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
"Hush up, you ugly creep!" Roxanne snarled.
"Or we'll have Mr. Thornton
down upon us."
Turning to Shemaine again, the woman pointed toward the prow. "Get up
there now, you bitch!
Or I'll blow a hole through you where you stand!"
"You're going to have to shoot me, Roxanne.
And if you kill me like
that," Shemaine gritted out, "then twill be difficult for you to lay the
blame on Gage.
There'll be witnesses in the cabin who'll come running
and will no doubt see him leave the cabinet shop on his way here.
In
fact, his father will likely come up here, too, to see what has
happened.
He's not as agile as Gage, so it may take him a little time
to get here, but he'll come.
Aye, I think tis much better if you kill
me with the pistol, Roxanne, because I'll know then that you won't be
able to fool the people into thinking that Gage killed me."
"Lift her up on the prow, Cain," Roxanne barked, tossing a glare toward
the hunchback.
"If you don't, I'm going to shoot your little darling
right through the head right now!"
''Naw Shamawn!" he croaked, his face twisting hideously with the agony
that roiled within him.
"Plawse naw Shamawn."
"Please!
Please!
Please!" Roxanne mimicked sneeringly. "Haven't I
begged you to help me?
And what have you done?
Turned a deaf ear to my
pleas, that's what!
Well, I'm going to kill Shemaine, Cain, and nothing
you can say or do will stop me.
Twill either be a shot through the head
or a fall from the prow, but either way, she'll be dead."
Roxanne stretched out her arm, aiming the bore of the pistol between
Shemaine's eyes.
Shemaine felt her stomach wrench with sickening dread,
but she refused to move one step closer to the prow. Allowing herself to
be shot was the only way she could save her husband from a hanging.
A bellow of rage came from Cain as he lumbered forward and knocked the
pistol aside.
It went off with a horrendous bark, echoing through the
clearing and the glade.
In the cabinet shop, Gage had just finished nailing Potts's body in the
newly constructed coffin when the sound brought him upright with a
start.
In the next instant he was racing toward the door.
In the cabin, William had just stepped from his sleeping grandson's room
when the echoing shot brought him to a sudden halt. Exchanging an
alarmed glance with Bess, he hastened toward the tall cabinet near the
door, took out a pair of pistols and checked their loading.
Ignoring
the pain that still encumbered his movements, he stepped out onto the
porch, cursing his lack of agility.
Each man ran toward the ship, albeit one more swiftly.
While William
still picked his way hurriedly down the path from the cabin, Gage was
already- sprinting up the building slip, frantically calling Shemaine's
name.
He had just reached the top of the slip when Cain swept an arm
around Roxanne's waist and hauled her toward the prow.
"You fool!
What are you doing?" Roxanne railed angrily.
"Put me down!
Put me down, I say!"
The hunchback tossed a glance over his shoulder as Gage ran toward him,
but Cain had more strength in his arms and legs than one might have
imagined.
He hauled himself and his burden up to the prow, despite the
woman's screeching and her wildly thrashing struggles to free herself.
Holding Roxanne clutched in the crook of his arm, he looked back at Gage
and stepped near the edge, bringing Gaze to a skidding halt. It became
immediately apparent to Gage that if he came one step closer, the
hunchback would leap to his death and take Roxanne with him.
"Cain, put Roxanne down," Gage urged quietly.
"Naw!
Naw!" Cain shook his misshapen head and waved his free arm in a
sweeping gesture, motioning for Gage to retreat.
That one had no other
choice but to step back several paces.
Cain canted his head at an odd angle and looked down at Shemaine. Tears
were flowing down his distorted face, barely visible in the deepening
twilight.
"Shamawn maw frawn." He touched his heart briefly.
"Cawn lawve
Shamawn."
"And I love you, too, Cain,'' Shemaine answered him anxiously. "You've
been a good friend to watch over me." Wiping at the streaming wetness
flowing down her own cheeks, she began to beseech him.
"Please, Cain, please don't hurt Roxanne.
Just come down here where you
both will be safe."
"Cawn mawst daw!
Cawn kawled Vectawrea!
Cawn mawst daw!"
