Read Rapturous Rakes Bundle Online
Authors: Georgina Devon Nicola Cornick Diane Gaston
and creamy flesh. She looked up as Rebecca came in
and gave a little shudder.
‘Brown, darling? So disfiguring!’
Nicola
Cornick
43
‘I do not dress to impress in my profession,’ Re-
becca said, without rancour.
Her friend’s blue eyes mocked her. ‘And how it
shows!’
In reply, Rebecca pushed Nan’s feet gently off the
workbench and sat down opposite her. Sam the coach-
man put the tea tray down on the rosewood desk and
gave Rebecca a huge wink. She found herself smiling
back. Sam had the bearing of an old soldier and a
granite-hewn face to match, and he might work for the
Archangel, but then so did she after a fashion. He also
made an excellent strong cup of tea, and that went a
long way towards gaining Rebecca’s appreciation.
‘Call back for me in a half-hour if you please, Sam-
uel,’ Nan said sweetly, kicking off the red shoes and
tucking her feet up under her on the
chaise-longue.
‘I
have matters of business to discuss with Miss Ra-
leigh.’
The coachman bowed, gave Rebecca another smile,
and went out into the street.
‘Your business must be urgent indeed if it brings
you out so early,’ Rebecca said. She remembered Nan
once saying that one of the benefits of being a kept
woman was that one worked all night and could sleep
all day. Rebecca privately thought that it was not
worth it, even to be the mistress of an amiable buffoon
like Lord Bosham. For better or worse, she had in-
herited a large amount of pride and a streak of inde-
pendence from her family, and that pride revolted at
the thought of being any man’s mistress.
Nan did not answer immediately. She allowed her
gaze to travel around the workshop, pausing as her
44
The
Rake’s
Mistress
eye fell on a slender vase on the windowsill. It was
engraved with a picture of a sailing ship, a privateer
with elegant lines and furled sails. She smiled slightly.
‘How is your brother these days, Rebecca? Have
you heard from him lately?’
‘Not in a long time,’ Rebecca said. Her chest tight-
ened and she took a deep breath to steady herself. No
matter how much time went past, it always hurt to be
cut off from Daniel; now that her aunt and uncle were
dead, the isolation was much more acute.
‘A pity,’ Nan said, her blue eyes sharp. ‘Now there
is a man who could persuade me into marriage...’
‘I do not believe that Daniel is a marrying man,’
Rebecca said with a small smile. ‘He is wedded to his
ship.’
‘Show me a man who is the marrying kind, darling,’
Nan said, a little bitterly. ‘They are all out for what
they can get, which is why we have to fleece them
first.’
Rebecca pulled a face. She had heard Nan speak
like this before and seen her friend’s pretty face crease
with cynicism and bitterness. Rebecca herself had
never had a great deal of time for love. As a child,
she had been a voracious reader and had devoured
everything that came within her grasp, be it romances
or treatises on engraving. Once she had started to
work, the time for reading and any other pursuit had
become very limited indeed and Rebecca had come to
the conclusion that romance belonged only between
the pages of a book. As far as she could see, marriage
was a matter of comfort, convenience and sometimes
of financial benefit, and yet she had never seen fit to
Nicola
Cornick
45
enter the married state for any of those reasons. Not
even when her aunt and uncle had died and, lonely
and almost destitute, she had received three offers of
marriage and had been tempted to take them simply
for security... She had held out because a stubborn
instinct had told her that, despite her cynicism, there
had to be something better. She hoped it was true, yet
in her heart she did not really believe it.
Rebecca drew a piece of paper towards her and ex-
tracted a pencil from the drawer of her desk. She
started to sketch idly—little cherubs, larger angels
with grave faces, wings folded, hands held piously in
prayer. The angel motif was the perfect engraving for
her commission. But perhaps a saintly face was not
the correct image for the Archangel Club. Angels with
wicked faces would be more appropriate, angels that
looked like Lord Lucas Kestrel...
Rebecca bit the end of her pencil and tried to con-
centrate.
‘Lord Fremantle was asking for you,’ Nan said. ‘He
was most impressed when he met you last night.’
The pencil broke between Rebecca’s fingers but she
did not look up. ‘By my engraving, I hope,’ she said
colourlessly.
Nan drummed her fingers on the brocaded edge of
the sofa. ‘You understand precisely what I mean,
Becca.’
Rebecca sighed. ‘I hope that you told him that I was
not interested,’ she said.
There was a pause. ‘Rebecca,’ Nan said, ‘will you
not at least consider it? Fremantle is rich and gen-
erous—’
46
The
Rake’s
Mistress
And
depraved
and
revolting,
Rebecca added, though
she did not voice her thoughts aloud.
Nan waved a hand to encompass the workshop.
‘What are you trying to prove here? You know that
you cannot continue. This week, next week, it will all
be the same in the end.’
Rebecca looked up and met the steely blue of her
friend’s eyes. She felt angry and upset. So this was
why Nan had called so early. Lord Fremantle,
Bosham’s crony and one of the gentlemen of the Arch-
angel Club, had made no secret of his admiration for
her when they had met the previous night. Rebecca
had ignored his veiled hints and had concentrated on
business, but now the inevitable had happened. Fre-
mantle wanted her to be his mistress and he had sent
Nan as a go-between, to negotiate the arrangement.
Perhaps there was even a financial reward in it for Nan
herself, when Rebecca complied. The thought made
her skin crawl.
