Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
A warm shudder slowly cascaded.
down the
length of her, and she savored
the depth of it, wanting to identify
the feeling it stirred. It most
definitely wasn’t apprehension.
Neither was it anything even
slightly akin to
repugnance. It was almost a
hunger of sorts, a rather pleasant
kind of
...
Anticipation, she realized, her
heart jolting and her
breath catching. Dear God in
Heaven, what was wrong with
her? Distance. She needed to keep
as far away from the man
as she possibly could. If only
she'd spoken up when Barrett
Stanbridge had given her the
chance. If only there was
someone else she could hire.
Alex drew her elbow from his
grasp yet again and resolutely
set off toward the back of the
store, saying crisply,
"Follow me, if you
please," hoping that by some great miracle
he'd turn around and walk out of
her life.
Chapter 4
Alex stood in the center of the
front shop, her hands pressed
to her midriff and willing her
heartbeat to slow. It was absolutely
ludicrous to run away from a man
in your own home.
Especially a man who was there to
protect you and those for
whom you were responsible. She
simply had to gain some
measure of control over her
reactions to Aiden Terrell. She
was the employer and he was the
employee. She'd been the
royal tutor, for heaven's sake;
she'd had hundreds-perhaps
thousands-of relationships with
subordinates before. This
one was no different from any of
the others. She closed her
eyes and took a deep, steadying
breath.
"Cool
distance," she
whispered.
"Cool,
cool distance."
The sound of his footfalls on the
stairs sent her heart back
into her throat and shattered her
mantra. Letting her hands fall
to her sides, Alex opened her
eyes and faced him squarely, resolved
to take command of the situation
before he could.
He was just coming off the last
step when she gestured to
the goods surrounding her and
crisply said, ''As you've no
doubt surmised, the main floor is
devoted to the sale of
goods. I've tried to arrange
things so that my customers can
easily visualize the various
objects in their own homes."
He nodded and let his gaze wander
over the displays. ''Did
you bring all of this with you
when you came out of India?"
"Very little of that initial
shipment remains," she supplied,
vastly relieved by the distant
and impersonal tone she heard
in his voice. "I receive
replacement goods from a trader in
Dwarka on a regular schedule. One
is, in fact, due any day."
Casually rubbing a paisley
cashmere shawl between his
fingers, he said, "If he
knows where you are-"
"He's Mohan's favorite uncle
and can be trusted."
Again he nodded. This time,
though, the gesture was accompanied
by first a humming sound and then
a pronounced
silence. After several moments,
he turned to face her,
crossed his arms over his chest,
and asked, "May I pose a
more personal question?"
"I suspect that refusing
wouldn't make any difference in
whether you ask or not."
''True,'' he admitted with a grin
that sparkled all the way to
his eyes. "Let me more
accurately restate the question. If I
asked you a personal question,
would you give me a straight
and honest answer?"
"I can't know the answer to
that," she countered warily,
''until I know what the question
is."
"Fair enough." He
picked up an ornately carved picture
frame and studied it as he asked,
"Why the shop? Why London?
Mohan's father could have bought
a country estate and
tucked you both neatly away in
safe seclusion. Why didn't
he? Why did he choose to
establish his royal tutor as a merchant
in the heart of a huge
city?"
He considered this a personal
subject? God was indeed
merciful and caring. Alex leaned
her hip against the writing
desk and relaxed, suddenly much
more confident in her ability
to manage both the conversation
and Aiden Terrell.
"While, in recent years, the
East India Company may have
crumbled as a governing body of
India," she said, "it's apparent
that British control isn't going
to be surrendered anytime
soon. The rajas know this, of
course, and believe that in order
to effectively exercise their
power within those parameters,
they must understand the ways of
Britain herself." .
He set aside the one frame and
picked up another Without
comment or-most
surprisingly-another question.
"Part of the reason for
bringing Mohan to England," she
went on, watching him caress the
carving with the pads of
his thumbs , "was to immerse
him in British ways so that he
would be a better leader when his
time comes. Ensconced in
at a country estate wouldn't have
accomplished the larger
goal. London is the center of the
empire and so it's London
that Mohan must experience in
order to learn what he must
to rule effectively." "
"A partial answer. A quite
acceptable one, actually. He
put down the frame and selected
yet another. "Now if you'll
just as ably answer the other
part. Why did he establish you
as a merchant? Why not simply put
you in a house and support
you and Mohan in royal
fashion?" .
''That was his intention at the
beginning. I suggested that
Mohan would learn more of what he
needs to know if he were
to experience a more common
reality. In the end, the raja saw
matters my way."
"Do you always get your
way?" .
"No, not always." He
set down the small frame, but this
time didn't select another.
Still, he didn't look at her. She
found it most odd; it didn't seem
at all like him to approach
matters in this way. "Just
usually." .
His gaze snapped up to meet hers
as another of his heart jolting
grins lit up his face. "I'm
not the least surprised by
that."
Something had surprised her,
though. Aiden could see It.m
the nervous edge to the smile she
gave him in return. Despite
an apparently determined effort
to appear unaffected, her gesture
was a bit vague and shaky when
she indicated the back of
the main floor and said, "If
you'll come this way, I'll show you
the other rooms."
There was nothing vague about the
way she turned and
walked off. He'd seen squads of
royal sailors make less obvious
retreats. He followed, puzzling
over what he'd done
that had set her into flight.
She'd been answering his questions
easily and forthrightly up until
...
He'd
given her a
compliment. Well, of sorts,
anyway. That's when
she'd
gotten
flustered. And he'd smiled at
her, too.
“
'This
is
one of the three fabric rooms," she said, interrupting
his musing.
Aiden stopped with the space of
the
doorway
separating
them and looked inside. There
were shelves against 3ll the
walls from floor to ceiling. all
of them packed with neatly
folded fabric. The floor was
covered with a dark blue, richly
patterned rug. A huge
library-type table sat in the center
.
of
the room and a discreetly draped
dress form had been placed
in the comer. Everything was
blue, green, purple, or a variation
thereof.
She didn't
say
anything
but he followed when
she
moved
to the next room. As the first
had been stocked with fabrics
at the cooler end of the rainbow,
this one decidedly dis
played
the warmer. Reds. yellows,
oranges.
From bright to
the merest hint of color. Another
coordinating
rug, another
table, another dress
form
.
The third room she showed him
was, to his
surprise,
something of a disappointment
after the first two. It was visually
divided in half. Blacks and grays
were on one side.
Whites to light camels on the
other. The rug was white, the
dress form draped in black. He
frowned, realizing that, as
strange as it was, the general
absence of color made him feel
somehow cheated.
He was still pondering his
reaction to the room when she
moved to the next. This one she
actually entered and he dutifully
stepped
in
behind her. There were shelves in this one,
too. But it wasn't fabric she
displayed. It was silver. Tea and
coffee services, trays, bowls,
platters, pitchers, and silverware.
God Almighty, there was enough
silverware in that room to
set the table at Windsor Castle.
There were wooden storage
boxes of it everyWhere; some
stacked one upon the other,
some of them opened to display
the gleaming contents. If
there was any stolen silver in
the mountain before him, he'd
have one helluva time trying to
find it.
"I
don't
think I've ever seen a collection of silver this ...
extensive," he ventured.
She tweaked the angle of a tea
service on one of the
shelves, saying, "It is a
bit overwhelming, isn't it? I didn't
set out to be a silver broker,
but the opportunity presented itself
and the profits are so
attractive, I couldn't resist. It's
been very instructional for Mohan,
too."
"I
can't
imagine a raja being all that concerned over what