Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
bland, but there was amusement lurking at the back of
his eyes. ‘Then you would not be required to show
me the slightest degree of affection.’
Rebecca blushed again and looked away. ‘I cannot,’
she said. ‘It would be too difficult. Why do we need
to pretend anything of the sort?’
‘We need a reason, Miss Raleigh,’ Lucas said per-
suasively. ‘I am sworn to protect you and therefore we
need a reason to explain why I shall stay as close to
you as a lover.’
The air in the salon seemed suddenly highly
charged. Rebecca was trapped by the look in his eyes,
which conjured up the heated images of the previous
night.
‘No,’ she said for a third time, but this time it came
out as a whisper.
‘I think,’ Rachel Newlyn said, breaking the fraught
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Mistress
silence with a tactful clearing of the throat and throw-
ing a look at her husband for support, ‘that we might
consider some other solution, Justin. How would it be
if Miss Raleigh was to be a cousin of yours—a distant
one?’
‘Good idea,’ Cory Newlyn said at once. ‘You have
so many cousins, Justin, that no one would remark on
it.’
Justin nodded slowly. ‘It might serve. What do you
say, Miss Raleigh? You are a distant cousin whom
Lucas has met again for the first time in years and he
is quite
e´pris.
’ A smile lurked at the corner of his
mouth. ‘You, alas, are not in the least smitten by him.’
Rebecca felt swamped with relief. Once again, she
caught Lucas’s quizzical look and glanced hastily
away. He made her feel as though her defences were
as fragile as glass.
‘I am content to agree to that,’ she said cautiously,
‘as long as I do not have to pretend to any degree of
fondness for Lord Lucas.’
‘Capital!’ Justin Kestrel said, smiling broadly. ‘I
shall leave the two of you to work out the details of
our family connection and tell the rest of us how it
stands. Keep it as simple as possible. You will wish
to spend some time with Miss Raleigh after luncheon,
Lucas?’
‘I shall,’ Lucas said, with disconcerting promptness.
‘Then we shall travel to Midwinter tomorrow morn-
ing,’ Justin Kestrel concluded. ‘I shall send a message
ahead to Kestrel Court. Is there anything else?’
Rachel Newlyn raised a point of her own. ‘We are
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Cornick
181
going to need some time to arrange suitable attire for
Miss Raleigh,’ she said.
Everyone looked at her, including Rebecca. She had
not given any thought to clothes. She seldom did.
‘I can go back to Clerkenwell to fetch my belong-
ings,’ she began, but Lucas shook his head.
‘In the first instance, it is too dangerous for you to
return there until this matter is settled,’ he said, ‘and
in the second, I doubt you have anything suitable for
this masquerade.’
Rebecca glared at him. She knew that she was being
trivial, but it was good to have an excuse to argue. ‘I
assure you, Lord Lucas, that I have some very attrac-
tive gowns. It is simply that I do not wear them.’
‘Lucas is in the right of it, Miss Raleigh,’ Justin
interposed smoothly, ‘although he could have ex-
pressed himself much more diplomatically. No one
will believe that you are our cousin unless you are
suitably attired.’
Rebecca looked around the rose salon at the simple
but expensive furnishings and the understated elegance
of her hosts. She deflated slightly. ‘Oh, very well! But
I require the minimum of items. I cannot believe my
stay will be a long one and there is no point in wasting
the money.’
She saw the brothers exchange a look and wondered
just what Lucas had told his brother about her. ‘Just
so, Miss Raleigh,’ Justin Kestrel said. ‘We shall be
most frugal.’
Even so, it soon transpired that the Duke’s idea of
frugality and Rebecca’s own did not accord particu-
larly well.
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Mistress
‘This cannot be right,’ Rebecca said hopelessly,
gazing at the mountains of clothing and accessories
that were piled up in all corners of the blue bedroom
by the middle of the afternoon. ‘I cannot possibly need
all of this! I have not ordered the half of it!’
‘No, I did,’ Rachel Newlyn said calmly. She ges-
tured to the piles in turn. ‘You have gloves over there,
Rebecca, stockings there, various undergarments
there—I shall not put you to the blush by itemising
them!—nightgowns and robes, handkerchiefs and
scarves, hats to choose from there—oh, and shoes, of
course.’
Rebecca pressed both hands to her hot cheeks.
Never had she imagined setting eyes upon such a se-
lection of fashionable and expensive clothes, much
less being able to purchase them. Yet there was no
possibility of refusal on her part. Rachel had accom-
panied Rebecca to Bond Street, for a bewildering array
of items Rebecca had not even realised she needed. In
addition to all her clothes there was a selection of glass
cosmetic bottles and a very beautiful set of silver-
backed brushes. Her head ached with the opulence of
it all.
The day dress she was wearing became her well. It
was rose pink and suited her complexion perfectly. On
the bed was a huge selection of gowns—walking
dresses, riding habits, ballgowns, spencers, pelisses...
She had no notion when she would have the oppor-
tunity to wear them all. When she had first tried on
the rose-pink gown she had stared at herself in the
mirror for quite five minutes, for it had utterly trans-
formed her appearance. Her thick chestnut hair, which
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normally she wore tied back or pushed hastily under
a lace cap, was loose about her face in a dark cloud.
Her eyes were a vivid blue. It felt odd to be a dressed
as a lady of fashion, but she knew she looked pretty.
She hesitated to use the word for it had not had much
currency in her world, but it was true.
