Read The Perfect Temptation Online
Authors: Leslie LaFoy
The Perfect Temptation
By Leslie LaFoy
Chapter 1
London, England
Early January, 1864
John Aiden Terrell turned his
back to the fire and looked out the
office window, watching the snow
fall and hating winter. Almost
as much as he had lately come to
hate Barrett Stanbridge, a
man who was, to Aiden's recent
way of thinking, an all-around
son of a bitch. The things
Barrett had asked of him in the name
of friendship ... The last three
weeks had been hellish. All the
more so because Barrett had
insisted that he be sober enough
to fully experience every moment
of the heart-aching,
head-pounding misery.
"Do you mind?" the
object of his disgust said without looking up
from his paperwork.
Aiden
stamped his frozen feet again and blew into his
cupped, blue hands.
"Not at all," he
snapped. "I live to meet your every expectation."
Barrett snorted and offhandedly
motioned toward the silver
coffee service
on
the far side of the office.
Still reading,
he said, "Pour yourself a
cup and stop your wallowing."
Aiden glared first at his friend
and then at the silver pot
sitting primly with a sugar and
creamer on the sideboard. "I
don't want coffee. I want a
brandy."
"It's nine-thirty in the
morning and you're not having a
brandy. Not now. Not later,
either. You're reforming."
It was actually nine thirty-eight,
but Aiden knew there
was no point in correcting his
friend. There wasn't any point
in protesting the leash Barrett
had put on him, either, but he
still possessed a bit of pride.
Albeit tattered. ''As I've mentioned
several times already, I'm not
the least interested in
reformation, thank you very
much."
Barrett reached for a pen and
scribbled in the margins of
the report as he replied,
"And as I counter each and every
time ... Your father has asked me
to put you back on the
straight and narrow. I take the
responsibility seriously."
"I've never in my life been
on a straight path and you
know it just as well as he
does," Aiden shot back. "Frankly,
I'd rather be dead than live the
boring existence you find so
comfortable."
"Frankly," his friend
retorted calmly, still writing, "when
I first found you, I thought you
were dead. If a lorry had run
over you, you wouldn't have felt
a thing."
"Which was precisely my
intent."
Barrett finally looked up and met
his gaze. "Had you been
conscious enough to have seen
yourself, you would have
been mortally embarrassed. You
would have made a pig
retch."
Such bluntly honest comments had
been constant fare
since he'd first sobered up
enough to comprehend anything
at all. Aiden had had quite
enough of it "I should have known
better than to come to London;'
he snapped.
Barrett cocked a brow but said
nothing. He didn't have to.
Aidan heard the unspoken
rejoinder.
"You should have
known better than to go
to Charleston."
Abruptly turning on his heel,
Aiden faced the fire and extended
his hands toward the flames,
trying to forget that
day-and failing-yet again.
"Hindsight is always
perfect, Aiden," Barrett said quietly.
"You can't punish yourself
for what you didn't see at the
time."
"Oh, but I can," he
retorted drolly, hating the sympathy,
hating even more the pity.
"Just watch me."
A knock on the door spared Aiden
from another lecture
meant to be inspirational.
Instead, Barrett called out, prompting
his secretary entrance.
The man pushed open the door,
then stood stiffly on the
threshold to say, "Pardon
the intrusion, sir. There is a Miss
Radford in the anteroom. I
suggested that she make an appointment
for tomorrow but she refuses,
insisting that it is a
matter of considerable
urgency."
''Isn't it always?" Barrett
quipped with a dry chuckle. He
looked past his man and his brow
shot up as a smile quirked
one comer of his mouth.
"Please see to the lady's coat and
then show her in, Quincy."
''I'll be going," Aiden
declared, seizing the chance and
heading off in Quincy's wake.
''Wouldn't want to intrude on
a private conversation and all
that."
"You'll stay right where you
are, John Aiden."
It was a command, spoken as only
a former army officer
could issue one. Aiden stopped in
his tracks. Partially out of
habit, but mostly out of
something else that was deep inside
him, nameless but potent
nonetheless. He clenched his teeth
and turned back.
