Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
his favourite brother was Lucas, who was an Army
man and a great gun. By the time they turned into
Grosvenor Street, Rebecca’s ears were heartily tired
with the repetition of Lord Lucas Kestrel’s name. He
sounded to be precisely the sort of gentleman of fash-
ion that she instinctively disliked and she could only
be grateful that she would have no requirement to meet
him.
The coach drew up outside an elegant townhouse
and Lord Stephen peered out of the window, drawing
back with a curse.
‘Devil take it!’ He recollected himself. ‘I beg your
pardon, Miss Raleigh, but I do believe Lucas is at
home. What cursed luck! I was hoping he would still
be at his club for several hours and I could hurry inside
undetected.’
‘Could you not go around the back and go in at the
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servants’ entrance?’ Rebecca suggested. It was the
route that was most familiar to her, but the idea had
evidently not occurred to Lord Stephen before, for his
face lit up.
‘What a splendid idea! I say, you are up to all the
rigs, Miss Raleigh! I am most indebted to you—’ He
broke off.
There was an ominous click as the door of the coach
unlatched from the outside. An icy gust of air blew in,
bringing with it a spattering of rain. In the aperture
stood a man with a lantern in one hand. He looked
like an avenging angel with the light illuminating his
dark auburn hair and casting shadows across the hard
planes of his face. A cool hazel gaze swept over Re-
becca in challenging appraisal.
This man was older than Stephen Kestrel—ten years
older at a guess—but he had enough of Stephen’s
spectacular good looks to make him instantly recog-
nisable. Here there was a harder edge, something al-
together more intimidating than Stephen’s boyish
charm. This, Rebecca thought, must be the infamous
Lucas Kestrel himself.
It was clear that Lord Lucas had returned home for
the night, for he was dressed with an informality that
only befitted his drawing room. His jacket was unbut-
toned and his neck cloth loosened. The casualness of
his attire did little to soften the impression of uncom-
promising maleness. Rebecca shivered. This was the
sort of man about whom the chaperons would issue
dire warnings. Every instinct that she possessed told
her to tread very carefully. She had no difficulty at all
in identifying him as an out-and-out rake.
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Rebecca drew back into her corner as the icy wind
whipped inside the carriage. Lord Stephen made a vain
grasp at the cloak, but it blew aside to leave him once
more half-naked and caught in the lantern light in all
his glory.
‘Stephen?’ Lucas Kestrel said incredulously. The
dark frown on his brow deepened. His gaze shifted
back to Rebecca and seemed to pin her to her seat.
She felt a strange, swirling sensation in her stomach,
a wariness with an edge of excitement. It set her heart
racing. She turned hot despite the icy draught.
‘Stephen,’ Lucas Kestrel said again, without taking
his eyes from Rebecca, ‘what the devil is going on?’
‘Hello, Lucas.’ Stephen Kestrel was stuttering. ‘I...I
do apologise. This must look quite bad...I... This is
Miss Raleigh...’
‘How do you do, Miss Raleigh,’ Lucas Kestrel said.
His voice was lazy and smooth and it sent a ripple of
awareness down Rebecca’s spine. A smile that was not
in the least friendly lifted the corner of his mouth as
he looked at her. ‘I do not believe we have met be-
fore.’
‘How do you do, Lord Lucas,’ Rebecca said. She
inclined her head politely. ‘I am sure that we have not
met. I would most certainly have remembered. Your
family do seem to make quite an impression.’
That earned her another look, hard and unsmiling.
‘Pray excuse me a moment,’ Lord Lucas said, with
exemplary courtesy. He took his eyes from her at last
and Rebecca managed to breathe again. She made a
small business of smoothing her skirt and adjusting
her gloves. It was unnecessary, but it helped to settle
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her nerves. She had been unprepared for the impact of
Lucas Kestrel’s presence and it had disturbed her far
more deeply than any man had done before.
‘Out of the coach, please, Stephen,’ Lord Lucas
said. ‘I shall see you in the library in half an hour.
Fully dressed, if you would.’
Rebecca watched as Stephen drew the cloak about
him with the forlorn dignity of a dethroned emperor
and descended the carriage as decently as he could.
Once he was standing on the pavement he turned back
to her and sketched a rather comical bow, hampered
as he was by keeping the cloak tightly wound about
him.
‘I am indebted to you, Miss Raleigh,’ he said. ‘If
you would give me your direction I shall call to con-
vey my sense of obligation. And to return your cloak,
of course—’
‘Enough, Stephen,’ Lucas interrupted. ‘I will deal
with Miss Raleigh.’
Rebecca did not like the sound of that. She arched
her brows haughtily. Ignoring Lucas, she turned to his
brother, who was now shivering in the chill autumn
breeze.
‘It was a pleasure to meet you, Lord Stephen,’ she
said. ‘I am glad that I was able to be of service.’
That brought Lucas’s eyebrows snapping down in
an intimidating stare. Stephen gave her a tentative nod
and sped away up the steps into the house, where a
blank-faced butler held the door open for him. Stephen
disappeared. Lucas did not. Despite the fact that her
insides were quaking, Rebecca turned a disdainful
gaze upon him.
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‘I assure you that I do not require dealing with, Lord
Lucas,’ she said. ‘If you would be so good as to close
the carriage door, I will make my way home at once.
