Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
odd to
think
of
him
as
being a central part of her life. Given
the resolve she'd found on the
stairs no more than two hours
earlier, that was a disturbing
realization. Alex sighed, abandoned
the effort to sort through the
jumble, and announced,
"I'm going to get my things."
Aiden thanked Emmaline one
more time and then followed
Mohan out of her shop. And
stopped dead at the sight of
Rose Walker-Hines advancing on
him. Sweet Jesus. What
other nasty, god-awful things
were in store for him today?
"John Aiden!" she
cried, reaching out for him with both
hands. "Why is it that
I'm always meeting you in front of a
millinery shop?"
"Pure coincidence,
Rose," he answered, taking her hands
in his in an attempt to get
her to halt a respectable distance
out. She didn't, of course.
Her breasts impacted his chest full
on and he had to take a
half-step back as she kissed his cheek
just to keep her momentum from
toppling him onto his back.
The instant she drew away
enough to look at him, he
cleared his throat and cast a
quick glance toward Mohan.
She took the cue beautifully,
but not in the vein he'd
hoped. Instead of
circumspectly stepping away, she tightened
her hold on his hands, smiled
at Mohan and asked, "Who is
your young friend? Aren
'
t you
going to introduce us?"
"Rose, Master Mohan
Singh," he began, resigned to making
the best of it and then
getting away as quickly as he could.
''Mohan, this is the wife of a
friend of mine from years past,
Mrs. Geoffrey
Walker-Hines."
"Madam."
"Well, aren't you a
darling little boy:' Rose crooned at his
polite response and bow. And
then, like a spigot being shut
off, she promptly dismissed
the boy's presence.
She reached up and ran the
edges of Aiden's jacket lapels
between her fingertips.
"You haven't sent word of when
you'll be coming to dinner,
John Aiden." She looked up at
him,
pouted, and fluttered her eyelashes
.
"You
promised that
you would."
And he'd once been attracted
to such a coquettish performance?
He'd been insane. Barrett and
Carden should have
had
him
locked
away for his own good. "My apologies for
the oversight," he
offered tightly. ''I've been busy the last
few days and it slipped my
mind. I'll attend to it tomorrow."
"What about today? Right
this moment?" she pressed.
She patted the center of his
chest and wrinkled her nose in
what he supposed she
considered a flirtatious smile. ''That
way it can't slip your mind
again or be postponed. How does
this Saturday evening sound to
you? And please don't tell
me that you've already made
plans."
He had no idea what Alex
intended to do Saturday evening,
but, whatever it was, he
wasn't going to miss it
to
be with Rose
Walker-Hines. ''Actually, I do
have an engagement already."
''And for Saturday evening
next?" she asked, irritation
lacing her words as she
pointedly arched a brow.
"I'm sorry, Rose, but
it's a standing engagement."
"Well, surely she lets
you off the leash one night a week,"
she snapped. Then, apparently
thinking better of her tone
and approach, she sighed and
summoned a more honeyed
manner. Leaning closer, she
said softly, "Geoffrey always
plays cards at his club on
Wednesday and Friday evenings.
Would either of those be
possible for you?"
"Not at this time,"
he replied, trying his best to look at
least a little regretful.
"Perhaps in a few weeks. And then
again, perhaps not. I'd be
reluctant to make a promise today
that I might not be able to
keep. I hope you understand."
"Oh, I do indeed,"
she quipped, her brow arching again.
''And I also understand how
such commitments can quickly
change. Especially with
you."
He thought about reminding her
that the shoe fit her dainty
little foot too, but decided
against it. Trading insults would
only prolong his agony.
Instead, he smiled and shrugged
roguishly.
"The invitation remains
open, John Aiden." She stepped
forward to press her breasts
against him again and plant another
kiss on his cheek.
"Please don't be boorish and ignore
it forever," she
admonished, furiously fluttering her lashes as
she inched off toward
Emmaline's door.