‘You look lovely, Rebecca,’ Rachel said warmly,
watching her with amusement. ‘It is a shame that we
have had to buy your gowns off the peg, but you are
fortunate to have found things that fit you well.’
‘I had no idea what I was choosing,’ Rebecca ad-
mitted, still turning surreptitiously to view the gown
from all angles in the mirror. ‘I was looking at colour
and cut.’
‘You have a flair for it,’ Rachel agreed. ‘It must be
the artist in you.’
‘It feels strange,’ Rebecca admitted. ‘I never wear
clothes like this.’
‘Do you like them?’ Rachel asked, her eyes twin-
kling at Rebecca’s poor attempts to conceal her pleas-
ure.
‘Oh, yes,’ Rebecca admitted with a little sigh.
‘Rather too much! It will be a pang for me to give
them up when the masquerade is at an end.’
There was a knock at the door. ‘Come in!’ Rachel
called, before Rebecca could say anything.
Lucas Kestrel walked in. ‘I am come to see how
much longer the security of the nation must wait on
the demands of fashion—’ he began, then his eyes fell
on Rebecca and he stopped.
She stood somewhat self-consciously before him
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Mistress
whilst his astounded gaze travelled over her. There
was a long moment of silence.
‘Good God, Rebecca...’ Lucas said. He sounded
stunned.
‘Try for something more coherent, Lucas,’ Rachel
said, a spark of amusement in her eyes. ‘Does Rebecca
not look fine?’
Lucas seemed to recollect himself. ‘It is extraordi-
nary what one can achieve with good grooming,’ he
said. ‘I am come to ask Miss Raleigh when she will
be free to discuss our plans.’
‘We shall not be much longer,’ Rachel said. ‘Re-
becca may join you in the garden shortly, as it is a
fine day.’
Lucas went, with one long, backward look at Re-
becca, who had gathered the nearest piece of material
to her—a riding habit—and was holding it defensively
at her breast, despite the fact that the pink gown was
all that was demure.
‘How rude he is,’ she said breathlessly. ‘Good
grooming, indeed!’
Rachel laughed. ‘He was only rude because he was
shaken,’ she said shrewdly, ‘and if you can do that to
Lucas, who is accounted a man of experience, I’ll war-
rant you will have the whole of Midwinter falling at
your feet, Rebecca!’
Chapter
Eight
When Rebecca joined Lucas in the garden some
twenty minutes later, she was wearing a warm pelisse
over the pink day dress and therefore felt a great deal
more prepared to face him. Her confidence lasted pre-
cisely thirty seconds—until he took her hand in his to
guide her to the wooden seat that overlooked a pretty
little ornamental fishpond.
‘Are you sufficiently warm out here?’ he asked. ‘We
may talk inside if you prefer.’
Rebecca shook her head. At least out here in the
open air she felt free. The thought of being shut away
privately with Lucas was enough to make her
breathing constrict.
‘It is a pleasant day and I have not been outside
much of late,’ she said. ‘I am content to stay here.’
‘Very well.’ Lucas sat down beside her, crossing his
long, elegant legs and giving her a sideways apprais-
ing look.
‘So we are to be cousins, Miss Raleigh,’ he said
softly. ‘I rather like that, although I could ask for a
closer relationship.’
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The
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Mistress
‘Even this is too close,’ Rebecca said. ‘We are not
kissing cousins, my lord. If you recall, you have suc-
cumbed to a
tendre
for me but I, alas, wish for none
of it.’
‘Kissing cousins...’ Lucas said. The corner of his
mouth lifted in a smile. ‘I rather like that idea.’
‘Pray disregard it,’ Rebecca said sharply. ‘You are
supposed to be acting as though you suffer unrequited
love, rather than planning a conquest.’
Lucas’s smile deepened as it rested on her face. ‘It
would not be in character for me to ignore a challenge,
Miss Raleigh.’
Rebecca’s pulse fluttered and was ignored. He had
already told her that he would do all in his power to
convince her to accept his suit. This, then, was the
confirmation.
‘I believe we are intended to be discussing my aris-
tocratic antecedents,’ she said, ‘rather than wasting our
time. To which branch of your illustrious family do I
belong?’
Lucas laughed. ‘You are to be a very distant cousin
on the distaff side. We have so many cousins that no
one will think anything of it.’
‘And the reason that I have come to visit you?’
‘We thought to stick as closely to the truth as pos-
sible,’ Lucas said. ‘The relatives with whom you lived
were recently carried off by fever and so you are on
a protracted visit to us whilst Justin, as head of the
family, decides what is to become of you.’
‘How very convenient,’ Rebecca said, her lips thin-
ning. ‘Not only does it have the ring of authenticity
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Cornick
187
but it would be a cruel person indeed to question me
when I have been in mourning.’
‘Indeed so,’ Lucas said. ‘It also explains why you
have not been in society.’
‘But not why I never had a season or made an ad-
vantageous match,’ Rebecca said. ‘I am scarcely a de´-
butante, my lord, so what is the explanation for that?
Were we too poor?’
‘No,’ Lucas said. ‘That would make Justin look un-
generous for failing to sponsor you.’ He put his head
on one side. ‘I think, Miss Raleigh, that you must have
been disappointed in love.’
Rebecca raised her brows. ‘That will not require a
great leap of imagination, my lord,’ she said bitterly.
Their gazes clashed. ‘And I am pledged to make
you forget,’ Lucas said softly, ‘which is why I dog
your footsteps like a suitor.’
‘I prefer to think of you as a faithful hound,’ Re-