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
from the front porch as she leaned on her cane and glanced about her.
"Where's yer pretty wife?
An' Andrew, where is he?"
Gage swept a hand casually toward the loft.
"Andrew's upstairs with his
grandfather.
You may go up and introduce yourself if you so desire.
Shemaine isn't ready yet and has need of my services before she can be
presented." He held up the satchel to gain the elder's attention as he
stepped toward the bedroom door.
"I'll put this in Andrew's room in
case you should have need of it.
I've already pulled out the trundle
bed, so I'll leave the case beside the one you'll be sleeping in
tonight.
The taller bed will be more suited for you."
Mary Margaret elevated her gaze as she heard the low murmur of a deep
voice drifting down from the upper story.
It had a nice sound to it,
she thought, but promptly faced Gage with one of her concerns.
"Ye sure
I won't be disturbin' Andrew sleepin' in his room tonight?"
"He'll enjoy your company," Gage reassured her.
"He's been a bit
lonesome in there since we put up the wall between our bedrooms."
"The wee tyke will no doubt be havin' a new brother or sister before too
long," Mary Margaret ruminated aloud, cutting her eyes back toward Gage.
4,That will help ease his lonely plight, ta be sure."
Gage grinned and cocked a querying brow at her.
"Now look who's
watching for Shemaine's belly to grow," he teased, and lifted his
shoulders in a casual shrug.
"You'll have to give us time, Mary
Margaret."
"As if I've not given ye enough as it is, ye rogue!" she rebuked with a
chortle.
"Just how much time do ye need?"
"Give or take a month or two .
.
.
or maybe more."
Mary Margaret flung up a hand as if to pooh-pooh his argument. "Ye've
been wastin' time, else ye'd be knowin' whether or not yer wife has been
caught." Growing suspicious, the elder eyed him closely. "But then,
ye've always been a bit closemouthed, Gage Thornton, an' I'm thinkin' ye
wouldn't be tellin' til the rest of us can see it for ourselves."
"Now, would I keep such an important secret from you?" Gage inquired in
an affectionate tone.
Mary Margaret responded with an exaggerated snort.
"Bet yer infernal
hide, ye would!"
Curbing a smile as her host chuckled, the woman progressed several steps
toward the back corridor and then, upon recalling a matter of grave
importance, turned back to reclaim Gage's attention just as he reached
the bedroom door.
She was reluctant to bring tales of woe into the
Thornton home so soon after their altercation with Horace Turnbull and
his men, but she thought her friends needed to be told.
"I assume ye've
not heard that Samuel Myers went missin' for a pair o' days...."
Gage looked at her, perplexed.
"You mean he left Newportes Newes?"
"In spirit only."
Gage's brows drew together.
"What do you mean?"
"They found Mr.
Myers in his well this morn'n.
His neck had been
broken." She sighed pensively.
'He might the'er been discovered except,
on the way down, his foot got tangled in the pulley rope on the bucket."
Gage set his jaw at a reflective angle.
"I presume he didn't break his
neck just falling in."
''Dropped, more'n likely.
Alma Pettycomb said she came round ta see Mr.
Myers the other day an' found him squabblin' with his neighbor, Dr.
Ferris.
Twould seem they were arguin' over Annie.
Myers claimed ye had
cheated him, an' Colby called him a bloody blackguard an' a liar ta his
face."
Gage's lips twisted grimly.
"So Mrs.
Pettycomb is now pointing a
finger at Colby as the murderer."
Mary Margaret dipped her head in the affirmative.
"She's become quite
taken with the fact that yer father is a lord and, for the time bein',
has given ye a reprieve from her criticism.
Otherwise, she'd be layin'
the blame on ye, too."
"How kind of her," Gage jeered caustically.
"Not really."
He looked at the woman, sensing that something more was coming.
"Alma is now sayin' Shemaine's not fit ta be yer wife, what with her
bein' a convict an' all."
"Too bad someone didn't drop Mrs.
Pettycomb down a well!" Gage growled
in vexation.
"Aye, someone might be tempted to do the deed one o' these days, but I'd
rather it not be any o' me friends." Mary Margaret eyed the man closely
until the full weight of her statement penetrated his awareness, then
Gage laughed and reassured her with a shake of his head.
