Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
Lord, she hoped it was at least a year before
Kedar sent
for them. Two would be even better. A
lifetime, heavenly.
Chapter 17
The peacocks had settled back into silence by
the time he
reached the lower level. Knowing that they'd
still be screaming
bloody murder if Barrett were on the back
side of the
house, Aiden slipped out the front door and
carefully locked
it behind him. He found Barrett in the
shadows on the far
side of the street, dressed in black and smoking
a cheroot. It
was the quick, hard red pulsing glow that
gave him away. As
Aiden walked up to join him, his friend
declared, "Those
peacocks are a public nuisance," and
flicked ash onto the
pavers at their feet.
"Obnoxious, aren't they?" he
agreed. "I was going to
shoot them yesterday morning but was attacked
by a rampaging
herd of kittens along the way."
Barrett snorted. "You're certainly
chipper for two-thirty
in the morning."
Two-thirty? Damn, that was a gaffe.
"Sorry," he offered
sheepishly. "I fell asleep."
"Apparently rather soundly," the
other countered, the tiniest
hint of amusement rippling under the censure.
"Since I
all but threw a rock through your
window-without effect you
didn't leave me with any choice but to set
the damn
birds to screeching."
"Well," he countered, looking for a
bright, but very neu
tral,
spot, "at least they didn't go on
forever like they sometimes
do."
The end of the cheroot glowed bright
red.
After expelling
a long stream of smoke, Barrett said, "I
didn't know that
you'd taken to sleeping with a candle lit.
Monsters in the
dark?"
"No." There were times when he
hated the way Barrett
could add things up and come to accurate
conclusions. Secrets
were damn near impossible to keep around
him.
''Then the book must not be a particularly
good one. Not
if you're nodding away while reading it.
What's the title? So
I can avoid it."
He couldn't think of a single one; his mind
wasn't so
much a blank as it was awash
in
the memory of holding Alex
and drifting off to sleep with her curled
against his side, too
sated to even
think
of blowing out the light. He deliberately
but tenderly closed the images away for
another time and
met his friend's gaze with a brow cocked in
warning.
"Welcome back, John Aiden," Barrett
said, laughing quietly.
"It's good to see the old you again.
You've been missed"
The
old
him
would have grinned and suggested
that when
he
tired
of his lover, he'd pass her along to his friend. The
old
him
had been a
pleasant but largely indifferent rogue. ''We're
not going to
talk
about it, Barrett. It's not for sharing."
Alex
isn't for sharing. You're not going
to touch her. Ever.
''Understood.'' He took a hard pull on the
cheroot, then
dropped it to the walkway and ground it out
under the toe of
his boot. "So where are we going
tonight? Or this morning
as the case may be."
Good. He'd drawn the line and Barrett had
agreed to respect
it. "Hunting," he replied, his
brain practically clicking
as it settled into the course he'd set that
afternoon. "I'm betting
the shadow warrior is hunkered down in a nest
he's built
somewhere close by. A place out of the cold
where he can
see the house and keep watch."
"It
makes sense. And
I suppose you have some vague
idea where that might be?"
"If
I were in his
shoes, I'd take up residence in a dark corner
of someone's carriage house. Someone who's at
their
country estate for the winter and isn't
likely to notice the uninvited
guest. I figure we'll start along the alley
behind the
Blue Elephant and work out from there. He
can't be too far."
Barrett nodded and, scanning the houses along
the street,
muttered, "I hope to hell you're the
only one who has peacocks."
They slipped into yet another darkened yard,
moving in the
shadows and Aiden thinking that if ever Her
Majesty's Royal
Army or Marines needed to invade a carriage
house, he and
Barrett were the men to teach the finer
points. After a good
dozen or so, they'd refined
it
to a silent, flawless art. They
would scan the ground around the entire
structure for signs
of recent human footprints, pause beside the
door and listen,
look for the telltale flicker of lamplight,
and slowly, quietly
open the latches. And when, that was done,
Barrett would
hold up three fingers, then tick them down
one by one. As
the third dropped, Aiden would open the door
and Barrett
would dart in, low and with the muzzle of his
revolver
sweeping in a wide arc from center to left
ahead of him.
