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
a pair of shoes."
"You needn't worry about buying me any shoes, Mr.
Thornton," Shemaine
replied softly.
"I'm grateful to have the ones you gave me to wear.
As
you accurately surmised, they are a bit long, but twill not be hard for
me to get used to them.
I know well what it's like to go without, and
I'm thankful to have a pair, whatever their condition or fit.
Truthfully, tis far more comfortable to have my feet shod than feel
every pebble or splinter I come upon."
"It took no great insight on my part to determine that Victoria's shoes
would be too large for you," Gage pointed out.
"Though fineboned, my
wife was nearly half a head taller than you."
"Andrew will be tall too, I think," Shemaine predicted, glancing down at
his father's hands.
Gage's fingers were long, slender, and rather
squarish at the tips, as handsome as the man himself.
"How can the boy
not be when you're so tall yourselM I'm sure he'll be the very image of
you when he grows up."
"Victoria said as much soon after Andrew was born," Gage recalled.
"And perhaps that will be true, since she was so fair.
Her hair was as
pale as cornsilk and had a sheen that matched.
I used to watch it
blowing in the wind and was always amazed by the fact that the strands
never seemed to get tangled."
Self-consciously Shemaine smoothed a wispy curl back from her face.
Her
hair was far from finely textured.
It was so thick and rebellious, the
heavy curls had to be restrained by braids or upswept creations that
could test the patience of the most ingenious coiffeur. Her lady's maid
in England had enjoyed the challenge of combing her hair into beautiful
styles and bragging about the golden highlights in it.
But the woman
had brushed and tended her hair since her tenth birthday and naturally
was a bit prejudiced.
In lauding her own praises, Nola had often
claimed that no aristocrat's pampered darling would ever be as
exquisitely coifed as her Shemaine.
"I fear my hair is as ornery as it looks," Shemaine complained, wishing
she had but a small measure of Nola's talent.
"I came nigh to cutting
it off this afternoon, just to be free of the snarls."
Gage watched an obstinate tendril readily rebound as soon as her hand
dropped away.
He wanted to reach out and rub the curl between his
fingers just to feel its silky texture, but he checked the urge,
guessing his bondslave would bolt like a frightened deer.
He was
already familiar with a variety of her qualms and considered it a rare
accomplishment indeed to have massaged those shapely limbs as long as he
had.
"I like your hair, Shemaine, and I would not take it kindly if you were
to cut it off."
Suddenly apprehensive of the areas where she might unwittingly offend
him, Shemaine began to fret about what she had already done and decided
it was far better to admit the truth than have him learn of her deed in
some other fashion.
"I hope you won't be too angry with me, Mr.
Thornton .
.
." she said in an anxious rush.
"After using it, I was
careful to wash it and put it back where I found it...."
"It?" Gage's brow lifted warily.
"What are you trying to tell me,
Shemaine?
What is it?"
"Your brush," she answered simply.
"I had to use it to get the snarls
out of my hair."
Behind an abbreviated smile, Gage breathed a sigh of relief.
"Is that
all?
The way you acted, I was sure you had committed some grievous
mayhem."
"You don't mind that I used it?" Shemaine asked in amazement. "You're
not angry?"
"Should I be?" he questioned with a devilish gleam in his eyes. "Do you
have something I'd rather not have?"
Laughing, Shemaine shook her head.
"I'm not aware of any infestation,
sir."
Gage rubbed his chin reflectively, squelching the desire to grin as he
teased.
"Perhaps you should be afraid of what I may have given you,
Shemaine You did say you washed the brush afterwards and not Bracing her
hands upon her knees, Shemaine settled an impishly quizzical glare upon
him.
"Are you sure you're English, Mr.
Thornton .
He responded with a casual shrug.
"If I'm my father's son, then I'm
from a long line of Englishmen.
If not, my mother was ravished in her
sleep, for she laid all the credit for my birth, looks, and stubbornness
to William Thornton."' "Daddee?" Andrew called sleepily from the
bedroom.
"Coming, Andy," Gage replied, and rose to his feet in one swift
effortless movement that fairly bedazzled Shemaine with his strength and
manly grace.
Striding across the parlor to the bedroom, Gage was
unaware of the emerald eyes that followed him across the room.
