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 cutting retort.
"A hanging from the yardarm for insubordination if I
had my way!" He gestured angrily with his cane.
"Now, you useless
grog-sucker, get below!
You've earned a three-day stint cleaning the
mudhook's chains!"
"Come on now, Mistah Arper," Potts cajoled, waggling his head from side
to side.
"Here we be, bouts ta be given shore leave, an' I gots an itch
in me crotch ta finds meself a doxy or two ta scratch meself pon."
"You'll stroll no further than the limits of the cable locker for the
next five days," Harper rumbled, seething with rage.
"Now, Potts have
you anything further to complain about?"
The pig eyes narrowed with almost tangible hostility, but'the swabber
had no choice but to obey or see his sentence lengthened by several more
days.
"Nary a thing, Mistah Arper."
"Good!
Then report to the cable her at once." Scowling darkly James
Harper briefly marked the huge swabber's progress, then signaled another
seaman to follow and lock Potts in the forward compartment. Curtly
dismissing the tar from mind, Harper faced the bosun's mate and lent his
consideration to the matter at hand.
"The male prisoners've been accounted for, sir," the younger man
announced as he handed over the list.
Then he added for Harper's ears
alone, "Minus the thirty-one what died enroute."
"'Tis an uncommon loss the London Pride has suffered, Mr.
Blake,"
Harper muttered.
"Aye, sir, an' seem's as how ye begged the cap'n not ta let his mussus
limit the prisoners' rations afore we left, I figures ye gots goqd
reason ta fret.
Another week at sea an' there wouldna've been enough o'
them poor devils alive ta pay for the crew's vittles, much less our
wages."
Harper's jaw tensed as he recalled the numerous times he had been
required to order the cohvicts' bodies hurled overboard, all because the
ship's owner, J.
Horace Turnbull, had grown suspicious of the Pride's
accounting from previous voyages and had insisted his daughter accompany
her husband on this particular crossing to make a proper evaluation.
Having given Gertrude unprecedented authority to examine the ship's
ledgers, the old shipping baron had further instructed her to curb
whatever costs she might consider superfluous, a mandate which had
reaped dire consequences.
"One must imagine that when Mr.
Turnbull gave his daughter leave to use
her own judgments, he had no idea he'd be losing more on this voyage
than in the last five years we've been delivering prisoners to
the colonies.
In her eagerness to save her father a few shillings, Mrs.
Fitch has mindlessly managed to murder no less than a fourth of the
prisoners.
That should shorten the old man's profits by several hundred
pounds, at least."
"If Mr.
Turnbull thought there was thievin' going' on afore this here
voyage," Roger Blake mumbled grimly, "ye can bet he'll be thinkin' it
for certain this time."
"And will no doubt send his precious daughter on the following voyage to
take another accounting." Harper frowned at the gloomy prospect.
"Was Mr.
Turnbull right, sir?
Be there a thief among us?"
James Harper heaved a laborious sigh.
"Whatever the truth, Mr. Blake, I
prefer to keep my suspicions to myself." He shrugged as he added,
"Still, if I were to discover the identity of the culprit, I'd be loath
to ferret him out for Mrs.
Fitch.
She's made it evident she suspects
us all of swindling her father."
"Aye, ta be sure, sir," Roger Blake heartily agreed.
Mrs.
Fitch
definitely had a way of making an honest seaman feel less than worthy of
respect and trust.
Even the captain wasn't excluded from her criticism.
She had, however, seemed peculiarly inclined to lend an attentive ear to
the babble of Jacob Potts, although that vile tar had the distinction of
being despised by their small company of officers and a goodly share of
his shipmates.
Casting a glance toward the bridge, Roger Blake mentally laid odds that
he would find the older couple locked in another verbal fray and smiled
ruefully as he won his bet.
The portly pair were at it again, and he
knew by experience that Mrs.
Fitch would not desist until she had
gotten her way.
Thankful that he was not encumbered with the likes of
that great white whale for a wife, Roger returned to his duties.
Shemaine was able to enjoy a vague sense of relief after the banishment
of Potts, but it was not long before the murmuring voices of the other
women began to intrude into her awareness.
Their fretting comments and
morbid speculations on what further hardships they would experience
under the authority of their new masters began to trickle down into her
consciousness, heightening her dread with a pungent taste of grim
reality.
