Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
no attempt to touch her. He was making it very diffi-
cult to resist him. He had made no excuses; made no
attempt to deny that he had hurt her very badly. Si-
lence fell and lingered. Lucas put one hand over her
clenched ones.
‘I would never injure you again, Rebecca. I swear
it. I want you to marry me. I want it very much.’
Rebecca shivered. He was watching her intently and
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she was almost unbearably aware of his touch on her
hand. His softly spoken words were so persuasive.
‘I cannot.’ The words were wrenched from her.
‘You are still angry with me,’ Lucas said, watching
her. ‘I understand that. What happened between
us—’
Rebecca made a sharp movement. ‘I cannot blame
you for that. I asked you to stay. It was my choice.’
Lucas ran one finger in a silken caress along the
line of her jaw and tilted her chin to look down into
her eyes. His own were smiling. ‘I admire your can-
dour, Rebecca, but I cannot let you take that respon-
sibility. I could have refused. Knowing what I did, I
should have refused.’ His hand lingered against her
cheek. ‘But I wanted you too. I needed you...’
Admire.
Need.
Want...
Rebecca closed her eyes for a second. She had
asked Lucas to stay with her that night because she
had been seeking escape, but she had chosen him be-
cause she already loved him. Yet he had never pre-
tended that love was what he was offering her. She
met his dark, hungry gaze.
‘I love you,’ she said with deliberation. ‘That is why
I cannot marry you. Because I have made enough mis-
takes and I cannot accept second best.’
She saw the stupefaction in his eyes as he took her
words in and for a few endless, fragile seconds she
waited, knowing that she was hoping for the words
she wanted to hear. They did not come. Lucas got to
his feet and took several steps away from her.
‘It is not second best.’ His voice was rough. ‘I
need
you, Rebecca.’
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Rebecca shook her head. The disappointment and
despair threatened to swamp her. She got to her feet
and made blindly for the door. ‘No, Lucas...’
He was there in two strides, easily blocking her
way. ‘Do not fight me, Rebecca. You want me as
much as I want you.’
It was true, but Rebecca’s mind stubbornly told her
that it was not enough. ‘You mistake,’ she said. ‘I
want none of this.’
Lucas’s face was white with strain. ‘Let us see, shall
we?’
He kissed her with hunger, need, and a blistering
passion that shook her to her soul. She did not know
if she was strong enough to withstand this onslaught.
‘How much more proof do you need?’ he demanded
when he released her.
‘It proves nothing!’ Rebecca said. For a long mo-
ment she stared into his eyes. And then she wrenched
herself out of his arms and ran away.
Chapter
Ten
Lucas stayed quite still for several minutes after the
slam of the door had died away. He felt tense and
heated and strangely disoriented.
‘I
want
none
of
this,’
Rebecca had said and, although he had proved otherwise in a physical sense,
she had still remained obstinately aloof from him. It
was as though there was a part of her that he could
not reach, a part that stubbornly refused to accept what
was between them no matter how he tried to convince
her.
Lucas thrust one hand through his hair in a gesture
of extreme frustration. He wanted to reach that corner
of Rebecca’s mind that she withheld from him. He
wanted all of her. She was meant to be his. They both
knew it. He loved her...
He stopped dead. It was not a conclusion that he
had reached logically, by rational thought. It had burst
into his head with the sudden explosion of a shower
of fireworks and yet he knew without a doubt that it
was true. He loved Rebecca Raleigh. He had done so
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for a long time. He had been monstrously slow to rec-
ognise his own feelings. He was a fool.
There was a knock at the door and Justin stuck his
head around. ‘Tom Bradshaw is here, Lucas. Do you
wish to join us in the study?’
For a moment Lucas could not even remember who
Bradshaw was, let alone why he was there. Then he
recollected that they had asked the man to look into
Rebecca’s antecedents and in particular to investigate
the motto he had seen on the engraved glasses. At the
time he had felt uncomfortable at this latest, small be-
trayal. Now he felt it was even more distasteful. He
did not want to know. And yet he had to know. He
had to know everything. He followed Justin slowly out
of the drawing room.
‘Well, Bradshaw?’ Justin said expectantly, when
they were settled in the study. ‘Do you have infor-
mation for us?’
‘Yes, your Grace,’ Bradshaw said. He ran a hand
over his hair, looking slightly nervous. ‘I apologise for
the delay. It took me longer than I had expected to
find the information you required.’
‘Cut the courtesies, Bradshaw,’ Lucas said. His
nerves were strung as tight as a bow. ‘What is your
news?’
Bradshaw looked at him and Lucas felt a lurch of
fear as he saw the expression in the man’s eyes. Justin
was silent.
‘My lord—’
‘Spit it out.’
‘Yes, sir.’ Bradshaw cleared his throat. ‘The motto,
my lord—’
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‘Celer
et
Audax?’
‘Yes, my lord. Swift and bold. It is the family motto
of the Pearce family. The current head of the family
is a Sir Gideon Pearce, a country gentleman whose
seat is at Bowness in Westmorland.’
Justin looked as blank as Lucas felt. ‘Never heard
of him.’
‘No, your Grace.’ Bradshaw shuffled his feet.
‘There is no real reason why you should. Sir Gideon
lives quietly and, as far as I am aware, there is nothing
notable about him at all.’