''Whatever problem she has,"
Barrett went on crisply, "is
going to land in your lap. You
need to be productive for a
change. It's time."
There was one good thing to be
said for Barrett's sanctimonious
pronouncements; they made him mad
enough that
his blood actually heated. Aiden
smiled thinly and made his
way to the desk, saying, ''Then
you should know that I'm going
to tell her that there's nothing
to be done about her goddamn
missing ring until the bloody
snow melts."
"We have no idea why she's
here," Barrett countered, rising
and straightening his jacket with
a quick, efficient tug at
the hem. "It might be some
rare and valuable piece of British
'
antiquity. Or a
valuable family member who's gone missing.
A wanton niece or a dotty
grandfather. And the finder's fee
could be considerable. It would
be yours, of course, He who
does the work, earns the
money."
"I don't care about
money," Aiden supplied, thinking that
all he really wanted was to get
the hell out of Barrett's reach
for a while. And Sawyer's, too.
Between the two of them
there wasn't a single moment in
his day-or night-that
wasn't carefully supervised.
"All right," Barrett conceded
with a bare shrug. "So you've
thrown away your self-respect and
don't care about earning
your own way. You might, however,
want to think about the
considerable pleasures to be had
in bathing in the font of
gushing feminine gratitude."
Aiden instantly bristled but
Barrett didn't give him a
chance to retort
"It's been almost a year,
John Aiden," his friend declared
gently. "You've been
virtuous long enough."
It angered him that Barrett not
only didn't understand
how deep the pain went, but that
he'd never even pretended
to care that it existed. Aiden
swallowed down the sudden
lump in his throat to say,
"You're a bastard."
"Which is precisely why your
father chose me to salvage
you," the other countered,
coolly shooting his cuffs.
"For God's sake, I'm
twenty-six years old. To be treated
like a child in leading strings
is insulting
.
I don't want-or
need-to
be
salvaged. All I need is to be left the hell alone."
"You were allowed that
course," Barrett pointed out quietly,
his gaze narrowing past Aiden to
the doorway. He put a
polite smile on his face as he
added, "You didn't do well
with it."
"Miss Alexandra Radford,
sir."
Quincy stepped to
,
the
side and the woman entered the
room. Glided, actually. In a
cloud of what had to be outrageously
expensive silk. Like the shifting
colors of a peacock
feather, her morning dress was
sometimes green, sometimes
blue, and somehow, sometimes both
colors at
,
once. Actually,
it was a blouse and matching
skirt, he noted. Which strongly
suggested that she didn't have a
lady's maid to assist her in
dressing.
The woman herself ... So very
English. Of middling
height, with fairish skin and
raven dark curls peeking from
beneath a stylish bonnet. Her
face was nicely shaped and
finely featured. And even a dead
man would have noticed the
decently corseted and curved
figure. Not that any man would
have dared to openly regard that
particular feast. Miss
Alexandra Radford might well be
deliciously wrapped, but
under it all lay the heart and
soul of a woman who considered
herself the equal of any duchess.
A duchess without a maid.
Aiden suppressed a groan and
summoned what he could
of a civil smile. Women of
privilege--and especially those
who simply considered themselves
privileged-were such a
pain in the ass. Well, the vast
majority of them, anyway. There
was always the rare exception.
Alexandra Radford, however,
didn't look to be such an
exception.
"Good morning, Miss
Radford," Barrett offered smoothly
as he moved forward to meet her
halfway. She stopped and
extended her hand. He took it and
bowed over it slightly,
adding, "Barrett Stanbridge
at your service."
"Good morning to you, Mr.
Stanbridge," she replied on
cue and in perfectly even,
cultured English tones. "I deeply
appreciate your willingness to
see me without the courtesy
of an appointment."
"It's no trouble at
all." Barrett smiled broadly and moved
to the side to gesture toward
Aiden. "May I introduce my associate,
Mr. John Aiden Terrell."