Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
holding the lantern was an Indian and
clearly a servant of the
regally dressed, somewhat older version of
Hanuman advancing
toward them. Mohan walked at his uncle's
side, followed
by three other men who Aiden guessed were
Vadeen's
comrades-in-arms.
"It
is not
necessary, Vadeen. Please do not add to your
injuries in
trying,"
the
man
replied. his
English
studied, his
accent
fairly light He
motioned to the men behind
him
and
they quickly moved forward to
take
Vadeen from
him
and
Alex. as their master went on. saying,
"I
have seen the proof
of your success. Take your rest, Vadeen.
It
has been earned."
Relieved of the burden, Aiden squared up to
the man and
resolutely faced the inevitable reckoning.
''I
gather that you're
Prince
Sarad."
"I have been told that you would
be
John Aiden Terrell."
"I
am."
Sarad slowly, deliberately took his measure
and then
brought his gaze back to meet Aiden's.
"I have also been
told that you have been the protector of my
brother's children
in recent weeks."
He nodded, knowing what was coming next, his
heart
growing more leaden with every beat.
"On behalf of my brother
Kedar,"
Sarad went on,
apparently
oblivious to the
pain
his words were inflicting, "I
thank
you for all that you have done. I have
entrusted the payment
for your services to
your
man, Sawyer. He bas removed your
belongings and awaits
your return
to your own home.
Prince
Mohan,"
he
added. motioning offhandedly to the boy, "has
indicated that he would like to
gift
you with the horses and
the carriage you assisted
him
in acquiring."
"Thank you, Mohan. That's very generous
of you."
"It
is my pleasure,
Mr. Terrell." He smiled sheepishly and
shrugged. "And
I
cannot take them with me on the
ship."
"Well," Aiden replied, forcing
himself to chuckle, "when
you're done with them, let me know and I'll
come collect
them."
"You should take them now, Mr. Terrell.
We sail in
the
morning."
"In the morning?" Alex gasped. her
hands pressed hard
against her midriff, the anguish on her face
the mirror, Aiden
knew, of that tearing him apart on the
inside. "Why so
soon?"
"The danger is past and your father
wishes to have his
children home," her uncle replied.
"Were it possible to have
the ship ready to sail before then, we would
not spend even a
single night."
"But," she stammered, her voice
edged with barely contained
tears. "My shop. Our home. All the
things in it ... "
"Preeya is directing my men in the
packing. She is upstairs
if you wish to speak with her concerning the
task."
Aiden watched Alex swallow, saw her look
past her uncle
and into the open back door of the Blue
Elephant. She was
close to tears and in a few more minutes she
was going to
lose the struggle to hold them at bay. He
knew exactly how
she felt. The only thing he could think to
do was to get their
parting done as quickly and as cleanly as
possible. The rug
had been pulled out from under their feet
and the next blows
would hurt less
if
they came while they were both still
stunned and reeling.
"You'll tell Preeya good-bye for me,
won't you?" he
asked, turning to her and offering a smile.
It
was tight, but it
was the best he could do.
"Of course," she offered, clearly
dazed, the smile she
gave him in return vacant and weak.
"Behave yourself, Mohan," he said
briskly, reaching out
to ruffle the boy's hair.
"I will. Thank you for
all
you have done for me. I am honored
to have known you,
Mr.
Terrell."
"The honor's mutual." He started
to turn away and then
stopped to look back over his shoulder and
jauntily ask,
"You are taking the cats with you,
aren't you?"
Mohan grinned and nodded. "Yes, sir.
Sawyer insisted."
"He's a good man."
"Aiden, please," she said softly,
catching his arm and
staying
him.
Tears welled along her lower lashes and tore
at his heart.
"Good-bye, Alex," he whispered,
lifting her hand and pressing
a light kiss to the back of it He released
her with a wink
and managed to clear the lump from his
throat to say,
"You'll be the best princess India ever
had."
"Aiden ... "
''Take care of her," he instructed
Vadeen as he walked
past, determined to be gone before Alex's
tears shredded
what little was left of his dignity.
"With my life."
He couldn't speak; not and keep hidden his
ravaged emotions.
He nodded instead and kept walking, willing
himself
to keep his gaze on the carriage and his
mind focused on the
task of getting the horses tied
to
the rear of it, on getting
back into the driver's box and setting it
all in motion, on getting
the hell gone before he made a complete,
blubbering
fool of himself.
Alex fought back the tears and turned to her
uncle. "I will
join you in the house in a moment. For now I
wish to say my
farewells privately."
"Narain will wait for you here,"
he declared, turning
away. "Do not tarry, niece."
She didn't have the time or the energy to
protest. And
she'd tarry if she damn well pleased.
Gathering her skirts,
she hurried out toward the rear of the
carriage, her heart
lodged high in her throat and her thoughts a
confusing jumble
of words and swirling emotions. .
"You're not leaving with regrets, are
you?" she blurted as
she reached his side. "You have nothing
to
be sorry for,
Aiden."
He looked down at her and blindly finished
tying the
reins of her horse to the ring. ''Well,'' he
drawled, "I never
did teach you to dance."
His voice was tight, too tight, too
controlled. He
was
hurting just as deeply as she was. Desperate
to prolong her
time with
him,
wanting with all her heart and soul to ease his
conscience in his leaving, she raised her
hands in the pose
her mother had taught her long ago.
"Teach me now," she
pleaded. "Show me how to dance,
Aiden."
He swayed on his feet and then stiffened,
expelling a
hard
breath. Offering her a brittle smile and a
cocked brow, he
asked, "Does an Indian princess really
need to know how
Englishmen dance?"
''There's a difference between needing and
wanting;' she
countered, her heart tearing. "I want
to know what it's like to
dance with you. I want that memory to tuck
away with all the
other treasures that have been ours."
He looked over at the door, to where Narain
waited
silently for her in the shadows. Then
slowly, almost hesitantly,
he stepped close and took her hand in his
and slipped
the other to the small of her back.
"Keep the distance between
us as we move," he whispered, his voice
catching.
Alex nodded, afraid her sorrow would
overflow if she tried
to speak. He guided her smoothly backward
and she looked
up at
him,
memorizing his face as it looked in the moonlight,
remembering the way he smiled, the sound of
his laughter.
Ask me to stay, Aiden,
she silently begged.
Ask me to love
you. Tell me that you'll
try
to find room in your
heart for me,
too.
He stumbled and stopped, then deliberately
released her
and stepped back. "I can't do this,
Alex. I have to go." He
moistened his lower lip with the tip of his
tongue and took a
ragged breath. Cupping her cheek in the palm
of his
hand,
he gazed down at her and murmured,
"Stay safe, my beautiful
princess. Think of me from time to time and
know that
I'll never forget you."
"I will always remember you, Aiden.
Always."
And then he was gone, striding past her
without another
word, without another touch. She couldn't
turn and watch
him disappear from her life. It was all she
could do to stand
where she was and keep silent with the tears
coursing over
her cheeks. The springs of the carriage
creaked. The leather
of the reins popped. The horses snorted and
then their
hooves pounded over the hard-packed earth of
the yard and
onto the brick pavers of the street beyond.
She stood in the darkness, listening to them
fade away.
"Princess
?"
The sob broke from her soul and tore up her
throat. Gathering
her skirts, she fled toward the house, past
the startled
guard, and up to the sanctuary of her lonely
room.