Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
growing progressively more difficult, but this new sit-
uation was both unexpected and utterly confusing. She
did not wish to feel beholden to Lucas Kestrel and she
was very afraid of where his charity might take her.
When Lucas returned a surprisingly short time later,
Rebecca was still sitting on the sofa. She got up
quickly when he came in and wiped her eyes with the
back of her hand, hoping that he had not seen her tears.
The wood merchant’s assistant followed him into the
workshop, hefting a very heavy sack of logs. The man
took the sack through to the store, as he had done in
Rebecca’s uncle’s time, and received a coin for his
trouble from Lucas before he went out. It was then
that Rebecca also spotted the parcel that Lucas had
laid on the table containing a fresh loaf of bread, a pat
of rich yellow butter, some cheese, a ham and half a
spit-roasted chicken. Her stomach, treacherously, gave
a loud rumble at the sight of food.
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She seized a few logs and threw them higgledy-
piggledly into the fireplace, venting her frustration on
the inanimate blocks of wood until Lucas put out a
hand to stop her.
‘Wait! It will never light if you build it like that.’
‘I know!’ To her horror, Rebecca could feel the
tears closing her throat. ‘I know how to make a fire!
I am also quite capable of feeding myself. I have man-
aged perfectly well on my own for the past six months
and I do
not
require some high-handed, arrogant
lord—’
‘That is tautology,’ Lucas said.
Rebecca stared, jolted out of her train of thought. ‘I
beg your pardon?’
‘Tautology. Gilding the lily. If I am high-handed,
then the arrogance goes without saying...’
Rebecca gave an exasperated squeak. ‘Arrogant,
high-handed, conceited, self-important—’
Lucas raised a hand. ‘Please, Miss Raleigh. I have
taken your point. I am going to make some tea. Oh...’
he paused ‘...and the food is for me to take home for
supper...’
‘I do not believe you!’ Rebecca said sulkily.
Lucas shrugged. He disappeared into the scullery
and Rebecca did not even trouble to try to stop him.
Instead she took the logs out of the fire again, swept
it clear and built it painstakingly from scratch. By the
time the flames were taking hold, Lucas had returned
with the tea and some Bath Oliver biscuits that Re-
becca suspected might be stale.
He placed the tea on Rebecca’s desk much as Sam
had done the previous day, and came to sit beside her.
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The tea, Rebecca was surprised to discover, was al-
most as good as Sam’s brew had been.
‘Now,’ Lucas said, ‘I would like you to tell me
something about yourself, Miss Raleigh, and how you
have ended in this situation. You said that you had
managed very well on your own for the last six
months. What happened before that?’
Rebecca looked at him. She was tempted to tell him
everything, not just about the hardship following her
uncle’s death, but about her family and how her
brother Daniel was the only one left, and he was a
hunted man in as much trouble as she. She teetered
on the brink of disclosure and then drew back a little.
Lucas did not prompt her. He watched her steadily,
but with so much gentleness in his eyes that she caught
her breath to see it. It was grief and tiredness, she
warned herself, that had weakened her. She needed to
tell someone. She took a deep, refreshing gulp of the
tea, set down her cup, and started to talk.
Lucas had not been entirely sure that Rebecca
would answer his question. He recognised that she was
living within her work at the moment; that it was the
thing she used to blot out the grief. There were no
signs of her personality at all in her studio, although
it was the place where she lived as well as worked.
He concluded that she had withdrawn into herself so
much that nothing else could reach her. He wanted to
be the one to break through that shell and touch her.
He wanted it so much that it frightened him.
For his own sake he had to draw back. He had never
felt like this before and it was the very devil. Even as
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he was questioning her and trying to gain her confi-
dence, he felt the veriest traitor, the greatest betrayer
in the whole world.
He had never met a woman like Rebecca Raleigh
before. Affairs of the heart—he did not like to think
in terms of love—had never been difficult for him in
the past. Yet his current feelings prompted him to take
Rebecca away from this hovel of a place where she
tried so desperately to scrape a living. He wanted to
cherish her, care for her and protect her. He pushed
aside all the complex and unfamiliar emotions that
pressed in on him and tried to concentrate.
He watched her face as she took a scalding mouthful
of tea, watched the pure line of her throat as she swal-
lowed and set down her mug. There was a slump to
her shoulders, but she would never admit defeat. His
heart swelled with an emotion he tried to dismiss as
pity.
He sat quietly drinking his tea—a beverage that had
never been his favourite drawing-room tipple—and
listened whilst Rebecca talked. Her face was drawn
and her blue eyes were full of pain, and it took every
ounce of Lucas’s self-control not to touch her.
‘My uncle and aunt died of the sweating sickness
four months ago,’ Rebecca said, fiddling with the han-
dle of her mug. Lucas noted that it had been broken
and affixed again, slightly off centre. Presumably she
could not afford to throw things away.
‘I am sorry,’ he said. ‘So recent a grief must be
very painful for you.’
