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
heed to what a convict has to say."
Roxanne whirled away, and with the breezes billowing beneath her
wrapper, it seemed as if she floated toward the man to whom she had once
offered her heart and who, after the months of devoted service she had
given him, had cruelly rejected her gift of love.
In a hushed, hurt
tone she confided, "I thought you had come to make amends, Gage, perhaps
even to tell me that you'd be getting rid of your bondswoman. But I see
you intend to be obstinate.
True to your inclinations as always, aren't
you?" She shook her head regretfully.
"A pity.
.
. for your sake as
well as your son's."
Sensing a threat in her words, Gage fixed her with a harsh scowl, but he
remained mute, preferring not to get into another hassle with her or
anyone else while Shemaine was near enough to hear.
It seemed the whole
day long he had been involved in one confrontation after another, and
all he wanted at the moment was to go home and enjoy a nice, peaceful
evening alone with his son and his bondslave.
Limping to the forge, Hugh rested on his crutch as he barked at Gage.
"Stoke the embers and make yerself useffil if ye want me ta shoe yer
horse.
I can't do it alone."
"I'm able to do it myself if you'd prefer," Gage offered.
"All I need
from you is the loan of your equipment."
"Ye'll pay the same no matter who does it," the elder informed him
brusquely.
"So don't think ye'll be using me as your dupe."
"I hadn't intended to," Gage rejoined tersely.
With a slowly steeping
resentment brewing inside of him, he began pumping the billows to push
air into the forge.
The smithy pivoted about to settle a speculative stare upon Shemaine,
pricking her mettle with his disparaging perusal.
Turning stoically,
she carried Andrew to a large tree stump some distance from the
blacksmith shop and sat down upon it, hoping that she had gone far
enough to be safely off the Corbin property, for she had already
concluded that she liked the blacksmith no better than his daughter.
Cuddling the boy to her, Shemaine began to sing to him as she rocked
back and forth.
Gradually Andrew relaxed in her arms until his eyelids
sagged.
A sigh slipped from his parted lips, and he fell asleep,
snuggled close against her soft breast.
Hugh fought an inner conflict with himself as he watched Shemaine gently
nurturing the boy, but he was powerless to subdue the raging turmoil
that roiled within his heart and mind.
Tormenting impressions spewed
upward from the murky depths of long-buried memories, vexing him sorely,
and he turned on Gage, bedeviled by a darkly brooding envy. "Ye've
bought yerself a fine-lookin' convict there," he jeered in scorching
reproof.
"No doubt, with ye ownin' her, ye'll be gettin' yer manly
cravings appeased at the snap o' yer finger, so's I'm thinkin' ye'll be
havin' second thoughts bout weddin' me girl."
Gage had been leaning over the forge, examining the horseshoe he had
been heating, but at the man's words, he lifted his eyes to Roxanne. The
woman grew unsettled beneath his sharply pointed stare and, turning
away, busied herself suddenly by hanging the lantern on a nearby post.
Gage's angry scowl reverted back to the smithy.
"I'm afraid you're
mistaken, Mr.
Corbin, if you think I have ever asked your daughter to
marry me.
Since that is definitely not the case, I really don't see
that I owe you any explanation about my reasons for buying Shemaine.
In
short, Mr.
Corbin, it's none of your damn business."
"Ye arrogant libertine!
I'll teach ye ta show proper respect for yer
elders!" In a spitting rage, Hugh seized the small end of the crutch in
his hand and, holding it like a club, hopped forward on one foot,
intending to give the younger man a proper thrashing.
Slowly straightening to his full height, Gage raised a condescending
brow as he regarded the elder.
"If you mean to hit me with that, Mr
Corbin, be assured that I won't stand here and take it meekly.
I'li
finish anything you start, believe me."
The cold gaze piercing the lantern-lit gloom cooled Hugh's temper
effectively.
The memory of the pain he had suffered when the horse he
had been shoeing sat on him and broke his leg was too fresh in his mind
for him to willingly invite further injury.
Finding no graceful way of
retreating from a confrontation, he flung up a hand in a vivid display
of temper and snarled, "Finish what ye're doin' and then get out of
here.
Me girl and me don't want ye and that filthy li'l slut around
here, do ye hear!"
It took a fierce effort of will for Gage to curb the goading temptation
to drive his fist into the man's face.