Despite the adversities she had been forced to endure since
leaving England, she had sought to bolster her courage by clinging to a
frail fragment of hope that, by some miracle, her parents or even her
fiance would find out where she had been taken and arrive in time to
save her from the fate of being sold as an indentured servant.
But as
yet, no beloved face had appeared and only a few moments remained before
that humiliating event was set to begin.
Shemaine ran her slender fingers beneath the iron band that encircled
her wrist in an effort to ease the constant chafing.
It was cruel irony
that she was even there, but after sipping the bitter draught of English
justice firsthand she had ceased to believe that she was the only
prisoner aboard the Pride who had been unjustly condemned.
Others had received equally harsh sentences for nothing more dastardly
than stealing a loaf of bread or expressing a political view, which some
of the young Irish hotbloods were wont to do.
In spite of the frailty
of their crimes and the sheer absurdity of their convictions, their
departure as unsavory rabble from the shores of England had been
expedited by pompous, bewigged magistrates who had enjoined the gaol
keepers to offer royal pardons to any and every felon who would agree to
a term of indentured labor in the colonies.
The alternatives had made
such proposals seem magnanimous.
It was either bound servitude beyond
the shores of England or a choice between two extremes, a hanging at
Triple Tree for more grievous crimes or, for lesser offenses, the
probability of rape, murder, or mutilation in the foul pits of Newgate
Prison, a place where absolutely no attempt was made to distinguish
between or to separate prisoners by gender, age, or severity of
offenses.
It was impossible for Shemaine to forget the trauma of being snatched
from her family' s stable and, like the foulest offender, hauled into a
court of law by an ugly slip of a man who had identified himself only as
Ned, the thieftaker.
A short stint in Newgate had taught her the
futility of tearful supplications and desperately spoken promises of
reward to anyone who would travel to her father's warehouses in Scotland
and take her parents news of her arrest.
It had been absurd to think
that anyone would believe her guarantee of a weighty purse when she had
been confronted by no kinder visage than the stony faces of criminals,
gaolers, and their helpless victims.
Later, after she had come aboard the London Pride and witnessed
firsthand the travails of others, she had lost all hope of ever finding
a sympathetic benefactor.
She had seen suckling babes torn from the
breasts of desperately pleading mothers, like Annie Carver, who had not
foreseen the possibility of her infant being snatched from her arms and
sold to a passing stranger.
Mere children, with haunted eyes and
runnels of unchecked tears streaking down their thin filthy faces, had
been left behind on the docks while they watched their only kin led
across the gangplank in chains.
Other youngsters, convicted of
fretfully feeble crimes, had been shackled alongside hardened
whoremongers and thieves.
The only two to board the Pride had not survived.
Such sights had been an outrageous affront to Shemaine's sensibilities
and carefully nurtured upbringing.
She had not even imagined the like
of such barbarism until she had seen and experienced it for herself.
En
masse they had been treated like common vermin, something detestable
that had to be spewed forth from the shores of England to make the
country fit and clean for a more genteel class of people, no doubt that
same breed of aristocrat who had hired a thieftaker to seize her and to
concoct a crime that would see her condemned to seven years in prison,
just to prevent her from spoiling her fiance's sterling heritage with
her own Irish-blended blood.
Of late, Shemaine's memories of her past bliss had grown dim and
strangely distant, as if she had but dreamed the princely Maurice du
Mercer had asked her to marry him.
After all, Maurice was a titled
Englishman and could have chosen from a vast assortment of young maidens
of the same noble standing as he, whereas she could claim no loftier
status than being the solitary offspring of a marriage between a
hotheaded Irish merchant and a gracious English lady.
"Impudent little peasant," countesses had been inclined to whisper
whenever Maurice had swept her around in a promenade.
Yet the wealth of
her father probably would have staggered the wits of selfexalted
aristocrats who were so eager to boast of their highly esteemed titles
but in truth could lay claim to very little of actual monetary worth.
Maurice, on the other hand, had not only been heir to the vast fortunes,
estates, and title of his late father, the Marquess of Merlonridge,
Phillip du Mercer, he was atso the grandson of Edith du Mercer, a most
formidable matron and protectress of a lineage well fortified with
impeccable credentials.
Still, if the copious bribe which had been offered to her by the elder