Nan was still looking disparagingly around the
empty workshop. Rebecca knew there was no point in
pretending. Her friend had seen the desperate state to
which she had descended. Nan had even checked that
Daniel, Rebecca’s brother, was not inconveniently on
hand to defend his sister’s honour, and then she had
passed on Lord Fremantle’s proposition. And the
worst of it was that Nan was right. Sooner or later
Rebecca would lose the roof over her head and would
need to find alternative employment, although she was
utterly determined that it would not be in a house
of ill repute, even one so exclusive as the Arch-
angel Club.
Nicola
Cornick
47
Rebecca thought about Lord Fremantle and felt her
skin shudder. He had been everything that was cour-
teous the previous night, but his dead fish eyes and
his waxy hands had repelled her. Even had she been
starving she could never have accepted his offer. The
thought of those hands on her body was so repellent
that she felt sick.
‘His lordship is very kind,’ she said, trying to swal-
low the lump of nausea in her throat, ‘but I fear I must
decline his proposal. Even if I cannot continue with
my own workshop I am certain I shall find employ-
ment elsewhere.’
‘As a drudge in someone else’s workshop?’ Nan
asked, the derision clear in her voice. ‘You are too
good for that, Becca.’
Rebecca almost said, ‘Better a drudge than a
whore’, but managed to hold back, both out of friend-
ship and also because she was not at all certain that it
was true. Was her own parlous situation so much more
enviable than her friend’s pampered life? Most people
would think not.
‘I cannot do as you suggest,’ she said.
She knew that her voice was nowhere near as steady
as she would have wished, but she also knew that Nan
was canny and would not push too far. She had
planted an idea and she would watch it grow as Re-
becca’s plight became more acute. Sure enough, Nan
shrugged lightly now.
‘No matter. It was merely a thought. Your decision
will not affect your commission, of course. Lord Fre-
mantle was most impressed by your work.’
‘Thank you,’ Rebecca said. She looked at her friend,
48
The
Rake’s
Mistress
her shoulders slumping. ‘You know how grateful I am
that you got me the work, Nan, but I cannot do as
Lord Fremantle wishes.’
Nan’s hard little face softened slightly. She put a
hand out to Rebecca. ‘I know you think that you could
not do it, Becca, but it is not so difficult in the end...’
‘I understand that,’ Rebecca said, shuddering. ‘That
is what frightens me.’
She picked up her pencil again and sketched a few
more angels. Lord Fremantle had been entranced by
her suggestion that she should take the Archangel im-
age and transfer it to the medium of glass. He had
placed an immediate commission for a large shallow
rose bowl and a matching vase to grace the dining
table of the Club, and he had offered her a huge
amount of money as payment for her work. Rebecca
felt cold inside. She had an unpleasant feeling that she
might be obliged to offer Lord Fremantle various other
services before she ever saw her money, whatever Nan
said.
The difficulty was that she was trapped. If she un-
dertook the work and the Archangel Club refused to
pay then she was ruined, with no recourse. If she re-
fused the commission because she suspected Lord Fre-
mantle’s motives, then she would starve all the sooner,
for she had only one other customer at present and no
prospect of that situation changing. She had no choice.
‘I hear,’ Nan said, holding her teacup delicately be-
tween painted fingernails, ‘that you had a most excit-
ing encounter with Lord Lucas Kestrel last night, Re-
becca.’
Nicola
Cornick
49
Rebecca pushed her sketches away with an impa-
tient hand. ‘I suppose that Samuel told you?’
‘Of course. He was most concerned for your safety,
my love. He would have stepped in at any moment,
you know, had his assistance been required.’
‘Handsome of him,’ Rebecca murmured, remem-
bering the alacrity with which the coachman had taken
orders from Lucas Kestrel. ‘Fortunately I was in no
real danger.’
‘Tell me all about it,’ Nan invited, leaning forward.
‘You are flying high there, Becca. The Kestrels are
monstrously high in the instep.’
‘I am scarcely pursuing their acquaintance,’ Re-
becca said drily. ‘Indeed, I should be happy if I never
set eyes on a member of that family again. One meet-
ing was quite enough for me.’
‘It sounds as though you set eyes on quite a lot of
Stephen Kestrel,’ Nan said, arching her plucked eye-
brows knowingly. ‘Almost all of him, in fact. Sam was
concerned that he might catch his death of cold when
he hopped into the carriage half-naked.’
Rebecca stifled a laugh. ‘Happily for Lord Stephen,
I lent him my cloak. And I averted my gaze as best I
could.’
Nan opened her reticule and popped a sugared al-
mond into her mouth, crunching with fervour. ‘I hear
that he is a sweet boy.’
‘Very,’ Rebecca said wryly. ‘I felt very sisterly to-
ward him.’
‘I wonder if he has a penchant for bawdy houses
and low company?’ Nan mused. ‘Perhaps I could
make his acquaintance?’
50
The
Rake’s
Mistress
Rebecca gave her a very sharp look. ‘He has no
money of his own,’ she said. ‘I think he is beneath
your notice, Nan.’
‘Oh, well...’ Nan put her reticule aside with a pet-
tish gesture. ‘I doubt the game would be worth the
candle. Young boys...’ She shrugged. ‘They are usu-
ally grateful and eager, but it is seldom worth it in the
end.’
‘Besides which, you would incur the wrath of Lord