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
grandson, of all people.
Maurice's dark eyes glittered with ill-suppressed rage.
"Shemaine is
alive, married to a colonial, and carries his child .
.
.
and I would
give my whole wealth to be where that man is in her heart today."
Edith's own heart sank at the news of Shemaine's continued existence,
but she was as accomplished an actress as Morrisa.
"Your whole wealth?"
She forced herself to laugh at her grandson's exaggerated assertion and
waved an elegant hand to banish his claims.
"Really, Maurice, no man in
his right mind would give up the like of your fortune for a little twit
of a girl...."
"Her name is Shemaine, Grandmother,'' he stated with sharp clarity.
"Shemaine Thornton now.
It should have been Lady Shemaine du Mercer. If
not for you, it would have been."
"Come now, Maurice, you're overwrought and don't know what you're
saying."
"I know exactly what I'm saying." Maurice slipped his hand into the
pocket of his waistcoat and withdrew the silky-smooth leather pouch.
With a flip of his wrist, he tossed it onto the table near her hand.
It
landed with a clink of coins.
"Recognize it, Grandmother?" he
questioned caustically.
"You've always been rather proud of your simple
but elegant tastes.
I need not look inside to see your initials to know
that it's yours.
I wonder just how many of those fine leather pouches
you've had made for yourself over the years?
I've seen them all my
life.
You gave me several while I was growing up.
You were trying to
teach me the value of a coin, remember?"
Edith's face remained a stiff, careful mask that effectively hid the
inner turmoil that was raging inside of her.
Her grandson's tone
revealed far more than his words had yet disclosed.
She knew down deep
inside that she had lost this murderous game she had set herself to
because of some silly mistake of her own making.
She had instructed
Morrisa to give Potts a few coins and to promise him more to hasten his
return.
How could she have known that a tiny little pouch would be her
undoing?
"How did you come by this purse?" Edith questioned carefully.
"I
thought I had lost it."
Maurice curtly denied the possibility.
"You didn't lose it.
You gave
it to Potts when you sent him on a mission to kill Shemaine.
But he
failed you, Grandmother, and paid for it with his life.
That little
twit of a girl you can't abide shot him when he tried to kill her
husband.
You probably promised a sizeable reward to Roxanne Corbin,
too, but she won't be back .
.
.
except in the coffin Gage Thornton
made for her.
What I would like to know, Grandmother, is how you could have been so
cruel to me .
.
.
and my betrothed."
Edith du Mercer sat in dignified silence, refusing to answer as she
stared unseeing across the room.
Her bony hand clasped the silver
handle of her walking stick, which she had braced upon the wood floor.
"Answer me!" Maurice barked, slamming his palm down upon the top of the
table and startling a gasp from his grandmother.
"Damn you for your
cold bitch's heart!" he snarled.
"I know now that you must have
connived with sticky-fingered magistrates and ambitiously arranged for
Shemaine's arrest in London and her banishment from England, probably
all the while thinking you were doing me a good service .
.
.
for my
fame and future as a marquess.
It grieves me to think of what Shemaine
suffered because of you.
After the O'Hearns discovered what had
happened to her, I refused to allow myself to believe that you had any
part of it.
But her disappearance was too convenient, hardly a month
after our engagement.
You were so calm in your assurances to me that Shemaine would be found.
I saw more distress in your eyes when I announced my intention to marry
her." He sneered at his only kin, feeling nothing but contempt for her.
"You were probably hoping that news of Shemaine's death would reach you
so you could skillfully arrange for the information to come to my
attention."
A bitter smile curved his handsome lips.
"I'm sure you could buy your
way out of any English prison I tried to send you to, so I've chosen a
more fitting punishment for you, Grandmother.
From this day forward,
you shall never see me again.
If I go back to England at all, it will
be to collect my possessions.
But I shall be returning here posthaste
to live out the rest of my life as an ordinary colonial gentleman, and
you will never, ever be welcomed in the house that I will build for
myself and my family, should I be fortunate enough to marry.
