Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
herself, but she had found stepping into this rank of
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society to be quite a difficult task. Lucas’s casual as-
surance made her feel unsophisticated and out of her
depth.
‘Miss Raleigh?’ Sir John Norton was at her elbow,
claiming her attention. He smiled at her with an un-
pleasantly speculative twinkle in his eye. ‘If you are
not engaged for the next, I should be honoured were
you to promise it to me.’
Rebecca smiled, though her heart was not in it.
‘Thank you, Sir John, I should be delighted—’
‘Have you forgotten that that honour has already
been granted to me, Rebecca?’ Lucas drawled, mate-
rializing at her side. ‘I should be desolated if you pre-
ferred Sir John’s company over mine!’
‘On the contrary,’ Rebecca said coolly, ‘I thought
you very well consoled by Miss Ducheyne, Lucas. Be-
sides, surely cousins do not need to stand on ceremony
with each other if there is an offer more attractive?’
Sir John Norton smirked. ‘You heard the lady, Kes-
trel!’
There was a spark of devilment in Lucas’s gaze as
his eyes rested on Rebecca’s face. She felt a shiver of
anticipation along her nerves as he smoothly took up
her challenge.
‘I did indeed,’ he murmured. ‘However, you and I
know, Sir John, that a lady will often say quite the
reverse of what she is thinking in order to make her
erstwhile suitor all the more devoted.’
‘You delude yourself, Lucas,’ Rebecca said sweetly.
‘Or perhaps it is your conceit that deceives you. You
certainly have enough of it. Enough for two men, in
fact!’
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Lucas’s smile held a wicked glint. ‘My dear Re-
becca, why pretend? You know you are not indifferent
to me!’
‘I believe that we were discussing Sir John’s invi-
tation to dance, rather than my feelings or lack of
them,’ Rebecca said sharply. She turned to Norton. ‘I
fear that we have already missed this opportunity, Sir
John, but I should be delighted to dance with you later
in the evening. The country dance after supper, per-
haps?’
Sir John shot Lucas an unsubtle look of triumph.
‘Enchanted, Miss Raleigh,’ he murmured. ‘Perhaps
you would also like to drive with me one day next
week? I could show you my yacht—’
‘That would be splendid,’ Rebecca said hastily, as
Lucas looked as though he were about to make an
abrasive remark. ‘Thank you, Sir John.’
Sir John took her hand and kissed it gallantly, al-
lowing his lips to dwell rather too long. Rebecca was
sincerely glad that she was wearing gloves.
‘Your cousin will soon tire of your attentions if you
are so pressing, Kestrel,’ Sir John said with a sneer as
he released her. ‘Not your usual style, eh?’
Lucas took Rebecca’s hand and tucked it through
his arm in a gesture of possession. ‘Where my cousin
is concerned I do not conform to my usual mode of
behaviour,’ he said smoothly.
‘Nor, indeed, to any style at all,’ Rebecca added.
Sir John gave a crack of laughter and strolled away,
pleased with himself, and Lucas held on to Rebecca a
little tighter.
‘Rebecca, my sweet,’ he said in an undertone, ‘if
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you wish to cross swords with me I suggest that you
do so in private in future, or you may find yourself in
the most compromising position of being kissed in a
ballroom full of people!’
Rebecca tried to draw her hand away, but he held
her firmly.
‘I was merely trying to add a little colour to our
supposed relationship,’ she said coolly. ‘I am sorry
you did not care for it.’
Lucas was looking dangerous. ‘Two can play at that
game,’ he said. He put an arm about her waist in a
hard grip and drew her towards the window embra-
sure. The alcove afforded some privacy from the cu-
rious gaze of Lady Sally’s guests, but Lucas’s high-
handed behaviour did not go unnoticed. A little ripple
of scandalous excitement fluttered through the ranks
of the assembled ladies as they watched him.
‘If you wish to lend colour to the deception, I am
at your service,’ Lucas said. He had not released Re-
becca, but stood with his back blocking the ballroom
from view. Rebecca felt breathless and slightly ner-
vous, a reaction that was only heightened by the un-
relenting grip of his fingers about her wrist. He moved
closer, until his body just brushed against hers.
‘I shall match you step for step and the money will
be on me to overcome your scruples and make you
my bride.’
Rebecca caught her breath. Although he was refer-
ring to the show they were putting on for society, his
words echoed precisely their own, secret situation. Lu-
cas had sworn that she would accept his declaration
and she had rejected him out of hand. Yet with each
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day that passed her will to oppose him grew weaker,
and now, with the insistent pressure of his body
against hers, she felt utterly incapable of resistance.
‘You are mine, Rebecca,’ Lucas said. ‘Do you think
that if I cannot have you I would permit anyone else
to even touch you?’
Rebecca gave a gasp at the undisguised intimacy in
his voice. ‘Permit?’ she said. ‘You presume too much,
Lord Lucas. It is scarcely your place to permit or for-
bid.’
‘By all means believe that if you wish.’
Rebecca’s eyes narrowed. ‘You do not have the
right to dictate my behaviour!’
‘Whilst you are in Midwinter you are my respon-
sibility.’
‘I can take care of myself; once this is all over, we
shall not meet again.’
They were standing stiffly now, like combatants.
Lucas caught her wrist and jerked her close to him, so
close that she could feel the staccato beat of his heart
against the bodice of her gown.
‘I will not let you go,’ he said softly.
