden was a wonderful
man. He was handsome and brave
and kind and
strong. He had a wonderful sense
of humor and a delightfully
devilish charm. But he also had
the lowest tolerance for
tedium of any human being she'd
ever met and she was
never, ever, ever going
to
take him
shopping with her
again
no matter how long she lived.
"Can I help ya?"
Alex looked around. trying to
find the woman who belonged
to the voice. The store wasn't
much larger than a single
room in her own shop but it was
ten times as full. There
were piles and mounds and heaps
everywhere. And
all
of it
without any discernible
arrangement or order or readily
apparent value. Aiden had been
kind in calling it a junk shop.
"Is anyone there?"
Alex pulled her skirts through a
narrow passage in the warren,
moving toward the rear of the
shop and the voice. There,
behind a counter made by placing
a warped plank across two
rickety produce crates, sat an
old woman
dressed
in a worn
dress and tattered knit shawl.
Hunchbacked, her eyes hazed
white, she held a teacup in one
gnarled hand as she tilted her
head to hear.
"Good morning, madam,"
Alex began, and the woman's
attention came instantly to her.
"My sister is marrying and I
want to present her with a set of
silverware. I saw the spoon
in the window and thought perhaps
you might have more.
Would you by any chance have a
set for sale?"
"Got three sets,
honey," she said, pointing off in the general
direction of Alex's left.
"Complete ones they is, too.
Fine pieces."
It took a few moments to find
them, but they were there;
three sets of silverware, each
badly tarnished, haphazardly
bundled, and tied with a frayed
piece of twine. One set was
on the floor, having obviously
tumbled away from the two
remaining on the precarious tower
above. Alex retrieved all
three
and laid them on the counter. A large Shell pattern
engraved
with an
A
and a C, a
small Shell pattern engraved
with a
K
and ...
Alex stared in stunned disbelief. And the
Westerhams' Fiddle.
"How much are you asking for
this set?" she asked casually,
holding the set out so that the
woman could touch it and
identify it.
She didn't move. "It's what
you're lookin' for?"
"It might do," Alex
began cautiously, afraid that it was
going to cost the moon and stars
to ransom. "Her married
name will be Timmons.
If
the price
is right, it would be
worth having a silversmith remove
the current monogram.
The
W
would hardly be
appropriate."
From the window, from the other
side of the maze, she
heard Aiden softly swear.
The shopkeeper instantly cocked
her head. "Is someone
else here?"
"My husband," Alex
supplied as Aiden slipped sideways
into the narrow corridor and
shuffled toward them. She leaned
closer to the woman and added in
a whisper, "He's the worst
shopper in the world."
The old woman chuckled.
"Never been a man any good at
it. How does five pounds sound to
ya?"