One last lie ... "It was
nice seeing you again, Rose."
"It's always a
pleasure
to see you, John Aiden," she countered,
pausing halfway across the threshold.
"And I'd dearly
love to see more of you.
Soon."
She turned away and he
instantly did the same, his heart
thundering in relief to have
escaped largely unscathed. Scrubbing
his hand over his face, Aiden
expelled a hard breath and
shook his head in wonder. Had
Rose always been so incredibly,
tactlessly predatory?
"If
she is the wife of your friend," Mohan drawled
as they
started back toward the Blue
Elephant, ''why did she invite
you to dinner the evenings her
husband is not home?"
"You noticed that, huh? I
was rather hoping you hadn't."
"Is she your
companion?"
Aiden winced. "That was
delicately put." But, he realized,
if the boy was perceptive
enough to guess the truth, the
time had probably come to
discuss such matters openly. And
considering that this very
necessary part of his education
was well outside Alex's
expertise, he should be the one to
address it. He knitted his
brows as a riddle presented itself
for consideration. He wasn't
the first man to have kissed
Alexandra Radford. And she
wasn't one of those skittish
women who bolted at the merest
suggestion of physical
attraction. God, no.
If
he lived to be a hundred, he'd never
forget the way she'd looked up
at him when he'd threatened
to ravage her on the stairs.
And yet he'd bet his soul that
Alex was a virgin. How she
could be so obviously innocent
and yet so breathtakingly
carnal at the same time was beyond
him. It did, however, make him
curious. A long road
stretched between kissing and
lovemaking. How far had
Alex traveled before she'd met
him? How far would she let
him take her?
"Was I too
delicate?" Mohan asked, intruding on his
speculations. "Should I
now attempt to be less subtle?"
Aiden chuckled and allowed the
boy credit for persistence.
"Just between us men,
Mohan ... Rose was a lover.
We parted ways a good long
while ago."
"Before she became the
wife of your friend?"
"One, he's not really my
friend." Aiden clarified. "You say
things like that just to be
polite. And two ... " He took a
breath and committed himself
to providing Mohan with what
Alex would undoubtedly
consider an unseemly education.
''No, it wasn't before she
married him. It was after.
"
"If
she was one of my father's wives, my father would
have had you killed for
that"
''Those sorts of ...
transgressions are viewed differently
in
England," he explained. "It's fairly
common practice for
husbands to have affairs.
Sometimes the wives do, too. As
long as everyone's discreet,
it's considered acceptable."
Mohan stuffed his hands into
his coat pockets and considered
the near distance with
narrowed eyes. "Why," he asked
slowly, "would a man
marry a woman and then let her lie
with another?
If
he
cares for her enough to bring her into his
household, would he not care
enough about her to keep her
for only himself?"
It was a damn good question
.
One that
he hadn't thought
to ask until he had been quite
a few years older than Mohan.
"Some people marry for
reasons other than love, Mohan.
Wealth and social standing
being the most common. They
don't so much care about the
person they marry as they care
about what can be had from the
union in a tangible sense. As
long as that isn't threatened,
they're willing to overlook
physical affairs." He
shrugged and added, "Personally, I
think it's a shallow
life."
"Yet you engage in the affairs
with married women?"
So much for delicate. But it
was an honest question and
deserved an honest answer.
"Yes, I do. Whenever possible,
actually."
"Why?"
"I knew you were going to
ask that," he admitted with a
rueful smile. The boy was
naturally curious about matters of
casual sex and just as
obviously wholly uninformed. How to
tell him what he needed to
know without telling
him
more
than he could use at the
moment? "Look, Mohan," he began,
remembering how his own father
had explained it to him years
and years ago.
It
had
served
him
well enough to be worth passing
on. ''There are several
distinct categories of women. The
first one is those
you
just
don't
think
of in any physical way at
all. Your mother and your
sisters, for example."
"And the queen."