Rebecca was trapped by the look in his eyes. It
spoke of possession and demand, and it heated her
blood with sparks of fire. The ballroom, the guests, the
curious glances cast their way...all were as nothing
compared to the raw claim that Lucas was staking to
her.
‘Lucas,’ Justin Kestrel said from beside them, and
his voice cracked like a whip, ‘I am persuaded that
you would not wish to draw any further attention to
Miss Raleigh in such a public place.’
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The
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They both jumped and Lucas released Rebecca’s
wrist.
‘I beg your pardon,’ he said. His gaze still smoul-
dered. He backed away and sketched a bow. ‘You will
excuse me. I shall be better off in the card room.’
Justin Kestrel offered Rebecca his arm. ‘I believe,’
he said smoothly, ‘that Lucas is finding the experience
of unrequited love more trying than he had imagined,
Miss Raleigh.’
‘I am also finding it rather difficult, your Grace,’
Rebecca retorted, trying to quell her shaking.
Justin laughed. ‘Lucas can be very determined when
he wants something sufficiently.’
‘As can I,’ Rebecca said. ‘I have not forgotten that
once my stay here is complete I shall be returning
home.’
She had not forgotten, but she was finding it in-
creasingly difficult. The more time that passed the eas-
ier it seemed to believe that she belonged here and,
worse, that she belonged with Lucas. She had to hold
on to the truth at all costs, and the truth did not include
a future with Lord Lucas Kestrel. It was as simple as
that.
‘So, Miss Raleigh,’ Lady Sally said, ‘what do you
think of
The
History
of
Miss
Harriot
Montague?
’
The eyes of the reading group were fixed on Re-
becca. It made her a little nervous. Although Rachel
Newlyn and Olivia Marney had both been extremely
friendly to her, Chloe Ducheyne and Helena Lang
were, as far as Rebecca could tell, gossiping quizzes
in the making, and Lily Benedict was without a doubt
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215
the most spiteful creature that Rebecca had ever had
the misfortune to meet. She clutched the handsome
brown morocco edition in her hand and tried not to
feel as though she were back in the schoolroom.
‘I find it improbable,’ she said. ‘So many abductions
and kidnappings, and adventures and pirates! I doubt
that anyone could survive so much excitement.’
‘I fear you are of distressingly practical disposition,
Miss Raleigh,’ Lily Benedict said, smiling her feline
smile and regarding Rebecca through half-closed eyes.
‘I suppose you do not believe that such brigands truly
exist?’
‘I am sure that they do,’ Rebecca said crisply, ‘but
that they are nowhere near as romantic as the heroes
of literature.’
Lily Benedict gave a tinkle of laughter. ‘I am certain
that no dyed-in-the-wool villains could withstand your
sternness, Miss Raleigh. They would wither beneath
your pitiless regard!’
‘Surely Miss Raleigh’s point is correct,’ Rachel
Newlyn interposed. ‘In literature one may allow one’s
imagination full reign, whereas in life—’
‘In life one never gets swept off one’s feet by a
handsome hero!’ Lily Benedict said. She tittered. ‘Oh,
but of course that was exactly what happened to you,
Lady Newlyn! I forgot! And to Miss Raleigh herself,
if Lord Lucas Kestrel has his way! Will he have his
way with you, Miss Raleigh?’
There was a sharp intake of breath around the circle.
Some, such as Rachel and Olivia Marney, were look-
ing disapproving of Lily Benedict’s blatant malice.
Others were looking intrigued.
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‘I have a very cousinly regard for Lord Lucas, Lady
Benedict,’ Rebecca said. ‘However, I assure you that
it is no more than that.’
‘You looked extremely close, if not cousinly, at
Lady Sally’s ball,’ Lily Benedict said. ‘And I must
confess that it is difficult to see Lord Lucas as any-
thing other than a very attractive man.’
‘Even attractive men have mothers, sisters—and
cousins,’ Rebecca said drily.
‘Lily,’ Lady Sally interrupted, ‘much as I enjoy a
good gossip, I do believe we are here to discuss Miss
Harriot Mon-tague’s romantic trials and tribulations
rather than those of anyone else.’
Lily Benedict waved one white hand dismissively.
‘I merely ask what everyone else wishes to know,
Sally—is Lord Lucas Kestrel caught in a parson’s
mousetrap? If so, it would be a good joke for the man
who has broken half the hearts in London!’
‘You exaggerate, Lily,’ Lady Sally said calmly.
‘I beg your pardon. A quarter of the hearts in Lon-
don, then.’
‘That woman is as unpleasant a creature as one
could ever find,’ Rebecca fumed as she and Rachel
walked back to Kestrel Court after the meeting of the
reading group. ‘I cannot believe that we are engaged
to dine at Midwinter Bere this evening! Justin and Lu-
cas seemed anxious to fulfill the obligation, whereas I
fear every morsel of food will stick in my throat!’
Rachel nodded sympathetically. ‘It is only because
they hope for the opportunity to search Midwinter
Bere house,’ she pointed out. ‘Lady Benedict rarely
entertains because her husband is an invalid, and since
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Sir John Norton does not appear to have the engrav-
ings in his possession, suspicion inevitably falls on
her.’
‘The idea is foolish,’ Rebecca said shortly. ‘What,
is Lady Benedict to entertain us to dinner with her
engraved crystal sitting on the table? Surely even she
would not be so arrogant as to parade it when she must
know she is under suspicion?’
Rachel grimaced. ‘She is intolerably proud and it
may well be that arrogance that brings her down.’
Rebecca kicked in vicious and unladylike fashion at
a pile of autumn leaves drifting down from the bank.