Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
of his plight at the hands of his friends, who had aban-
doned him in a bordello, I agreed to convey him home.
That is the sum total of our acquaintance.’ She looked
at him defiantly. ‘On the basis of that short meeting,
however, I can assure you that his company is far pref-
erable to yours!’
Lucas laughed. ‘I imagine so,’ he agreed. ‘I expect
that Stephen was most charming to you, whereas I,
having knocked about the world a good deal more than
he has, am not as gullible as a youth in his salad days.’
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Once again, his gaze assessed her, studying the curve
of her breast beneath the thick, unfashionable worsted
of her dress and returning to linger with disturbing
concentration on her mouth.
‘How much did you take him for, Miss Raleigh?’
he asked softly. ‘One hundred guineas? More? What
is your price?’
Rebecca shrugged, feeling inordinately angry.
‘Your judgement is not as sound as you pretend, my
lord,’ she forced out. It was an effort to speak politely,
but years of dealing with her uncle’s customers had
schooled her temper. ‘A gentleman who cannot tell the
difference between a Cyprian and an artisan has little
discernment indeed.’
Lucas looked incredulous. He lay back on the seat,
crossing his long legs at the ankle. Rebecca moved her
skirts aside to avoid touching him. He watched her
manoeuvre with amusement.
‘My dear Miss Raleigh,’ he said, ‘surely the facts
speak for themselves?’ He gestured about them. ‘This
is a carriage owned by the Archangel Club for the
exclusive use of their customers. I find you inside it,
with my brother. He is half-naked, smelling of drink
and perfume, and covered in painted kisses. You
are—’
‘I am what?’ Rebecca retorted. ‘Fully dressed? Your
imagination runs away with you, Lord Lucas. Matters
fell out precisely as I told you, as you will find when
you interrogate your brother. In fact, I suggest that you
go and do so now. I find your company grates on me!’
Lucas was laughing. ‘What a charming manner you
have, Miss Raleigh. Do you practise it on your cli-
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ents—in whatever trade it is that you profess to per-
form?’
Rebecca bit her lip. Hard. She found that she wanted
to do him some sort of injury, preferably a painful and
nasty one.
‘My customers deserve civility, my lord,’ she said.
‘You forfeited that right by your own discourtesy.’
Lucas gave her an ironic half-bow. ‘I beg your par-
don, Miss Raleigh. Would you care to explain the
manner in which I have insulted you?’
Rebecca glared at him. ‘Surely that is quite obvious,
my lord? You are a gentleman who has a positive
talent for offending a lady. I deeply regret the act of
kindness that led me to offer my help to your brother.
If I had known that it would require me to spend any
amount of time with you, then I would have thought
not once but twice!’
She saw the gleam of Lucas’s teeth as he smiled.
‘A neat insult of your own, Miss Raleigh. You defend
yourself with spirit. Alas, you are doing it too brown.’
His tone changed, became cynical. ‘No one associated
with the Angels ever acts out of kindness. Why not
come clean and tell me the truth? You may be sure
that Stephen will not hold out for long when I speak
to him.’
Rebecca closed her eyes, counted to ten and opened
them again. Her voice was measured.
‘I assure you, my lord, that my meeting with your
brother fell out exactly as I have related it. As for
myself, I would say that that is none of your business.
I am not a Cyprian, I am not out to fleece your brother
or drag him down into the moral depravity you evi-
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dently fear. In fact, I am not in the employ of the
Archangel Club at all...’ She hesitated for a fraction
of a second, for that was not entirely correct, and Lu-
cas pounced.
‘Why the hesitation, Miss Raleigh? You had almost
convinced me there...’
Rebecca shrugged angrily. ‘Very well. The reason
that I am in this carriage is that I have undertaken a
piece of engraving work for the Archangel Club. I
have a commission from them—’ She broke off as she
saw Lucas’s expression of sardonic amusement.
‘A commission,’ he murmured. ‘I suppose one
might call it that.’
‘I do not see why I have to protest my virtue to you,
my lord!’ Rebecca said hotly. ‘It is none of your busi-
ness.’
‘Indeed, you have no need to protest at all, Miss
Raleigh,’ Lucas agreed smoothly. ‘Not when there are
easier ways to prove your innocence.’
Before she could guess his intentions, he took her
hand in his and with studied deliberation stripped off
her glove. His gesture was so sudden and so sensually
provocative that Rebecca gasped. She tried to with-
draw her hand, but Lucas held it firmly between both
of his, running his fingers over her skin with the light-
est of strokes. His touch was cool and she felt the
effect of it jolt right through her body. The colour
flooded her face; her nerves prickled. She was unable
to repress a shiver.
‘You will see that they are not the hands of a lady,’
she said, ‘but an artisan.’
Her voice came out a little huskily and she hoped
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that Lucas had not noticed. He was insufferably ar-
rogant as it was, without giving him the advantage.
He looked up and met her gaze, and Rebecca real-
ised that it was a vain hope. Lord Lucas Kestrel was
quite experienced enough with women to know when
he had an effect upon them. She could see it in his
eyes.
His thumb was stroking her palm gently now, send-
ing flickers of feeling along her skin. ‘I agree that they
are the hands of someone who works for a living,’ he
agreed softly. ‘That does not make you any less of a
lady, Miss Raleigh.’
