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
Annie waved away her concern.
"Ne'er mind me face, m'liedy.
Just let
me look at ye !
" Her eyes swept the slender form.
Then she gathered
Shemaine's thin hands in her own and laughed in pleasure. "Ye're lookin'
grand!
Simply grand!"
"Come into the bedroom and meet Calley," Shemaine urged, taking Annie's
arm.
"And then you can tell us how you came to be here."
"Oh, I'll tell ye right now.
If tweren't for yer master layin' out
twenty pounds for me, I'd the'er be here at all."' Shemaine halted
abruptly and, tugging on Annie's arm, pulled the tiny woman around to
face her.
"What do you mean, Annie?
Did Mr.
Thornton buy you?"
"Not exactly." Annie shrugged.
"He paid out five pounds ta rent me, so
ta speak, but if'n he don't take me back, then he'll be twenty pounds
poorer." She shook her head in wonder, amazed by his ability to lay out
such a large a sum.
"Yer Mr.
Thornton must be rich or somethin' ."
"He's not rich, Annie, just very, very wonderful, I'm thinking,"
Shemaine said with an elated smile.
Dr.
Colby Ferris, a tall, gray-haired man with gaunt features and a
perpetual stubble covering half his face, arrived before they finished
the noon meal.
Annie took her duties seriously and provided the
physician with warm water and soap to wash his hands and clean linens
with which to dry them before she would allow him in the woman's
bedroom.
"Me ma said tweren't right for a midwife ta leave one house an' go ta
nother where babies were bein' born without showin' proper respect ta
the mothers by washin' yer hands."
The tall doctor settled a stern stare upon the small woman. 'Young lady,
do you know how many babes I've brought into this world?"
Annie settled her thin arms akimbo and stubbornly held her ground.
"Prob'ly more'n I can count, but what hurt is it gonna do ta wash yer
bloomin' hands after tendin' the sick or maybe touchin' the dead. .
.
Or..." She searched mentally for another good reason and finally flung
up a hand in frustration toward the window through which the mount he
had arrived on could be seen.
"Or ridin' a smelly ol' horse?"
Dr.
Ferris seemed momentarily taken aback by the small woman's
impertinence, but after a lengthy pause, he scrubbed a hand reflectively
over his bristly chin and began to chuckle, much to the relief of those
who had witnessed the confrontation.
"I guess there'll be no harm done
by washing my hands.
What about my feet?
Will you be inspecting them,
too?"
Annie glanced down without thinking, and then clapped a hand over her
mouth as she saw his dusty boots and realized that she had been a victim
of his humor.
Leaning her head back to meet his gaze, she gave him a
wide grin, lending some charm to her plain face.
"Wipin' em will be
good enough for the time bein', I suppose, but ye'd best be mindin' yer
manners, cause I'm gonna be meetin' ye at the door when ye come back.
.
.
at least for a while."
A hoary brow shot up to a lofty level, as if the doctor had taken
offense at her threat, but his next query had nothing to do with her
demands.
"What about that toad, Myers?
Is he going to let you stay
here without raising a ruckus?"
Annie Carver was astounded by the physician's obvious conclusion. "I
came here with his consent, I did, so ye needn't be a-thinkin' I
skedaddled.
Mr.
Thornton gots a paper ta proves it."
Dr.
Colby Ferris scoffed.
"It must have taken a goodly sum to get you
out of that toad's clutches.
Myers has never been overly generous with
his possessions."
"Oh, it took a goodly sum, alright," Annie agreed, and threw a thumb
over her shoulder to indicate her benefactor.
"Mr.
Thornton had ta lay
out twenty pounds, five ta rent me an' fifteen against the likelihood o'
me not bein' returned."
"Are you saying that Myers actually signed a receipt to that effect?"
Annie nodded cautiously, not at all sure why the doctor was so shocked.
"That he did, gov'na."
Colby Ferris looked pointedly at Gage.
"Then I'd advise you to keep the
receipt safe, sir, because Myers isn't to be trusted.
He'll cheat you
if he can .
.
.
or find some way to call you a thief."
"I don't know the man very well, except that I've come to dislike him in
a very short span of time," Gage admitted.
"You can be certain I'll be
as careful as I can."
