Read Petals on the River Online
Authors: Kathleen E. Woodiwiss
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Love Stories, #Historical, #Nannies, #Historical Fiction, #Virginia, #Virginia - History - Colonial Period; Ca. 1600-1775, #Indentured Servants
said unsteadily.
"Yet I'd rather not go back up there all alone again .
.
.
at least not yet."
"Nor will I let you." Gage raised a hand to indicate William, who was
still waiting.
"Why don't you let Papa escort you back to the cabin?
I'll be in as soon as I'm finished with my tasks."
"I'm worn out," Shemaine admitted.
"But I want to help.
Twill keep my
mind busy so I won't be reliving everything over and over.
And Cain
will need to be washed up before he's laid in the coffin.
I can do that
while you're making the coffins, then we can come back to the ship
together and finish cleaning the deck."
"All right, my sweet, if that's what you'd prefer."
"Then I'll leave you two," William said reluctantly.
"But don't be too
long.
I'm going to fret until I know you're both safe inside the
cabin."
With Shemaine there, Gage dared not tell his father that he might have
good cause to be concerned while there were still others in the area
willing to pay for Shemaine's death.
His young wife had been through a
lot, and if she hadn't overheard what Potts had told him, then it was
just as well, at least for the time being.
Shemaine brought the subject to light herself.
"Gage, Roxanne said that
someone had paid her to kill me...."
William paused to look back at them.
He had become concerned about his
son' s young wife, and her statement assured him that he had good reason
to be.
"Potts said the same thing," Gage acknowledged with a weary sigh. "
Twould seem someone is very serious about wanting you dead, my love."
"But who would seek after my death besides Morrisa?" Shemaine asked,
totally baffled.
"Morrisa wouldn't waste her money trying to get Potts
to kill me.
He'd have done it for her willingly."
"I don't know who it could be, my love," Gage replied.
"But I intend to
find out.
Potts said that Morrisa knows who it is.
I'll be paying her
another visit tomorrow, right after I take the coffins into Newportes
Newes."
A troubled sigh slipped from Shemaine's lips as she searched her mind,
but she found no face to put to this unknown adversary, at least none
here in the colonies.
"I won't be able to sleep wondering who had
enough money to pay them."
"Then let us be about our tasks, madam, so we can finish up everything
and go to bed," Gage urged.
He stepped across the rocks and lifted
Roxanne.
He was amazed at himself for thinking how much boavier the
woman felt in his arms than his wife.
But then, it was true.
f t being
illogical, despite the trauma of having had three more þffed aut on his
ship.
After tonight, he would be hoping to see the last of the vessel
before any further disasters solidified his niggling apprehensions .
William walked with them as far as the cabin and went inside as they
made their way to the cabinet shop.
Gage returned for Cain's body and
laid the hunchback on a table near Roxanne.
At Shemaine's insistence,
Gage fetched her a pitcher of water and a basin, then observed her with
growing concern as she began to wash the blood from Cain' s face.
Her
hands were trembling, and soon her whole body was shaking.
He tried to
distract her with questions as he took the cloth from her and took over
the task himself.
"What was that about Cain killing Victoria?
You said
Roxanne had lied to him...." Unable to drag her gaze away, Shemaine
stared fixedly at the gnarled face of the hunchback as she told her
husband everything that Roxanne had told her.
" Twould seem that Cain was Roxanne's own private dupe, poor soul," Gage
commented at the conclusion of her story.
r "I really don't think he meant to harm Victoria," Shemaine murmured.
"He just didn't know his own strength, but it served Roxanne's i
purposes well.
I think, at the very last, Cain realized just how evil [
Roxanne really was.
That's probably why he said Roxanne had to die."
12 "He obviously thought he deserved to die, too, for killing Victoria,"
Gage reflected.
"He judged himself and decreed the sentence of death
was fit and just for what he had done."
"Roxanne said Cain was more deliberate about breaking Samuel Myers' s
neck before he threw him down the well."
tR "Well at least I'm better able to understand Myers's death than
could Victoria's," Gage said, heaving a sigh.
"She was so kind to ri
everyone, 1 just couldn't imagine why anyone would want to murder her,
and yet 1 refused to think that she had jumped to her death.
The only
one 1 ever suspected was Roxanne, but 1 just couldn't figure out how she
managed to lift Victoria over the prow and throw her down.
