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
could not dismiss her abilities when I had such a needþ"
"No need!" Roxanne snarled in denial, reclaiming her former wrath.
"That's only your feeble excuse for getting rid of me." She could almost
hear the villagers whispering and laughing behind her back, cruelly
berating her for being so foolish as to think that Gage Thornton, of all
people, would actually marry her.
He had ignored maids far more comely
than she and had taken to wife a young beauty none of them had been able
to surpass.
Fool she was to believe that any man would take her to
wife, they would say.
And more fool she for setting her hopes so
inconceivably high that she would dare to imagine the cabinetmaker would
ever court her.
She was, after all, the smithy's daughter, the
plain-faced offspring of that rough-featured, callous man whose wife,
years ago, had deserted him and their daughter to run away with a
traveling man.
Just like then, there would be the pitying stares, the
sadly shaking heads, and the long serpent tongues that would suddenly
start hissing whenever she approached.
"I'd have come back to work for
you just as soon as the splint had come off Pa's leg.
Hannah could have
watched Andrew until then!"
Frightened by the woman's angry tone, Andrew began to whimper as he
clung to his father.
Turning aside, Gage tried to reassure him, but he
could feel the boy trembling against him.
"You know what I say is true," Roxanne accused harshly, moving toward
him.
Gage glared over his shoulder, bringing Roxanne up short with the
penetrating chill of his gaze.
"We'll have to discuss this matter at a
later time, Roxanne," he muttered.
"You're upsetting Andrewþ"
"I'm upsetting him?" Roxanne railed, outraged at his accusation.
She
was equally incensed by his curtness.
Jeeringly she thrust her chin
outward to indicate Shemaine.
"And what about that filthy little
baggage you've bought for yourself?
Your son has more cause to be
frightened of her than of me!
You don't know what she's done, Gage! She
may be a murderess for all you know!"
Gage whirled to face the blonde with fire in his eyes, but when his
actions caused Andrew to cry out in sudden alarm, he bit back the angry
retort he had been about to make.
Taking himself firmly in hand he gave
his sobbing son back to Shemaine and silently motioned her into his
bedroom.
He closed the door behind them and then, grasping Roxanne' s
elbow as gently as he could manage at the moment, ushered her out to the
front porch, but he did not stop there.
Escorting her down the steps at
a rapid pace, he took her back along the path toward the riverbank,
where he espied her father's dinghy pulled up on shore It was only after
he had put his ship behind him and was well out of earshot of the two
men who were working there that he could finally trust himself to speak
and not to roar.
"Roxanne, you and your father were among the first people I met after my
arrival in Virginia," he began in tense but moderate tones. Dropping her
arm, he faced her.
"You brought baskets of food to me when I was
building my cabin here, though I assured you at the time T didn't want
you to go to the trouble.
When Victoria arrived in the colonies with
her parents, you were kind to them and befriended her " He paused at the
sharp prodding of his conscience, for in all actuality it had been
Victoria who had gone out of her way to take Roxanne under her wing,
having felt a great empathy for the spinster.
But he could not bring
himself to callously remind the woman that she had virtually been
without friends until Victoria had taken pity on her.
"Months later,
you consoled Victoria when her folks died.
I know you think I betrayed
you when I married her.
You said as much, in fact.
But you finally
visited us, and for a time, it seemed that you had forgiven me.
You came with some of the other women to help out the night Andrew was
born.
You were the one who assured me that everything would go well
with Victoria .
.
.
that she was too strong to die in childbirth.
You were here many
times after that, helping her care for Andrew.
Shortly after she was
killed, you pleaded with me to let you clean my house and look after
Andrew, saying that being here would help you get over your grieving.
"During all of that time, Roxanne, I never knowingly encouraged you or
gave you reason to hope or to expect anything more from our acquaintance
than the friendship I had offered you.
But you wanted something more,
something I wasn't able to give.
I know now that I must speak clearly
of this matter so there wi11 be no further cause for error.
If you have
ever imagined there could be anything more between us than a wi11ingness
to be friends, then you've been mistaken, Roxanne, and have simply
presumed too much."
His stoic rebuff crushed the lifeblood from Roxanne' s heart.
