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
of tea.
"Shemaine is as much o' a lady as any woman in this village.
I can see
it in the way she walks an' carries herself.
She has the confident,
refined elegance o' one who's been well tutored and instructed in the
social graces.
I can hear it when she talks, despite that wee bit o' an
Irish brogue.
She's well worth the hefty price ye paid for her, Mr.
Thornton, if ye didn't know it."
"She's all of what you say, and more," Gage admitted.
"Her talents are
unlimited.
Andrew is already becoming attached to her. Perhaps you saw
his concern when he thought she had been hurt.
She's very good with
him, better thanþ" He paused suddenly, realizing he was being much too
verbose about the girl.
"Roxanne?" Mary Margaret supplied the name in a gently questioning tone,
not wishing to set the man at odds with her.
"Shemaine has a way about her," Gage said, preferring not to answer the
elder's query.
"She's very gifted."
"Oh, no doubt.
No doubt." The elder paused to take a sip from her own
cup and then settled in a rocking chair in front of the hearth.
For a lengthy moment she stared into the flickering flames as she
savored the brew.
Then she tossed a quick furtive glance toward the
tall man.
"But I should warn ye -bout the rumors that are already
makin' their way bout town, many with the aid o' Mrs.
Pettycomb, who,
if she minded her own business as much as she did others', would be a
blessed saint."
"I can imagine the rumors are not very pleasant,-" Gage muttered above
his teacup.
"They never are."
"When ye're as handsome as yerself, sir, ye're bound ta cause talk, but
when ye've also got a girl as winsome as Shemaine O'Hearn livin' under
the same roof with ye .
.
.
well, such talk is almost ta be expected.
Some folks are already callin' her foul names an' sayin' as how ye
bought her for yerself ta sport with.
Ta be sure, they'll be watchin'
her belly ta see if it grows heavy with child."
The muscles tensed in Gage's cheeks as he stubbornly declared, "I bought
Shemaine because she'll be able to teach Andrew how to read and write in
years to come."
"Is that the only reason?" Mary Margaret inquired softly.
Gage looked at her in surprise, but for the life of him he couldn't make
any denials to the elder's unspoken insinuation, for he'd be lying
through his teeth.
"If I were a man as fine as yerself, ownin' a bondswoman as comely as
Shemaine," Mary Margaret ventured, "I'd not allow any space for the
rumors ta hatch.
I'd marry the girl an' grin with pride when the ol'
biddies see her belly growin'."
Her guest raised a brow in quizzical wonder.
"You never give up, do
you, Mary Margaret?"
"What in the world do ye mean?" She feigned innocence with a sweet
smile.
"You know very well what I mean," Gage challenged.
"The realms of the
lower world would freeze over ere you'd cease your attempts to marry off
couples.
You have a very determined nature, madam."
The elder grinned back at him as she shrugged her thin shoulders. "What
do ye expect?
I'm Irish!"
Gage tossed a pleading glance upward.
"Heaven protect this Englishman
from all the Irishwomen in the world!"
Chapter 7.
The cobbler's workshop was nigh the heart of Newportes Newes, and though
the afternoon was swiftly aging, Gage refused to leave the hamlet
without completing all the errands he had set out to do, the last being
to order shoes for his bondswoman.
He pulled the wagon to a halt in
front of the cobbler's shop and lifted his son and then Shemaine down to
the boardwalk.
As he did so, he noticed that a number of people had
stopped along the thoroughfare and were watching them in unabashed
curiosity.
Their interest seemed mainly centered on the girl, and after
his recent chat with Mrs.
McGee, it wasn't hard to surmise what most of
them were thinking.
Then, too, accounts of Shemaine's recent set-to
with Potts might have been spreading through the village, and some
people were no doubt interested in seeing how the girl had fared.
Several bachelors were edging closer for a better look as well. Though
Gage couldn't imagine the pinch-faced Mrs.
Pettycomb lauding the beauty
of a convict, other residents of the community had witnessed his
purchase of Shemaine and were far more apt to describe her in greater
detail.
It was conceivable that such talk had given rise to the
curiosity of the young gallants.
But then, considering the scarcity of
available women, they would have looked with yearning at any fetching
maid who might have ventured into the area.
Gage knew most of the men well enough, some certainly better than
others.
