Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
dragged a breath through his clenched teeth
and tried to
straighten his back.
"No, don't move," Aiden commanded,
pressing his shoulder
back against the wall. ''Where's the closest
physician,
Alex?"
"Six blocks."
He stripped off his jacket and thrust it at
her, saying as he
rose
to
his feet, "Stanch the worst of the bleeding while I
hitch the carriage."
He was gone in the next second. Over the
sound of his getting
the horses from their stalls, Alex righted
his jacket and
surveyed Vadeen's leg. Going clear
to
the bone, it was, by far,
the worst of his injuries.
If
he lived, he might never walk right
again.
"Hanu-"
''Aiden finished the task you began;' she
assured him in
Hindi. “All
is well. We're taking you to a doctor. This is going
to hurt, Vadeen, and I'm sorry to add to
your pain, but I must
or you'll bleed
to
death."
He nodded and sucked one hard breath as she
tied the
sleeve of Aiden's coat hard over the cut
that had opened his
upper thigh from one side to the other. And
then, thankfully,
he went limp and his awareness of the pain
passed into the
oblivion of unconsciousness.
"Mr. Terrell!"
Sawyer. In the doorway and sounding as
though he'd
sprinted from the house.
"We're all right," Aiden replied
over the sound of clinking
tack while Alex tore off the shredded lower
portion of
Vadeen's pant leg and used it to bind the
gaping wound on
his right arm. "And that bastard
deserved to die. Kindly drag
his body out of the way for me."
"What else can I do, sir?"
"Keep Preeya and Mohan out of
here," Aiden answered
crisply. "In fact, take Preeya into the
house and don't let either
one of them out of your sight until we get
back. Here," he
added. "Take this and don't think twice
about using it if you
have to."
Alex was removing what was left of Vadeen's
sleeve and
puzzling that part of the exchange when
Aiden snorted. "For
God's sake, man, hold it firmly by the butt
and at least look
like you know what you're doing with
it."
Aiden had given
him
the gun, she realized as she packed
the fabric into the grisly gash on Vadeen's
side and Sawyer
asked, "And where are you going,
sir?"
"Tell Preeya we'll be late for
dinner," was the only answer
the man got.
"Very good, sir."
The horses snorted and pawed and then there
was the
heavy slap of leather against wood. In the
next second Aiden
was striding into the stall.
"Good," he muttered, reaching
down and sliding his arms under Vadeen's.
"He's not going
to feel the rough handling."
Alex watched in amazement as Aiden hefted
the man's
dead weight up the stall wall and then bent
down to plant his
shoulder in his midsection. Vadeen groaned
as he was bent
double and pulled over Aiden's shoulder. She
trotted after
him and then dashed ahead to open the
carriage door before
he reached it.
Depositing Vadeen on the front-facing seat,
he stepped
back and vaulted out to stand in front of
her. "What the hell
were you thinking, Alex?" he demanded,
his eyes flashing
with anger. "I told you to keep that
horse between you and
the barn. Were you trying to get yourself
killed?"
"Better me than you," she replied
honestly.
He rocked back on his heels and then
instantly leaned
forward, his brows knitted. "I could
turn you over my goddamn
knee," he seethed. "Don't you
ever
do anything like
that again. Do you hear me?"
"Yes, I hear you," she countered,
her own anger flaring
and her hands going to her hips as she met
his gaze unflinchingly.
"But it doesn't mean that I'm going to
blithely
obey."
He swallowed and the muscles in his jaw
ticked furiously.
"When we're alone tonight," he
said evenly, emphatically,
''you and I are going to have our first
significant row."
"Good," she retorted, pushing past
him and hopping up
onto the step. "I'm looking forward to
it."
He caught her around the waist and hauled
her hard against
him. "Fair warning," he whispered.
"I'm going to win."
His kiss was fierce and harshly, utterly
consuming. And
beneath the heat of his anger, she felt not
only the eddying
currents of his fear and his relief, but
also the depth of his
caring.
