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
more time.
She selected the green gown to wear only because it seemed a
trifle shorter.
After donning the shoes, she strapped on thin rawhide
laces to hold the light leather slippers on her feet and then wound the
cords up around her ankles and tied them in a knot.
She wrinkled her
nose in disgust at how red and marred her ankles had become from the
constant chafing of the shackles.
She could only imagine how much more
irritated they would become from the leather strips Shemaine checked the
dough and, much to her relief and delight, found that it had risen quite
well despite being rushed.
She added the next ingredients until the
batter became the right consistency.
Once again she set the mixture
near the fireplace.
Then she busied herself dusting and tidying the
cabin.
Once the dough had risen sufficiently for a second time, Shemaine laid a
griddle on a rack where it could be heated to the right temperature by
the flames.
Having every intention of presenting her new master with an
opportunity to enjoy a light, leisurely afternoon repast she set a pot
of tea to steep near the hearth, hoping fervently that he would return
in time to taste the crumpets and tea while both were still hot and
fresh.
Though the lessons had been learned years ago, they had undoubt i_ edly
been indelibly etched upon Shemaine's memory through constant
repetition, for the crumpets were an unblemished marvel.
For the first
time in her life, she was ecstatic over the results and wonderfully
grateful that Bess Huxley had demanded excellence in whatever cooking
assignment her student had undertaken.
If only, Shemaine sighed
forlornly, she could recall all of Bess's meticulous instructions with
the same success.
A rapid ascent of the front steps alerted her to the presence of
another, then three quick raps on the heavy door eased the prickling
along her nape.
Leaving several crumpets browning on the iron griddle,
Shemaine ran to the portal, lifted the bolt and swung the door wide to
admit the rain-drenched man.
For the length of his return journey and during his rapid flight to the
cabin, Gage Thornton had sought to keep both his young son, whom he now
carried, and a large basket of food, which he bore over an arm,
protected beneath a tarp.
He was still intent upon his mission even as
he stepped into the cabin.
He gave Shemaine little notice as she
hastened back to the hearth, but shoved the door closed with a shoulder
and dropped the basket on a rough-hewn table near the entrance before he
swept away the sheltering cover from his son.
When the boy saw a
stranger in the house, he pressed back against his father' s shoulder,
immediately shy and reluctant to be parted from the security of his
parent, but the aroma filling the cabin soon drew his amber-lit brown
eyes to the hearth.
"Daddee .
.
.
Andee .
.
.
hungee."
The delicious smell had attracted Gage's curiosity as well, and after
setting his son down beside him, he peered inquiringly toward the
griddle as he tugged the tail of his soaked shirt out of his buckskin
breeches.
"What smells so good?"
"I remembered how to make crumpets," Shemaine announced with a smile
that wavered between timidity and pride.
Whatever she had been about to add was stricken from her mind as Gage
dragged the sodden garment over his head and dropped it into an oaken
bucket near the door.
The sight of his lean waist, wide muscular
shoulders and taut chest rippling with thews was more than a little
unsettling for a young woman who, during her few excursions on the deck
of the London Pride, had been subjected to the sight of many potbellied
and narrow-shouldered sailors who had been amply disposed toward
strutting about shirtless in front of the women, as if they had imagined
themselves admirable examples of manly prowess, worthy of impressing the
most discriminating of the opposite gender.
In comparison, Gage Thornton had an extraordinarily fine physique,
possibly the best Shemaine could remember ever viewing in her limited
encounters with half-garbed men.
Yet, for all of that, he seemed
oblivious to his own exceptional appearance and the mental disarray it
caused his bondswoman.
Shemaine couldn't recall ever seeing a man who,
by simply shedding a shirt, could unnerve her.
With that invading
jitteriness came the realization that except for the child she was
completely alone with a strange man for the very first time in her life.
Any true lady would have been less awed by his anatomy and far more
cautious of the man, for under the circumstances she was really quite
vulnerable to the whims of her master.
Abashed by her own forwardness at openly admiring his lightly furred
chest and broad shoulders, and equally reluctant to be caught gaping,
Shemaine turned back to her cooking, adding with a decidedly shaky
comment, "I thought you and Andrew might enjoy some crumpets with your
afternoon tea."