"Don't worry, Mary Margaret, I won't ruin my life killing that old crow.
She doesn't bother me that much."
"That's good." Mary Margaret smiled in relief and, lifting her cane,
pointed toward the corridor.
"Yer father is decent, is he not?"
"Not really," Gage quipped, lending a whole different meaning to her
question.
"Right now, he could probably take on Potts and come out the
better.
Just be warned."
Mary Margaret' s smile never wavered as she tossed a glance toward the
stairs.
"I think I can take care o' meself."
"I never suffered any doubts, madam."
With a chortle the Irishwoman waved him toward the bedroom with a
flourish of a slender hand and continued toward the loft.
Upon nearing
the last step in her ascent, she rapped the tip of her cane against the
floor to announce her presence.
" Tis Mary Margaret McGee comin' ta see the gentlemen in this upper
room."' "Miz McGee!" Andrew cried, scooting off his grandfather's bed.
The boy ran to meet her and, taking her hand, led her back toward the
cot.
William hurriedly jerked off his eyeglasses, tucked them in a breast
pocket of his nightshirt and pulled the sheet nigh to his chin before he
glanced around with a scowl.
The prospect of having a harping ol' biddy
at his beck and call had put him in a sour mood, but upon laying eyes on
the small, trim, winsome woman, he immediately had second thoughts.
He
sought to lift himself upright from his pillow, but an excruciating pain
shot from his back through to the front of his chest, and he fell upon
the bed with a sharp grimace.
"Your pardon, madam," William apologized in some embarrassment as she
stepped near.
"I have not the strength to rise and meet you with
courteous attention.
Lying in this cot without reprieve for so long has
taken its toll upon me."
"No need ta bother yerself, me lord," Mary Margaret assured hin with a
sweet smile.
"I'm well acquainted with yer infirmity an' do no hold it
against ye." She swept her eyes casually along the length o him and, for
once in her life, had to agree with Mrs.
Pettycomb.
Hz was an
admirable specimen, even for an English lord.
But then, shz had always
considered Gage Thornton an exceptionally handsome man, and there was
definitely a striking resemblance between father and son.
"I was just reading to my grandson," William explained, gathering up
some of the books that Andrew had brought to his bedside.
''Please continue," she urged, laying a hand upon the boy's shoulder.
"I'm sure Andrew would love it.
While ye're doin' so, I'll go down an'
make us some tea.
If I know Shemaine, she'll be havin' some wee cakes
or crumpets made for servin' with tea." With a light, affectionate pat
on Andrew's shoulder, she moved toward the stairs "Mrs.
McGee .
.
.
?" William was amazed at the urgency in his tone and rebuked himself for
having grown so awkward around women.
Perhaps he had been too long a
widower and too ambitious in his shipbuilding endeavors, for he had lost
most of the social graces that women found attractive in men.
In the
years following his wife's death, he had grown hard, unpolished, and
irascible.
No wonder he found it difficult to talk to the fairer
gender.
Mary Margaret returned to the cot and looked down at him inquiringly.
"Would ye be wantin' somethin', me lord?"' He flicked a quick, hesitant
glance upward, but upon meeting eyes that were a truer blue than the
sky, he dared to hold her gaze.
"I was wondering how skilled you are
with cards...."
The blue eyes twinkled as Mary Margaret raised her small pointed chin
and challenged him.
"Skilled enough ta give yer lordship a run, ta be
sure."
William grinned with the same cajoling charm his grandchild had
mastered.
" Tis boring up here all alone.
Perhaps after Andrew has
been put to bed, you'd consider a game or two...."
Mary Margaret inclined her elegant white head ever so slightly, but the
shine in her eyes was dazzling.
"A game or two .
.
.
or mayhap even
three...."
Shemaine and Gage were just coming out of their bedroom when Mary
Margaret stepped from the back corridor into the kitchen The elder
paused to admire the young beauty who now wore a deep turquoise silk
that had once been Victoria's most enchanting gown.
The woman clearly
remembered how comely the previous owner had looked wearing it, but not
nearly as much as the present one.
A narrow turquoise ribbon adorned
Shemaine's slender throat, and from her ear-.
Iobes hung pearl droplets, a recent gift Gage had bestowed upon his
bride.
Her fiery red hair had been swept atop her head beneath a white