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
amber-brown eyes rose to look at her in stony detachment. A gasp of
surprise came from her lips, and it was all that Shemaine could do to
meet that stoic regard and not retreat, for there was no doubt in her
mind that there stood Gage's father.
The resemblance was too close for
her to mistake.
"Is Mr.
Thornton here?" he asked in a cool tone.
"I'm sure he must be by now," she answered, somewhat flustered. "One of
the men said he went into Newportes Newes earlier, but if you'd like to
come inside and wait with the boy, my lord, I'll run to the cabinet shop
and see if he has returned."
Amazed at her perception, William stepped inside where he could look at
her more closely.
Noting the delicately refined features and the
wedding band on the third finger of her left hand, he arched a brow at
her.
"You know who I am?"
Shemaine laid her hands on the boy's shoulders.
"I believe you're
Andrew's grandfather .
.
.
and my husband's father."
William's lips tightened slightly as he sought to hide his irritation.
The gossipmonger was right!
Not only had Gage gotten into some kind of
trouble over his first wife, but he had given his name to a convicted
felon.
Still, the girl was far more observant and obviously a lot
smarter than he had expected a common criminal to be.
"Does it disturb you that your son and I are married?" Shemaine asked
quietly.
His inquiry was far more blunt.
"Are you the convict Mrs. Pettycomb
told me about?"
Shemaine lifted her chin in defiance.
"Would it matter to you that I
was unjustly condemned?"
"It might, if there was a way of proving your innocence, but the
colonies are a long way from England, and I would presume there is no
one here who can confirm what you say," William answered crisply.
"No
father would fancy his son taking a criminal to wife, and I am no
different."
"Fancy it or not, my lord, the deed is done," she murmured.
"And
there'll be no undoing the vows unless you would have your son set me
aside with an annulment.
I'll tell you truly, though, tis gone too far
for that."
"My son has already proven he has a mind of his own," William stated
tersely, and then heaved a sigh as he remembered his last altercation
with Gage.
It had taken several years before the truth had come out,
but he had been struck by the loneliness of his loss from the first. "It
wouldn't matter what I may advise, Gage will do what he thinks best, and
I'm sure he would be reluctant to give up a young woman as winsome as
you despite the crimes you may have committed in the past."' Aware of
the antagonism sprouting between them, Shemaine felt her heart grow cold
with dread.
This man had set his mind to the fact that she was a felon,
and nothing short of proving her integrity would content him.
It was the same kind of trap in which she had found herself after being
arrested by Ned, the thieftaker.
Though she had been innocent of all
that little man had claimed, no magistrate had been willing to believe
her.
"Will you stay with Andrew while I go out to see if Gage is here?"
As his lordship nodded, Shemaine swept her hand to indicate the settee.
"You may sit down if you'd like.
I won't be long."
Andrew balked at the idea of being left with a stranger and let out a
shriek of fear when Shemaine started toward the door.
He ran after her,
and though she sought to console him, the boy clung to her in
desperation.
William was closely attentive to her soothing words as she
caressed the boy's cheek and took his small hand in hers.
"I'm sorry, my lord," she apologized.
"Andrew doesn't care to stay with
you right now.
After he gets to know you better, he'll be more willing
to make friends."
"I understand."
As they left the cabin, William leaned back on the settee and looked
around at the interior.
Recognizing excellence when he saw it, he was
overwhelmed at the high quality of workmanship in every item of
furniture his eyes touched upon.
After he had been put ashore with his
trunk and had enlisted Gillian's aid in carrying the chest to the porch,
he had paused near the building slip to admire the half-finished vessel
and to question the old man, Flannery, about his son's design. The two
shipwrights had been eager to show him through the vessel and had been
just as quick to laud the praises of their employer.
His heart had
swelled with pride as he took everything in and finally began to
comprehend what Gage had once tried to talk him into building in
England.
After nearly ten years' estrangement from his son, looking at
what Gage had created was almost as enlightening as finally being able
to understand why his son had left the family home and England.
