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
this overstuffed grouse who, with her wickedly vindictive ways, had
pecked away at the lives of the prisoners.
Snatching the kerchief from
her head, Shemaine threw caution literally to the wind and let the
bright strands of hair whip out around her in riotous confusion,
silently challenging the older woman, whose face slowly contorted with
murderous hatred.
"You're a vile witch, Shemaine O'Hearn," Gertrude hissed through
gnashing teeth.
"I pity the fool whotll buy you!"
I Of a sudden, the scudding breezes strengthened and swept across the
deck, snatching Shemaine from a morass of morbid uncertainty as she met
Gertrude's blazing glower.
It dawned on her that she had much to be
grateful for, for she had proven herself capable of existing under the
most intolerable conditions, many of which this woman had purposely
created.
Yet, for all of the abuse and venomous reproofs she had
endured, Shemaine knew, without a doubt, that she was still wonderfully,
desperately alive!
And that achievement was truly a thing to be
thankful for!
"And a very good day to you, Mrs.
Fitch," she called, lending a
cheeriness to her Irish-infected greeting despite her aversion to the
termagant.
"Did I not tell you I'd survive the pit again, and here I am
for yourself to see!"
Gertrude's lips tightened in a sneer.
"More's the pity, Shemaine.
More's the pity.
But then, you may not be so lucky in the next seven
years."
CHAPTER 2
The call boy blew his whistle, giving the signal for the waiting crowd
of colonials to come aboard.
Though most of the men had come to the
ship intending to acquire field hands, they strolled leisurely past the
female convicts as if seriously disposed toward making a purchase, at
least until they reached Morrisa, who had settled in a provocative
stance near the mizzenmast.
They stared agog at her overt display and
seemed unable to turn away.
Their wives and other townswomen passed her
by, lifting their noses in obvious disdain, and devoted their
consideration to more practical possibilities.
A short, balding man
gaped in slackjawed awe at the harlot's generous proportions, but when
he made an attempt to question her, Morrisa waved him away in annoyance.
"Go way, li'l toad," she snapped.
"I'm lookin' for a real man ta buy
me."
The man's face darkened to a mottled red as he glowered at her, but
Morrisa drew her lips back in distaste and made a hissing sound as if
she were a snake frightening off a predator.
Highly offended, he
s[umbled back a few steps and straightened his coat with an angry jerk.
"They drown witches here, ye know!" he warned direly.
Then he sniffed
in sharp disfavor and stalked off to join another handful of men who
were scrutinizing Shemaine and some of the younger women.
It was almost more than Shemaine could bear to have the settlers sizing
her up like so much merchandise.
For this one and that, she had to
stand and submit to a careful inspection of her teeth, hands, and arms.
Her polite answers elicited approving nods from the women, but the
warming glint in the men's eyes conveyed a more lurid imagination. The
idea that she could be purchased merely to appease a prurient appetite
was completely appalling, and she breathed a desperate plea that she
would soon be bought by a kindly mistress who might patiently instruct
her on the duties of a household servant.
"You women there!" James Harper called from the rail.
"Step over here
at once and give this man your attention!" He jerked a thumb to indicate
a tall, dark-haired colonial who stood beside him.
"Hig name is Gage
Thornton, and he's here in search of a nursemaid to care for his
two-year-old son."
A flurry of conjectures arose from the townspeople, and they gawked at
the man as if he had suddenly grown two heads.
Though Shemaine
recognized him as the one who had kept to himself on the wharf, and the
only one of the lot whom she had deemed young enough to offer some hope
of fulfilling Annie's wishes, she could not fathom the reason for the
amount of attention he was receiving.
Shemaine gave the tiny woman a gentle shove to encourage her. "Hurry,
Annie!
This may be your only chance!"
Annie was eager to comply and wasted no time in her attempt to be at the
vanguard of those who surged forward.
It was apparent from the
enthusiasm of the other females that they, too, wanted the position Mr.
Thornton offered.
Young and old alike shoved and clawed their way
toward him, for without a doubt the duties of nursemaid were greatly
desired above those of a scullery maid, a field hand or the like.
"Remember you are ladies," Harper cautioned, wondering if he would soon
have to quell the ruckus.