"Let me get out of these wet clothes and I'll be right with you," Gage
replied eagerly as he hastened to his bedroom.
The one thing that had
spoiled his complete satisfaction with his indentured servant was his
concern over her inability to cook.
Despite his efforts not to, he had
continued to worry over the matter, wondering how his small family would
survive on poorly prepared meals.
It was a tremendous relief to realize
the girl knew more than she had first let on.
When she could cook
something that wafted so tantalizingly through his senses it could make
his mouth water, it spurred some hope that she would be capable of doing
even more.
"Daddee!" Andrew squealed in sudden anxiety, realizing his father had
left him.
He shot a wide-eyed look of panic at Shemaine and ran into
the bedroom screaming in terror.
Shemaine smiled as she heard Gage soothe the fears of his sobbing son.
"It's all right, Andy.
Shemaine is going to be living with us and
taking care of you while Daddy makes chests and tablesþ'' "An' big ship,
too, Daddee?" the boy asked through his tears.
"And big ship, too, Andy."
Shemaine set the teapot down on the table, added a cup and saucer two
small plates, utensils, and fruit preserves that she had found in the
cupboard.
A moment later Gage came out of the bedroom carrying his son,
having changed into a pair of dark brown hide breeches and a
loose-sleeved, homespun shirt.
Before her arrest, Shemaine had found
herself more inclined to admire men dressed to the hilt in elegant
attire Maurice had been an exceptionally garbed individual, looking the
most handsome in black silk frock coats, waistcoats and breeches to
match.
With hair and eyes of the same dark hue, the stark contrast between the
black silk garments and the snowy white shirts and stocks he usually
wore with them had been no less than dramatic.
Indeed, dressed out for
formal occasions, Maurice had been most effective in causing feminine
hearts to race in avid admiration.
Still, when her new master came nigh
to halting her breath wearing such rough garb, Shemaine had to wonder if
she would ever again be moved to awe by princely appareled lords in silk
stockings.
Gage sat the boy in the high chair at the end of the table, tied a bib
around his neck, and then settled himself on the bench to Andrew's q
left.
Shemaine leaned across the table to place the plate of crumpets
in the center, prompting Gage to glance up as he thanked her, but as the
hanging lantern cast its light upon her face, he saw her clearly for the
first time since his return.
If there was anything capable of disrupting that maddeningly cryptic
reserve of his or those sparse smiles, Shemaine guessed the change in
her appearance qualified.
When their gazes had first met on the London
Pride, she had been startled by the strength of those glittering brown
eyes, but there was something entirely different about the slow,
exacting way he looked her over now, as if he were seeing her for the
first time as a woman instead of a possession.
Shemaine held her breath
in trepidation, wondering if the sight of her wearing Victoria's clothes
would cause him to regret his kindness to her.
"You look different..." Gage murmured finally.
"Very nice, in fact."
Indeed!
Too beautiful for a man who's been without a woman for the last
year, he thought, dropping his gaze and fixing it with great
determination on the crumpets.
Almost mechanically he reached for one,
sliced it apart and spread preserves on one of the halves for his son.
"Should I pour Andrew some tea?" Shemaine asked uncertainly, still
unable to determine Gage's mood, for he seemed even more distant than he
had before.
Avoiding the folly of looking her way, Gage pushed himself to his feet.
It was a painful truth that abstinence had a way of sharpening a man's
senses to an agonizing intensity when a winsome maid was so near at
hand.
"I've got some milk cooling in the well," he answered at last.
"If you'd like, I'll show you where it's kept."
"Should I get the tarp?" she inquired, not wishing to get soaked and
cold again.
She hadn't ventured out to the well while he was gone, for
she had been anxious to bathe and had only waited until the water in the
kettle had gotten warm enough to use.
"No, there's no need.
I built a roof over the back porch and extended
it far enough over the well so we can stay dry even when it's raining."
Gage led her through the back corridor, lifted the bolt from the door,
and swung it open for her.
Stepping past him, Shemaine went out onto
the porch and once again had a chance to marvel at the diligent man.
It
was becoming increasingly evident to her that Gage Thornton enjoyed
creating things that were not only beautiful to behold but completely