Rebecca nodded. ‘They had brought me up from the
time I was a child. It was my uncle who taught me
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my profession.’ She glanced quickly across at the
workbench. ‘He was a master engraver, one of the
most talented men in the profession, though he never
truly gained the recognition he deserved. I think...’
for a moment she smiled ‘...I think that he taught me
well.’
‘I am sure that he did,’ Lucas said, ‘judging by the
work on display here.’
Rebecca shot him a glance that had a tiny sparkle
in it. Lucas noticed with a jolt how she came alive
when she spoke of her work. ‘And you are suddenly
an expert, my lord?’ she teased. ‘You, who did not
even know that the profession existed a week ago?’
Lucas gave a self-deprecating shrug. He felt guilty.
‘I am a quick learner.’
The sparkle died from Rebecca’s eyes. ‘Whether or
not I am good at my work is irrelevant now. When
my uncle died, the business died with him. It was na-
¨ıve of me to think that I could keep it running single-
handed. One of the journeymen and the two appren-
tices took work elsewhere, for they did not wish to be
employed by a woman. The other journeyman...’ she
hesitated ‘...he thought to persuade me into marriage
as a way for me to continue the business.’
Lucas clamped down on his instinctive violence at
the thought of some buffoon forcing himself on Re-
becca and kept his voice level. ‘You did not care for
the idea?’
‘No, I did not,’ Rebecca said. ‘I cared even less for
the way that he tried to persuade me, and
he
disliked
the means I took to dissuade him from his amorous
advances.’
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Lucas bit his lip on a laugh. He remembered her
threatening him with the diamond scribe. ‘What did
you do?’
‘I used the fire irons,’ Rebecca said. ‘They have a
slight dent in them now.’
Lucas shook his head. ‘So you used the fire irons
on him and your engraving scribe to defend yourself
against me... You are a dangerous woman, Miss Ra-
leigh.’
Rebecca did not look at him. ‘You were different,’
she said softly.
Lucas felt his body tighten. He did not feel different.
He wanted exactly what her journeyman and no doubt
many another man had wanted from Rebecca Raleigh,
and it was the devil’s own job not to demand it from
her.
‘Not so different,’ he said, wryly truthful. ‘I wanted
the same thing.’
Their eyes met and the tension seemed to spin out
between them for an eternity. Rebecca broke the con-
tact with an effort.
‘You were quicker to understand,’ she said drily,
‘for with you I did not have to resort to physical vi-
olence.’ She shifted a little. ‘So once Malet had left,
muttering of retribution, I was on my own but for
Emma, the servant girl. I soon realised that when the
men went they took all the work with them. So then
I had to let Emma go too, since I could not pay her.’
Lucas’s gaze narrowed with incredulity. ‘You have
been living here
alone
for four months?’
‘Three months.’ Rebecca’s gaze flicked to his face
and then away. ‘Emma was with me for a few weeks
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after my uncle’s death. I have managed well enough
on my own. I have some work in hand...’ She smiled.
‘Quite a lot, thanks to you, my lord. And to the Arch-
angel Club.’
She had given Lucas the opening he needed. He was
astounded to feel himself hesitating to take it. At each
step he became more deeply mired in deception. He
was trying to obtain information from her under false
pretences and his honour revolted at the thought. He
ignored the squirming of his conscience and forced
himself to press on.
‘Do you have any other clients currently?’ he ques-
tioned, allowing his gaze to range about the workshop
as though the answer did not really matter to him.
Rebecca’s gaze flickered. She rubbed a hand across
her forehead. ‘No, I have none,’ she said.
‘And no business outstanding from your uncle’s
time?’
Rebecca rubbed her eyes. It made her look like a
child and it smote Lucas’s heart. ‘There are a few
pieces still to be collected,’ she said. ‘My uncle com-
pleted some work for a gentleman who is a prodigious
collector, but he has yet to send for it. I have it in the
storeroom.’
Lucas’s nerves prickled. If this mysterious collector
was part of the Midwinter spy circle and he had yet
to collect his order, then they might be about to catch
him red-handed.
‘What sort of engraving interests your collector?’
he asked, as casually as he could.
Rebecca raised her brows. ‘Why, all sorts of de-
signs, my lord. Ships and birds and anchors... My
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uncle did an entire set for him with an astronomical
motif—the phases of the moon, and the sun and stars.
He has a wide interest.’
Lucas’s attention was riveted. He had one of the
Midwinter glasses in the pocket of his coat at that very
moment and it was a match for a design he could see
on the display shelves. He could feel the hard edge of
the glass pressing against his thigh, reminding of the
exact reason why he was in this studio, questioning
Miss Rebecca Raleigh, glass engraver.
‘What manner of man is he, this collector?’ he
asked, hoping he was not pressing too hard and raising
her suspicions. It was difficult to tell what she was
thinking. She gave him a direct look from her very
blue eyes, but he could not read her expression.
‘I have no notion, my lord. I never meet him. He
sends his servant to place the orders and collect the
finished engraving.’
Lucas shrugged, as though the matter was of no
further interest to him. He would instruct Tom Brad-
shaw to keep the shop under observation until such
time as the servant came to collect his order, and then
he would have the man followed and see where that