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
came open in surprise, she laughed softly.
"And the pain has passed."
"Well, so it has!" Turning her head on the pillow, Calley looked at
Shemaine through elated tears.
"Can it be true?
Can I talk meself into
keeping this babe?"
"I don't know, Mrs.
Tate," Shemaine answered honestly.
"But twould
seem to me that being hopeful and relaxed can be more advantageous to
the both of you than being anxious and fretful."
"Call me Calley, mum," the woman earnestly implored.
"I can tell ye're
a real lady, just like Mr.
Thornton is a proper gentleman.
He needs a
wife like ye."
"I'm only his bondswoman," Shemaine asserted.
The last thing she
wanted, especially after the previous night's ordeal, was to have this
woman presume that her master intended to marry her and to make the
mistake of saying something to him about it.
She had apologized to Gage
Thornton much too often of late.
"That'll change," Calley predicted, growing more confident. "Ramsey says
it will.
He said Mr.
Thornton is already taken with ye."
"Mr.
Thornton is taken with my cooking," Shemaine stated firmly.
"Nothing more.
Your husband is mistaken."
Calley was amazed by her insistence that nothing could come of their
association.
"Would ye not marry him if he asked ye?"
"I was engaged to be married before I came here .
.
." Shemaine's
words trailed to a halt, and she found herself unable to finish her
statement.
The memory of her betrothal seemed strangely detached from the reality
of the present.
"England is a far piece off, mum, an' Mr.
Thornton is here, right ready
ta become a husband.
Do ye not think he'd make a handsome one?"
"Certainly, he would, but I .
.
." Again words failed Shemaine.
"The man ye were engaged ta in England, was he as handsome as Mr.
Thornton?" Calley pressed.
''I don't know...." Shemaine moaned, uneasy with such questions. By the
standards of every eligible young lady in England, Maurice du Mercer had
been considered the best-looking man in all of London.
Yet Gage
Thornton would have caused as much confusion in the hearts of those same
maidens as she was presently experiencing.
It seemed somehow disloyal
to imagine her former fiance as less attractive.
It also seemed silly
to fret about the degree of handsomeness of one over the other.
She was
sure that if she did think that Gage Thornton was more appealing, it was
only because he was near and Maurice so far away.
"Do ye still love your fiance?"
"I thought I did once," Shemaine admitted lamely.
"But that seems so
long ago, and much has happened.
I'm indentured to Mr.
Thornton and
even if Maurice were to find me, I would not be free to marry him unless
Mr.
Thornton was willing to release me.
Besides, Maurice may not even
want me anymore, considering my arrest and all."
"Mr.
Thornton wants ye, ta be sure."
"This discussion really seems pointless," Shemaine replied,.hoping to
squelch the disturbing conjectures.
"No one can predict with any
certainty what Mr.
Thornton may be thinking.
I am simply his
bondslave, and unless he speaks for himself, I shall consider any
discussion on the subject of marriage purely speculative."
"Aye, tain't right for us ta say what Mr.
Thornton will do," Calley
conceded.
"There be plenty enough o' those what try ta guess at what
he's up ta without us doin' the same."
Shemaine breathed a sigh of relief, having made her point. Gathering the
woman's fingers in her own, she smiled down at her.
"How are you
feeling now?"
"A bit tired," Calley acknowledged, smiling easier.
"But better."
"A little rest may do you and the baby good."
"Aye, I think I can rest now .
.
.
and hope."
"Then I'll leave you so you can.
If you should have need of me, I'll be
in the kitchen."
With a relaxed sigh, Calley closed her eyes, and Shemaine slipped
quietly from the room.
Ramsey was waiting in front of the hearth, and
the stricken look on his face made her hasten to allay his fears.
"Your wife is feeling much better now and will be able to rest for a
while." The strain of the last hours was evident in his face, moving her
to compassion.
"I think twould do you good to get some sleep, too," she
said kindly.
"I'll call you if something happens."
Gage Thornton climbed down from his wagon and approached the physician's
cottage.
A small woman in a neighboring yard was pulling weeds that had
overgrown an earlier year' s garden, but when he strode up the walk, she
straightened and squinted against the sun to watch him.