All the
love she had felt for him earlier now congealed into a seething hatred.
"You presumed too much, Gage Thornton.
If you think I'm going to keep
still about Victoria.
.
."
Gage felt a cold prickling along his nape and an uneasiness in his
vitals.
She had never outwardly threatened him since Victoria's death,
but after his purchase of Shemaine, he had foreseen the likelihood.
Cautiously he asked, "What do you mean?"
"I trusted you...." Roxanne's voice cracked as she blurted out, "I loved
you, and I just couldn't believe you could actually kill your own wife,
but I was a fool to ignore the facts.
I came here after Victona was
dead, after you had taken Andrew back to the cabin.
No one else was
around that day, remember?
Your men had the day off. Wondering about it
all, I recently went up to the ship's prow to see for myself, and I
realized that it would have taken a strong man to throw Victoria over
the rail to the rocks heaped below, rocks that you and your men had
hauled in to fortify the bracing stocks so the spring rains wouldn't
wash away the sand from beneath the supports.
Unless your wife had
reason to kill herself, then you are the only one who could have done
it, Gage Thornton, because you were the only man around at the time.
Perhaps you did kill her in a fit of temper as the townspeople have
suggested, and you tried to make it look like an accident. Whatever the
truth, T've no choice but to believe that when you saw me commg in the
dinghy that day, you threw Victoria over the prow and then ran back to
the cabin with Andrew to let me be the one to find her because you knew
how I felt about you!
You knew I would willingly accept anything you
told me!
But I'm smarter now, and I've come to believe that you killed
Victoria that day, one way or the other!"
"That's a lie!" Gage barked.
"I heard Victoria scream after I reached
the cabin, and when I came running back, you were standing over her dead
body!
If I had thought for one instant that you had the strength to
accomplish her murder, I'd have seen you arrested that very day.
But as
you say, it would've taken a strong man to carry Victoria up to the prow
and hurl her down, and as yet, I haven't found anyone with reason enough
to want to hurt her, much less kill her."
"You're the one who's lying, Gage Thornton.
Not me.
And I'm going to
let everybody know it!"
He laughed scathingly at her threat.
"Do you think anyone will believe
you after you swore you heard Victoria scream and hurried up from the
dinghy in time to see me running from the cabin?
I was too far away to
have come from the ship, you said.
I sincerely doubt that your new
story will have much effect on the townspeople, Roxanne.
With Shemaine
here, everyone will see through your spiteful jealousy and accept it for
what it is."
"You murdered her!" Roxanne shrieked, hauling back an arm.
With teeth
gnashing and eyes blazing, she flung the flat of her hand across his
cheek and felt the painful sting of the blow herself in her bruised and
prickling palm.
All the force of her pent-up fury could not be spent so
easily, however.
She wanted revenge to ease her seething rage.
For a brief moment, Gage stood as she had left him, with his eyes
closed, his face averted, his clamped jaw tensed with rigid control.
Gradually turning his head, he arched an eyebrow sharply and glared at
her.
"Don't ever do that again, Roxanne,'' he warned.
"If you do, you will
see just what I'm capable of."
"Will you throw me from the prow of your ship as you did Victoria?" she
taunted bitingly.
For no more than a passing moment, Gage stared at her, amazing Roxanne
with the frigid coldness in those ordinarily warm brown eyes. Then,
pivoting sharply about, he left her.
The bedroom door was still closed when Gage entered the cabin.
He stood
just inside the front portal for a long moment, listening to Shemaine
singing a sprightly verse to his son, who giggled in delight as she
punctuated each verse in a way Gage could only imagine was a gentle
tickling or a clucking of his little chin.
Raising a knuckle, he wiped
a trickle of blood from the corner of his mouth and, with measured
tread, crossed to his bedroom door.
Lifting the latch, he pushed the
portal inward to find Shemaine kneeling beside his bed. Andrew was now
fully dressed and sitting on the edge of the bed within the circle of
her arms.
As he entered, the girl's eyes were drawn immediately to his
burning cheek, and in some embarrassment she scrambled to her feet.
Gage tried to smile to put her at ease, but his attempt was sorely
strained.
"I've got to take the wagon into town this afternoon,