Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
ever learn?"
"Only the hard way," he admitted,
slamming down the
glass and heading for the door. "I'll
talk to you later today,"
he called back over his shoulder. "Much
later."
"Where the hell are you going?"
"To buy myself a big white horse,"
he called out, not
looking back, the liquor searing its way
downward and
blessedly warming the dread churning in the
pit of his stomach.
“That's going to be something of a bitch to
get done in
the middle of the night."
Just ahead of him, the brandy bottle
shattered against the
wall beside the front door. Aiden ignored it
and kept going.
Chapter 21
Alex walked along the bustling wharf in the
early morning
light, carrying her parasol and valise, and
trying very hard
not to
rain
on everyone else's happiness.
In
the tradition of
royalty the world over, Sarad, flanked and
backed by his
bodyguards, led the procession toward the brightly
pinioned
ship anchored just ahead. Behind Sarad, borne
in the
canopied and gaily festooned royal litter,
went Vadeen, his
bandages concealed by a new and resplendent
set of clothes.
Mohan scampered at his side, chattering away
in Hindi, his
English suit forsaken for opulent silk of
royal purple and
red. Preeya,
in
a new, gold-embroidered sari, followed in
their wake, her parasol and valise-and Mohan's
basket of
kittens--carried by the very proper but
sweetly smiling
Sawyer.
A fair distance back, Alex brought up the rear
of the
happy little entourage, kicking her English
traveling skirt
out ahead of her and fighting the urge to look
back over her
shoulder. Wishing Aiden at her side wouldn't
bring
him,
she
reminded herself for the countless time. Looking
for
him
only deepened the pain in not seeing him. No,
she had
to
keep her attention focused on the ship and the
gangplank
leading up to
it.
Resolutely looking forward would
be
the
only way she might get through the next few
hours without
dissolving into yet another sobbing puddle of
tears.
Forward, not back,
she silently repeated. Sarad had
reached the wharf end of the gangplank and was
conversing
with the man who had to
be
his ship's captain. The guards
were back a short distance, but close enough
to shield any
one member of the royal party if the need
arose. Except her,
she noted. She was far enough away that it
would take them
some time to reach her. They were watching
her, though, and
talking among themselves. No doubt discussing
the princess's
silly devotion to English dresses and her
tendency to dawdle,
she decided. And, judging by their scowls,
they weren't
feeling particularly tolerant of either
predilection.
For a second she considered quickening her
pace to
please them and then decided against it These
were her last
moments on English soil and no one was going
to hasten
their end. She was a princess and only Sarad
would chastise
her for the distance she'd allowed to develop
between the
guards
and herself. And,
besides, the longer she tarried,
the
greater the chance ...
No, she chided, there was a fine line between
faith and
foolish hope. Dragging her feet and delaying
her departure
was
akin to looking
back over her shoulder.
If
it was meant
to be, it would be. How fast or slow she
walked wouldn't
change her destined course. Aiden either came
for her or he
didn't.
She reached the knot of her family and
stopped. The ship
gently rocked in its berth and the soft
lapping of the water
against the hull seemed oddly out of place
amid the jarring,
raucous noises of the dock. Alex closed her
eyes and focused
on the lullaby, hoping it would ease the
throbbing ache in
her soul.
Vadeen called out sharply in Hindi, startling
her and shattering
her concentration. Glancing around. she
instantly
noted the tension in the guards, their
dark
expressions and
the direction of their gazes. She turned to
see what had
alarmed them.
Aiden,
her heart sang. Her delightfully wicked, tousle haired
Aiden was there, riding purposefully toward
her, his
jaw set and his shoulders squared. There was
no more handsome
man on earth, no other who would ever claim
her heart
as he did.
Details flitted past her awareness. He wasn't
riding his
own horse, but a huge white one she'd never
seen before.
And everyone around her was watching his
progress, their
expressions a strange mixture of happiness and
what seemed
almost
to
be trepidation. They were wise, she realized as he
drew the massive animal to a halt in front of
tier and swung
down from the saddle. To assume that he'd come
for any reason
other than to say a formal good-bye was a
fool's blindest
hope.
Unable to stand not knowing, she took the
initiative and
tossed the biggest gambit of her life.
"I'm glad that you
came to say good-bye, Aiden." .
Standing
in
front of her, the reins
in
his hands, his eyes
dark and his lips a firm line of resolve, he
slowly shook his
head. "Don't get on that ship,
Alex," he said quietly. "Please."
Her heart fluttered with hope, but she held it
in check,
knowing Aiden, knowing his ghosts and the
limits of what
he could offer of himself. And knowing just as
well that she
couldn't live with less than all of him. She
managed a smile
and began, gently saying, "I have
responsi-"
''If
anyone knows the
price of responsibility
and
the value
of love, it's
Kedar.
He'll understand
if
you choose love, Alex!'
Her knees went weak with the wildness of her
surging
hope. "I don't want to be alone,"
she confessed. her body
trembling, "waiting for your returns,
praying that nothing's
happened to you. I can't live like that,
Aiden."
''Then I won't go."
So calm, so certain, so impossible. "It's
what you do for a
living. What your family does. You sail. That
requires you to
go."
''Then
you'll come with
me," he countered without hesi
tation
his resolve clearly unshaken, his gaze
searching hers.
We can run a regular India-to-London route. I
sail, you buy.
And whenever you want, I'll take you to see
Preeya and Mohan.
I promise. Please say you
will,
Alex."
No
pledge
of forever. No declaration of his feelings.
But
It was. a life together. And, in that, a
chance that he might,
over time,
grow
to
love her. It was enough for her heart,
enough to give her hope.
His brow shot up and his gaze slid away from
her as he
asked, ''What did Vadeen say?"
Alex blinked, startled from her reverie and
realizing b
hadn't the foggiest awareness that Vadeen had
said
and
at all.
"I said," Vadeen
answered,
grinning, "that I had despaired
but am
now hopeful
again. You have, Aiden, in the English
way
of
circling
and circling, finally approached the
point of
asking Princess Alexandra to marry you. I beg
you
to
have
mercy on us
all
and
to
circle no
more."
His
smile
was instant, bright and broad. Her heart
soared
With certainty and unbridled
joy as he turned back to her.
She
is
a princess, Mohan interjected. ''The permission
to
marry
must come from the raja, from our father"
His, smile
faded
and then he shrugged and said,
“All
right.
If
that s .how It
has
to be, then that's how it has to be."
Her jaw went slack in astonishment as he
turned and
walked over
to
her uncle.
"I request passage
on
your ship, your highness. I'll pay
whatever
price
you ask. I intend to go to
Kedar
and formally
ask to
marry
his daughter, the Princess Alexandra.”
He hadn't asked her yet! She hadn't agreed to
be
his wife.
Not that she had the slightest intention of
refusing, but to
have it
all
negotiated without her consent .. .
“My
brother will
expect a
bride price." Sarad countered.
folding his arms across his chest. ''Unless
you have something
of great value to offer, there is no point in
making the
journey."
"What will he want? I'll get it."
It had better be a white horse because, as far
as she could
tell, it was the only thing of any value he'd
brought with
him