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
winds.
"It sounds like the storm has slackened.
I'd better leave while
I can.
It might start up again."
"But where should I bathe?" Shemaine queried, unfamiliar with the proper
procedure of preparing a bath in a cabin.
In her father's house, her
baths had been prepared by servants.
"There's water heating over the fire for you already, and there's a well
outside at the far end of the back porch from which you can draw more
water if you need it.
You'll find a washtub hanging in the storeroom.
For the time being, it will have to suffice for any baths you and the
boy take and any laundry that you do indoors.
One of these days, when I
have some time, I intend to turn the storeroom into a bathing chamber,
but until then, we'll all have to make do with what's available.
As
long as the weather is tolerable, I bathe in the stream that runs
through the inlet.
You might have noticed it near the growth of trees
on the way up to the cabin.
There's not a great deal of privacy to
offer a woman, only what the trees may provide, but if you're of such a
mind, I'm sure my men and I would enjoy the view."
"I'll bathe inside, thank you," Shemaine replied pertly, feeling a
warmth creep into her cheeks.
Once again Gage accepted her reply with a faint smile.
"Hannah usually
likes me to visit a while, so you should have plenty of time to bathe
and dress while I'm gone.
But it also depends on the weather." He faced
her with a question.
"Are you afraid to stay here alone?"
Shemaine smiled a lot easier than he seemed able to do.
"Tonight I
think I'll be happy to have some privacy.
As you can probably imagine,
there was a serious scarcity of it aboard the London Pride."
"The front door can be bolted from the inside once I'm gone," he
informed her.
"I'd advise you to take the precaution, just in case some
stranger spies the cabin and comes searching for food or valuables and
finds you here alone.
I'd hate for you to be stolen away before I've
even had a chance to see your face washed." Another meager glimpse of a
smile hinted at his humor.
"When I return, I'll knock three times to
let you know it's safe to open the door.
Otherwise, don't show yourself
at the windows.
Before the week is out, I'll try to get around to
teaching you how to shoot a musket.
I'm not gone that often, but when I
am, you'll feel safer knowing how to use it.
You can never predict when
you might see a bear or wildcatþ"
"Or an Indian?" she interjected, having heard rumors about their
ferocity on the voyage.
"Or occasionally an Indian," Gage admitted.
"But for the most part,
they've moved into the mountains or the valleys beyond the Al leghenies.
It's gotten too crowded for them around here with all the English,
Germans, and those tenacious Scotch-Irish settling in the area."
Shemaine followed him to the door, wondering if there was any need to
tell him about Jacob Potts and his threats so soon after he had bought
her.
But he had seemed distracted since buying her, and she didn't want
to give him any excuse for taking her back.
At a more convenient time,
she reasoned, when it won't trouble him overmuch.
Pausing at the door, Gage indicated the tall kitchen cupboard standing
near the hearth.
"There's bread and cheese in there if you get hungry
before I return.
Hannah usually packs some food for me to bring home
when she knows Andrew and I are here alone.
At least tonight you'll be
well fed.
I can make no guarantees for the morrow."
Opening the heavy portale he stepped out onto the porch, glanced quickly
around the area, and then pulled the door closed behind him. The
floorboards creaked slightly as he crossed to the front steps. After his
departure, a long moment of enjoyable silence ensued.
Then, with a soft
smile, Shemaine laid the heavy bolt in place across the door, for the
first time in many months feeling a surge of hope for the future.
._ .
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, i, .
CHAPTER 4
A lengthy shampoo and a warm, leisurely bath did wonders for Shemaine's
spirit.
She marveled at the enormous change in herself as she dragged
on a frayed chemise from the dead woman's trunk.
Once she would have
casually discarded the undergarment as a castoff, not worthy of being
used for anything but a servant's dust cloth or a scrub rag. Wearing a
riding habit relentlessly day in and day out for several months
certainly had a way of making one feel immensely grateful for any
apparel that was clean and reasonably intact.
Though there were nicer
shifts packed away in the chest, even a lace-trimmed one which had
obviously been the woman's best, Shemaine refused to take her new
master' s benevolence for granted.
