Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
raised his head and greeted Rebecca as she walked
slowly by, touching his cap to her before he went back
to his work. Beside his tiny boat gleamed Sir John
Norton’s yacht,
Breath
of
Scandal,
and Rebecca was
halfway past it before she realised with a sinking heart
that Sir John was actually on board and had seen her.
It seemed unfortunate. Her spirits were lower than the
tide, her heart and her thoughts were full of Lucas and
the last thing she wished for was to fend off Sir John’s
bluff gallantry. Remembering Justin Kestrel’s words
the previous night, she felt a
frisson
of fear. This was
dangerous company in which to linger.
However, it was too late. Sir John had seen her and
now jumped down on to the quay with every expres-
sion of delight.
‘Miss Raleigh! Well met, ma’am! I was wondering
when I would have the pleasure of showing you my
craft.’
‘It is a trim yacht,’ Rebecca agreed, dredging up a
smile and giving the boat’s shining lines a look of
approval. ‘Do you go out today, Sir John? It seems an
inclement day for a sail.’
Sir John looked over his shoulder at the sea mist
pressing on the shore. ‘This will lift shortly,’ he said
dismissively. ‘The sun is already breaking through.
Perhaps you would care to come for a cruise with me
later?’
Rebecca smiled. ‘Thank you for your kind offer, but
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Mistress
I fear I shall not have the opportunity today. Some
other time, perhaps?’
Sir John did not appear particularly cast down.
There was a flicker of calculation in his blue eyes as
he watched her. ‘At the very least, permit me to show
you the trophy I won in this year’s Deben Yacht
Race,’ he suggested. ‘I am sure that you will appre-
ciate the workmanship, Miss Raleigh. It is a marvel-
lous piece of engraved glass.’
‘Engraved glass?’ Rebecca said unwarily. Her gaze
shot up to meet his, but Sir John was looking bland.
She cleared her throat. ‘That is...I know little of such
matters, Sir John, but I should be delighted to see the
trophy, of course.’
‘Splendid!’ To her shock, Norton put one arm about
her waist and practically carried her over the side of
the yacht, guiding her down the companionway and
into the cabin below before she could even protest.
Gasping, ruffled and confused, she put out a hand to
steady herself on the table—and heard the stealthy
click of the cabin door behind her.
Rebecca jumped, trying to sound no more put out
than any young lady who had been manhandled
aboard a yacht and was now in danger of having the
vapours. At all costs she had to seem no more than
Justin Kestrel’s slightly feather-headed cousin.
‘Good gracious, Sir John, you are importunate!’ she
exclaimed. ‘What on earth can you be doing—’
‘A moment,’ Norton murmured. ‘I have it here.’
The neat wooden cupboard under the bulkhead was
slightly ajar, and through it Rebecca could see the
gleam of light on glass. There was indeed a magnifi-
Nicola
Cornick
243
cent engraved rose bowl, but next to it on the shelf
was a set of smaller glasses and they looked suddenly
and shockingly familiar. There was the one with the
engraved sun, the seagull, the anchor, the half-moon...
Rebecca stared as the ideas slowly slotted into
place. Of course. How foolish of them to have thought
that either Lily Benedict or John Norton would keep
an incriminating set of engraved glasses on display in
their homes for all the world to see. The Midwinter
spies were arrogant, but they were not stupid. Here on
the boat was the perfect repository for their master
code, the boat that Norton used for his illicit meetings
with his French spymaster...
‘Superb, is it not?’ John Norton’s voice sounded
loud in her ear. ‘Allow me to show you the detail,
Miss Raleigh. I am sure that a connoisseur such as
yourself will appreciate the magnificent craftsmanship
involved.’
Rebecca shook herself out of her reverie. Her nerves
were jumping and she was suddenly aware of the ex-
treme danger of her situation. She looked at Sir John,
but his face betrayed nothing but its usual good-
humoured bonhomie.
‘I am scarce an expert,’ she said lightly, ‘but I
should be delighted to see the trophy, Sir John.’
Norton bent to extract the rose bowl from the cup-
board. His voice was muffled.
‘You should not be so deprecating, my dear Miss
Raleigh. Who could be more qualified than you to
judge the merit of a piece of engraving?’
Rebecca’s throat dried. She started to edge back-
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The
Rake’s
Mistress
wards towards the doorway but Sir John Norton
straightened quickly, empty-handed.
‘Not so keen now, eh, Miss Raleigh?’ His bluff red
face had flushed to an even redder hue. ‘What a pity
that your faithful protector is unaccountably absent on
the one occasion when you require his aid—’
He broke off and stiffened as the boat shifted
slightly under the weight of someone coming aboard.
There was a thud, the sound of voices and then Lily
Benedict burst down the steps and into the cabin. Her
bonnet was askew and she looked flustered and dis-
traught.
‘John, what is happening?’ she demanded. ‘Edgar
said that the girl, Miss Raleigh, had come this way.’
She broke off as her gaze fell on Rebecca. Her eyes
narrowed in calculation. ‘Oh! Then you already have
her.’
‘Tell Edgar to cast off,’ Norton said without taking
his eyes from Rebecca’s face. ‘Quickly, Lily! We must
get away before the Kestrels come looking for her.’
Lily Benedict looked from the half-open cupboard
to Rebecca and back again. ‘I see,’ she said slowly.
