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
the giant was already moving in for the kill.
William raised the sights of his pistol toward the man and began to
squeeze the trigger, but before he could complete the motion, the roar
of another flintlock echoed in resounding waves across the ship. Ever so
slowly, the huge brigand's knees buckled, twisting oddly beneath him as
his body began to collapse.
Blood glistened wetly in the rosy shades of
the coming dawn as it oozed from a large hole in his head and cascaded
down over his ear.
William turned in wonder, curious to know who had
brought about the culprit's demise.
Shemaine stood at the top of the building slip with a smoking flint .
lock still clutched in her hands.
Even in the meager light William
could see that she was shaking uncontrollably, having now killed a man.
A cry of rage brought their attention to bear upon the portly man
scrambling up from the companionway.
Upon reaching the deck, Horace
Turnbull halted and wheezed air into his lungs as he surveyed the
carnage in the dawning light.
In his hand he still clasped the pike, a
weapon he had learned to use as a foot soldier at a much younger age. A
broken leg had seen him cashiered from the ranks, but by then he had
already acquired a skill and a fondness for the lance.
It had become a
keepsake of sorts, for he had started acquiring his wealth by both
devious and slightly more honest methods soon after his leg had mended.
He still carried the weapon on missions such as these, for he had never
learned proficiency with black-powder firearms, and he never knew who
might seek revenge.
Horace Turnbull's eyes flared brightly as he fixed his gaze upon the one
who had sailed away from Portsmouth with his cargo long years ago.
The man sat on a cask with his head cradled in a hand, completely
vulnerable to his whim and unaware of the danger he was in.
Turnbull hauled back the pike and took aim.
"Look now, Lord Thornton,"
he bellowed, having recognized his lordship right off.
"See how I will
now exact vengeance on you both .
.
.
for your son, death. For you,
the agony of his loss, for twas you who sent him to pirate my cargo!"
"Turnbull, nooo!" William railed, but it was too late.
The lance was already flying forward.
Shemaine screamed, but there was absolutely nothing she could do but
watch in paralyzed horror.
William, however, was not willing to give
his son up to the grave so soon after he had found him.
With strength
born of desperation, he leapt forward, throwing himself in front of
Gage.
The pike sank deep into his back, wrenching a startled gasp from
him.
Then, almost stiltedly, he staggered about to face Turnbull and
lifted his arm, painfully taking aim with the pistol he had not yet
fired.
The wealthy shipping baron gaped into the bore of the flintlock and his
eyes nearly bulged out of his head as he stared into the face of death.
Raising his gaze to William, he shook his head frantically.
"No .
.
.
please!
You mustn't!" he blubbered, and began to bargain pleadingly,
"I'll give you all my wealth...."
The pistol barked in an ear-numbing explosion, projecting the small
leaden ball through the air.
A second later it seemed to bore a third
eye between Turnbull's brows.
Like a stiff statue, the man toppled .
backward into the companionway, where he lay with head slanting downward
on the stairs, his eyes open but unseeing.
Shemaine ran to William as his legs began to give way beneath him.
Bracing him up with her own body, she eased him to the top of a cask
near the one Gage sat on.
Blood flowed from the wound in William's
back, turning his white nightshirt ominously dark in the meager light.
Shemaine pressed a hand upon his shoulder and, grasping the wooden
shaft, tried to pull it out, but her efforts proved futile, for it
refused to come free.
The sound of running footfalls came from the building slip, bringing
Shemaine around with a start, but her breath eased out in a long sigh of
relief when she saw Gillian.
In increasing apprehension the young man
had taken account of the bodies scattered around the ship as he hurried
to the slip.
Now he also saw one on the deck and another in the
companionway.
He looked at Shemaine, totally astounded.
"What happened?"
"Never mind that now, Gillian," she replied anxiously.
"Help me get
Gage and his father down to the cabin.
They've both been hurt, his
lordship seriously."
The situation demanded action.
Gillian could see that for himself.
He
ran back to the rail and looked toward the small craft that he and his
father had just pulled ashore.
