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
came to investigate that I was able to gain my release.
"Then, several nights later when everyone was sleeping, a noise awakened
me, and when I opened my eyes, I saw the turnkey creeping toward the
corner where I lay.
He had a short rope in his hands, and the way he
held it made me think he meant to strangle someone, whether me or a
prisoner nearby I cannot say.
The only way he could get to us was by
stepping over the convicts sleeping on the floor of the cell. When he
trod on a woman' s hand, her outraged shrieks brought the gaoler at a
run.
The turnkey gave him some lame excuse about seeing a rat.
It
seemed a feeble story to me.
It certainly made !1!
.
I the gaoler laugh.
He jeered something about a fool trying to hang a
rodent and told the turnkey to get out.
The next day, I was taken to
the ship, and I never saw the turnkey again."
"Could the turnkey have been acquainted with the thieftaker?"
Shemaine lifted her shoulders in an attempt to shrug but immediately
regretted the motion.
She walked stiffly to his stool instead and
braced a hand against it for support.
"Perhaps I'd better carry you upstairs so you can rest now," Gage
suggested.
"You also might consider wearing a nightgown for the rest of
the day.
Twould be more comfortable for you."
" Tis unsuitable to wear nightclothes so early in the afternoon,"
Shemaine argued.
"It's barely half past three o'clock, and your men are
still here."
"They'll be leaving soon," Gage countered, "and if anyone else should
come, I'll just have to explain that you've been wounded and need your
rest."
"Likely story, they'll say," Shemaine scoffed, and tossed her head.
"From what I've heard from Annie, I'm sure some of the townspeople would
be expecting to see me in my nightgown, but not because I've been hurt.
Their imagination is far more indecent.
I'm sure Mrs.
Pettycomb has
done her best to besmirch our reputations, especially after you took me
to the soiree and had the audacity to dance with me while everybody
watched."
"I've heard some of the talk," Gage conceded.
"Mary Margaret thought we
should do something to silence it."
Shemaine's soft brows slanted upward, conveying her skepticism.
"And did Mary Margaret perhaps advise you just how we might go about
accomplishing that deed, sir?"
His eyes flicked briefly upward to meet hers.
"She said we should
thwart the gossips by getting married."
Shemaine was aghast that such a well-intentioned woman had so little
diplomacy.
"Well, that may be suitable for Mary Margaret to suggest,
seeing as how she's always seeking to make a match between couples, but
did she take into consideration that you might not want to take a
condemned convict to wife?
I find it most disconcerting that she could
even recommend such a solution to you.
The impropriety of the woman!
Truly, sir, I would be mortified to have you imagine that I may have put
her up to suggesting such a thing.
Why, the idea is so farfetched, it's
ludicrous."' Gage lifted his shoulders in a casual shrug.
"Actually,
Mary Margaret wasn't the first to conceive of the idea."
Shemaine was dumbstruck, unable to imagine another who would be so bold.
"Well, I don't think Roxanne would have made such a suggestion, not when
she's made it apparent that she wants you for herself."
"Nay, twould hardly be Roxanne," he affirmed with a chuckle.
"Calley, then," she stated with conviction.
"Not Calley either."
Shemaine looked at him in growing confusion.
"Might I ask who took such
liberty, sir?"
The door of the bedroom opened, and Andrew came out to the parlor
dragging a rocking horse behind him.
Gage went immediately to his son's
assistance before any damage could be done to the furniture.
He lifted
the boy into the padded buckskin saddle as Shemaine stepped to the door
of the kitchen to watch.
Rocking back and forth, Andrew was soon lost in childish delight as he
mimicked the cries of a teamster he had once heard.
"Geeyup yair!
Yah!
Yah!
Fastah, ya' mules!"
Shemaine and Gage dissolved into laughter as they watched the boy, whose
curls were still wildly tousled from his lengthy nap.
For the moment,
Andrew seemed oblivious to either of them.
"Another example of your many talents, Mr.
Thornton?" Shemaine queried,
indicating the wooden horse.
Gage dipped his head in a brief affirmation as he came back to her, but
he was frustrated by the noise his son was making.