Three years short a day from the time Gage had left, Christine had
succumbed to a bout of pneumonia (or a broken heart, as she had
raspingly maintained).
On her deathbed, she had tearfully confessed to
her father that she had been so enamored of Gage that she had sought to
entrap him in marriage by claiming he had gotten her with child.
She
had died a virgin, having sullied her own name, but, according to her,
she had deemed her attempt well worth the price, for she had never
wanted another man as much as she had wanted Gage Thornton.
After her funeral, her father had beseeched William to forgive his
family for bringing about the alienation of his son, but in his long and
frustrating search, William had come to realize that it had probably
been his own prideful stubbornness that had brought about the rift.
He
had been so determined to force his son to obey him that he had been
unwilling to entertain the possibility that Gage might have been an
innocent pawn in the lady's game.
The back door opened again, and William rose to his feet in anxious
haste as Gage strode down the corridor toward the parlor.
It was the
father rather than the son who quickly traversed the space between them
and, through welling tears, gazed upon the younger.
It was an older,
more mature face the father saw, but with its bronze skin and leanly
chiseled features, it was even more handsome than before. In it, William
saw a strong duplication of his own, except for his advancing years and
the yearning regret that had exacted a harsh toll, leaving deep creases
across his brow and a poignant sadness in the lines around his mouth.
"I nearly gave up all hope of finding you," William managed to choke out
through a gathering thickness in his throat.
His stoic demeanor began
to waver, and he clasped Gage's shoulders and shook him gently as if in
a desperate effort to make him understand how deeply he had been missed.
"I've searched for you all these many years without success and have
sent men to the far reaches of the world in a hopeless quest to find
you.
It was only through a chance meeting that I happened upon the man
who had captained the ship on which you had sailed.
My dear son, can
you ever forgive me for driving you away from our home?"
Gage was astounded at the emotion visible in his father's face. He had
never thought he would see the elder so vulnerable and humble. It was a
side of William Thornton that he had never seen before.
His mother had
died after his twelfth birthday, and the pain of her loss had seemed to
harden his father, turning him into a tough disciplinarian.
Now here
the elder stood, almost sobbing with joy over their reunion.
The change was so great, Gage felt at odds with himself and a bit
cautious about how he should react.
He wanted to wrap his arms about
his sire and clasp him firmly to his breast in a hearty embrace, but he
felt strange and clumsy doing so until his father responded in kind.
"My son!
My son!" William wept against his shoulder.
The back door creaked open, and Andrew came running in.
He halted
abruptly when he saw the stranger still in the parlor.
The two men
turned to the boy, and Andrew noticed a strange wetness in his father's
eyes.
"Daddee, yu cry?" he asked in amazement.
In some embarrassment, Gage brushed a hand across his face before he
lifted his son in his arms and presented him to his grandfather. "Andy,
this is my father, my daddy .
.
.
and your grandfather, your
grandpa."
"Gran'pa?" Andrew looked at the elder curiously.
Malcolm and Duncan had
a grandpa who frequently visited them, but his father had never told him
before now that he had one, too.
William held out his arms to take the boy, but Andrew pressed back
against his father's shoulder and shook his head.
"Where's Mommy?" Gage queried, realizing that Shemaine had not come in
with Andrew.
The boy waved his arm, pointing toward the back.
"Mommee Sheeaim on
porch."
Gage put his son down and, with gentle firmness, bade him to stay.
"Wait here with your grandfather, Andy.
I'm just going out to the
porch.
I'll be right back."
Gage stepped out the rear door and glanced down the lane toward the
workshop before he realized that Shemaine was huddled in a knot in a
chair at the far end of the porch.
Her knees were drawn up close
beneath her chin and her arms were folded around her legs, holding them
to her chest.
As he approached, she cast him a shy glance that clearly
bespoke of her trepidation.
He squatted on his haunches beside her and
peered up at her for a long moment, noting the wetness in the silken
lashes.
Reaching out, he claimed a slender hand and drew the trembling