In determining her future needs she
had also laid out a second chemise, a green gown, a pale blue one two
long white aprons, and a pair of black slippers, all of which had seen a
lot of use.
Once she had bathed and washed her hair, Shemaine began to sense the
importance of demonstrating her gratitude to Gage Thornton for having
bought her, and what better way of accomplishing that feat she decided,
than proving herself an enterprising cook and efficient servant.
Granted, it would take some time before she regained her strength and
stamina, but she wrapped a towel about her wet head and then, garbed
only in the chemise, set about testing her ability in the preparation of
food.
A few years had passed since Bess Huxley, their family cook, had tried
to stimulate her interest in culinary endeavors and teach her the basic
techniques required for success.
At the time, Shemaine had grudgingly
performed the tasks, doing them over and over again until she had
attained the perfection the woman had demanded, but she had loathed
stirring sauces endlessly so they wouldn't scorch and beating egg whites
until they peaked.
She had been convinced that Bess's instructions were
a wasted effort, for even at a younger age she could not imagine herself
marrying a man without the means and properties to warrant a house full
of servants.
So much for her expectations, Shemaine mentally jeered.
Bess had warned
her not to be so high-minded, for a mere girl could not predict what man
would ask for her hand or, for that matter, to whom she would give her
heart .
.
.
if she were fortunate enough to be allowed a choice.
Despite the cook's arduous drilling, Shemaine was sure there was much
that she had forgotten about her training.
Yet it was now necessary for
her to prove her capability and, if she could, to recall everything that
Bess Huxley strove so hard to teach her.
There was nothing quite as
motivating as desperation to make one acutely attentive to another's
sage advice.
Shemaine busied herself making crumpets from memory.
While serving out
her time in the solitude of the cable her, she had yearningly
remembered the relaxed afternoon teas she had once enjoyed with her
family.
Those cherished memories came drifting back now with poignant
clarity as she made the basic dough.
After mixing it, she covered the
bowl with a cloth and set it near the warmth of the hearth where the
bread could rise while she resumed her toilette.
It seemed an endless drudgery combing the stubborn snarls out of her wet
hair as she sat before the fire.
The task took much longer than
Shemaine had expected, and she became concerned about the time, for the
afternoon seemed to be flitting rapidly away.
In desperation she
searched about for a pair of scissors to make short work of her hair,
but she found nothing better than a butcher knife.
The disaster that
particular tool might wreak promptly dissuaded her.
While going through the articles stored in the trunk, she had found a
brush with several long strands of blond hair twined about the bristles.
Though her new master had given her leave to use whatever she had need
of, Shemaine could not bring herself to destroy such a precious
keepsake.
She searched through the man's possessions instead, finding
most of his clothes and underwear neatly stacked and separated in his
armoire.
The only exception was a clean bundle of wrinkled shirts that
were of much finer quality than the homespun garment he L...
was presently wearing.
They had been stuffed in the very back of the
cabinet and had been there so long they had taken on the scent of the
wood.
As pleasant as the smell was, Shemaine decided that one of her
very first laundry duties would be to wash, starch and iron the shirts
for her master.
After that, whether or not they were worn would be
entirely up to the man, but at least he'd have an option.
The rain began again in earnest, and not knowing whether the downpour
would deter or hasten Mr.
Thornton's return, Shemaine did not dare
dawdle over her hair any longer.
She finally located a brush in a
drawer in the man's shaving stand and made use of it to smooth the rest
of the tangles from her hair.
The heavy tresses were still slightly
damp when she plaited them and coiled the resulting two braids close
against her nape.
Then she quickly washed the brush, dried it, and put
it back where she had found it, hoping her master wouldn't notice that
it had been used in his absence.
Both gowns were too long, as Gage had predicted, and snug across her
breasts.
It amazed Shemaine that a man could remember his wife with
such unerring accuracy that he could correctly judge the sizes of other
women just by his memory of her a full year after her passing. The
bodices could not be let out, Shemaine discovered after examining the
seams, and any alterations to the hems would have to wait until she had