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
consider his offer to buy Shemaine, as if the man had actually perceived
that it was his wife who held the ultimate power.
The fellow's success
in plucking the girl from his grasp would have been a despicable blow to
any man's pride, but for Everette Fitch, it was compounded by the
suspicion that J.
Horace Turnbull had deliberately arranged matters so
that Gertrude would be the controlling entity in any situation, perhaps
for no other purpose than to see his son-in-law thoroughly humiliated.
Gertrude was oblivious to what had really been bandied back and forth
between the two men.
During their exchange, she had swept her eyes over
the mud-pocked thoroughfare and wooden buildings that lined the
boardwalk and drawn her own conclusions.
With a sneer she conveyed her
distaste.
"I've seen nothing in this settlement that would make me want
to ever come back."
Gage managed a tolerant smile.
"Newportes Newes is but a babe compared
to London, madam.
Still, there are other cities in this land that are
becoming quite impressive even in their youth.
Williamsburg, for
instance.
The governor' s palace is representative of a more gracious
way of life than you will see here in this port.
As for myself, I enjoy
living on the river, and I treasure the space and freedom of this area.
The spirit of adventure thrives in this land and appeals to my heart."
Gertrude wasn't very appreciative of the tenets of a backwoods colonial,
especially one whom she could only presume was low-born. "I'm sure you
must be overwhelmed with excitement in this savage wilderness, sir, but
I much prefer the civilized refinement of England to this small, filthy
hamlet.
Of course, only an enlightened Englishman would esteem his
cultural heritage."
Her sneering tones worried Andrew.
The child had heard about witches
from his playmate, Malcolm Fields, and was afraid he was seeing one
right now.
Stumbling around, he hid his face against his father' s
buckskin-clad thighs, desperately wishing the ugly, gruffvoiced woman
would go away.
Gage combed his fingers idly through his son's hair as he offered a
reply.
"I know London very well, madam.
I grew up there and worked
nearby building ships for my father.
I've met aristocrats who thought
themselves knowledgeable beyond the common man.
Granted, some were, but
more than not, I sensed the views they expressed originated from a
narrow-minded prejudice."
Gertrude sniffed arrogantly.
Such a clod needed to be set in his proper
place, and what better way to accomplish that feat than to demean his
ancestry.
'You say your father is a shipbuilder, sir, but I wonder if
anyone in England has ever heard of him.
You'd not be living here in
this backwoods settlement if he were all that successful.
What may his
name be?"
"William Medford Thornton," Gage answered, preferring to leave off the
title of lord.
Gertrude shook her head, unable to recall anyone by that name, but she
failed to consider that her own world was painfully narrow, her circle
of friends even more so.
In supercilious pride she posed another
supposition.
"I'm sure you've heard of my father.
He's quite well .
known among the best of circles.
Almost everyone in the shipping trade
knows J.
Horace Turnbull."
Gage lifted a brow in amused wonder.
"J.
Horace Turnbull, did you
say?"
"Then you have heard of him."
"Oh, indeed!" His reply was emphatic though somewhat cryptic.
Gertrude smiled smugly, pleased that she had proven her point. "'Twould
seem his fame has spread even here.
But tell me, Mr. Thornton, how is
that you know of my father?"
A dark brow twisted dubiously upward as Gage met her gaze.
"I'm not
sure that I should tell you, madam."
"Oh, you must!" she insisted.
'I'll not have it any other way."
Gage glanced down at Shemaine, who had sidled close to him, as if
unconsciously seeking safe refuge, like Andrew.
His answer would
probably be the only revenge the girl could ever savor.
He squeezed the
thin fingers reassuringly.
"Ten years ago or so my father sent me on a mission to find your father,
madam,'' he said, once more bestowing his attention upon the matron.
"Before the occurrence of that event, J.
Horace Turnbull had taken
possession of a ship he had ordered from my father and had left a chest
of coins as payment in full.
The contents were carefully counted before
the agreement was sealed, but after your father sailed away on the ship,
the chest was taken to a London bank.
When it was opened, musket balls
were all that it contained.