Victoria may have been slender, but she was incredibly strong for her k
size.
No doubt Roxanne realized beforehand that she would need an
accomplice to kill Victoria and lured Cain into believing her lies."
, The whys and wherefores of Roxanne's motives and Potts's vengeful bent
had been rehashed several times before Gage and Shemaine finally
returned to the cabin.
For the first time since the* wedding day they
did not conclude the evening making love.
Shemaine was visibly
distressed, and it was some time before she calmed down enough to drift
to sleep in her husband's encompassing arms.
Gage was too afraid for
his wife to even think of trying to relax, for he could find no release
for his roiling thoughts.
Once the house was quiet and dark, Gage roamed the interior, peering out
the windows into the ebon darkness beyond the glass panes, rechecking
the bolts on the doors, and placing his rifles within easy reach of the
front portal.
But after he realized he was disturbing Bess, who had
spread a feather-filled mat on the floor of the kitchen, he went back to
the bedroom and closed the door.
He rechecked the loading in his
pistols and, placing one on his bedside table, slipped into bed beside
his wife, Taking her in his arms again, he stared up at the ceiling,
mulling over the possible culprits in his mind.
He could name very few,
and although Morrisa was at the head of that list, he could only think
of one person with enough wealth to enlist others in her efforts to get
rid of Shemaine.
With Maurice du Mercer's presence in the colonies,
there could be a serious connection, albeit a very slim one.
Still,
Gage promised himself that he would go to the docks on the morrow to
make inquiries among the captains just to see if a titled elderly lady
had bought passage from England aboard one of their vessels and had
recently arrived in Newportes Newes.
Daylight finally came, and after a hearty breakfast that Bess laid out
for him, Gage went down to the cabinet shop.
By that time Ramsey and
the other men had arrived and were looking rather apprehensively at all
the newly made coffins.
They could only wonder if their employer had
gone into that particular business.
"Ye can just tell us if'n ye've decided ta stop makin' furniture,"
Ramsey offered drolly.
"The lot o' us will leave an' the'er hold it
against ye.
Better ta walk out o' here on our own accord than ta be
shipped out in one o' those."
Gage could not help but chuckle at the unassailable humor of his chief
cabinetmaker.
"Those boxes seem a bit small for the likes of you and
Sly."
Ramsey took exception to his comment and ran his hands down his own
torso, which had become rather bulky around the middle lately. "Are ye
sayin' we've gotten a bit broad and weighty?"
"A bit?" Gage scoffed with quick humor.
His friend's wit had always
been a good tonic for easing his woes.
"Why, the way you've been
filling out lately, I'm wondering if we won't have to widen the doors
around here."
Sly chuckled good-naturedly as he joined them.
"Aye, I was wonderin'
meself if I should extend him the use o' me britches ta cover his
backside.
Every time he bends over now, he exposes more'n I can bear."
Gage broke out into hearty laughter as Ramsey turned a wickedly baleful
glare upon his fellow cabinetmaker.
Already his heart was feeling
lighter.
About that time, Gillian came charging through the door, looking for
Gage.
At sight of the three coffins he halted abruptly with one foot
still dangling in the air.
"Holy Mother o'þ" he breathed as he slowly lowered his foot to the
floor.
The young Irishman stared agog at the pine boxes and, after a
moment, faced Gage with a noticeable gulp.
"Who did ye put in em,
Cap'n?"
"Roxanne, Cain, and Potts," his employer answered simply.
The three men gaped at him in shocked surprise, and Sly shook his head
sorrowfully.
"1 was hopin' they were empty."
The two apprentices hurried in from the back, curious to hear the story
firsthand.
All of them congregated around Gage.
"I gather they vexed ye a mite," Ramsey voiced the conjecture, eager to
know more.
"Ye shoot all three?"
"Nary a one," Gage responded with a lame smile.
"My wife shot Potts,
who was trying to kill me.
Cain killed himself and Roxanne by leaping
off the prow of the ship."
"Ye ever think that there ship is jinxed?" Ramsey prodded.
Gillian would not allow time for that thought to take firm root in
anyone's mind.
"Why did Cain kill Roxanne, Cap'n?"
"She was one of those trying to kill Shemaine, and he didn't like that