Shemaine was the only woman who refrained from joining the melee, but a
deepening curiosity began to take root as she regarded the man. His
sleeves were rolled up past his elbows, as if he had left some important
task behind to make his way to the ship, yet his tense frown and rigid
jaw strongly hinted of his distaste for the errand he was on, especially
since it seemed likely he would be caught in the midst of an eye-gouging
fray.
Grimy fingers clung to the homespun shirt and hide breeches that
covered the man's frame, while some women, with admiring oos and ahhs,
were bold enough to stroke the torpid bulge casually defined by the
clinging deerskin.
"Ladies!" Harper chided testily.
"Hands off the buyer, please!"
"Awwh, mate," a snaggletoothed doxy grumbled in exaggerated
disappointment.
"He's the finest bloke we've seen in a goodly time that
he is!
Sides, we can't sees where a li'l lovin' fondle would hurt the
bloke none.
Saints alive!
We needs it more'n him!"
Three months sharing the same cell with these women had not been nearly
enough time to dull Shemaine's sense of propriety.
Acutely embarrassed
for her gender, she also sensed the colonial's annoyance as he briefly
lifted his gaze skyward.
If he had sudden regrets about coming aboard
the London Pride or, by chance, was silently pleading for intervention
from above, it was much too late for either.
Among her companions he
remained the center of attention, and with good reason, Shemaine had to
admit.
In a face that was intensely handsome and tanned golden by the sun, his
eyes gleamed like warm brown crystals shot through with shards of amber.
Shadowed by brooding, well-defined brows, they were darkly lashed and
wonderfully translucent.
His nose was thin and sculptured with a
subtle, aristocratic curve that any noble Grecian might have envied. His
cheekbones would have been equally coveted, for they were leanly fleshed
and pleasantly prominent.
Devoid of a beard, the jaw and chin were
crisply wrought beneath bronzed skin.
It was entirely a man's face and
no less the torso beneath it.
He stood nearly a head taller than the stockier Mr.
Harper, and though
he was neither massively built nor one of great overwhelming brawn, his
wide shoulders were sleekly buttressed by a tautly muscled chest that
tapered to a trim waist and narrow hips.
If the iron-thewed arms were
any indication, then the rest of him had to be as hard as tempered
steel.
The settler's expression grew pained as his eyes slowly scanned the
women who stood around him.
When Morrisa elbowed her way toward him,
rudely displacing another with a sharp nudge of her hip, his dark
eyebrows came together with the intensity of a thunderclap.
He didn't
seem the least bit intrigued by the transparency of her sagging blouse,
only annoyed by her impertinence.
"Ain't ye a handsome bloke," the strumpet cooed.
Coyly tracing a finger
along his forearm, she smiled up at him.
"Me name's Morrisa Hatcher,
gov'na, an' I'd be o'erwhelmed with delight ta tend yer chit."
Gage Thornton was now convinced that he had come on a fool's errand.
Only a short time ago he had been resolved to ignore the inevitable
brashness of the female prisoners on the slim chance that among them he
might find one who would meet his qualifications, but he was quickly
losing patience with this whole preposterous idea of his. How could he,
even in his wildest imagination, have ever hoped to obtain from such an
unlikely source so rare an acquisition as he had mentally conjured?
Perhaps his desperation had surpassed even the degree he had realized it
had reached.
He was determined to accept nothing less than his ideal,
but it was becoming increasingly apparent that the kind of woman he was
looking for wasn't to be found aboard a convict ship.
"I have different qualifications in mind than the ones you generously
display, Miss Hatcher.
I'm afraid you do not suit my purposes."
Morrisa nodded knowingly as she jeered, "Afraid o' yer wife, are ye?"
Gage felt his vitals slowly twist with indignation.
This woman had no
idea, of course, what he had gone through since Victoria's death, and
certainly no stormy retort would enlighten her.
"Your pardon," he
replied succinctly.
"My wife was killed in an accident a year ago. Were
she alive today, I assure you I wouldn't be on this damn fool errand."
Timidly Annie stepped forward to tug at the man's sleeve.
"Me name's
Annie Carver, sir.
Me own babe was sold soon after I boarded the ship,
so tis me earnest wish ta have a wee one ta care for.
I can promise ye
I'd cherish yer son as me very own, sir." She blushed in sudden
confusion and wrung her hands as she added, "That is, if ye'd be o' a
mind ta lay out the coins ta buy me."
Gage's indomitable gaze softened somewhat as he looked down at the
small, plain-faced woman, but her garbled speech bespoke her lack of