Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
She was so angry that all she wanted was to get out
of the carriage and be free to walk home and forget
everything that had happened. She was furious and
humiliated and distraught, and to escape from Lucas
was the only thing that mattered now.
‘Do you know how to use that thing?’ Lucas asked,
his eyes on the barrel. ‘Hold it steady or you will never
hit your target. Which you will not anyway, since the
pistol is not loaded.’
Rebecca hesitated for a split second and in that mo-
ment Lucas caught her wrist in a vicelike grip and she
cried aloud. The pistol fell to the floor, skittered away
and went off with a loud report, burying a bullet in
the cushions of the seat. Lucas pulled her beneath him,
sheltering her body with his as the interior of the coach
filled with smoke and pieces of velvet and stuffing
rained down on them.
Rebecca sneezed. ‘It was loaded,’ she said.
‘Of course it was,’ Lucas said. ‘What use is an
empty pistol?’
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Rebecca felt another pang of misery. ‘I wonder how
long it will be,’ she said bitterly, ‘before I learn not
to trust a word you say.’
She tried to sit up, but Lucas held her still, ruth-
lessly trapped beneath him.
‘I should be obliged if you would allow me up,’ she
said.
‘I will only let you up if you promise not to pull
any more tricks like that one,’ he said. ‘You could
have killed both of us. What did you think you were
doing?’
‘I wanted to go home,’ Rebecca said. Her lip trem-
bled and she bit it viciously, turning her head aside so
that Lucas could not see the tears in her eyes.
She felt him brush the tumbled hair away from her
face very gently and shuddered at his touch. It under-
mined every single barrier she was determined to erect
against him.
‘Stop fighting me, Rebecca,’ he said.
Rebecca looked at him. ‘I did not believe you would
abduct me.’
Lucas gave her a faint smile. ‘I gave you fair warn-
ing.’
Rebecca turned her face away. She had underesti-
mated him. She would have to be a great deal more
careful in the future. How had she made such a serious
error of judgement with Lucas Kestrel? The self-
loathing threatened to swamp her. No one had ever
hurt her so much.
She struggled to sit up and this time he allowed her.
She turned a shoulder to him and stared out of the
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window of the carriage, determined not to show any
weakness.
‘I cannot simply leave my workshop,’ she said.
‘This whole matter is preposterous!’
Lucas sounded unconcerned. ‘I will have someone
keep an eye on the place for you,’ he said.
‘But my commissions—’
‘You told me that you had no work at present.’
Rebecca cursed herself. How many more unguarded
remarks had she made to him that he had stored away
and would use against her when the time was fit?
‘That is true,’ she said bitterly. ‘I do have a half-
finished set of glasses that you ordered, but as you
never actually wanted them—’
‘That is not correct.’ For the first time, Lucas
sounded angry. ‘I should be delighted to have some
of your work.’
‘As a souvenir, perhaps,’ Rebecca said.
Once again, Lucas did not rise to the provocation,
and after a moment Rebecca sighed. ‘I cannot afford
to close my business,’ she said.
‘We will pay you for each day you are away from
your work,’ Lucas said. ‘Ten guineas a day.’
Ten
guineas
a
day.
It was a fortune to Rebecca. She
set her jaw. ‘I will not accept it. I will not work for
you for money, my lord.’
She remembered him touching her hand when he
offered words of comfort over her uncle’s death. She
remembered him taking her in his arms and the blissful
pleasure of his kiss. She remembered thinking that if
one was obliged to take a lover, there would be no
one preferable to Lord Lucas Kestrel, and discovering
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that those wanton thoughts had indeed been perfectly
true. The shame and anger swept through her again at
the way he had betrayed her and she had betrayed
herself.
‘In fact, I do not want to help you at all,’ she said,
driven by bitterness.
She felt Lucas shift slightly. ‘Rebecca,’ he said,
with weary patience, ‘I appreciate what you must think
of me—’
‘I doubt it!’ Rebecca snapped.
‘But I must ask you to put aside personal animosity
for a moment to consider the greater good.’ Lucas con-
tinued. ‘The Midwinter spies are putting thousands of
lives at risk with their treasonable work. They have
already killed a man and are quite ruthless enough to
kill again if they see the necessity.’ He took a deep
breath. ‘They have to be stopped and you are the only
one who can help us get to them.’
Rebecca was silent.
‘Please,’ Lucas said again. ‘If you would not help
us because I ask it of you, Rebecca, then do it for your
country.’
Rebecca turned away. If only he knew her compli-
cated pedigree then he would think twice about putting
such an argument to her. She wondered what Lucas
would say if she told him the truth:
My
lord,
my
ancestors
travelled
to
the
New
World
before
they
returned
to
settle
here
in
England.
There
is
very
little
English
blood
in
me.
Yet she had lived in England all her life and was
fiercely attached to this country, and she knew she
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owed it her loyalty. So she had no real choice. If only
it was not Midwinter...
She sighed. ‘Very well. I do not think I have a
choice.’
Lucas gave her a searching look as though he was
not entirely sure he trusted her, then she saw him re-
lax.
‘Thank you,’ he said. He took her hand and kissed
it. ‘You are a very good person, Rebecca.’