‘I do not wish to discuss semantics with you, my
lord,’ Rebecca said. ‘In fact, I do not wish to discuss
anything at all. However, I will accept an apology.’
Lucas gave her a very straight look. There was the
very faintest hint of a smile in the depths of his eyes
and Rebecca’s insides trembled. She was aware of an
insidious feeling of attraction growing between them
and fought against it wholeheartedly. Lord Lucas Kes-
trel was clearly a dangerous man.
‘You have it, Miss Raleigh,’ he said softly. ‘My
most humble apologies.’
Rebecca drew her hand from his grasp and cleared
her throat.
‘I think that it is time for you to go now, my lord.’
She rapped on the roof of the carriage. ‘Stop, please!
Lord Lucas will be leaving us here.’
She half-expected the Archangel’s coachman to ig-
nore her command, but the carriage slowed obediently
to a halt. Lord Lucas was not so biddable. He sat
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watching her, a challenge in his gaze as though he
were defying her to throw him out bodily.
‘What, are you to abandon me here?’
‘I am certain that you will be able to navigate the
streets of London better than your brother,’ Rebecca
said sweetly, ‘and since I have no desire to remove
your clothes you will not be in need of begging a cloak
from a kindly traveller.’
Lucas grinned. ‘You put ideas into my head, Miss
Raleigh.’
Rebecca blushed. The ideas were in her head as
well, erotic and disturbing, no matter that she tried to
ignore them.
‘Disabuse yourself of them, my lord. I will bid you
good night.’
Lucas held her gaze for a long moment. There was
something lazy but watchful about his scrutiny. ‘I am
not entirely sure that I wish to go, Miss Raleigh,’ he
murmured.
Rebecca slipped her free hand into her reticule. Her
fingers closed around the cold, reassuring shape of her
engraving scribe. She whipped it out and levelled it at
his throat. ‘Allow me to encourage your departure, my
lord.’
‘The devil!’ Lucas’s eyes lit with unholy amuse-
ment. He kept his gaze on the wickedly sharp diamond
point. ‘What is that?’
‘A diamond-pin scribe for cutting glass. I use it for
the very profession you derided a short while ago.’
Rebecca touched the point of the pin with one gloved
finger. ‘Diamonds are the hardest substance known to
man, my lord.’
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Lucas rubbed his chin ruefully. ‘Then it seems that
you have something in common with them, Miss Ra-
leigh.’
‘I do not think that you should be in any doubt of
my profession now, nor of my sincerity in wishing you
gone,’ Rebecca said.
‘No, indeed.’ Lucas’s gaze came up to her face and
he smiled again, a real smile, wholly disarming, seri-
ously dangerous. Rebecca felt her pulse skip. He in-
clined his head in a gesture of acknowledgement.
‘Very well, Miss Raleigh, I shall leave you, but I shall
see that your property is returned to you, all the same.’
‘Please do not trouble yourself,’ Rebecca said.
‘It is no trouble. Cloaks are expensive commodities,
particularly for a lady obliged to earn her own living.
I shall return it in person.’
Rebecca felt her temper flicker again. ‘Pray save
yourself a tiresome task, my lord, and send a servant
with it. That would surely be more appropriate.’
She saw Lucas’s amusement that he had got under
her skin. ‘That would be too shabby. Will you furnish
me with your direction, Miss Raleigh?’
‘Certainly not,’ Rebecca said.
Lucas sighed. ‘I shall find it out anyway.’
‘But not from me.’
Lucas sighed again. ‘Then I shall leave you, Miss
Raleigh, with the promise to see you again soon.’
He opened the door of the carriage and sprang down
without bothering to lower the steps. Rebecca’s last
view of him was a tall figure standing beneath the
street lamp, a dusting of raindrops already on his hair.
She sat back as the carriage moved off again and
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gave a huge sigh. She did not regret helping Stephen
Kestrel for he seemed a pleasant enough young man.
His elder brother was another matter. Forceful, confi-
dent, with a face like a fallen angel and a touch that
threatened to overset all good sense... Rebecca shook
her head. She had a rule about staying away from gen-
tlemen like Lucas Kestrel, men who were rakish and
dangerous and who could spell disaster for a woman
who had her own way to make in the world.
She hoped that he would not seek her out again.
She knew he would.
Lucas Kestrel stood on the wet pavement and
looked about himself in some perplexity. He realised
that he had no notion where he was. He had spent the
entire journey with his attention focussed on Miss Re-
becca Raleigh to the exclusion of all else. They could
have been halfway down the London to Brighton road
for all he knew. He could not remember the last time
that had happened to him when he had been in con-
versation with a woman.
He started walking. He knew that he would soon
see a familiar landmark. Having navigated his regi-
ment across half of Egypt, he had no concern that he
would get lost in the outskirts of London. The only
thing that he regretted was failing to put a coat on.
That showed lack of foresight. He had not thought that
Miss Raleigh would occupy him for long and certainly
had not foreseen that she would throw him out of her
coach and leave him to walk home.
A rueful smile tugged at his mouth. He found Miss
Rebecca Raleigh a fascinating combination of confi-
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dence and vulnerability, strength and innocence. When
he had first set eyes on her he had felt her gaze like
a physical blow to the heart. He had never known
anything quite like it.
He had had ample proof that night that Miss Raleigh
was no Cyprian. Despite the misleading circumstance