Gage had been looking at Shemaine, but his head snapped around when he
realized what the hunchback had said.
"No, Cain, you needn't die," Shemaine argued desperately. "Roxanne made
you think that Victoria was going to kill her, but you didn't mean to
break her neck when you grabbed her.
It was an accident.
Then Roxanne
told you to throw her off the ship so it would look like Victoria had
fallen, but that had been her plan all along." Shemaine glanced at Gage,
who was listening intently to every word she was saying.
She knew her
husband needed and wanted to know everything about Victoria's death, but
she could not pause to explain now, not when she had to stop Cain from
jumping off the ship to the rocks below.
"You thought you were protecting Roxanne from Victoria, but Roxanne lied
to you, Cain.
Victoria would never have hurt her.
She thought Roxanne was her
friend."
"Cawn mawst daw!
Rawxawne mawst daw!"
At his declaration, Roxanne renewed her frantic efforts to free herself
and began to claw at the gruesome face, crying in frightened hysteria,
"Let me go, you buffoon!
Let me go, do you hear!
I don't want to die!
I want to live!"
"Gawdbawe, Shamawn."
With that muttered farewell, Cain swept his captive around and leapt
from the prow of the ship.
Roxanne's scream lasted no more than a
second, then it was forever silenced.
Shemaine and Gage ran to the
prow, and by that time William had gained the bottom of the building
slip.
He made his way back to the two whose broken forms lay sprawled
across the jagged rocks.
Though it caused him some agony, he bent down
to examine each carefully.
Roxanne's neck had been broken by the fall,
Cain was still alive, but just barely.
He lay sprawled across the
boulders, but one that was taller and sharper than the rest bulged
upward beneath his back.
Wheezing loudly, the hunchback tried to smile
as he felt William's hand gently stroking his arm, but he coughed
instead, spewing up some of the blood that was rapidly filling his
lungs.
There was a horrendous pain in his chest, as if a long knife had
been plunged through him.
Then Cain saw Shemaine leaning over the prow
above him with tears flowing down her cheeks.
"Lawve Shamawn .
.
.
maw frawn," he whispered.
Then he closed his
eyes, took a gurgling breath, and grew very still .
.
.
and lifeless.
"Poor man," William muttered sadly.
Gage lifted Shemaine from the prow, and together they ran down to join
his father.
" Twill be too late to take the bodies into Newportes Newes tonight,"
Gage said.
"I'll have to leave them in the cabinet shop until morning.
Ramsey and the rest of the men can help me load the coffins in the wagon
for the trip into town."
"I'll help you build them," William offered.
"I'd rather you go in and see about Andy, Father," Gage said.
'He might
have heard the shots or the screams and may be wondering what has
happened.
He'll be frightened if he wakes to find only Bess there with
him."
William understood his son's concern.
"I'll go inside and sit with the
boy."
''Thank you, Father." Gage realized how much discomfort it must have
caused his father to come such a distance from the cabin.
He stepped
near to lend the older man assistance.
"Here, let me help you back to
the cabin."
William laid a hand upon his son's arm, forestalling him.
"I'd rather
you stay with Shemaine, son, and watch after her.
She's carrying my
grandchild, and after what she's been through, I'd like to see her
resting in bed so there'll be no chance of her losing it.
If she will
consent to come back to the cabin with me, then I'd be able to watch
after her while you're finishing up with the coffins."
Shemaine managed a shaky smile for the elder.
"I'm all right, your
lordship."
"Why don't you call me William or Father, Shemaine," William suggested.
"Papa sounds much nicer, but I'm afraid, with your own father around, it
would cause some confusion."
She went to him and rose up on tiptoes to brush a kiss against his
leathery cheek.
"Thank you, Papa William."
His lordship smiled and nodded.
"It sounds nice, daughter."
When his wife came back to him, Gage slipped a comforting arm around her
shoulders.
"Papa's right, Shemaine," he murmured, revising his own
address and, in so doing, bringing a start of happy tears to his sire's
eyes.
"Why don't you go in and rest?
I don't need any help.
And I'm
sure by now you must be feeling at wit's end with everyone coming out of
the woods trying to kill us."
"I've got almost all of the blood cleaned up from the deck," Shemaine