He
disappeared within, and Shemaine leaned back in her chair to listen as
his muted voice blended with his son's sleepy tones.
Though the words
Gage spoke were of no great import, his tone was gentle and comforting,
warming Shemaine's heart perhaps as much as the boy's Evening descended
upon the land, and with it came thickening mists that rolled up around
the cabin, making it an island unto itself.
Outside an owl could be
heard hooting in a tree somewhere in the woods to the west.
With the darkness, the interior of the cabin had grown quiet except for
the crackling and hissing of the fire and the scratching of a quill on
parchment as Gage made notations in a ledger in the back corridor.
Engrossed in his accounting, he seemed oblivious to the woman whom he
had purchased earlier that day, but whenever Shemaine glanced up from
her sewing in the kitchen, she could see him through the open doorway.
She sat in the rocking chair on the far right of the hearth, with a
clear view of half the hallway.
After sharing the food Hannah Fields
had sent over for supper with the Thorntons, she had readied the morning
fare for an early rising and tidied the kitchen Later, Gage had put
Andrew to bed in his small nook just off the main n u / PET2NLS ON THE
RIVER 8l bedroom, and then had settled down to work at his drafting
table while she hemmed the blue gown and the second chemise she had
chosen for herself.
It had certainly not been her intention to compare her master with her
fiance, but as her fingers plied the needle through the cloth,
Shemaine's mind drifted far afield and the inevitable happened.
In many
ways the two were similar.
Both men had hair as black as a raven s
wing.
Gage Thornton kept his clipped short and close against his nape, whereas
Maurice tied his thick locks in a neat queue behind his head, shunning
both powder and wigs.
If there was a difference in the height of the
two men, then it was too minuscule to even notice.
Both were tall,
broad-shouldered, lean but muscular, complementing whatever garments
they wore, whether it was the deerhide breeches and homespun shirts that
Gage favored or Maurice's more elegant garb.
A1though her betrothed
Susually preferred the dignity of black silk over other colors and
fabrics for more formal attire, it came to her mind that the Marquess,
as handsome as he was, had looked no more impressive in his courtly
finery than Gage Thornton in his more durable clothes.
Her master's
waist and hips were narrow enough to be envied by the most conceited
dandy, and the long buckskin trousers were slim enough to cling to every
muscular contour, readily revealing the taut sinews that flexed through
his thighs, clearly evidencing the athletic vigor of the man.
Maurice du Mercer was certainly not- without strength, Shemaine mentally
argued in an effort to keep her comparisons clearly in perspective.
He
was, in fact, a formidable swordsman and an accomplished equestrian.
He
was adept at all the courtly dances and moved through them with as much
grace as he rode a horse.
Yet the difference in the two men could have
been summed up simply by the contrast between their hands.
Gage's
fingers were lean and hard.
In the grip of such a steely vise, the
pale, beautiful, uncallused hands of the Marquess du Mercer might have
been severely broken.
At one time, perhaps a century or two ago, Shemaine had been convinced
that the handsomeness of her betrothed was unequaled. Certainly none
could have denied the aristocratic refinement of Maurice s features and
the beauty of his darkly lashed black eyes.
Upon hearing of his
marriage proposal, her mother, who had previously demonstrated a firm
confidence in her daughter's good sense, had expressed concern that
Maurice and Shemaine had been influenced by a strong physical attraction
for one another rather than a deep, unswerving devotion.
Some time later Camille had again posed the conjecture that She maine
had been swept off her feet by the grandeur of her fiance's appearance
and his station in life.
Shemus O'Hearn may have had a temper to
battle, but he was usually wise enough to take his wife's counsel to
heart.
Together they had concurred and refrained from giving their
consent, begging her suitor to understand that they only wanted Shemaine
to be aware of the life she would be committing herself to as a
marchioness.
Understanding their concern, Maurice had ardently declared
his love for their daughter and had promised that she would want for
nothing.
At least a month had passed before the O'Hearns had finally
relented, acquiescing to Shemaine's quietly spoken assurances that no
other man whom she had ever met or possibly would ever meet could
measure up to the man she had come to know Maurice to be.
That was eight months ago in England!
And this was a different continent and a different timel And much had
happened since that balmy day in London when Maurice had asked her to be