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
an arm around the narrow waist that he himself had once possessively
embraced and laid a hand on the same smooth brow he had lovingly kissed.
The casual handling of his betrothed aroused his ire to no small degree,
and he almost stepped forward to protest, but the plight of his fiancee
finally dawned on him as she tried to subdue a gag behind a lace
handkerchief.
Spurred to action, Maurice raced back to the horse through, wet his
handkerchief and returned to offer it to her.
Meekly Shemaine nodded
her gratitude and wiped her face as she leaned against Gage.
Brushing a
strand of hair from her flushed face, he laid an arm around her waist as
she rested her head against the solid bulwark of his chest.
The intimacy of Gage's embrace invited a dark-eyed glower from her
former beau, but that was not all, by any means.
"What the bloody hell is going' on here?" another voice demanded from the
thoroughfare, snatching the very words from Maurice's mouth.
''Papa?" Shemaine lifted her head and glanced around in search of the
beloved face.
She could not have mistaken the voice, and when her eyes
lit on the short, wiry, nattily garbed man standing with arms akimbo and
legs splayed in the middle of the road, she could not mistake her own
sire.
"Papa!
Oh, Papa!"
Nearly dancing along the edge of the boardwalk, Shemaine eagerly
motioned him forward, and within four long strides Shemus O'Hearn was
there, sweeping his daughter within his embrace.
Gage's brows flicked
upward in a lopsided angle as he stepped back a respectful distance,
allowing the two to have this moment together.
"Just who the bloody hell are you, anyway?" Maurice du Mercer demanded
as he stepped before Gage, but he gave the colonial no time to answer as
he crisply explained, "When we started making inquiries at Newgate
shortly after her boots were found, we were told that Shemaine had
shipped out on the London Pride.
We had the good fortune of catching
sight of the Pride's sails while we were steering a course here, and we
had our captain bring our ship about to intercept the vessel.
When we
boarded her, Captain Fitch told us that Shemaine had been sold as an
indentured servant to a colonial named Gage Thornton here in Newportes
Newes.
Are you that man?"
"Aye, I'm that man."
Maurice's face tightened with vexation.
"The bosun on the Pride also
informed us that he had heard rumors about town that the colonial who
had bought Shemaine had killed his first wife."
"It was rumored," Gage acknowledged sharply.
"But it could never be
proven because I didn't kill her!"
Maurice tossed his head in jeering disdain.
"Why is it that I don't
believe you?"
"Perhaps because you don't wish to," Gage retorted.
"You're right.
I don't wish to.
What I really want to do is to lay you
out with my fist!"
Gage's eyes grew noticeably less warm as he returned the Marquess's
glare.
"I give you leave to try."
"Shemaine!" A feminine voice cried, drawing their attention to a small,
slender woman with pale blond hair who was hurrying across the
thoroughfare toward Shemaine and her father.
On either side of her were
two women garbed in servants' attire who were hastening to keep up, one
an older, plumpish woman with gray hair, and the other a maid of an age
about a score and ten.
"Mama!" Shemaine cried, and was immediately swept to the thoroughfare by
her father.
Sidestepping to avoid an oncoming wagon and team, she waved
to her mother, and then, as soon as the conveyance had passed, the two
came together with a cry of glee.
With arms wrapped tightly about each
other, they stood in the middle of the road, not caring that riders and
wagons were passing in front and.
behind them.
The fierce embrace
eased to some degree, allowing them to touch and gaze at each other as
if they tried to comprehend that they were actually together again.
The older servant was weeping, anxiously awaiting her turn, and when she
blew her nose loudly in a handkerchief, it finally dawned on Shemaine
that their old cook was there also.
Facing the elder, Shemaine hugged
her jubilantly.
"Oh, Bess!
How wonderful it is to see you!
All of
you!" With a gay laugh, Shemaine stepped away and embraced the younger
servant, who had come forward to claim her attention.
"Nola!
For
heaven's sakes, what are you doing here?"
Her mother readily explained.
"I've been using Nola's services in your
absence, Shemaine, because my old Sophy began ailing.
But Nola will be
yours again once we get you back to England."