When he tapped on the front door, she called to him.
"If ye've come ta see the doc, he's gone upriver a ways ta mend a broken
leg.
He won't be back for a spell.
If'n ye can write, ye can leave a
note sayin' where ye wants him ta go once he gets back.
Doc Ferris said
for me to say as much ta any what came.
He also left a quill an' things
on his porch for those what be o' such a mind."
Gage Thornton faced the drably garbed woman, wondering if he had ever
met her before, for her voice sounded strangely familiar.
As he walked
across the lawn toward her, he noticed that the whole side of her jaw
was darkly bruised and swollen.
Even so, he keenly recalled the tiny
woman who had encouraged him to buy Shemaine on the London Pride.
"Annie Carver?" The facial bruises looked even worse up close, and he
couldn't help but inquire, "Good heavens, woman, what has happened to
you?"
- Dumbfounded, Annie lifted a dirt-crusted hand and shaded her eyes
against the brightness of the solar orb as she tried to see him clearly.
" Oo is it?"
"Gage Thornton.
I bought Shemaine O'Hearn, remember?"
The woman hooted and slapped a hand against her leaner cheek. "Blimey,
gov'na!
Remember ye?
How could I forget?
It just took me a bit ta see
ye clearly, what with the sun in me eyes an' all.
How's Shemaine?" Her
eyes filled with sudden apprehension.
"She aren't hurt, is she?
Be that
why ye're wantin' the doc?"
"No, she's all right, Annie.
Actually I came for a friend of mine.
His
wife is due to give birth in late spring, but she's having trouble now .
.
.
may even lose the babe."
"I knows a thing or two about birthin' babies," Annie informed him
shyly.
"Me ma were a midwife afore she took ill an' died, but she
taught me what ta do ta help a woman a wee bit.
But me master, he'd
the'er let me go with ye."
"Did your master do that to you?" Gage asked gently, indicating her
blackened cheek.
Embarrassed, Annie lifted her shoulders in a feeblehearted shrug. "I
guess Mr.
Myers thought I deserved a knock or two for burnin' his
supper.
He told me ta go out an' chop some wood cause his parlor was
chilly.
It took a mite longer'n I figgered." She peered at Gage
quizzically.
"What bout yerself, gov'na?
Ye getti4' enough ta eat with
Sh'maine cookin' for ye?"
"I'm happy to say she's an exceptional cook, Annie.
I couldn't have
found a better one had I ventured clear to London town."
Annie gave him a sober, sidelong stare.
"Last night, this here Mrs.
Pettycomb come o'er ta talk ta me master .
.
.
Samuel Myers .
. .
bout how ye'd gone an' bought yerself a convict ta service yer manly
cravings, an' how ye'd almost killed the bosun from the London Pride
cause he tried ta take her away from ye."
Gage grew a bit irate over the unswerving verve of the old busybody in
spreading her biased stories about the hamlet.
"Mrs. Pettycomb usually
enlarges upon everything she hears, Annie, so I wouldn't put much stock
in what she says if I were you.
She seems to enjoy deliberately
distorting the facts to enliven her tales."
Annie was in hopes that he would explain further, but Gage remained
reticent about his purposes for buying Shemaine, for he saw no reason
for justifying himself to everybody who lent an ear to the lurid tales
being told about him.
If he ever made such an attempt, he'd never come
to the end of it, especially since the matron and her circle of
busybodies seemed inclined to prattle about him continuously.
The front door was snatched open, and Samuel Myers stalked out to the
edge of his porch, where he stood with one arm behind his back. Glaring
at them, he assumed the disposition of a red-faced dictator. "You lazy
bitch!" he snarled at Annie.
"I didn't buy your papers so you could
talk to every no-account that passes my gate.
Get back to your work
before I lay my fist to your other cheek.
And I warn you if you know
what's good for you, you'll stay busy while I'm gone, or I'll flay your
blooming hide.
I can't leave my shop every hour on the hour just to
check on you.
My customers will begin to fret and think I've left town."
Gage's brow grew sharply peaked as he peered across the yard at the man.