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
thicket, he nosed it into the water and silently directed Shemaine to
the far end.
The slender craft seemed far too flimsy to suit her, and though she
obeyed her master's directive, she settled herself gingerly where he had
indicated.
Cautiously she looked around at the wide river beyond them
and then cringed in sudden worry.
Aware of the nervous
fluttering in her stomach, she turned back, not wanting to face the
possibility of being launched into that swirling expanse.
Taking a place at the opposite end, Gage braced the end of the paddle
against the river's edge and shoved them away from shore.
The current
caught the canoe, making it wallow slightly, and Shemaine's heart leapt
with fright.
After all she had been through, it would be sheer travesty
indeed if she were drowned only moments after leaving the London Pride.
Gage tossed a small tarp to her.
"That should help keep you warm."
Grateful for the protection from the rain and the watery view
surrounding them, Shemaine spread the tarp over her head and huddled
beneath its folds.
Despite the raindrops that slashed into her face,
she fastened her gaze upon the land beyond the riverbanks, searching for
signs of life and habitation.
Just beyond the hamlet, the countryside
seemed flat and low, in some areas a grassy marshland inhabited by
waterfowl and reptiles, but in other places there were thickets so dense
they seemed impenetrable to anything but the smallest of animals.
Shemaine was immediately impressed by the beauty of the wilderness, yet
a little frightened of it, too, for she had no idea what to expect from
this land or if she would be able to survive in it.
Occasionally through the downpour she saw where a cabin and outbuildings
were nestled in the trees or where others were in the process of being
built.
In a larger clearing she saw a much grander house being erected
and was amazed at the spunk of the people who, having no guarantees of
safety and security so far from civilization, would make such a
commitment to the future.
The canoe glided with ease through the swiftly flowing current as Gage
repeatedly dipped the wooden blade in the rain-pocked waters, stroking
leisurely on one side and then the other, marking a course close to the
riverbank where lofty, wide-spreading branches afforded them protection
from the storm.
Farther down the river, a profusion of pink and white
petals, stripped from a snarled thicket of fruit trees growing near the
shore, floated on the surface of the river beneath the shelter of their
limbs.
Others were being swept into the main channel, where they
swirled chaotically in the current for a time before being drawn into
the depths.
Feeling as vulnerable as those tiny flower petals, Shemaine
dismally mused on the similarities between her life and their short
voyage on the river.
Against her will, she had sailed across an ocean
and was now being borne along to some strange destiny beyond her ken.
Only time would reveal the outcome, if she would be swept under a darkly
brooding morass of adversity or if she would remain afloat until she
came to the end of her indentureship.
They finally came within sight of a sandy inlet where a partially
finished ship rested in bracing stocks near the river's edge.
No one
had to tell Shemaine that here was where Gage Thornton endeavored to
build his dream.
As they drew near, the ship seemed to loom above them
like a sleek-framed edifice, much larger by far than Shemaine had dared
to imagine.
This would truly be a sailing vessel for the high seas, she
thought in awe, realizing just how dedicated and enterprising the man
who had designed her really was.
A large cabin stood on higher ground beyond the ship.
Its sharply
pitched roof seemed to thrust upward into the belly of a gray, turbulent
haze that roiled close above the tall pines and deciduous trees
surrounding the cabin.
Their branches swayed to and fro with the strong
winds that blustered through them and seemed to answer with a plaintive
wall, as if bemoaning the fact that they had been disturbed.
Gage drove the canoe into the shallows near the bank.
There he jumped
to shore and dragged the craft from the river.
The pelting raindrops
continued to slash down upon them with a vengeance as he lifted Shemaine
in his arms and raced toward the cabin.
Carrying her easily, he leapt
up the front steps, strode across the covered porch and lifted the latch
as he nudged the heavy-timbered door open with a shoulder.
Once inside,
he kicked the portal closed behind him and withdrawing the arm he had
clasped beneath her knees, allowed Shemaine to regain her footing.
Leaving her, he pulled a towel from a rack near the door and proceeded
to dry his face and arms and blot some of the moisture from his clothing
as he moved about the spacious cabin, lighting several lanterns to chase
away the gloominess of the interior.
