Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
the distance between them, to
more effectively pin her gaze
with his. "Let's go back to
where we were when you attempted
to derail me. WIll Mohan be a
wise leader?"
Clearly, he wasn't going to abide
by accepted social
conventions. "It's too early
to tell," she all but snapped.
"He is, after all, only ten
years old. His judgment is that of
a child."
He made no attempt to contain his
smile. ''That was physically
painful for you
,
wasn
'
t
it?"
''And the possibility of it
pleases you greatly."
''A
half-related
truth." He sat back once more and pushed
his hands into his coat pockets,
adding, ''That makes a fourth
way you can answer. I'm
impressed."
He had to be the most
insufferable man in all of London.
In all of England. Perhaps even
the entire British empire. The
possibility of enduring his
questioning and derisive comments
for the foreseeable future was more
than she could
bear. "Is there some
particular reason why you have this apparent
compulsion to needle me, Mr.
Terrell?" she demanded,
determined to resolve their
contest one way or the other. "Do
I remind you of someone you
especially dislike?"
"Well, you certainly don't
appear to have any difficulty
in
asking a direct question."
''A
related
truth, Mr. Terrell," she shot back
.
"Perhaps
even an attempt to change the
subject. But not an answer."
His smile was easy and broad,
crinkling the corners of his
eyes and sending a hard jolt into
the center of her chest. "And
you don't appear to like evasion
any better than I do, Miss
Radford. Shall we call a truce?
Or
shall we just continue to
verbally fence until one of us
actually succeeds in drawing
blood?"
A truce? Dear God, no. Not under
any circumstances. She
needed to keep as much distance
as possible between them;
he had a way of undermining her
concentration
,
of stirring
feelings that she suspected might
grow to be uncontrollable.
"I don't much care for your
manner, Mr. Terrell," she admitted.
"You're disrespectful,
sarcastic, and appear to be, at
best, only marginally interested
in the task to which you've
been assigned."
He snorted softly and his smile
widened. "I've been assigned
to the task for less than fifteen
minutes. The majority
of that time has been spent
trying to pry straight answers out
of you. And not altogether
successfully, I might add. Which
means that, to this point,
anyway, you haven
'
t earned my respect."
His smile faded and his eyes
darkened to the color of
a storm-shadowed sea "As for
sarcasm ... I don't like being
treated like a boot-licking
minion, Miss Radford."
"Especially by women,"
she clarified, her pulse racing in
the face of prodding his obvious
anger.
"Mostly by spinsters with an
inflated sense of self-importance."
There it was; the unvarnished
truth of it. He'd accurately
concluded that she wasn't the
sort of woman who would
ever wrap herself around his
ankles and beg him to deliver
her from evil. And since she
didn't meet his standards of
femininity, he wasn't obligated
to meet the expectations of a
modern Saint George. It certainly
wasn't the first time she'd
been declared insufficiently
female, but that truth didn't dull
the pain. In fact, inexplicably,
the barb seemed to have gone
deeper this time than ever
before.
Summoning every shred of her
dignity, Alex found what
she hoped passed as a serene
smile and said, "It's apparent
that we're not going to be able
to work well together,
Mr.
Terrell.
I
think
it would be best
if we had the driver turn back."
"As long as you
understand," he countered, "that I'm the
closest approximation to a
gentleman that Barrett Stanbridge
can assign to you.
If
you're
looking for abject subservience,
you're going to have to find
another private investigator."
Subservience would be perfect. It
was the way men had
usually treated her. It was one
of the more positive benefits of
being a royal tutor, the only
British member of a royal Indian
household.
"Mr.
Stanbridge
himself will do quite nicely," she
mused aloud. "He has a most
appropriate demeanor."
Terrell glared at her as another
of his derisive smiles
lifted one corner of his mouth.
Alex drew a slow, deep breath
and waited.
