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
younger man was telling him.
After a moment of strained silence, he
wiped his trembling hands on his breeches and muttered half to himself,
" Twill take me a while ta dig two graves...."
Gage looked at the smithy, not sure he understood what the man had said.
"I thought I'd try to find that old woman's cabin in the woods where
Cain lived and bury him out there.
If you know where it is, it would
help me...."
"I'll bury Cain beside Roxanne."' "Are you sure you want to do that, Mr.
Corbin?" Gage asked in quiet sympathy.
"After all, Cain did kill
her...."
"This was where Cain was born, this is where he'll be buried."
Gage wondered if the shock of Roxanne's death had addled the smithy.
"As far as I can remember, the woman in the woods never said where Cain
came from.
Are you saying that Cain was born in Newportes Newes .
.
.
or near here?"
"He was me son," Hugh answered in a gravely voice.
"Me firstborn.
He was born a couple o' weeks afore he was due, an' when I saw how
grotesque the babe was, I told Leona ta pad her belly so's everybody
would think she was still with child.
Then I took the babe in the woods
an' left him on the ol' woman's doorstep.
Didn't seem right somehow ta
kill me own son.
After the hag found Cain an' spread the news around, I
told some people that Leona was going' inta labor with our own babe, but
I wouldn't let anyone come inta the house.
Later, I built a tiny
coffin, weighted it down with a small bag o' grain an' told the
townsfolk that the son what had been born ta me an' Leona had come inta
the world dead.
I didn't want ta own up ta that hideous 418 K2NTHLEEN E.
WOODIWIM li'l
creature I'd taken in the woods, but Cain was the only son I e'er had."
"Did Roxanne know that Cain was her brother?"
"I never told a soul .
.
.
til this moment .
.
.
an' now it just
don't seem ta matter anymore."
Gage left the man alone to deal with his sorrows as best as he could.
The smithy had made his own way in life, and it had become obvious to
Gage during the short time he was there that Hugh wanted no one to pity
him.
He would remain as stubborn and harshly stalwart as ever.
Gage helped the smithy unload the top two coffins, then he took the
third and a statement of how Potts had met his death to the British
authorities in the area.
Gage then proceeded to the tavern and found
Freida in a raging tizzy.
"I'd like to talk with Morrisa," he informed the madam.
"Do you know
where she is?"
"I wish I did," Freida snapped irritably.
"She left here without
lettin' any o' us know she was leavin', an' from what I hears, she
caught a ride going' north with the first fella what come along, a
mountain man what's been visitin' her lately.
Twould seem she aren't
plannin' on comin' back any time soon."
"Then I take it Morrisa didn't bother to buy her freedom."
Freida snorted angrily, attesting to the accuracy of his conjecture.
"Ye can bet when I catch up with her, she's gonna wish she had."
"I suppose Morrisa was more afraid of what I'd do to her than she was of
you," Gage surmised.
Freida squinted a glance up at him.
"Potts go out ta yer place gain?"
Gage responded with a nod.
"This time he tried to kill me and said that
Morrisa told him to do it.
He meant to kill my wife after doing away
with me."
The madam swept him with a lengthy perusal, seeing no visible wounds.
"But ye're here an' Potts aren't."
"His coffin is down the street a ways."
Freida pursed her reddened lips in a wrinkled "Oh?" as she leaned back
in her chair to stare at him.
"So's ye're here lookin' for Morrisa an'
maybe thinkin' ye'll do her in like ye promised, but ye're gonna have ta
wait yer turn, cause I'm gonna find her first an' lay inta her so harsh
she's gonna wish she done gone ta the grave."
"Be my guest.
As long as she's out of the territory, I think I can
forget about her being a danger to Shemaine."
"Oh, I'm gonna bring her back alright or kill her tryin'.
I gots
friends what keep me informed bout things.
Until I finds out where
she's gone, I'll be a-thinkin' up what'll be the best punishment I can
give her for leavin' here without me knowin'.
She aren't gonna be much
use ta me all scarred up by a whip.
The gents won't mind a finger or
two missin' on a harlot as long as she's got enough ta get their
attention.