Shemaine looked around and, extending her hand toward Gage again,
invited him to join her.
Her father and Maurice followed closely on his
heels, having immediately taken a fierce dislike to the colonial. It was
his familiar handling of the woman they held dear as a daughter and
fiancee that they couldn't abide.
"Mama .
.
.
Papa .
.
.
Maurice .
.
." Shemaine briefly settled a
glance on each before she deliberately slipped an arm through Gage's,
drawing him to her.
"This is my husband, Gage Thornton."
"Your husband!" Maurice barked.
"But you were betrothed to me!"
Catching Gage's shoulder, Shemus spun him about until they stood toe to
toe.
It didn't matter that the colonial stood a whole head taller.
The elder seized his lapel and glared up at him with all the fury of an
outraged father.
Even his frizzled red hair, which had paled over the
years with whitening strands, seemed to stand on end with his wrath.
"What do you mean, marrying my daughter without my consent?"
Shemaine clamped a trembling hand to her throat.
"Papa, don't!"
"I didn't need your consent," Gage answered tersely.
Gripping the
smaller man's wrist, he dragged the white-knuckled hand away from his
coat.
"Shemaine was already mine."
Maurice stepped near the two whose glares dueled like glinting sabers
and informed Shemus bluntly, "He's the one who bought her papers .
.
.
the one Captain Fitch told us about.
The wife-murderer, so the bosun
says.
Obviously this colonial forced Shemaine to marry him!"
"No!" Shemaine pressed her hands to her face in dismay, for the world,
which had seemed like heaven only a moment earlier, was now closing in
around her again.
Facing her mother, she pleaded for help. "He's not a
wife-murderer, Mama!
He asked me to marry him, and I accepted!
Because
I wanted to!'' Camille was as bemused as her husband, but she moved
forward and laid a gentle hand upon Shemus's arm.
'The middle of the
road is no place for us to conduct inquiries into this matter, my dear.
We must seek a private room, perhaps one at an inn will suffice."
"Your pardon, madam," Gage offered stiffly.
"There's been an influx of
ships docking here recently, and with only one inn in the hamlet, I
rather doubt you'll find space for even one of you there."
"But where are we to go?" This time it was the mother who turned to the
daughter for help.
"There are so many of us.
And we've come so far.
What are we to do?"
Shemaine went to her husband and asked in a subdued tone.
"Do you
suppose Mrs.
McGee would consent to putting them up?"' Gage would have
gladly consigned them to sleep in the street if not for his wife.
"Possibly tomorrow, but what about tonight, Shemaine?
Twould be a late
hour before we could get back home.
We can't rout our guest out of bed
and burden her with the task of returning to the hamlet and opening her
home to people who are strangers to her.
Twould be too much to expect
of the old woman."
"Is there some way they can stay with us tonight?" Shemaine cajoled
softly.
"Perhaps you and I can sleep on the floor...."
"We wouldn't think of putting you out of your own bed," Camille
interjected, though she could hardly approve of their little girl being
married to this stranger.
She was so young, and he .
.
.
so, so .
.
.
Camille could find no adequate word to describe her feelings toward the
man, except that she was sure he was nothing less than a scoundrel who
had taken advantage of her daughter.
"I'd like to see the blackguard put out of my daughter's bed!" Shemus
growled.
"I'd like to suggest an annulment," Maurice offered boldly.
"The l
beast has no doubt imposed himself upon her.
Whether Shemaine admits it
or not, I'm sure she was under great duress when she accepted."
Shemus was not so civilized with his recommendations.
"I'd like to see
the man gelded!"
Shemaine clapped a trembling hand over her mouth and moaned, "I think
I'm going to be sick!"
"Good heavens, child!" Camille cried, looking aghast.
"Don't tell me
you're .
.
.
you're .
.
."
"You're what?" Shemus implored, looking stricken.
If his wife was
upset, then it was damned certain he would be infuriated by whatever she
was thinking.
Camille waved a hand weakly, hoping against hope it wasn't true. "With
child.
.
."
Shemaine closed her eyes and shuddered squeamishly as her father let out