I have already been delayed far too long.’
In response, Lucas held the door open a little wider.
‘If
you
would be so good as to come inside, Miss
Raleigh,’ he said, with unimpeachable politeness,
‘then we might continue this conversation in the
warmth.’
‘No, thank you,’ Rebecca said.
Lucas’s lips almost twitched into a smile. Rebecca
felt herself warm to him slightly. She did not seem
able to resist. The man evidently had a sense of hu-
mour, deep though it might be buried.
‘It was not an invitation,’ Lucas said gently.
Rebecca smiled. ‘It was not an acceptance,’ she
said.
Lucas’s eyes narrowed on her face. ‘Step down,
Miss Raleigh,’ he repeated, his tone harder this time.
‘No, thank you,’ Rebecca said again. ‘A lady would
need to be quite mad to agree to enter the home of
gentlemen she had only just met.’
Lucas’s lips set in a thin line. He said a few words
to the coachman and then swung himself up into the
coach and slammed the door behind him. Immediately
the space in the carriage seemed to shrink and become
nerve-rackingly small. Rebecca had not found Stephen
Kestrel daunting even when he was half-naked. Lucas
was another matter. He was just plain intimidating,
fully dressed or not. Rebecca tried to calm the erratic
tripping of her heartbeat.
The coach set off with a small jerk, the horses’
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hooves striking loud on the cobbles. Rebecca felt
panic rise in her throat and once again tried to quieten
her nervousness. She could not pretend that the situ-
ation looked promising. The servants of the Archangel
Club were accustomed—and well paid—to take orders
from gentlemen without any argument. For all she
knew, Lucas Kestrel could be a member of the Club
himself. So if she were to call out, or demand that the
carriage be turned around, the coachman would very
likely ignore her. She could be dead in the Thames
before anyone lifted a hand to help her.
Despite her attempts to keep such thoughts from
showing on her face, something of how she was feel-
ing must have penetrated the mask, for Lucas Kestrel
put a hand out to her and said silkily,
‘Have no fear, ma’am. Since you would not join me
I thought it easier to join you. I have merely instructed
the coachman to drive around for a while to prevent
the horses from becoming chilled. This will all be over
quickly if you choose to oblige me.’
His tone was even, but Rebecca could not miss the
threat implicit beneath the words. She raised her chin,
an angry spark in her blue eyes, her own voice cutting.
‘And in what way may I assist your lordship?’
Lucas’s gaze slid over her lazily, from the thick
chestnut hair beneath her plain round bonnet to her
feet encased in nankin half-boots. He considered her
with insulting thoroughness and Rebecca felt her tem-
per catch beneath the scrutiny. She was not accus-
tomed to tolerating the impertinent inspection of a
rake.
‘I can think of many ways you might assist me,’ he
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murmured, ‘but for the moment I am concerned only
for my brother. For the moment.’
The angry colour had come into Rebecca’s face at
his words and now she subjected him to a scrutiny of
her own. It proved a mistake, for once she had started
looking, she found it difficult to tear her gaze away.
Lord Lucas Kestrel had a striking face, thin and
sunburnt, with high cheekbones, dark auburn hair that
was almost brown and very dark hazel eyes beneath
strongly marked brows. He was not conventionally
handsome, but the sum of all the elements was so un-
usual that it had a potent impact. Rebecca found that
she wanted to go on looking at him and not just be-
cause he was shockingly attractive. She made her liv-
ing as an engraver, and as such she had an eye for a
striking image. Lucas Kestrel had a face an engraver
could lose herself in, all hard lines and angles. As for
his body, he had a compact elegance that would trans-
late well into a sculpture or picture. That powerful
body would be quite magnificent without its clothes...
Rebecca felt herself blush all over, as though someone
had locked her in a hothouse. This sort of instant re-
action to a man never happened to her normally. An
artist of any discipline, be they painter, sculptor or
engraver, was accustomed to viewing the human body
as an art form. They were accustomed to being com-
pletely detached. Alas, detached was not the word to
describe her response to Lucas Kestrel.
He was watching her with one of those dark brows
raised quizzically and a smile lingering on his lips, as
though he knew what she was thinking. It turned Re-
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The
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Mistress
becca hot with annoyance, rather than awareness, to
have been caught staring.
‘So you should be concerned for your brother,’ she
snapped, to cover her embarrassment. ‘A youth who
gets drunk at his club and indulges in foolish pranks
with other young men running riot in the streets—’
‘And ends up in the arms of a Cyprian from the
Archangel Club, having sexual congress in a carriage,’
Lucas finished softly for her. ‘Yes, Miss Raleigh—if
that is indeed your name—I do so agree with you.
Stephen’s exploits are a matter for alarm. Boys will
be boys, but I wish Stephen had chosen another place
to indulge himself than in the dangerous hands of the
Angels. They will ruin him.’
Rebecca felt a violent flash of outrage that almost
got the better of her. She calmed herself with a deep
breath and when she was able to speak she was
pleased that her voice was almost steady.
‘I fear that you are labouring under a series of mis-
apprehensions, my lord,’ she said. ‘I first made your
brother’s acquaintance when he climbed into the car-
riage in Bond Street only a half-hour ago. On learning