"I'll open the shutters after the winds die down," Gage stated drawing
Shemaine's attention to the small-paned windows spaced at neat intervals
in the cypress-paneled walls.
Except for those that were protected
beneath the overhanging roofs of the front and back porches, the rest of
the windows were darkened by wooden shuners that had been closed and
bolted from outside.
"I put in the glass only a couple of months before
my wife died, and it was no cheap or easy task.
When there's a storm
brewing, I usually close the shutters so there's no chance of the
windows getting broken, mainly to save myself the trouble of repairing
them."
Shemaine was impressed by the charm and comfort of the interior. "It's
nice and cozy in here with the lanterns."
A loft had been built beneath the steeply pitched ceiling, partially
forming a second story which, from a gracefully turned balustrade
overlooked the great room.
Lending support to the loft on the main l
floor was an interior wall set back some distance from the end of the
overhang.
On the left, a massive stone fireplace had been built to
provide a cooking area in the kitchen.
Immediately to the right of the
hearth and directly opposite the front entrance was a door that led to a
wide corridor, at the end of which was a window and a back portal.
On
the far right of the interior wall, a second door stood ajar, revealing
a neatly arranged storeroom.
Adjoining that same wall was another
partition which ran from front to back, behind which a spacious bedroom
could be seen through an open doorway to the right of the en It was
apparent that a gifted artisan had crafted the furnishings, for they
were as fine and elegant as any piece her own parents owned in England.
Of most worthy note was a tall secretary standing against the parlor
wall near the bedroom door.
The piece had been painstakingly adorned
with carved shells, gracefully curving drawers and burlgrained doors.
A
leather-tooled desktop had been folded down to display tiny
compartments, drawers, and narrow cubicles where a collection of
bric-a-brac had been nestled.
Majestically crowning the piece were a
pair of spiraled finials on each end and, in the middle, an elaborately
carved shell, no doubt the handiwork of her new master.
Shemaine turned slowly about in amazement.
The costly appointments were
a luxury she had not expected to see in the colonies.
In fact, they were so much in evidence, she could not take them all in
with a mere glance.
A settee and two large, wing-backed chairs, upholstered in a Scottish
plaid, were part of a small grouping that had been arranged within close
proximity of the secretary.
In the kitchen a wooden sink, a worktable and a tall cupboard lined the
interior wali to the left of the hearth.
A butter churn, crocks and
other equipment abounded in this area, where, only a few steps away, a
pair of high-backed wooden benches faced each other across a trestle
table.
A child's high chair had been placed conveniently at one end.
A
short distance away, a rocking chair stood near the fireplace where one
could sit and enjoy its warmth or view the back corridor.
The stone hearth had an opening almost as large as Shemaine was tall It
was equipped with hooks and racks where iron kettles and skiilets could
be heated above the main fire.
An iron oven stood to one side and could
be readily moved about within the fireplace to make it more accessible
to the heat.
The massive chimney was solidly constructed, no doubt
lending substantial support to the structure as it rose upward through
the loft and the peaked roof.
"Did you build this cabin and all these things yourself?" Shemaine
asked, turning to Gage in amazement.
''Aye, I built a small cabin for myself soon after arriving, but when I
married Victoria, I enlarged it and started making the furniture for
her." His eyes flicked about the room, touching familiar nooks and
crannies.
"She was the one who made the place into a home for us.
She
was as clever with a needle as any woman I've ever known." He indicated
the settee and chairs.
"She had me trade a table to a Scotsman for the
plaid.
After I attached the legs and arms to the frames, she stuffed
the three pieces with horsehair, covered them with sailcloth and then
the woolen."
"You must miss her terribly," Shemaine surmised, detecting a strange
texture in his voice.
"Aye, I think of her a lot when I'm not busy," he acknowledged,
returning the towel to a peg near the front door.
"But you'll hear
rumors to the contrary when you venture into the village.
Alma
Pettycomb and other scandalmongers in the hamlet doubt that I can love
anything but the ship I'm building."
"I don't think I'll be lending too much credence to what Mrs. Pettycomb
has to say about anyone or anything," Shemaine stated with firm
conviction.
She had already settled her mind on the fact that the woman