Startled, Rebecca whipped her hand away. It tingled
from the touch of his lips. ‘I am doing this for loyalty
and not for liking,’ she warned. ‘I trust you will keep
your distance in future, my lord.’
Lucas grinned at her as though he sensed her weak-
ness. ‘I regret that I cannot oblige you, Rebecca. If
you are to help us, then I am sworn to protect you.
These are dangerous men—and women—and I must
keep you safe.’
They stared at one another.
‘Does it have to be you?’ Rebecca said wearily.
‘Why not another?’
Lucas’s smile deepened. ‘It has to be me because I
want it to be.’
‘And I do not want it,’ Rebecca argued. ‘I detest
you, Lord Lucas. You have behaved as no gentleman
would. To be obliged to spend more time in your com-
pany merely adds insult to the injury of your behav-
iour.’
Lucas shrugged. ‘I regret that you see matters in that
way. You should know that I still mean to marry you.’
Rebecca raised her chin haughtily. ‘I do not believe
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that we need to discuss this, my lord. It is all academ-
ic now.’
‘You mistake, Rebecca,’ Lucas said softly, and
though he did not touch her his tone felt like a brush
against her skin. ‘I intend to persuade you to accept
me.’
Rebecca drew in a short breath. ‘You are clearly
deluded, my lord. You have as little chance of per-
suading me as I have of swimming the English Chan-
nel.’
‘You have consented to spend some time in my
company,’ Lucas pointed out. ‘I intend to use it well.’
Rebecca was shaking her head in disbelief. ‘It is
impossible, my lord. I shall not change my mind.’
‘We shall see.’ Lucas smiled slightly. ‘I do not ex-
pect you to make it easy for me, Rebecca.’
His implacable confidence shook Rebecca to the
core. ‘But why?’ she wailed. ‘Just because of what
happened?’
Lucas was shaking his head. ‘Not just because of
that. I want you, Rebecca. I find I want you very badly.
And the only way I may have you with honour is
through marriage. So...’
Rebecca swallowed hard. She could not trust him.
How could she, after the way in which he had de-
ceived her? And yet there was a part of her that longed
for him, longed for his touch and the comfort of his
arms. It had felt absolutely right to give herself to
Lucas and that fundamental rightness had not changed,
overlaid as it was by disillusion and disappointment.
If she fought his will, she would be fighting a part of
herself as well, and she was not sure that she was
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strong enough to do so. She looked at Lucas’s un-
yielding face and shivered slightly. He had said no
words of love to her; even in the heat of the night
when he had uttered words of sweet tenderness he had
not spoken of love. Must she compromise on that too?
She could not believe that she had entertained the idea
for even a minute. She was angry at her own weak-
ness.
She raised her chin. ‘I still do not accept your pro-
posal,’ she said.
Lucas smiled. ‘I did not for one moment expect that
you would,’ he said, ‘but I have every intention of
making you change your mind.’
‘You have no notion how stubborn I can be,’ Re-
becca said.
‘I have some idea,’ Lucas contradicted, ‘and I can
be very determined.’
‘I am aware,’ Rebecca said. She smiled bitterly.
‘We shall see, my lord. You have limited time and a
difficult task.’
Lucas took her chin in his hand and turned her face
to his. Her skin heated beneath his touch. ‘And you
are fighting on two fronts,’ he said softly, ‘against me
but against yourself as well. So you are weakened be-
fore you start.’
Rebecca jerked her head away, but not before she
had felt the tell-tale quiver of desire through her whole
body. ‘Damn you!’ she said bitterly.
‘For telling the truth?’
‘For being insufferably conceited!’ Rebecca said.
And
for
making
me
want
you,
she added to herself, for despite her furious resistance and the ache in her
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heart, there was no denying that she still loved Lucas
Kestrel and she was afraid that she always would.
When they reached the house in Grosvenor Street,
Lucas took no chances on Rebecca refusing to coop-
erate and practically carried her out of the coach with
one arm tight about her waist. He bundled her through
the front door as though she were an awkwardly
shaped parcel and finally let go of her when they were
standing in the entrance hall.
Smoothing down her cloak, Rebecca glared at him.
‘If this is your persuasion, my lord, I have to tell you
that you waste your time!’
She fell silent as the butler glided out to greet them,
determined, despite the misery inside, that she should
not show how shaken she was.
‘Good morning, Byrne,’ Lucas said, as though it
were a common occurrence for him to be manhandling
a young woman through the front door of the house,
‘has the Duke returned yet?’
‘Yes, my lord,’ the butler said expressionlessly. ‘He
is waiting for you in the small salon, with Lord and
Lady Newlyn.’
‘Thank you,’ Lucas said. He turned to Rebecca.
‘May I ask you to wait in the drawing room, Miss
Raleigh? We will not be above a moment.’
‘Very well,’ Rebecca said. She waited pointedly
whilst Byrne opened the drawing-room door and Lu-
cas ushered her inside.
He looked at her. ‘Pray do not climb out of the
window and run away or I shall have to go to the
trouble of bringing you back.’
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Rebecca gave him a disdainful look. ‘You would