The doctor waved a hand toward Annie's battered face.
"You know, of
course, that Myers will do more of this to the girl if you take her back
to him."
"Do you have any suggestions as to what I should do?" Gage was eager for
a solution to his quandary.
He briefly indicated Shemaine, who stood
washing Andrew's face at the far end of the table.
"I have a bondswoman
already, and there's no room in my cabin for another."
The elder stroked his chin thoughtfully.
"I've seen the girl working at
Myers's place and know what she's capable of." He snorted as he
digressed a bit.
"Work that Myers should've been doing instead of
laying such tasks on a little girl."
"Do you need an assistant?" Gage queried hopefully.
"Annie says she's
had some experience with midwifery and such.
Perhaps you could use a
servant to keep your house."
Dr.
Ferris seemed to dismiss the notion as he tossed a glance toward
Annie.
"What?
And see myself vexed into washing my hands every time I
sneeze?
Lord save me from such a fate."
"Ye needn't worry bout me!" Annie declared hotly, miffed by the doctor's
casual rebuff.
"I'll go back ta Mr.
Myers when I'm done here.
Twouldn't be the first time I've been knocked longside the head."
Stepping to the washstand, Dr.
Ferris proceeded to scrub his hands and
face until they were clean.
Drying them on a towel, he offered Annie a
grin.
"Are you going to show me where Mrs.
Tate is now?
Or are you
going to stand there like an outraged porcupine with your quills all
bristled?"
"Mrs.
Tate's doin' better since M'liedy Sh'maine had a talk with her.
Maybe ye could buy Shemaine from Mr.
Thornton an' take her on yer calls
with ye," Annie suggested tartly.
Gage lowered an ominous scowl upon the small woman.
'I didn't lay out
my hard-earned money for you, Annie, so you could sell Shemaine behind
my back."
Annie grinned back at him.
"Mighty touchy bout her, aren't ye? Maybe ye
like her more'n a mite."
"I like Shemaine just fine," Gage stated emphatically.
"And I'm not
willing to sell her.
Do I make myself clear?"
Ferris glanced at Annie, curbing a chuckle.
"I guess that means I'd
better look elsewhere for an assistant."
"That's the bloomin' truth if I e'er heard it," Annie agreed, cackling
gleefully as she cast an eye toward Gage, who finally relented enough to
smile.
''Come on, Doc," Annie urged, beckoning to him.
"I'll show ye the
missus."
She led the doctor to the back bedroom, and while Ramsey paced with
renewed anxiety, Gage helped Shemaine clear the food and dishes from the
table in spite of her repeated assurances that there was no need for him
to do so.
Several reasons prevented Gage from taking his leave before
the doctor had completed his examination.
He knew Shemaine wanted to
hear the verdict, and Ramsey needed him there as a buffer against
possible bad tidings.
Then, there were his own concerns, for he
realized he was not as distant to the matter as he might have supposed.
The Tates were his friends, and he wanted to be there to offer support
in whatever way proved beneficial.
The baby's condition could not be determined, Dr.
Ferris announced
solemnly when he returned to the parlor.
Nor could he predict whether
Calley would carry her child full term or if she would lose it in the
weeks to come.
It was imperative that she remain in bed if she held out
any hope of giving birth to a healthy baby, and he instructed Annie to
watch over the woman carefully, for it would be no easy task keeping a
hardworking mother inactive.
If there was anyone who could accomplish
such a feat, he was sure it was Annie.
After all, he needled with
amusement, she had made him wash his hands.
The doctor wisely advised Ramsey Tate to return to his cabinetmaking,
for his wife's sake as well as his own.
It would only make Calley
anxious if she saw her husband fearful, he reasoned. Working would not
only serve to occupy Ramsey's time, but his thoughts as well, no doubt
reducing his constant worry.
Before Dr.
Ferris took his leave, he promised to make regular house
calls to keep abreast of Calley's condition and, if a meal was furnished
at such a time to ease his widowered state, he would count that as
payment enough.
Then he quipped that he hoped Annie was as good at
cooking as she was at taking charge.
Chapter 11.
Life as a bondslave could be easily tolerated when one had a master
charitable and noble enough to expend a sizeable portion of his limited
resources to help an employee and an abused bondswoman, Shemaine