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
Whether her subconscious summoned forth an evil incantation or, more
farfetched, providence yielded to her beck and call, a silky voice
queried from behind her, "What're ye gonna do bout them two, Mrs. Fitch?
Ye aren't gonna let Sh'maine's lover get away with callin' yer pa a
thief, now are ye?"
Gertrude turned her bulk stiffly about to face the woman who posed such
a question, and with a confident smile, Morrisa Hatcher sauntered from
the doorway of the adjoining building, where she had deliberately
tarried to hear the whole exchange.
The last Gertrude had seen of
Morrisa was when the harlot had strutted away from the ship with the
bawdily garbed older woman who had bought her.
In high spirits, Morrisa
had thrown kisses to all the sailors who had called to her and had
invited them to come visit her at the tavern.
"What does it matter to you, Morrisa?" Gertrude asked haughtily.
" Tain't none o' my concern, Mrs.
Fitch, but it just seems ta me ye
ought ta see bout silencin' all them lies they're tellin' bout yer pa,"
Morrisa replied with an indolent shrug.
She had been displeased by
Potts's recent failure to deal a death blow to her adversary and could
now see a need for another monkey on her leash.
Gertrude Fitch had
served her well enough on the ship, albeit through Potts, but if handled
right, the old crow could be a useful ally.
According to what Gertrude
had said while liberally lauding her father aboard ship, it would only
be a matter of time before he docked somewhere north of Virginia.
"If
Lord Turnbull was right here today, I'd bet me last shift he'd set his
mind on doin' somethin' bout them two."
Against the shrewd wiles of a skilled manipulator, Gertrude was as
pliable as rain-soaked mud.
Her pride swelled at the harlot's
deliberate magnification of her parent's importance, and she deigned to
consider her suggestion.
Gertrude knew that within a fortnight or two
her father would be sailing into the harbor of New York on the Black
Prince, no less than the biggest and best of his merchant ships. Perhaps
if she were to arrange for a message to be awaiting him when he arrived,
he'd be willing to sail south and deal with this Thornton fellow.
Once
they faced the wrath of J.
Horace Turnbull, the colonial and his bitch
of a bondswoman would soon realize the insanity of telling their
vindictive lies about him!
Gertrude conveyed her gratitude with a crisply cynical smile, the best
she could manage for the slut.
"You needn't fret yourself over such
matters, Morrisa.
I'm sure ere long they'll both reap their just
recompense."
Morrisa emulated solicitude with a troubled frown.
"Seein's as how Mr.
Turnbull is so well-known an' admired, m'liedy, it just seems a bloomin'
shame when a common yokel like that colonial can sully yer pa's good
name." She smiled and waved coyly at Captain Fitch, making him bluster
in red-faced discomfiture.
Easing his plight only slightly, Morrisa
took her departure of Gertrude with the same light fluttering of her
fingers.
"A right good evenin' ta ye both."
Gertrude jeered in distaste as she watched the fancy-garbed harlot
saunter leisurely toward the tavern.
Then she cast a glare toward her
husband, who had carefully fixed his gaze on some insignificant spot in
the opposite direction.
The fact that Gertrude hadn't let him out of
her sight since leaving England saved Everette the odious task of
answering a lot of angry accusations.
He had been as much her prisoner
as had the convicts on the London Pride.
Once again lending her attention to the young woman in the cobbler's
shop, Gertrude frowned menacingly and shook a fat finger as if chiding a
naughty child.
"You filthy little bogtrotter.
I'll make you sorry
yet."
Shemaine shrugged off the muffled threat and faced her master again.
"I think you deliberately provoked the woman, Mr.
Thornton, and I could
kiss you for it."
Gage leaned forward slightly with a broader grin.
"If that's a promise,
Shemaine, I'll collect when we get home."
"Well, I really wasn't .
.
.
I mean, I was only .
.
." Shemaine was
rather astonished at the colonial's ability to unnerve her, for she
couldn't recall ever being flustered in Maurice's presence.
And her
betrothed was a marquess, for heaven's sakes!
Becoming aware of the cobbler waiting expectantly, Shemaine in .
dicated the man in helpless confusion.
"Shouldn't we order the shoes
now so we can get back to your cabin before dark?"