Spying the elder in the tree-shrouded
gloom, he yelled down to him.
"Hurry, Pa!
The Thorntons are wounded!"
Flannery Morgan was far more nimble and quick-footed than one might have
thought.
In less than a moment he was on the deck, helping his son with
William Thornton.
Flannery was against pulling out the pike without a
doctor present, but to relieve the pain of its weight upon the wound, he
sawed off the shaft as Gillian held it firm, leaving just enough to be
firmly grasped.
Between the two of them, they carried the elder
Thornton to the cabin loft and then returned for their captain.
Gage had fallen into a deep, traumatized sleep in his wife's arms.
He could not be roused, deepening Shemaine's fear, and she hurried along
beside the two shipwrights as they bore her husband to the front
bedroom.
She asked their assistance in removing Gage's boots and the
shirt which had gotten bloodied from the open wound in his scalp.
Promptly she set to work cleaning the injury, and then she ran upstairs
to see how she might help William.
Her anxiety for both men brought
tears to her eyes as she worked to cut away the nightshirt from the
elder, who, even in his agony, tried to lend her assistance.
"Rest yourself if you can, my lord," she urged, sniffing and wiping at
the blinding tears with the sleeve of her robe.
"How's Gage?" William rasped through his pain..
"I don't know," she answered in a choked voice.
"He's unconscious."
"He must live!'' Shemaine's face threatened to crumple with pent-up
emotion, but she promptly sucked in a breath, willing herself not to
break down.
"You both must live!"
Upon Erich Wernher's arrival for work several moments earlier, he had
been sent out on the back of Sooner to fetch Dr.
Ferris.
He was the
best rider they had, and it was up to him to bring the physician back
posthaste.
When the doctor came racing up on the back of his own
capable steed about an hour later, he was whisked directly upstairs,
where he examined the elder Thornton, who lay fully awake on his side.
Colby Ferris immediately sent Gillian down to search the kitchen for a
strong brew to fortify his lordship against the discomfort he was
presently suffering, as well as the agony which would be forthcoming
once the extraction of the lance commenced.
Thus far the elder Thornton
had remained alert to everything happening around him, but Colby was of
the belief that his lordship would be better off unconscious.
In a few
short moments Gillian returned with a jug of brew that his own father
normally kept aboard the ship for his customary tipple before heading
home each evening.
"Watch over his lordship until I can see how his son is doing
downstairs," Colby instructed the young man.
"Encourage him to drink as
much as he can .
.
.
even if you have to sip along with him.
Just be
sure there's enough left to flush the wound before and after."
Gillian scanned the long form of the Englishman as he lay on his side
facing the wall.
With part of the pike still imbedded in his lordship's
back, he could only imagine the agony the elder had to be suffering and
would have to endure if he tried to push himself upright.
"But how will his lordship drink it dow...."
William looked around with a painful grimace and beckoned to be given
the jug.
Then, with Colby's and Gillian's help, he braced himself up on
an elbow as they stuffed pillows beneath him.
Satisfied that his
patient was willing, the doctor left the Irishman the unusual task of
getting an English lord thoroughly intoxicated.
Leaving them, Colby went downstairs to examine the injury on Gage's
head.
By now the rent had stopped bleeding, but there was a large knot
on the skull beneath it.
At the moment Colby couldn't make a firm
evaluation of his patient's condition.
"Your husband may come out of it
just fine.
.
." he told Shemaine.
"And then again, he may not.
Just
keep a cool, wet compress on the wound and watch him closely.
I'll have
to stitch his scalp together once I finish tending his father.
Your
husband has obviously suffered a concussion and, for a time, may drift
in and out of a stupor.
It all depends on how much pressure is building
beneath the skull."
Shemaine felt her legs begin to give way beneath her as a debilitating
coldness swept through her, but she gritted her teeth in sudden
determination and refused to yield to the pervading fear.
This was her
husband, and he needed her!
She could not allow herself to faint!
All the commotion in the house had served to awaken Andrew, and Shemaine
took a few moments to feed and dress the boy before she washed and
garbed herself.
Then the two of them carried the rocking chair from his