Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
‘It cannot be too soon for me!’
Rachel smiled and tied the ribbons of her bonnet
more securely beneath her chin. ‘You seem most put
out by Lady Benedict’s spite, Rebecca,’ she observed.
‘I know that she is a wicked scandalmonger, but I
wonder whether her barbs have upset you because they
have so much truth in them?’
Rebecca cast her a sideways glance. There was
nothing but concern in Rachel’s face; none of the cu-
riosity that she had encountered from the ladies of
Midwinter, none of the envious speculation.
‘I am sorry,’ she said, with difficulty. ‘You have
been the kindest of friends to me, Rachel, and I know
that I am very bad at confiding.’
Rachel gave a little elegant wave of the hand. ‘You
need confide nothing if you do not wish, Rebecca.
Once before I said that I would stand your friend if
you needed me; I merely wanted you to know that the
offer still stands.’
Rebecca nodded. ‘Thank you, Rachel. You are most
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kind.’ She sighed. ‘I suppose I
am
a little liverish be-
cause I am finding it difficult to remember that I dis-
like Lucas Kestrel. He is very good at making me
forget it.’
Rachel laughed. ‘Oh, dear—must you keep remind-
ing yourself?’
‘I think so,’ Rebecca said. ‘He did deceive me.’
‘And has been most sincerely repentant on the sub-
ject.’
‘And I am supposed to be spurning his advances.’
‘As part of a pretence, perhaps, but in real life?’
Rachel frowned. ‘If you like Lucas, Rebecca—if you
can forgive him—I would suggest that you give him
a chance to redeem himself. It is a melancholy thing
to punish both of you when you might be happier to-
gether.’
Rebecca clasped her gloved fingers together tightly.
‘It is not so simple, Rachel. I love Lucas. I loved him
even when I was angry with him. In fact...’ Rebecca
hesitated ‘...I was probably so angry because I loved
him so much, if that makes sense.’
‘Perfect sense,’ Rachel said sagely. ‘I see. You love
Lucas, but you are not certain if he loves you too.’
Rebecca shrugged dispiritedly. ‘I know that there
are those who hold that love is not essential for mar-
riage, but I am not amongst them.’
‘Nor I,’ Rachel said. ‘It is a melancholy thing to
settle for second best.’
‘So I believe,’ Rebecca said. ‘Which is why it is
easier for me to keep Lucas at arm’s length.’
Rachel looked unconvinced. ‘I do believe that Lucas
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cares for you a great deal, Rebecca. One only requires
to watch him with you to realise that.’
Rebecca blushed. ‘Liking and wanting someone are
different from loving them, Rachel.’
‘I understand that. What I am unsure of is whether
Lucas does.’ Rachel glanced quickly at Rebecca.
‘Please do not misunderstand me. Lucas has not con-
fided in either Cory or myself. Having known him for
a little, however, I would say that he has been caught
off guard by his feelings for you, Rebecca, and may
not yet have realised quite how important they are.
Men,’ Rachel said, with a little sigh, ‘can be rather
slow in recognising these matters.’
They had reached the place where the path to Mid-
winter Royal split from that to Kestrel Court.
‘I will not come back for a cup of tea,’ Rachel said,
‘for Mama is expecting me back to help catalogue
some artifacts she has found in the burial field. We
shall see you tonight at Lady Benedict’s dinner, Ra-
chel.’
Dinner at Midwinter Bere was every bit as bad as
Rebecca had anticipated it would be. Lily Benedict
had elected to place Justin Kestrel on her right and
Lucas on her left, putting Rebecca at the very bottom
of the table between her husband and John Norton. It
was extremely unusual for Sir Edgar Benedict to be
present at any social occasion and he sat in his Bath
chair, a huddled figure smelling strongly of old, musty
clothes and cloying illness, and said not a single word.
Occasionally his hooded gaze would sweep the assem-
bled throng like a malignant crow until he would bend
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his head over his food once again, speaking only to
the assiduous servant who was by his side throughout.
That left Rebecca to the tender mercies of Sir John
Norton, who seemed delighted to be squiring her for
the evening and told her many, protracted tales of his
Arctic exploration and his sailing prowess. Rebecca
listened and smiled in all the right places and noted
that the crystal on the table was very fine, seventeenth-
century Dutch workmanship, but that it certainly was
not the glass engraved by her uncle for the Midwinter
spies.
It was later, when the ladies withdrew after dinner,
that she saw something that made her heart leap into
her throat and made her wonder whether there was,
after all, someone in the Benedict household with a
closer connection to her uncle than she had supposed.
On a pedestal in the shadowed alcove by the library
door was a tall glass vase with an exquisite engraving
of a sailing ship on it. It was certainly the work of
George Provost’s workshop. Rebecca’s heart started to
race. She could not see the detail of the vase clearly
in the dim light, but it roused her curiosity and made
her wonder whether there were any other pieces in the
house.
She allowed the other ladies to stroll on ahead of
her, then slipped unseen into the library. It seemed as
good a place as any to start. It was a gloomy chamber
that seemed to fit all too well Sir Edgar’s melancholy
personality, and whilst there were various pieces of
sculpture on plinths about the room, there were no
other pieces of engraved glass. Rebecca, aware that
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she could not be missing for too long, heaved a sigh
and retraced her steps into the hall. She looked again
at the engraved vase. It was most definitely her uncle’s
work, which meant that someone in the household
must have placed a commission for work with George
Provost at some time. She had no recollection of it
having been made, but that was not extraordinary. In
her uncle’s heyday the engraving workshop had been
inundated with orders.