Lifting a hand, Gage bade the man to draw near.
"Miles, I've got a girl
here who needs to be fitted for a pair of shoes.
Can you accommodate
us?"
The gray-haired man hurried forward eagerly.
"Sure thing, Gage."
"Shemaine .
.
." Gage politely made the introductions.
".
.
. Mr.
Miles Becker.
Miles .
.
.
may I present Mistress Shemaine O'Hearn."
Miles Becker nodded a jerky greeting.
"Miles, if you'd prefer, Miss
O'Hearn," he offered with a fleeting smile.
Motioning for her to take a
seat in a chair, he settled on a stool in front of her and slipped one
of the oversized shoes off.
He admired the trimness of her stockinged
foot for a moment before he raised his gaze to the greenest eyes he had
ever seen.
A seasoned bachelor, he was rather astounded by his suddenly
racing pulse as he stared into those sparkling orbs.
He didn't dare
trust himself to speak as he measured her foot and traced an outline of
it on a piece of wood.
Yet he could not entirely ignore her effect on
him.
It was tantamount to the giddiness derived from strong libation,
which he felt in great need of at the moment.
Gage's brows gathered slightly as he detected the shoemaker's sudden
confusion, for it was not difficult to discern the reason for it.
Being
within close proximity to Shemaine O'Hearn certainly had its
disadvantages, he realized.
Indeed, if she was able to stagger the wits
of a bachelor like Miles Becker with nothing more than an innocent
stare, then no man would be safe from her beauty and guileless charm,
least of all one who was ever near.
"What kind of shoe will you be wanting, Miss O'Hearn?" Miles inquired,
his voice quavering.
He cleared his throat nervously, hoping she
wouldn't notice his discomposure.
"Something serviceable," Shemaine answered, marveling at the change in
herself.
Not so long ago she would have ordered the costliest silk or
the softest leather for her slippers without suffering the slightest
concern over how they would last.
But that had been when she could rely
upon her father to pay for all her clothing and accessories.
Now she
had to consider the limited resources of the man who owned her and
refrain from being a burden.
"They must wear well and not cost too
much."
"I've got two styles that fit those requirements," Miles informed her as
he stepped to his workbench.
After sorting through a small jumbled
pile, he brought back two different kinds of shoes which he was sure
would serve her well.
"These are rather bulky and not much to look at,
but they're extremely durable, miss."
Shemaine was somewhat distressed at the ugliness of both and wondered
how she would be able to wear them for any measurable length of time
without the stiff leather blistering her feet or their burdensome weight
causing her legs to cramp.
Unfortunately, she couldn't allow herself to
worry about such minor details.
She was a bondslave, she reminded
herself, and indentured servants could ill afford to be choosy.
"If
it's all right with Mr.
Thornton .
.
."
Two pair of eyes lifted inquiringly to Gage, drawing his attention away
from the girl.
Chiding himself for being no less vulnerable to
Shemaine's allure than Miles Becker, he took a shoe in each hand and
examined them side by side, then tested the pliability and weight of
each before handing them back with an admonition.
"You're not shoeing a
horse, Miles.
The girl will need something lighter and more flexible
than these cumbersome clogs."
"A better leather will cost you more money, Gage," the cobbler advised,
"and may not last as long."
"Did I ask you to worry about the size of my purse?" Gage questioned
testily.
'Now let me see what else you have.
I'll not see Shemaine
hobbled by those clumsy things."
Miles complied, and they finally settled on a more suitable pair that
was also better looking.
Gage counted out coins for a deposit and then,
with a nod of farewell to the cobbler, lifted Andrew in his arms and
followed Shemaine outside.
Dusk had settled, and lamps had been lit in the tavern a short distance
down the boardwalk.
Boisterous laughter and a lively plucking of a
stringed instrument drifted from its doors and flowed into the street
beyond.
"Daddee ...
me ...
hungee...."
"So am I, Andy," Gage replied, realizing he hadn't stopped long enough
to eat anything since the morning meal.
"Too hungry to wait until we
get home to eat."
Glancing at Shemaine, he jerked his head toward the establishment.
"It's not a proper tavern or a coffeehouse like some I've visited in the
Carolinas.
There's usually a lot of drinking and revelry going on