"If Barrett were the least
interested in being the one to
stand between the little raja and
harm, he would have stepped
up to it and you and I would have
ended our acquaintance at
his office doorway. But since
it's you and me sitting in this
rented hack together ... "
She'd been backed into a corner.
Ruthlessly tamping down
a swell of fear, Alex calmly
announced, ''Then I
will
simply
have to find another
investigator."
''Where?'' he inquired,
chuckling. "You've already interviewed
all of the reputable ones in
London."
"Excuse me?" she asked,
stunned that he somehow knew.
He settled his broad shoulders
into the corner of the carriage,
stretched his long legs out,
folded his arms over his
chest, and grinned
.
The
pit of Alex's stomach tightened even
as her skin warmed and tingled.
"You said that you put the
injured guard on a boat for India
three weeks ago," he began.
"Given your determination
to protect your ward, I'm
obsessing that you haven
'
t spent the
last three weeks forgetting to
hire a replacement guard. I
think
you've
made the rounds and went to Emmaline for a
recommendation only when the
obvious, more
-
publicly
known choices didn't meet your
standards. Barrett is a very
private investigator
.
You
only know about him by personal
reference. So, following the
deductive logic to the end ...
You have two options, Miss
Radford. It's me or go it alone."
He might actually do a decent job
of protecting Mohan.
His mind worked with surprising
precision and clarity. Not
that she was about to share that
bit of appreciative insight
with
him.
And not that she was willing to surrender control
of any situation to him, either.
''What credentials and experience
do you have, Mr. Terrell?"
He laughed silently and she knew
that he was thinking,
Change of subject.
Blessedly,
though, he found some grace
and didn't torment her.
"Relatively few, actually. I was once
ten years old and have younger
brothers, so I do have a basic
understanding of what goes
through the minds of boys.
Beyond that ... " He
shrugged. "Barrett has decreed that
I
shall
spend my life productively. I've
discovered that, for the time
being, it's easier to acquiesce
than fight him on the matter."
"Do you always take the
easiest course?"
"Rarely, actually. I'm
reforming at the moment."
Alex arched a brow, wondering
just how much of an improvement
she was seeing.
"No, not happily and not by
much," he supplied, apparently
able to read her mind. "But
since a child's life is in
danger, I'll manage to trudge
along."
She understood the edgy
resignation she heard in his
voice; she'd spent
all
of
her life trudging through one duty
after another. Nevertheless ...
"I don't find that attitude
very reassuring, Mr.
Terrell."
His smile faded slowly and, as
they had the last time
she'd prodded
him,
his
eyes darkened. "I'll do what I must to
protect Mohan for as long as
necessary. How you feel about
me in the process really doesn't
matter one whit."
Why on earth that taunt bothered
her-and bothered her
deeply-she didn't know. It was,
however, quite liberating if
not completely honest to counter,
"Which sums up perfectly
my sentiments concerning your
opinions of me, Mr. Terrell."
"Good," he said, openly
assessing her. 'We have an agreement.
Our first." .
"And quite likely our only
one."
"No. One more is absolutely
essential. I'm responsible
for the child's protection and
I'll make decisions in that regard.
You'll agree to respect
them."
"Only if I consider them
wise ones, Mr. Terrell. I won't
surrender my good judgment to you
or anyone else."
There was a long moment of
silence during which the
rented carriage slowed and drew
out of traffic. As it eased to
a stop in front of Emmaline's
shop, Terrell leaned forward in
the seat, took the door handle in
hand and said, "I'm a fairly
reasonable man. I'm willing to
discuss whatever issues may
arise, but only to a certain
extent. When I m:aw the line, it:s
drawn and I won't tolerate
dissension or reSIstance from eIther
you or Mohan." . .
"How very imperial of
you," Alex observed.
He grinned, dimpling his cheek
and sending another
jolt
into the center of her being.
''I
can go toe to toe WIth the best.
You've met your match,
duchess." Then he winked, popped
open the door, and vaulted out
onto the snow-covered walk.