Whatever
offspring I produce, Grandmother, you will never see them, never hear
them, and never be able to take pride in my children or their children .
.
.
if you should live so long.
And you will never be able to arrange
their lives as you tried to do mine.
This is good-bye forever,
Grandmother.
May you have a long and miserable life."
Turning crisply on a heel, Maurice crossed to the door and left, causing
Edith to flinch with the loud, resounding closing of the portal.
In the aftermath of his passage, Edith du Mercer sat in silence, staring
across the room yet seeing nothing.
She felt numb inside. Perhaps she
was already dead.
Everything she had striven for, yearned for, grappled
for, had fled from her life with the slamming of that door.
She could
not even feel a spark of hope or interest when a few moments later a
rather frantic rapping came again upon the plank.
It was only Morrisa,
wondering what had happened.
"Potts and Roxanne are dead," Edith informed her dully.
"You'd better
leave as soon as you can.
There' s a pouch of coins in my satchel near
the bed.
Take that.
There should be enough to get you to New York .
.
.
or someplace far off."
"But what about Freida?" Morrisa asked fearfully.
"If'n I leave without
buyin' back me papers, she'll send someone after me .
.
.
may e'en
have me killed."
Edith picked up the pouch that Maurice had just delivered back to her
and handed it over.
"Perhaps there's enough in this to buy your papers.
In any case, you should leave.
I would expect Mr.
Thornton will be
arriving some time this morning, perhaps to bring in the dead bodies or
to search for you.
I shall be taking the next coach north myself and
then a ship back to England."
Thoughtfully Morrisa tossed the small pouch in her hand, knowing full
well what it contained.
There was more than enough in it to buy back
her papers, but as far as the other purse, she had no idea what it held.
She could only hope that it would last her for a time, but once the
money was gone, what would she do?
Ply her trade again?
It was a
terrible gamble to leave Freida without paying her back, but there
seemed no other choice if she wanted a few coins to spend on herself
after she got to wherever she was going.
Gage Thornton would be
arriving soon and he'd no doubt be looking for her.
She couldn't wait
around.
She had to leave now!
Hugh Corbin limped out onto the front porch shortly after he saw Gage
halting the wagon in the lane in front of his house.
He was aware that
Roxanne hadn't come home the previous night, and even before he caught
sight of the boxes in the wagon bed, he had already begun to fret that
something dreadful had happened to her.
Gage swept his hat off his head as he approached the older man. Hugh
squinted up at him, as if wondering at his mission, and Gage halted in
front of him.
It was the first time in ages that Hugh met him without
an insult.
"Mr.
Corbin, I'm very sorry to have to tell you this, but
I'm afraid Roxanne is dead." Turning slightly, he gestured with his hat
toward the coffins loaded in the conveyance. "Her body is in one of
those pine boxes there.
I carved her name in it so we'd knowþ"
"Ye bastard, why did ye have ta kill her?" Hugh snarled in agony.
"Wasn't it enough that she chased after ye an' made a fool of herself
ever since ye come here!
But that weren't enough for ye, was it?
Ye
couldn't rest til ye took her last breath from her just like ye did
Victoria."
"I didn't kill her, Mr.
Corbin," Gage assured him quietly.
"Cain did."
"Cain?" Hugh Corbin stared at Gage, momentarily convinced that he had
taken leave of his senses.
"Cain wouldna've killed her!"
"I'm sorry, Mr.
Corbin.
My wife and I both saw him do it."
"Why?" Hugh demanded.
"Why in the hell would Cain do a thing like that
to Roxanne?"
Gage heaved his shoulders upward slightly.
"Because Roxanne wanted him
to kill my wife, and he was unwilling to obey her.
He killed Victoria
for Roxanne, too, after she tricked him into doing it. When she
threatened Shemaine, Cain swept Roxanne up in his arms and leapt off the
prow of my ship with her.
Roxanne didn't survive the fall.
She died of
a broken neck after hitting her head on one of the rocks."
Hugh Corbin gaped dully at Gage, hardly able to understand what the