All the reasons for refraining
from such an assault were there before him, so obvious a simple dolt
could recognize them.
Hugh Corbin was twice as old as he was and, at
the moment, lame.
If he punched the elder, he'd be no better than Jacob
Potts battering Cain.
No matter how much he longed to at that precise
moment, he just couldn't hit a crippled old man!
"Shemaine is not a slut, and I take great exception to you calling her
that," Gage ground out.
"My only regret right now is that I must finish
shoeing the mare.
Otherwise, I'd tell you to go to hell." He snorted in
contempt as he thought about it.
"But why should I waste my breath?
As
mean as you are, you're bound to go there anyway."
The air fairly crackled with tension as the two men glared at each
other.
Hugh wanted to launch an assault right then and there, but he
just couldn't dismiss the dreadful prospect that he might come to
further harm.
For once, better judgment took precedence, though he
still chafed beneath the harsh bit of fermenting animosities.
Hobbling around, Hugh returned to the porch with a halting gait and
clumsily took a seat on the edge.
From that vantage spot, he could keep
watch until the shoeing was complete.
Though he had never had a reason
to believe that Gage Thornton would ever cheat him, Hugh trusted no man
with his possessions.
Once he received the coins due him, he would send
the cabinetmaker on his way.
Leisurely Roxanne meandered back to a spot where she could see Gage more
clearly.
Leaning against a post, she scanned his downturned face above
the glowing coals and was amazed that even now she yearned to look into
that fine, handsome countenance and declare her love.
It would take
nothing more than a gentle smile from him to encourage her. But even as
she admired his noble visage, Roxanne saw his brows gather in a harsh
frown, as if he were annoyed by her close attention.
The idea set spurs
to her temper.
"What are you going to do, Gage?
Fight every man who
insults your convict?"
"If I have to!" he retorted sharply without glancing up.
"You're a stubborn man, Gage Thornton, and right now, I think you're a
fool.
Shemaine doesn't deserve your protection."
Though her words incensed him, Gage refused to yield his gaze to her.
"Your opinions really don't concern me, Roxanne.
They never have."
His words assaulted her as brutally as any slap across the face, and
Roxanne felt her temper soar at his blatant indifference.
How many
times throughout the nine years she had known him had she guilefully
offered herself to him?
And how many times had he failed to notice? Or
had that been a deliberate ruse on his part?
It had driven her nearly
mad wanting him the way she had and then being politely dismissed each
and every time, as if he were unable to think of her as his mistress . .
.
or his wife.
She could not imagine him being so insensitive to his
bondslave.
Oh, no!
He had other plans for the convict!
"You intend to take that trollop into your bed, don't you?" Roxanne
demanded, her voice fraught with emotion.
"That's been your desire from
the first moment you saw her, to fornicate with that slut!'' "What if it
has been?" Gage barked angrily, seeing no difference between father and
daughter.
Despite his qualms about pushing the woman closer to the
crumbling precipice of an irrational jealousy, he deliberately whipped
her ire into a slavering frenzy as he braced his palms on the brick
buttressing the forge and leaned forward to fix her with a probing
glare.
"Tell me, Roxanne, is it really any of your business what I
choose to do with Shemaine in the privacy of my cabin .
.
.
or, for that matter, my bed?"
The corners of Roxanne's mouth twisted downward in an ugly grimace, and
in the depths of her throat, a low gurgling growl was born.
With all
the fury of a woman scorned, it burst forth in a horrendous shriek.
The
hem of her robe swirled around her bare legs as she whirled and, like a
wraith in the night, fled back to the cabin. Racing past her father, she
stormed through the front portal.
The resounding crash of the door
slamming against the jamb made Hugh Corbin duck his head and grimace as
if he fully expected the porch rafters to fall down upon him.
On the long ride home, Shemaine sat quietly on the wagon seat beside
Gage, holding his sleeping son in her arms.
The moon had risen above
the trees and cast its silvery glow upon the land, enabling Shemaine to
see the ominous scowl that drew the man's magnificent brows sharply
together.
She dared not ask what was troubling him.
It went against
all propriety for a bondslave to inquire into the personal thoughts,
inner turmoil and feelings of her master, but she could not help but
wonder what the Corbins had said that had caused his mood to turn so