Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
there, exciting, pleasurable and at the same time
deeply comforting, like coming home.
Rebecca put her face in her hands for a brief mo-
ment, then bent to scoop up the pencils and the sheets
of paper that were still lying scattered on the floor.
She reminded herself that bliss was a very short-lived
and deceptive feeling, for when it had gone, as it
surely would, one was left counting the cost.
She must be practical. She had a living to earn and
she wanted matters neat, tidy and simple. There was
no room in her private life for passion when it all went
into her work. Nothing must induce her to accept
carte
blanche.
Not Lucas’s persuasions, nor her own desires.
She owed it to herself to keep that pledge.
All the same, she was tempted.
Chapter
Three
Lord Lucas Kestrel was feeling guilty. It was not a
sensation that was familiar to him and he did not care
for it. It was a guilt that had crept over him during the
previous few days and had finally driven him out of
the house at nearly midnight to take refuge at White’s,
where his friends had greeted him with great pleasure
and had promptly set out to relieve him of a large part
of his army pay. Since Lucas could not concentrate he
lost very quickly, and had just thrown his cards in for
a final time when someone touched his shoulder and
Cory Newlyn’s voice said in his ear, ‘Would you care
to join me for a drink, Lucas, before you lose your
shirt?’
Lucas looked up, his dark scowl lightening into a
reluctant smile. Cory had been a friend of the Kestrels
for many years and the two of them had met only the
previous week when he had called on Lord Newlyn at
the British Museum to discuss the pictorial code being
used by the Midwinter spies.
Lucas stretched. ‘I’ll gladly join you,’ he said, mov-
ing to sit with Cory at a quiet corner table where a
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bottle of port already resided on the table between
them. Cory sat down, crossed his long legs at the ankle
and viewed Lucas with a meditative air.
‘The only time I have seen a man lose like that was
when your brother Richard was suffering the pangs of
unrequited love for Deborah Stratton,’ he said cheer-
fully. ‘There must be something weighing heavy on
your mind. What is going on, Luc?’
Lucas scowled. ‘Damn it, Cory,’ he said feelingly,
‘must you be so shrewd?’
Cory laughed. ‘Forgive me. If you do not wish to
talk...’
Lucas shrugged, trying to shake off his irritation. ‘I
feel guilty because I am behaving like a cad,’ he said
bluntly. Briefly he told Cory the tale of his dealings
with Rebecca Raleigh. ‘Tom Bradshaw discovered
that she worked out of a studio in Clerkenwell,’ he
finished. ‘Until four months ago it belonged to her
uncle, George Provost. He was a well-respected en-
graver, if not a particularly eminent one, and he would
have been the perfect choice to make the Midwinter
engravings, for he would welcome the business but not
be famous enough for anyone to recognise his work.’
Cory grimaced. ‘You are sure?’
‘Certain.’ Lucas toyed with his glass of port, watch-
ing the deep red liquid glow in the light. ‘I have been
to the studio. There were some pieces there that
matched the patterns on the Midwinter glass precisely,
and Miss Raleigh confirmed that they were her uncle’s
work.’ Lucas sighed and sat back. ‘There can be no
doubt.’
‘So we have found our engraver.’
68
The
Rake’s
Mistress
‘It would appear so. But as he has so inconveniently
died, his niece is our only contact to the Midwinter
spy ring and I need more information from her.’
Cory pulled a face. ‘I see your dilemma.’
Lucas nodded. ‘I am taking advantage of Miss Ra-
leigh’s vulnerability because I want her to confide in
me,’ he said. He pulled a disgusted face. ‘Good God,
it sounds even worse when I express it like that! I can
scarce believe what I am doing.’
Cory did not reply immediately. He lifted the bottle
and poured another glass of port slowly, watching Lu-
cas’s face as he did so.
‘It sounds to me,’ he said perceptively, ‘that you are
suffering an excess of remorse over this, Luc. We all
know that espionage can be an unpleasant business,
requiring the sort of actions one might not normally
contemplate.’ He looked closely at his friend. ‘Are you
sure that your feelings are not involved?’
Lucas drew rings on the highly polished surface of
the side table with his wine glass. He tried to block
out the memory of kissing Rebecca and the promise
of passion with which she had responded to him. That
had not been part of his original plan. He had intended
to draw her out and gain her confidence, nothing more,
but the mutual attraction between them had made a
mockery of his good intentions. And then it had taken
little to change good intentions to bad ones...
He had been reading the poetry of Ben Jonson the
previous night. God only knew why—he was a man
of action, not a scholar. He suspected that it was a
book his brother Richard had left lying around and he
had picked it up because he was bored and restless
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and thinking too much on Miss Rebecca Raleigh. He
should have known better. Poetry never helped a man
to think straight, and when he had stumbled across a
line from the ‘Queen of Love’ he had paused and
thought of her even more, for he seemed powerless to
resist.
‘You
will
turn
all
hearts
to
tinder...’
He told himself that he had kissed Rebecca because
he had been testing her, suspicious of the innocence
that cloaked her like a shield. He had wondered if that
purity could possibly be genuine. Yet there had been
nothing calculated about their embrace. Lucas himself
was experienced enough to know the difference be-
tween real and counterfeit emotion, the type that men
could buy from courtesans. There was nothing coun-
terfeit about Rebecca Raleigh. He had acted on im-
pulse and her response had shaken him. And when he
had seen the confusion of desire in her face as he
released her, he had been overtaken by such a wave
of tenderness... He shook his head. That was no way
for a rake to think. More to the point, it was no way
for him to be thinking when he was conducting an
investigation.