Deep in thought, Rebecca rounded the corner of the
corridor and walked straight into Lucas. He grabbed
her above the elbows and held her hard. He looked
absolutely furious.
‘I have been searching for you everywhere. What
the
devil
do you think you are doing, Rebecca?’
Rebecca was stung by his tone. ‘What do you think
I was doing? I was
trying
to find the engraved glass.
I thought that to be the purpose of our visit!’
‘You do
not
go off wandering about on your own!’
Lucas shook her slightly. ‘Good God, Rebecca, have
you understood nothing? This is dangerous work!’
Rebecca was shaken by the savage undertone in his
voice. ‘I am perfectly aware of that, Lucas,’ she said,
with dignity, ‘and I do not think it adds anything to
the secrecy of our situation for you to stand upbraiding
me in the corridor. Anyone might hear you!’
They stood glaring at one another. There was the
sound of a door closing, footsteps, raised voices. Re-
becca tried to move away but, quick as a flash, Lucas’s
arms went around her hard and his mouth came down
on hers in a ruthless kiss.
Rebecca could not move, could not break free, and
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did not want to. The moment Lucas had touched her
she was lost, knowing this was what she had wanted
through the long, lonely nights when she had lain
alone in her bed, tormented to know that Lucas was
so close to her and yet so far away. Her body trembled
and went soft with acquiescence and the kiss eased at
once. Lucas bit down gently on her full lower lip then
rubbed it with the tip of his tongue, teasing, dipping
inside her mouth and then retreating. It melted her and
made her reach blindly for him. In return he moved
his mouth over hers with a thoroughness that had her
sighing. She had forgotten about their audience until
there was the sound of gentle laughter close at hand
and Lady Sally Saltire spoke from out of the shadows.
‘I do believe,’ she said, and the amusement was
clear in her voice, ‘that your cousin has overcome her
indifference to Lord Lucas, Justin!’
Rebecca jumped as though scalded, but even then
Lucas was slow to let her go, releasing her with every
sign of reluctance. Justin Kestrel and Lady Sally were
standing a mere ten feet away, Lady Sally looking
speculative and Justin looking quite blank. Rebecca
could not tell whether he approved or not.
Lucas drew her close to his side. It was difficult to
resist the reassuring protectiveness of his gesture.
‘I wondered,’ Justin said in measured tone, ‘whether
you were ready to depart, Miss Raleigh? It is a shame
to cut the evening short, but I think it wise not to tax
Sir Edgar’s strength too much.’
The journey back to Kestrel Court was conducted
in simmering silence. As soon as they were through
the door, Lucas murmured an apology to his brother,
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caught Rebecca’s arm and bundled her though the
door of the drawing room.
‘I do not believe that we had finished our conver-
sation,’ he said pleasantly.
‘No!’ Rebecca spun around. She was feeling edgy
and vulnerable. ‘You will not use kissing me as...as
an excuse for loitering in corridors, Lord Lucas!’
‘You were the one who was loitering,’ Lucas said,
a gleam in his eyes. ‘I could not be certain who was
about to come across us and needed to provide a good
reason as to why we should be standing in the shadows
outside Lady Benedict’s library.’
‘You are inexcusable!’
‘I am sorry that you should think that.’ Lucas
strolled over to the mantelpiece. ‘I confess I forgot my
original motive within a few seconds. Kissing you was
long overdue, Rebecca.’
The tension between them spun out and thickened
until it was almost tangible, then Rebecca shook her
head impatiently. ‘You make me forget... What I re-
ally needed to tell you was that Lady Benedict has a
glass vase that was engraved by my uncle.’
Lucas’s gaze had sharpened. ‘You are positive?’
‘Certain. There can be no mistake. The style is
slightly different from the glasses the spies have been
using, but I recognise his work. Someone at Midwinter
Bere had commissioned the piece from my uncle.’
Lucas let out a long sigh. ‘Yet Bradshaw has
searched both Midwinter Bere and Sir John Norton’s
house and neither has yielded a sign of the glasses.’
‘Which leads one to the only conclusion—that the
glasses are kept elsewhere.’
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Lucas nodded. Unexpectedly he caught her hand.
‘Thank you, Rebecca.’
Rebecca was startled. ‘For what?’
‘For helping us. I understand that there are many
reasons why you might not.’
Rebecca tugged gently to free her hand, but he held
her tight. He gestured to the sofa.
‘Rebecca...I need to speak with you. Will you hear
me out?’
After a moment Rebecca sat down. Her heart was
hammering and her legs trembling so much she had
no choice.
‘I know that I deceived you badly over my original
motive in coming to your workshop,’ Lucas said. ‘I
hurt you. It was very wrong of me and I regret the
way that I behaved.’
‘You were doing a job,’ Rebecca said. Her throat
ached.
Lucas did not take the excuse. He came to sit beside
her. ‘That is true, but it is no justification. My instinct
told me to trust you and I ignored it. That was my
mistake.’
Rebecca did not argue the point. She was achingly
aware of his presence beside her although he had made