At some place and point in time, your
father had managed to switch two trunks that were exactly alike, except
for their contents, a connivance which we later learned he had planned
with Lendon Crocket, once one of our most trusted men."' Pausing as
Gertrude gasped an outraged denial, Gage noticed that Captain Fitch
seemed peculiarly elated by the tale.
The woman's stuttering attempts
to convince him of her father's integrity were slowly silenced as Gage
continued.
'Though Turnbull had assured Lendon Crocket that it would be
the bankers who'd be held accountable and no one would ever know of the
healthy bribe he had been given, it seemed his real purpose was to let
our man take the blame.
Mr.
Crocket was wise enough to realize that he
had been duped and told all, shortening by some degree a very lengthy
sentence in Newgate.
"Though I was only a couple of years past a score of age at the time, my
father sent me out on a ship manned with an extra crew with orders to
hunt Turnbull down to the ends of the earth if need be.
We found the
vessel taking on supplies as near as Portsmouth and waited til the eve
of the scheduled sailing, when most of the men were enjoying a last
fling in the taverns.
While they were doing so, we slipped aboard the
ship, threw the rest of the crew over the side and sailed her back to
the River Thames.
My father sold the cargo and kept the profit as usury
for what your father had tried to steal from him. Turnbull was enraged
and tried to call it thievery, but he forgot about our man in Newgate,
who was willing to testify in our behalf.
Turnbull had enough wealth to
buy his freedom and was released to carry on his shipping trade.
Needless to say, it was the last time we ever built a ship for your
father."
"I've never heard of anything so preposterous!" Gertrude squawked
indignantly.
"I don't understand your purpose, Mr.
Thornton, but I do
know your story is nothing more than a vicious, slanderous lie!"
Her eyes flared with unsurpassed fury as they settled on Shemaine.
"You little trollop!
Somehow you convinced your master to tell these
lies against my father." Despite the frantic shaking of the fiery red
head, Gertrude snarled in contempt, "What did Mr.
Thornton require to
see it done?
A night's toss in bed?"
"That's enough!" Gage barked sharply.
"Shemaine had nothing to do with
this!
You insisted on being told, and I obliged you, madam! If you're
so set on accusing someone, then talk to your father the next time you
see him!
Perhaps he'll tell you the truth.
But leave the girl out of
this!
She's done nothing!"
"Ha!" Gertrude scoffed.
"She'd do anything to see me shamed!"
"You shame yourself, madam," Gage accused brusquely.
"You abuse others
out of malice and then judge them by your own despicable character.
I
assure you, madam, that whatever shame or slander you or your father
reap in this world, you'll have brought it down upon your own heads. Now
good day to you." Releasing Shemaine's fingers, he slid a hand beneath
her elbow and gently guided her toward the door. Feeling her trembling,
he wanted to pause long enough to quietly reassure her, but there was no
privacy to he had, for the cobbler awaited them in his shop and, behind
them, Mrs.
Fitch still stewed.
Andrew cast a frightened glance toward the large woman as he trailed
behind his parent.
In his pair of years on earth, he had never seen
anyone look so mean or turn such an ugly color.
Tottering hurriedly
through the doorway after his father, he tugged at the elder's breeches,
winning Gage's immediate attention.
Fearfully he pointed toward the
matron with the liver-hued face.
"Fat witch mad, Daddee?"
His son's anxious question did much to relieve the tension that had
beset Gage since their arrival in the hamlet.
Even as he looked back at
Gertrude Fitch, he had difficulty subduing his mirth, and by the time he
swung the portal shut behind them, he was guffawing out loud, amazing
Shemaine, who stared at him in wonder.
"Whatever has taken hold of you, Mr.
Thornton?" she asked, startled by
his mirth.
It was totally unlike the man, whose smiles were far too
sparse and rarely glimpsed.
"Fat witch mad," Gage mimicked, and inclined his head toward Gertrude,
who still mouthed threats at them through the small, square panes of
glass which made up the larger window that stretched across the front of
the shop.
"Would you say that's an understatement?"
Shemaine felt a strange, burgeoning contentment rise up within her as
she glanced toward the turning woman.
After all the abuse she had
suffered at Gertrude's hands, she found it rather satisfying to have
witnessed the puncturing of the shrew's overly inflated pride.
They'll both pay for this!
Gertrude silently promised herself.