Cory cleared his throat gently and Lucas glanced
up.
‘I confess that I find it difficult to be detached about
this,’ he said morosely, answering the question in his
friend’s eyes. ‘I cannot conceive how it happened.’
Cory’s lips twitched. ‘How many times have you
met Miss Raleigh?’ he asked.
‘Twice.’
‘And what do you know of her?’
70
The
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Mistress
‘Very little, as yet.’
Lucas realised that in terms of fact this was proba-
bly true, but that in terms of instinct, on a deeper level,
he felt that he already knew Rebecca intimately. It was
a disquieting feeling. The little that he did know
prompted him to trust her, to take her into his confi-
dence. He was sure that she could not be guilty of
involvement in the Midwinter spy ring. Perhaps even
her uncle had not known the nature of the business he
was involved in. When Lucas had studied the pieces
on display in Rebecca’s studio, his heart had sunk like
a stone at the likenesses between the engraving on the
glasses there and the ones in his possession. It was the
first time he had visited an engraver’s studio
not
want-
ing to find the patterns he sought. But the style was
unmistakable.
‘Ask her to tell you the truth.’ Cory was watching
him, his face grave. ‘Either that, or disengage until
Justin returns from Midwinter and can question her
himself.’ He grimaced. ‘When do you expect him
back?’
‘In a week or so.’ Lucas rubbed his brow. ‘I cannot
disengage, Cory. We cannot take the risk that Miss
Raleigh is involved with the Midwinter spies. If she
were to suspect anything and disappear, we would
have lost the lead. Worse, she would warn the others
what had happened and then all our work would be
destroyed.’
‘And if she is innocent?’ Cory questioned. ‘How
will she feel to discover that you have approached her
under false pretences?’
Lucas’s lips thinned. It was the one question that he
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had not permitted himself to consider. ‘I cannot allow
that to influence me.’
There was a silence between them. ‘I appreciate
your difficulty, Lucas,’ Cory said slowly. ‘Sometimes,
however, a man must follow his instinct.’
‘Following one’s instinct can get one killed,’ Lucas
said bleakly.
‘And ignoring it can lose a man the one thing he
most desires,’ Cory pointed out gently.
Lucas shifted irritably. ‘Marriage is making you
soft, Cory Newlyn. Why tie yourself to one woman
when there is an entire legion of them out there?’
‘Perhaps,’ Cory said, ‘because one particular
woman is all you need?’
Lucas gave him a cynical smile. ‘Definitely soft,
Cory.’
‘All rakes reform in the end,’ Cory said, ‘unless
they want to end as sad old roueś leaning on their
canes and leering at the de´butantes.’
Lucas shuddered. ‘You paint such an attractive pic-
ture.’
‘Think about it,’ Cory said, smiling. ‘Look at Rich-
ard.’
Lucas shook his head. ‘Richard was ready to re-
form,’ he said slowly. ‘He was in love. I...’ he hesi-
tated, ‘...I am not.’
Cory sighed. ‘Nor ever shall be? I thought that you
had recovered well enough from your youthful dis-
appointment to realise that not all women are design-
ing harpies.’
Lucas laughed. ‘Oh, I have. My antipathy does not
stem from that.’ His face stilled. ‘It is more that I have
72
The
Rake’s
Mistress
never met a woman to whom I wished to be faithful.
Ever after is a long time.’
‘You are thinking of your father,’ Cory said acutely.
Lucas shrugged. ‘I am thinking of my mother,’ he
said. ‘She detested Papa’s philandering, but she never
said a word against him.’ He shifted uncomfortably in
his chair for, even now, the memories were hard to
recall. ‘She never said a word, but she lost the hap-
piness that once lit her eyes. I could not ask for such
stoicism from my wife.’ He fixed Cory with a sardonic
look. ‘If you start to tell me, in that exasperating man-
ner of happily married people, that I shall feel differ-
ently when I meet the right woman, then—’
Cory held up a hand peaceably. ‘I should not dream
of it, Luc.’ He got to his feet and slapped Lucas good-
naturedly on the shoulder. ‘I wish you good fortune. I
am away, home to my wife.’
Lucas watched Cory’s tall figure thread its way
through the milling crowd about the card tables. He
saw Cory pause to greet an acquaintance here and
there, but there was a barely repressed impatience
about him that soon had him on the move again. Lucas
noticed that he turned down at least two offers of a
round of piquet and several invitations to join some
cronies for a drink. He shook his head thoughtfully.
He had the greatest admiration for Rachel Newlyn, but
he could not see why Cory should be in such a hurry
to return to her side. Petticoat government... He had
done very well without it these twenty-eight years past
and he was not about to succumb to its lure now. This
business with Rebecca Raleigh was a different matter
entirely. The only reason he felt badly about deceiving
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her was because she was young and alone. She had
struck him as gallant. Yes, that was the word to de-
scribe Miss Raleigh. She was gallant in the face of all
the odds and he admired her courage whilst being in