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
humiliation of having her master know that she had looked upon his male
nudity and not fled like a flustered maid, Shemaine retreated very
slowly, very quietly, stepping backward toward Andrew's small room. Even
so, her racing thoughts could find no way of escape, not when she knew
she would eventually have to pass near the man.
Suddenly Shemaine halted, aware of a change taking place in the manly
loins.
The male flesh was now becoming much more pronounced and
obtrusive.
Her gaze flew upward, piercing the shafts of moonlight and shadowed
spaces, until she met the silvery-lit orbs smiling at her from the far
side of the bed.
The towel lay about Gage's sturdy neck, and his arms
hung relaxed at his sides.
The black hair, wetly spiked and wildly
tossed, gleamed in the gloom.
"I'm sorry," she strangled out, painfully aware that she had been
apologizing much too often since her indentureship.
"Andrew was crying,
and I didn't know where you had gone!"
In the silence that followed, Shemaine pivoted crisply about on bare
feet and lowered the boy into his bed.
Feeling the heat of shame
consume her, she closed her eyes, trembling in every part of her body as
she struggled to gather her scattered wits.
Despite her best efforts, a
vision of what she had just seen was now forever lodged in her memory.
It blazed before her mind's eye as clearly as if she still stared at the
man.
Whirling, Shemaine kept her gaze carefully averted from that male
nakedness as she fled to the open door and made her escape into the
parlor.
In her haste she stumbled on the stairs and gritted her teeth
against the sudden pain throbbing in her bruised shin, but she did not
pause.
Flinging herself into her cot, she turned her face to the wall
and yanked the covers up over her head, wishing fervently the world
would dissolve around her.
CHAPTER 10
Shemaine faced the morning with a definite dread, reluctant to meet her
master and suffer through the painful trauma of being within close
proximity to him when both of them would find it difficult to think of
anything except the night before, when he had caught her ogling his
manly parts like some lewd strumpet.
It had been embarrassing enough
when she had found her hand caught against his loins, but what had
happened during the night was even more humiliating.
She yearned to lie
abed until Gage went to his shop to work, but her duties as an
indentured servant denied her the privilege of hiding out in her room
like a spineless coward.
She must make the best of their inevitable
meeting, no matter how fervently she longed to vanish into thin air
before that particular event came about.
When she made a cautious descent, Shemaine was relieved to find that
Gage had already gone outside to attend his morning chores.
It was not
until she had breakfast laid out on the table and had found time to
dress herself that he returned to the cabin with his usual offering of
rations, a basket of eggs and a pail of milk.
He glanced in
appreciation at the food-laden table before setting the basket and pail
on the counter beside her.
"It smells delicious, Shemaine." Since she had been there, Gage had come
to anticipate the morning meal perhaps more than any other, for she
seemed to excel in cooking tasty dishes that he had memories of eating
in his father's home in England.
"Can we eat now?
I'm starving."
Timid about meeting his gaze, Shemaine focused her attention on pouring
the contents of a small pan into a gravy boat.
" Tis ready to be eaten
as soon as I finish dishing up this sauce.
Should I awaken Andrew?"
"Let him sleep.
Poor little fellow, he had a hard night."
However innocent his remark had been, it seemed to Shemaine a painfully
blunt reminder of her horrendous blunder.
The spoon that she had been
about to put into the sauce shot through her fingers as if it had stiff
springs attached to it.
As she watched in horrified dismay, it
skittered across the edge of the counter before plummeting to the floor.
She bent quickly to retrieve it, but nearly collided with Gage, whose
reflexes were faster.
He scooped up the ladle and, offering it back to
her, clapped his heels together.
She shot a nervous glance toward him
as she took it, provoking his curiosity.
He could not help but notice
her scarlet cheeks and the incertitude visible in her eyes. Stepping
close, he canted his head in an effort to draw her gaze upward, but she
feigned a sudden need to find another spoon and refused to look at him.
Gage was determined.
He took her small chin between his thumb and
forefinger and turned her face toward the light until he could search
the beautiful visage.
"What ails you, Shemaine?" he asked gently. "Do
you think I care a whit that you saw me naked last night?