‘And Miss Raleigh is related to this paragon?’ Lu-
cas questioned.
‘Distantly, my lord. Very distantly.’ Bradshaw took
a deep breath. ‘Bear with me, gentlemen. The Pearces
are an old gentry family. During the English Civil War
they were split, like many at the time. The father and
elder son were for Parliament, but the younger son,
Richard Pearce, fought for the King. He went into ex-
ile with Charles II after Worcester.’
Bradshaw ran a hand over his hair. ‘He met and
married a French Huguenot girl whilst he was in exile
and changed his name to hers as a sign that he repu-
diated his father’s allegiance and all it stood for. He
wrote to his father that the only thing that he was
keeping was the family motto because he was the only
one who deserved it. His father disinherited him as a
result.’
‘A man after my own heart,’ Lucas said, with a grin.
‘Indeed, my lord,’ Bradshaw said. His face was still
strained. ‘Richard Pearce did not return to England
after the restoration of King Charles II. Instead he and
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his wife went to America and became very wealthy
and prominent in New York society.’ Bradshaw con-
sulted his notes. ‘The family supported the British dur-
ing the Revolutionary Wars, lost all their money and
were obliged to flee the country as a result, returning
to England nearly thirty years ago. Miss Raleigh’s fa-
ther, James, became a soldier. For a few years his fam-
ily lived at Poyntz Manor in Somerset.’
‘Miss Raleigh told me this. She said that her father
was killed in India.’ Despite the fact that Bradshaw’s
tale bore out Rebecca’s meagre information about her
childhood, Lucas still felt uneasy. There was some-
thing that Bradshaw had not yet told them, something
bad. He could feel its approach with an inevitability
that chilled him.
‘He was indeed, my lord. His son Daniel, then four-
teen, joined the Navy and his daughter went to London
to live with a distant cousin of her mother’s.’
‘George Provost,’ Lucas said thoughtfully.
‘That is so. Glass engraving,’ Bradshaw added, ‘was
one of the professions of Miss Raleigh’s Huguenot
ancestors.’
‘It all seems perfectly straightforward and blame-
less,’ Justin said, his eyes narrowed shrewdly, ‘so what
is it that you have not told us, Bradshaw?’
Bradshaw took a deep breath. ‘When Richard
Pearce changed the family name in 1652 it was not to
Raleigh, your Grace. That is a much more recent fic-
tion. Since the seventeenth century that family name
has been De Lancey. Miss Rebecca Raleigh was born
Miss Rebecca De Lancey. Her brother is Daniel De
Lancey, smuggler, pirate and suspected French spy.’
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There was a silence in the Duke of Kestrel’s study.
‘Good God,’ Lucas said softly. He was remember-
ing all the little details that came together to create the
damning whole: the way that Rebecca had told him
the truth of her childhood whilst leaving out the most
important aspect—her name and identity. He thought
of all the images of the sea that lived in her engravings
and decorated her studio, he remembered her panic
when he had found the note and the money from her
brother, and the way she had pretended to know noth-
ing of Daniel De Lancey’s ship or current where-
abouts. He let his breath go in a long sigh. He was
not sure if he was angry or disappointed or merely
disillusioned, but he knew now that Rebecca had never
completely trusted him and that his hopes that matters
might change between them were based on sand.
‘What is Daniel De Lancey’s history?’ Justin asked
quietly.
‘He left the Navy at the age of nineteen, your Grace,
and for a while there was no word of him,’ Bradshaw
said quietly. ‘He first came to the government’s notice
as a privateer some five years ago when he captured
a French ship off Calais. These days he sails the east
coast between Kent and Suffolk. There have been
countless attempts to catch him. All have failed. It is
rumoured he deals in smuggled goods and piracy, and
also that he is a French spy.’
‘Is there any foundation to that rumour?’ Lucas
questioned sharply. He could not help himself. ‘Given
his family’s previous loyalties to the Crown, it seems
unlikely.’
Bradshaw shrugged. Lucas could tell that he thought
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he was clutching at straws. A privateer sold himself
and his services indiscriminate of loyalty.
‘With De Lancey there is never anything firmer than
rumour, my lord,’ he said. ‘There is also a tale that he
passes information to the Admiralty when it suits his
purposes and for that reason they have not tried too
hard to catch him of late.’
‘That, at least, may be corroborated,’ Justin said,
reaching for pen and ink. ‘I shall send to the Admiralty
immediately.’
Lucas rubbed his eyes. The facts were stacking up
in his mind like dominoes, one leading inexorably to
the next. ‘This fits rather too well to be coincidence,
does it not?’ he said bitterly. ‘We have French spies
smuggling information abroad. We have a privateer
lying off the coast, we have a glass engraver who has
provided the cipher and...’ he sighed ‘...now I have
brought Daniel De Lancey’s sister to Suffolk!’
Justin raised his brows. ‘I do not believe you should
jump to any conclusions, Luc—’ he started, but Lucas
cut him off.
‘It is not a question of jumping,’ he said bitterly,
‘more a matter of stumbling blindly over the truth.
Miss De Lancey has played me royally for a fool. She
and I will have settlement over this. Now.’
He ignored Justin’s measured suggestion that he
should wait a little as though he had not heard it, and
took the stairs to Rebecca’s room two at a time. He