Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
New, it had cost close to twenty
pounds. Melted down into
bullion
it
would have
been worth between twelve and fifteen.
Anyone with any knowledge of
silver would have asked ten
for it. "For the entire
set?" Alex asked, dumbfounded.
"Is it too much? My granddaughter
brought
'
em to
me.
Said they was gifts that she
didn't know what to do with.
From admirers. I don't get silver
often 'nough to know what
folks is payin' for it these
days."
Obviously.
And that ignorance was costing the woman a
profit she just as obviously
needed. Desperately. To offer her a
fair market price would require
doubling her request. Which
would be a decidedly strange
thing to do. People didn't shop
in secondhand stores unless they
were in search of bargains.
And the woman might take the
increase as an offer of pity and
charity. Alex didn't want to
insult her. But she didn
'
t want to
rob her, either.
Aiden came out of the tunnel,
squared up, and stepped toward
the makeshift counter, saying,
"Five pounds is quite
acceptable, madam."
Even as Alex met his gaze in
frustration and consternation,
the old woman nodded and said,
"Sold."
He cocked a brow and mouthed,
"What?"
"Look at this
place,"
she answered in kind, gesturing
broadly.
"Look at her!"
Frowning, his brows knitted, he
shook his head and
reached into the inside breast
pocket of his coat, saying, ''May
I ask your name, madam?"
Alex sagged in defeat. The woman
stared unseeingly at
Aiden and warily asked, "Why
would ya want to know?"
"I never do business with
people I don
'
t
know by name.
An
odd quirk these days, I know, but business has become
so
coldly impersonal in recent
years. I prefer the older way of
conducting such affairs."
"Dora Elmore," she
supplied, nodding. "And you be?"
"Reginald Majors. And this
is my wife, Millicent."
Millicent? Reginald?
Why was he making up names for
them?
Aiden took Dora's free hand and
laid a five-pound note in
her palm, saying, "It's a
pleasure to do business with you,
Mrs. Elmore."
"Yes," Alex added,
watching the woman rub the bill between
her fingers. "Thank you for
having what I needed. I'm
so glad to have found it."
"Would you be needin' the
other two sets?" Dora asked.
"Don't get many people in
here lookin' for silver an' with
the money to ac'ly buy it."
Aiden glanced down at the other
bundles on the counter.
"Five pounds for each of the
others, as well?"
"Would be 'nother ten pounds
together."
"Millicent?"
Like the Westerham silver, they
were badly underpriced.
But better that Dora Elmore make
a little something today,
Alex told herself, than having
the silver tossed into the refuse
bin when she died. "Your
sisters will someday marry,"
she said, continuing the
unnecessary charade. "We could
save the sets for them."
Aiden winked, pulled two more
five-pound notes out of
his wallet and turned back to the
woman. "Very well,
Mrs.
Elmore," he said brightly,
pressing the additional bills into
her hand. "We'll take all
three. And thank you for sparing
me the ordeal of looking for
wedding gifts in the future. You
can't know how very grateful I
am."
"I'm even more so,"
Alex muttered under her breath.
Dora chuckled. "Thank ya,
Mr.
Majors.
Mrs. Majors. God
bless you both."
They took their leave, scooting
down the pathway, Aiden
carrying the silver bundles, Alex
holding her skirts close and
watching the old woman grin
toothlessly at the cash in her
hand.
Fifteen measly pounds,
Alex
thought sadly as she followed
Aiden out onto the walkway. It
should have been thirty.
"Did you see the look on her
face?" Aiden said softly as
they made their way toward
Barrett's waiting carriage.
"She's never in her life
held fifteen pounds in her hand at
one moment."
"She's never held so much as
two, Aiden. And the saddest
thing is that all this silver is
easily worth twice what she
asked for it. I was trying to
think of a way to offer her a fair
amount when you stepped in and
accepted."
He stopped abruptly. "Is
that what all that was about?" he
asked in genuine surprise and
obvious regret. "Aw, Jesus.
I'm sorry, Alex. I thought you
were thinking about talking
her down, not up, and I didn't
care what we paid for it as
long as we got it back and were
done."
'That's all right," she
acceded on a sigh. Glancing back at
the shop, she added, "I just
feel sorry for her. Old and blind
and crippled and poor. With a
granddaughter who's apparently
not only a tart, but also a thief
and a not very bright one
at that."
"Why do you say that?"
"In the first place, she
stole monogrammed silver, which
is the easiest to trace and so
the most difficult to fence," she
explained as they resumed their
course. "And when she
couldn't find a fence willing to
buy it, she gave it to her
grandmother to sell in a junk
shop instead of melting it down
and selling it as bullion."
"You
know," he mused, chuckling, as they reached the
coach, "the world should be
glad that you're an honest
woman, Alexandra Radford. You'd
make a very good thief."
Opening the door, he looked up at
the driver. "Seaman's
Mercantile Bank, please."
Alex managed to contain her
curiosity until they were under
way.
"If
I
might ask ... Why are we going to a bank?"
"Lord Westerham gave Barrett
two hundred pounds just
for buying back the silver."
"Dear Lord, Aiden. I didn't
know that anyone could be that
desperate. Two hundred? That's a
positively
insane
amount of
money."
He nodded. "And handing one
hundred and ninety-five
back to him rubs against my
grain. It's money he'll never
miss."
"You're not going to keep
it," she said, appalled at the
only course she could see and
unable to believe that Aiden
would do something so
underhanded.
"In
a manner of speaking, yes, I am," he replied
happily.
"I'm going to place it in
trust with instructions that two
pounds be sent in the name of Mr.
and Mrs. Reginald Majors
to Mrs. Dora Elmore in
Whitechapel on the first day of every
month for the rest of her life.
If
she passes
before the funds
are exhausted, the balance can go
to an orphanage."
''That's why you made up the
names!"
"I hope they really don't
exist. I
was thinking on my feet
and picked the first names that
popped into my head."
She forgave him for the horrible
behavior while shopping,
for giving her a name like
Millicent, for everything.
"What if Dora outlives the
funds?"
"Then I'll replenish the
coffer myself for as long as
necessary," he said with a
shrug. "Twenty-four pounds a year
isn't much."
"You're a very good man,
John Aiden Terrell."
His eyes sparkled and his smile
tripped her heart. "I was
hoping you'd think so. It's all
part
of my grand
strategy, you
know. I'm figuring that if you
think I might be in the queue
for sainthood, you'll let down
your guard."
"You are so very good. Has
any woman ever been able to
resist you?"
"
Lady Ogden. But I really don't think she should count
against me. Rumor has it that she
prefers women."
Alex considered him, her heart
fluttering and light. In the
part of her brain that ordered
and aligned the world, she
knew that he wasn't good for her.
He was temptation without
commitment, joy without
restraint. When the paths of their
lives inevitably diverged, her
soul was going to ache with
missing him. But it was too late
to avoid that consequence;
she'd come too far already. There
was nothing to be gained
in turning back. Nothing at all.
She wasn't sure what good
was to
be
ultimately
gained in going forward, but she knew
Aiden well enough to suspect that
the journey to discovery
would be magnificent.
"What are you thinking,
Alex?"
Ah, so silken, so seductively
smooth. He knew precisely
what she was thinking. ''That
neither one of us is ever going
to be a saint."
He rakishly cocked a brow.
"
Disappointed?"
"Not in the least."
He shook his head slowly and
expelled a long, slow