It
was a precious gift she'd thought she'd never receive
and with a grateful sob she accepted it,
melting into
him and surrendering.
He set her from
him
as abruptly and roughly as he'd
seized her. "We're Dot done discussing
it, Alex," he warned.
Ah, but the sparks in his eyes weren't just
those of anger
anymore. Desire and amusement flickered
there, as well.
She turned and climbed into the coach,
saying, "I'm willing
only
if
you promise to kiss me
like
that again."
Grinning and shaking his head, he closed the
door behind
her.
God,
if
he hadn't
known
before
that
Alex had a
backbone of
steel, the last few hours would have Convinced
him
of the
fact. Both he and the doctor had tried to
send her
out
of the
surgery, but she'd adamantly refused. And
then scrubbed her
hands and lent
her
strength and resolve to the suturing and
bandaging. Aiden had seen some men faint
dead away at less,
seen others heave the contents of
their
stomachs on their feet.
But not Alex. Her dress
was
ruined, stained with Vadeen's
blood, and she didn't care. Her hands had
cramped from the
exhaustion of holding the tom flesh in place
while
the
doctor
sewed the wounds closed and
all
she'd done was silently flex
her fingers before moving on to the next.
Vadeen had cried
out in pain and she'd tenderly spooned the
opium tincture
into
him
and whispered encouragement until the drug dulled
the edges of his pain. And now ... Now she
was bearing a
fair portion of Vadeen's weight as they
gingerly guided
him
toward
the
rear door of the Blue Elephant.
"It
is not
appropriate," Vadeen said with a lopsided, drug induced
smile, "for a princess to assist a man
in walking."
''And it is appropriate," she
countered, "for her to stand
idly by and let him fall flat on his
face?"
Aiden chuckled. "Surrender the point
now, Vadeen, and
get it done. You're in no condition to use
the only tactics that
will win the contest. And if you were and
did, I'd kill you.
I'd rather not have to do that."
His head lolled on his shoulders as he tried
to turn it to
look at him. "You have tolerated much,
Aiden."
"Don't tell her,
but
I really haven't been all that
miserable."
He stopped as a sudden realization struck.
''The peacocks."
Alex looked back over her shoulder.
"They're gone."
Thank you,
Aiden offered up to the stars. ''The neighbors
must have finally had enough and taken
matters into their
own hands," he ventured. "Frankly,
I'm surprised they didn't
dispatch them long before now. Lord knows,
I've been
tempted."
"They do smell good," Vadeen
contributed, grinning.
"Have you ever eaten roasted peacock,
Aiden?"
"Can't say that I have," he
admitted, starting them forward
again and wondering why he hadn't noticed
the silence
and the delicious scent the moment he'd
driven into the yard.
It was almost as though, with the death of
Hanuman and the
doctor's assurance that Vadeen would live,
the larger part of
his brain had decided to go on holiday.
"They taste much like chicken. Only
wild."
Of course they did. Everything supposedly
tasted like
chicken, only different. Quail. Pheasant.
Partridge. Dove.
Pigeons. And none of them came even remotely
close to
tasting like chicken. And he knew that
because he'd been
lured into trying each and every one of them
on the same
empty promise. Aiden shook his head and
expelled a long
breath. Lord, the part of his brain that had
remained behind
was frightening in its devotion to the
consideration of the
ir
relevant
minutiae of his experience.
The back door of the store opened and the
brightness of
the lamplight on the other side blinded him.
He blinked into
it, his pulse quickening with apprehension
as he realized that
on the other side of it were a good half
-dozen large men. He
reached back for his gun, remembering that
he'd given it to
Sawyer just as Vadeen spoke in Hindi and
lurched forward,
threatening to pull all three of them off
their feet.
"Your highness," Alex translated,
gasping and struggling
to keep her balance.
His brain returned with an almost audible
snap. The man