Two of the younger ones had even worked for him as apprentices
for a time, but they had failed to come up to his expectations, and he
had let them go.
He was cognizant of the bachelors' lengthy struggles
to find themselves wives.
He had experienced many of the same
frustrations himself ere he had married Victoria and again in more
recent months, but their plight was of little consequence to him.
Had
any of them been of such a mind, they could have braved the bigoted
opinions of the town biddies and gone to the London Pride, just as he
had done.
But they hadn't, and he'd be hanged before letting them skim
off the best of the cream now.
Shemaine was his possession, and short
of her parents arriving to buy back her freedom, he had no intention of
selling her, even at a huge profit.
She was precisely the kind of
bondswoman he had been hoping to find, perhaps even better and more
beautiful than he had dared to envision, and that was enough reason to
refuse any and all overtures.
"Why, if it isn't Mr.
Thornton and Shemaine O'Hearn!" a woman jeered
behind them.
The harsh feminine voice was only vaguely familiar to Gage, but Shemaine
knew it too well.
Its caustic tone evoked dark memories of long hours
locked away in a cable her and morbid scenes of lifeless bodies being
dumped into the sea.
Drawing in a deep breath to steady herself,
Shemaine reluctantly responded in like manner as Gage faced the woman
whom she and the other convicts had derisively dubbed "Mrs. Captain
Fitch."
"Madam." Gage briefly tipped his hat as he recognized Ciertrude Fitch.
Then, with an equally concise greeting, he acknowledged her glowering
husband.
"Captain Fitch."
Gertrude raked her gaze scathingly over the object of her hatred and
felt a bitter disappointment as she took note of the much-improved
appearance of the girl.
Her lips twisted downward snidely as she made
comment.
"Life as a servant certainly seems to agree with you, She
maine."
Gertrude Fitch had been motivated by spite to find out how the
bogtrotter was faring as a bondslave.
In fact, she had all but demanded
that her husband escort her about the hamlet, on the chance that she
would glean dreadful news of Shemaine's circumstances from various
remarks townspeople were wont to make.
But when she saw the colonial
reach out and gently gather the girl's slender fingers in his own,
Gertrude nearly choked on the bitter bile of animosity.
Whether a
gesture of reassurance, compassion, or (worse yet) tender affection, it
conveyed sentiments that pierced her heart anew with hostility.
When I
the man made it evident that Shemaine was under his protection, Gertrude
could foresee nothing radically unfavorable happening to the girl.
A brief silence ensued as Gertrude glared at Shemaine, but Captain Fitch
was totally unsympathetic with his wife's enmity toward the girl and
tromped on her onerous taciturnity with a faint trace of scorn in his
smirk.
"This is the first time my wife has ever ventured beyond the
shores of England.
She was so curious about this blasted colony she
nigh threatened me with mayhem if I didn't show her about." Disguising
his resentment with a humorless chuckle, he rocked back upon his heels
as he cast an irksome glance down the thoroughfare.
Knowing full well
that Gertrude had been hoping to hear tales of Shemaine's adversity, he
continued with his subtle innuendos.
"I assured her there would
probably be nothing worthwhile to see, but I suppose she was longing to
find a wee bauble or even a bit of news to content her."
Everette Fitch settled his gaze fleetingly on Shemaine.
With her hair
combed and subdued in a braided knot behind her nape, the girl looked as
prim and comely as he had once imagined she would under better
circumstances.
Considering the depth of Gertrude's hateful
expectations, he could only surmise that by now his wife was seething
with disappointment.
Gage was keenly perceptive of the glance Captain Fitch flicked over
Shemaine and the torturous yearning burning within the gray eyes. He had
also caught the significance of the man's words and answered him
adroitly.
"Aye, there are treasures to be found .
.
.
but in their
true form, they might not always appeal to the one who searches for them
so diligently.
But to others, they are highly prized.
In fact, some
men would chance everything to have them safely within their grasp."
The guileful insinuations riled Everette so thoroughly that he could
hardly trust himself to meet the amber-flecked gaze, much less to speak.
He was still incensed over losing Shemaine, but he was even more
resentful of the fact that this impudent interloper had challenged his
authority as ship's captain by cunningly petitioning Gertrude to