An' I knows some other stuff what'll make the bitch take notice. If'n
Morrisa's smart, she'll behave herself from then on.
Otherwise, she'll
be regrettin' it til her-dyin' day.
That much I've promised her, an' I
always keep me pledge."
Gage didn't know which posed a greater threat to Morrisa, being at the
beck and call of a mountain man or being at the mercy of a vicious
adversary like Freida.
Whatever her fate, he seriously doubted that she
would enjoy herself overmuch.
News of Edith du Mercer's hasty departure from Newportes Newes reached
Gage before he left the tavern, and he returned to his family confident
that Maurice du Mercer had handled the situation in a way that he had
deemed fit.
Later, when Shemus and Camille arrived at the cabin after
venturing into the hamlet, they informed Shemaine and Gage that Maurice
had come to see them and had explained his intentions.
He was giving
some consideration to the idea of eventually settling near Richmond and
paying court to Garland Beauchamp to see what would come of that
relationship.
At the moment, however, he was still in love with
Shemaine and had decided it was best to put some distance between them
for his own peace of mind.
He was planning on returning to England
after an initial visit with the Beauchamps, and in a year or so would be
returning to the colonies and traveling upriver to Richmond. If, at that
time, Shemaine- had been widowed or left to her own defenses, she was to
leave word for him at the inn in Newportes Newes. Since she was
apparently deeply in love with her husband, he would leave her alone,
but should she want him ere he wed another, he would return to her stoop
with all the eagerness of a smitten swam.
Gage bristled at the announcement, but he could hardly blame the man.
In fact, if Shemaine were ever widowed, Gage could not imagine a better
man than Maurice to replace him as her husband.
Still, Gage hoped he
would completely frustrate the Marquess's desires and live to an ancient
age with her, for she was clearly the kind of wife a husband could
treasure beyond all the ships, fame and fortune in the world.
Shemus blustered at the urging of his wife and cleared his throat as he
faced his son-in-law.
The fact that William sat nearby only added to
his discomfiture.
"Now that ye've been cleared o' the murder o' yer
first wife, I suppose I must beg yer pardon for the things I said ta ye
the first day we met."
"Only if you're sincere about it," Gage assured him cordially. "An
apology isn't worth much unless you truly mean it."
Shemaine slipped an arm around her husband's waist and, leaning against
his long muscular form, smiled at her parent as she encouraged him to
make things right.
"You don't really want to geld him now, do you,
Papa?
After all, twould mean no more grandchildren after the one I'm carrying
now is born."
Her father reddened in painful chagrin.
"Yer mother an' I wanted a
large family, but it was never meant ta be.
Several grandchildren would
make up for all the years o' our yearnin'."
"Then say it, Papa!" Shemaine entreated eagerly.
Shemus cleared his throat and began his apology haltingly.
"I'm sorry
for what I said .
.
.
for wantin' ta see ye cut, Gage, but .
. .
at
the time .
.
.
I could only imagine that ye'd taken advantage o' me
daughter.
Can ye forgive me?"
"I can understand that you were concerned for Shemaine.
In fact, I
might have said as much if it had been a daughter of mine." Gage
extended a hand in friendship and smiled as it was readily grasped by
the Irishman.
"We have a common goal, sir, and that is the welfare of
Shemaine.
I will pledge my troth to you that I'll do everything within
my power as her husband to make her happy."
Chortling in good humor, Shemus laid his free hand upon the ones that
were still clasped together and shook them, bestowing his hearty
approval upon the younger man.
"I'm grateful Shemaine was bought by
yerself, sir.
Otherwise, it might have been a disastrous end ta her
adventure."
Shemaine freely expounded upon her father's conjecture.
"Before my
arrest, Papa, I didn't have the wisdom to search beyond the realm of my
own limited aspirations.
Against my will, I was set to a different
course in life than the one I had directed my sights toward, and yet,
looking back, I can only believe a kinder hand must have been guiding me
through my hardships, for tis boundless love and joy I feel in my heart
today for my husband, for my son, and for the child to come .
. .
and
for our families."
"Hear!
Hear!" Gage cried, and a triumphant shout of agreement came
simultaneously from William and Shemus.
"Hear!
Hear!"