‘Edgar!’ She turned on her heel. ‘Cast off! We must
make sail at once.’
In a desperate, unthinking effort to escape, Rebecca
made a dash for the doorway, but Norton reached her
within two strides and caught her about the waist, pull-
ing her brutally backwards. Her hip caught the edge
of the table; all the breath was knocked from her and
she bit back a gasp of pain.
‘Do nothing foolish, my dear.’ Norton murmured,
his breath hot against her ear. ‘There is so little point.
Nicola
Cornick
245
We had always planned to leave for France today and
all is prepared. Your presence merely complicates the
matter slightly, but I do not suppose that you shall be
with us for long.’ There was a threat beneath the words
that was impossible to ignore.
Rebecca struggled and was held hard. ‘I do not
know what you are talking about—or what you think
you are doing!’ There was no need now to pretend to
fear. It was clear in her voice. She could hear the
sound of the ropes being released and the anchor chain
clinking. It would take only a matter of moments to
get the boat ready to sail. Norton, as he had said, had
had it all prepared. Rebecca’s mind raced as like a
trapped rat. She could not get off the boat and Norton
knew her identity. There could be no pretence any
longer.
He laughed now and tightened his grip. ‘Silly chit,
thinking you could come here and ruin all for us. A
little engraver’s girl with delusions of grandeur.’ He
pushed her in front of him up the steps onto the deck.
‘Edgar recognised you straight away. He was a mem-
ber of the Archangel Club and he commissioned the
glass from your uncle and no one ever knew. No one
guessed the truth.’
Edgar, Rebecca thought. For a moment her mind
was blank, and then she remembered the huddled fig-
ure of Sir Edgar Benedict, skin papery yellow, sitting
in his Bath chair at the dinner, a sinister figure racked
with pain... Sitting in his chair and watching her to
see if she really was George Provost’s niece come to
expose the truth. They had never even considered him
as one of the conspirators. He had fooled them all.
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The
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Mistress
As Norton dragged her up the companionway, the
cold sea air hit Rebecca’s face and helped to clear her
head a little. She could see Edgar Benedict now, work-
ing the sails, as hale and hearty as the vigorous man
he had evidently been all along. Already the yacht was
halfway out into the middle of the estuary, but it was
not that which concerned Rebecca so much as the
shifting banks of mist that she could see curtaining the
entrance to the harbour. She stared in horror.
‘Surely you are not intending to take her out in
this?’
Norton gave a snort of derision. ‘What would you
know of sailing, engraver’s girl? Best stay below if
you are going to have a fit of the vapours!’
He pushed her back down the companionway and
Rebecca fell in a sprawling heap on the floor below
and heard the cabin door slam shut and the key turn
in the lock.
Lucas had completely failed to find anything he re-
quired in the gunsmith’s, which was no surprise since
he could not even see what was in front of his eyes.
All he
could
see was Rebecca’s white face as she
pleaded her innocence, an innocence he had not been
prepared even to consider. Burning with anger, he had
gone out into the night and walked around until his
head had cleared a little. Then he had lain awake for
the entire night whilst he sifted the facts in his mind,
weighing and discarding the evidence. All the indi-
cations were that Miss Rebecca De Lancey was as
guilty as sin, yet all the evidence of his own intuition
told him once again that she was true. He was not
Nicola
Cornick
247
accustomed to acting on intuition and he did not like
it. Yet now he was obliged to admit, at last, that where
Rebecca was concerned his instinct had never let him
down. He had loved her before he even knew it. He
loved her still. And now he wanted her back, and no
secrets or misunderstandings would ever part them
again.
‘Lucas?’ Cory’s voice cut through his thoughts. ‘It
is clear to me that you are never going to make your
choice, so why do we not rejoin the ladies—’
The door of the shop swung open violently and Ra-
chel Newlyn ran inside. Cory broke off and grabbed
his wife by the arm, but it was Lucas whom she ad-
dressed through panting breaths.
‘Lucas! Hurry! Rebecca is on
Breath
of
Scandal.
’
‘What?’ Lucas focussed abruptly. ‘She has gone
with Norton on his yacht? What in the name of thun-
der was she doing—?’
‘No time for that,’ Rachel said, gulping air and
dragging them both out on to the pavement. ‘They
have just this moment set sail. I saw her on deck and
then Norton pushed her below. Quickly!’
She did not need to tell him twice. Lucas had al-
ready abandoned Rachel in Cory’s arms with more
haste than chivalry as he raced towards the harbour.
The air tore in his lungs, clammy and thick. Norton
had taken his yacht out in this? It seemed suicidal.
He reached the edge of the jetty to see the yacht in
the middle of the channel, already drifting into the sea
mist. Beside him on the quay Benbow, the wildfowler,
calmly sorted through his nets, humming beneath his
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The
Rake’s
Mistress
breath as though he had not a care in the world. Lucas
turned to him.
‘Benbow, Sir John Norton’s yacht...’
‘Aye, m’lord?’ The man’s eyes were an incurious
pale blue.
‘Has he been preparing it for long?’
‘Aye, m’lord. Said they were to sail today.’
‘They?’
‘Him and the Benedicts. Took the girl as well, of
course,’ Benbow added, shaking his head. ‘Poor little
missy.’
‘You mean he kidnapped her?’ Lucas’s stomach
churned. A small, doubting part of his mind had won-
dered whether Rebecca had gone of her own free will.