Lifting a hand, he
motioned for Shemaine to follow him into the back room again. As she did
so, he put aside the crock of ointment and lifted her gently onto the
stool.
For a brief moment, he searched her face, recognizing her
bewilderment, and sought to put her at ease.
"I told you when you first came here, Shemaine, that I'd be making a
trip upriver to Williamsburg.
Thus far, I've been detained from doing
so, but yesterday I received word that my customer's house is complete
and he'd like his furniture now.
If you're feeling strong enough two
weeks from tomorrow, I'd very much like to take you and Andrew with me
when my men and I make the delivery."
"I'm sure by then I'll be able to go with you and look after Andrew, Mr.
Thornton."
"While we're there, I'd like to take care of another matter of great
importance to me ...
if you're willing...."
"If I'm willing?" Her eyebrows gathered.
"What is there that I must
consent to, Mr.
Thornton?"
"I need to discuss this matter with you tonight, and I pray you will
give me an answer posthaste, for I'll not rest until I know one way or
the other."
!
I Outwardly Shemaine seemed composed, but inwardly she quaked. She had
noticed that Gage had started pacing restlessly about the narrow
corridor, and she could only imagine that whatever he wanted to discuss,
it was of a serious nature.
Perhaps he was having second thoughts about
keeping her.
Potts's attempt to kill her might have convinced him of
the danger her presence posed to his small family. Carefully she asked,
"What matter do you wish to speak with me about, Mr.
Thornton?"
Gage stepped back in front of her, earnestly desiring to make certain
truths known to her.
"I wasn't necessarily teasing when I told you once
that I'd consider taking you to wife.
Even before I ventured to the
London Pride, I had given careful consideration to the idea of marrying
again.
I needed a nursemaid for Andrew, but I wanted a wife for myself
almost as much.
As I've told you before, there's a serious dearth of
young, marriageable women in the area.
The ones who are here are eager
to wed, as Roxanne has clearly demonstrated, but none has appealed to
me.
When I went to the ship, I never thought I'd be fortunate enough to
find a woman who'd even suffice as a nursemaid .
. .
much less a wife.
But I was wrong, Shemaine.
You are much more than I had hoped to find."
Shemaine stared at him, completely astounded by his revelation. "You
want to marry me?" Her mind raced, trying to understand his reasoning.
Surely he had taken the consequences of marrying one with a tarnished
reputation into consideration.
She could believe that he might have
wanted to bed her because she was handy, but marriage had seemed out of
the question despite his wont to tease her.
"Why in the world would you
want to do that, Mr.
Thornton, when the very sight of me leaves honest
people wondering what grievous crime I committed in England?
Surely
they've wondered about my incarceration and have made much of my
indentureship to you.
You saw how Samuel Myers behaved when he saw me
at the dance.
I was brought to this country in chains, sir, and if you
take me to wife, you'll be a marked man.
The husband of a convict,
they'll hiss behind your back.
No doubt Mrs.
Pettycomb has done her
best to tell everyone in the hamlet that I'm not worthy of being
received by any respectable family, and I seriously suspect it would do
me little good to explain to her or the other gossipmongers that I did
nothing deserving of my arrest.
How could you even consider inviting
that kind of criticism upon yourself?"
Gage was just as incredulous.
"Do you honestly think I care one whit
about what that woman may say or think?
Alma Pettycomb is so pure in
her own eyes, she's unable to see how utterly mean and malicious she
really is.
She feeds on the flesh of innocents, and I'm sure that one
day she'll reap dire consequences for wagging that long, serpent tongue
of hers.
Believe me, Shemaine, she isn't worth your slightest concern.
Nor should she hinder or influence any decision you might make.
It
should be done of your own free will without intimidation.
The matter
of our marriage is entirely between you and me, no one else."
Taking her small hand between his, Gage searched her green eyes for some
hint of a denial, but he found none.
"Shemaine O'Hearn, I would be
greatly honored if you would accept my proposal of marriage and become
my wife."
"You'd have no qualms about taking a convict to wife?" she inquired in
amazement.
It was almost as if she were waking from a long sleep, for
the full realization of what he wanted was just now beginning to hasten