Or that you
may have spent a fleeting moment looking at me and perhaps appeasing
your maidenly curiosity about men?
Good heavens, girl, I understand
that you went in there not to seduce me, but to comfort my son, and I'm
grateful for that.
What I must do is apologize for startling you, but a
man cannot always control how his body responds to a beautiful woman.
I've not been with another since Victoria died.
There was certainly no
woman in the hamlet I wanted to bed down with, and seeing you in my room
aroused longings I've struggled hard to suppress since becoming a
widower.
I'm a man, Shemaine, subject to all the feelings and flaws of
my gender.
As a man, I greatly admire your beauty and enjoy your
presence in my home.
Watching you pleases me.
You're soft, alluring,
gentle, and kind.
You grace this cabin and our lives like a delicate
flower that bestirs the senses with its fragrance and beauty. In the
short time I've known you, I've come to realize I do desire you as a
woman.
Yet I would never force you, Shemaine .
.
.
or knowingly hurt
you.
I want the best for you, so don't feel chagrined about what
happened last night.
As you may have surmised, I enjoyed you looking at
me.
It was most stimulating to find you in my room.
Condemn me for
that if you will, or simply accept me as a man who's very interested in
you as a woman."
A soft, quavering sigh wafted from Shemaine's lips.
"I didn't want to
face you today," she admitted diffidently.
"I thought I couldn't bear
it."' ''You needn't ever feel ashamed in my presence, Shemaine.
I'll
never chide you for having honest feelings or being human."
Still unsure of herself and even less certain of her situation, Shemaine
inclined her head toward the table, murmuring quietly, "Your breakfast
is getting cold, Mr.
Thornton."
"After you, Miss O'Hearn," Gage replied, stepping back into a gallant
bow and sweeping an arm before him invitingly.
"Daddee, where're you?" Andrew called from the bedroom before he came
tottering drowsily into the parlor.
"There you are, Sleepyhead," Gage cried with a chuckle.
Squatting down,
he held his arms out wide for the boy.
Laughing, the youngster ran into his father's embrace and was swung high
into the air.
Then upon gathering the boy close, Gage playfully nipped
at his taut little stomach through the nightshirt, exaggerating a
monstrous growl that evoked gleeful shrieks and giggles.
When Andrew was finally lowered into his high chair, he surveyed the
food laid out before him and gave Shemaine a toothy grin.
"Yummy !
Yummy !
" Gage grinned at his bondslave.
"I think that means Let's
eat." Shall we oblige him?"
Shemaine found herself once more enchanted by the pair and, despite her
continuing reservations, showed her obeisance with a curtsy.
"I'm here
to obey, m'lord."
"Any claims to that title I left behind me in England," Gage remarked
off handedly.
Shemaine's brows gathered in confusion as she slowly straightened.
Wondering what he had meant, she queried, "Is there a Lord Thornton?"
"My father, William, Earl of Thornhedge." Gage lifted his shoulders in a
casual dismissal of the title's significance.
"Not as impressive as a
marquessate, but here in the colonies a title holds little importance to
most of the populace, except for the British dignitaries."
He swept a hand to indicate the bench behind her, silently bidding
Shemaine to take a seat.
As she did so, he slipped into the bench
opposite her.
Once before he had told her the story about O1' One Ear
to put her at ease.
This morning he recounted the tale of Sly Tucker
trying to escape a bee while unloading supplies from the back of a
wagon.
"Sly took a flying leap off the rear of it, but his toe got caught in a
hole at the very end.
He fell forward like a dead weight and sprawled
flat on the ground, nearly breaking his nose.
It was so badly bruised
and skinned, everyone who saw him started laughing.
Sly is usually
rather gentle in nature, but the guffaws the incident provoked were loud
enough to set him on edge.
He mumbled many times afterwards that he
would have been better off letting the bee sting him than contending
with all the hilarity provoked by the sight of his swollen and bruised
nose."
Shemaine found herself suddenly giggling at the story.
Then she glanced
up and found her master regarding her with warmly glowing eyes, as if
satisfied that he had been able to draw her out of her timidity.
Shemaine dipped her head in acknowledgment of his accomplishment. "Thank
you, Mr.
Thornton."