Having lost the rock-paper-scissors contest,
Aiden would
follow on his heels. high and sweeping from
right to center.
And they would find nothing except cobwebs
and half frozen
muddy patches where the snow had melted and
poured down through the shingles. Honing the
precision had
been entertaining the first half-dozen times
they'd gone
through the exercise. The
thrill
of possible danger had lingered
a little while longer. But not much. It
existed for a few
seconds each time they came up on a
structure, but the absence
of footprints had a considerable dampening
effect
on it.
Still, they were doggedly, albeit not
hopefully, persistent
and consistent. Holding their guns at the
ready, walking
wordlessly together, they circled the stone
stable, their heads
bowed as they carefully sorted through the
shadows in front
of their feet.
"Got him," Barrett whispered,
abruptly halting, pointing
off to his immediate left. "He cut an
arc from here to the rear
door."
His blood pumping hard and fast, Aiden flexed
the
warmth into the chilled fingertips of his
left hand and visually
followed the line of footprints around the
perimeter.
Nodding his acceptance of Barrett's
conclusion, he turned
and looked along the sight line that could be
had from the
side windows of the building. Across the
street, a half block
down, he could see not only the entire
western and back
walls of the Blue Elephant, he could also see
the kitchen, the
western side of their carriage house and the
yard in its entirety.
The light still flickered through the iron
grills of his
bedroom windows. The peacocks were sound
asleep, huddled
together in the comer of their pen.
"It's the perfect vantage," he
whispered, turning to Barrett.
"Back door or the front?"
He answered by setting silently off for the
rear side of the
building, following the trail that had been
laid down for
them. Aiden went along, scanning the windows
on the lower
level. No light, no movement. He glanced up,
noting the
height of the roof and pitch. There was
enough that a loft
was likely. Would their quarry be on the main
level or up
above?
In
his mind's eye, he pictured the views of the Blue
Elephant from the northern and southern ends
of the struc
ture.
He'd be on the lower. Probably at or very
near the midpoint.
The latch lifted smoothly and without a
sound. Barrett's
hand went up and, in rapid succession, his
fingers went
down. Aiden pulled the door back just enough
to let Barrett
scramble through and then vaulted inside
behind him.
And froze just as Barrett had.
Straight ahead of them. in the darkness,
stood the man he'd
seen at Alex's window, at the carriage line
outside Christie's,
and climbing into the cab on Fleet Street
Only those times he
hadn't been obviously armed. Now he held a
gun
in each hand
with a muzzle steadily aimed at each of them.
So much for the element of surprise, Aiden
thought
darkly. And for Alex's early assurances that
a native assailant
wouldn't use a firearm. The only course left
now was
bluff and luck.
Never taking his eyes off the man, he eased
sideways to
make himself a smaller target and fixed the
man's chest
squarely in his sights. "I hope,"
he drawled, ''you speak English
because I have a helluva lot of questions
you'd better
be
able to answer.
Let's start with who you are and why
you're here."
"My name is Vadeen," he replied,
his words carefully
pronounced, his accent strong. "I am the
bodyguard of
Prince Sarad, the younger brother of the
raja, Kedar. I was
sent to protect Kedar's children from harm. I
have seen you
with the prince and princess and know we
share the same
task."
The puzzle pieces--:-every single one of
them-tumbled
into place perfectly, swiftly, and with stunning
ease and clarity.
If
the man's intent
was to knock the pins from under him,
he'd succeeded. In spades. Jesus. Sweet
Jesus. His heart was
pounding and frantically urging him to turn
around and walk
away,
to
pretend that the stable had been just as empty as all
the others. But his feet wouldn't move and
the ragged, sad
voice of reason said he couldn't walk,
couldn't run, far