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
women."
Gage finally glanced toward the group of onlookers, setting them to
nervous flight with nothing more than a thoughtful scowl.
Of a sudden,
they seemed in an anxious dither to cross the gangplank and board the
ship.
He gave little consideration to their undignified haste as he
looked at her again.
"You made your lack of skills quite clear ere I
bought you, Shemaine.
I cannot claim I've been defrauded. There'll be
no taking you back."
Shemaine felt her heart grow light with relief.
" Tis good to know
that, sir."
Gage gestured casually to her riding habit, having noticed several tars
watching the girl from afar.
" Tis plain we'll have to do something
about your clothing.
I don't appreciate the stares you attract, nor
would I have you shamed by my lack of generosity."
Once again Shemaine tried to read the inscrutable frown that occupied
his sun-bronzed brow as he slowly perused her, but the man himself
seemed carefully reserved and enigmatic.
Knowing only too well that her
appearance could cause even the staunch-hearted to cringe in chagrin,
she offered hesitantly, "If you'd prefer not to be seen with me, Mr.
Thornton, I can follow several paces behind you so no one will know
we're together."
Gage served quick death to her suggestion.
"I didn't lay out forty
pounds for you, girl, just to have you snatched behind my back. You have
no understanding of this area, else you'd know there are not a lot of
women to choose from, especially those worthy of being called pretty.
There are, however, enough trappers and backwoodsmen wandering around to
give a virtuous maid serious cause to worry.
Any number of them would
be willing to commit mayhem to get themselves a woman to take back to
their camps.
You'd be a fine catch for a man like that, especially
during the winter months."
Shemaine was hardly appreciative of his scolding and explained
brittlely.
"I only meant to save you some embarrassment, sir."
"I know what you thought, Shemaine, but you were wrong.
Even
half-starved and filthy dirty, you're the comeliest maid the people of
this hamlet have seen in some months."
Shemaine wasn't one to be easily taken in by a few charitable
compliments.
"Your flattery would surely turn a simple maid's head
about on her shoulders, Mr.
Thornton.
Were I one, I'd probably be
overwhelmed with gratitude, but I'm fully cognizant of just how wretched
I look."
At her blatant rejection of his praise, Gage displayed a bit of
exasperation of his own as he sighed.
"In time, girl, you'll learn that
I speak the plain truth.
I don't hold with lying."
"And in time, sir," Shemaine was quick to rejoin in stilted tones,
"you'll learn I'm not a mere girl."
Gage noted the deepening blush in his bondswoman's cheeks as she stood
in rigid poise, as if bracing herself for his reprimand.
Leaning toward
her slightly, he commanded her full attention.
Staring directly into
those widened eyes, he breathed his answer.
"Believe me, Shemaine, I
know that now."
His emphatic admission disarmed Shemaine completely and opened up a
plethora of questions in her mind.
Of a sudden, she was not at all sure
the colonial had been thinking solely of his son when he had laid out
his purse for her.
If he had told her outright that he had closely
appraised her womanly curves for what enjoyment they could give to him,
especially her bosom, which was probably the only curve she hadn't
entirely forfeited through her lengthy ordeal, he could not have made
her more uneasy.
Yet, when Shemaine considered how.
obstinate she could be, she deemed
it advantageous to offer some insight into her own failings if she
wanted to get along with the man or even held out hopes of staying with
him long enough to win his approval.
If she angered him unduly there
was absolutely no guarantee that he had to keep her.
He could just as
well sell her to the next stranger willing to pay his price. For her own
preservation, it seemed imperative that she demonstrate a willingness to
be submissive.
And if any lecherous schemes were being entertained by
the colonial, then those would have to be addressed once they became
apparent.
It was neither wise nor fair to judge a man prior to his
offense.
"I've had little experience being a servant, Mr.
Thornton," Shemaine
murmured carefully.
"You'll no doubt find me quite outspoken at times.
Perhaps even impertinent."
His gaze never wavered from her face.
"I'd rather have you speak your
mind, Shemaine, than see you intimidated by my presence."
Equally surprised by his answer, she conceded, "I have many faults sir,
and one of them is my temper.
I fear in that respect I'm very much like
my father."
Gage countered with a warning of his own.
"I'm sure you'll get to know
my moods in time, Shemaine, and occasionally think me an ornery beast.
But you needn't be afraid of me.
I won't beat you."
Her responding smile was genuine.
"I'm relieved to hear that, sir."
"Then come," he urged, taking her arm.
Peering up at the threatening
clouds looming overhead, he briefly mused on the prospects of a storm
being unleashed upon them.
"We'll get drenched in earnest if we stand
here much longer."
Gage drew her with him as he made his way along the quay, passing people
and stepping around wooden crates as if he had urgent duties elsewhere.
His walk was brisk, his strides long.
He was not a man who wasted time
or dallied overmuch at doing nothing.
His strength and energy were
valuable assets, and he used them to good advantage.
In his haste to
get home before the rain started, he gave little heed to his servant's
lack of vigor and lagging steps.
Shemaine's long fast in the cable her had left her feeling far too
faint and weak to allow her to keep up with her new master.
Even before
they reached the end of the wharf, her legs had turned to fragile stilts
that wobbled unsteadily beneath her and threatened to give way entirely.
Perceiving the impending danger as her vision began to blur, and shapes
and structures reeled woozily around her, Shemaine staggered to a
faltering halt and begged weakly for her master to give her pause.
Gaining her release, she stumbled away and clasped a nearby
post for support.
She closed her eyes and waited for her strength and
wits to return, hoping fervently that they would.
Gage took note of the shaking hand the girl pressed over her mouth and
the lack of color in her face and knew this was no feigned attack of the
vapors.
Half expecting her to collapse, he stepped beside her. "Are you
ill?"
Not wishing to upset her equilibrium more than it was, Shemaine raised
her gaze cautiously and was surprised to find him so near.
Her stomach
was so empty she wanted to retch, and it was a difficult moment before
she managed to subdue the urge.
"Give me a moment to catch my breath,"
she pleaded in a strained whisper.
"Then I'll be better.
Tis but a
passing weakness, I'm sure."' Some understanding began to dawn on Gage
as he considered her more closely.
Her sunken cheeks and the
all-too-obvious trembling of her slender hands indicated a frailty
associated with a lengthy fast.
"When was the last time you had
anything to eat?"
Though the frigid breezes continued to sap her energy and drag her down
into a mental stupor, Shemaine struggled desperately to remain coherent.
"I was given several crusts of bread and a bucket of stale water during
the four days I was locked away in the cable her...." She swayed
dizzily, feeling an invading debility sapping the last vestige of her
strength, but when he reached out and steadied her with a hand beneath
her arm, she staggered back abruptly, feebly brushing away his grasp,
and willed herself to stand alone.
"In truth, sir.
.
." She
swallowed, fighting another wave of nausea, and continued with
difficulty.
"I'm so famished .
.
.
I'm nigh to swooning."
Gage promptly hailed a passing vendor and went off to meet the man.
After purchasing several wheat cakes, he returned and offered one to his
bondslave.
"Perhaps this will help."
Shemaine accepted the cake eagerly and, tearing it apart, greedily
devoured the pieces, nearly choking as she stuffed them in her mouth.
Mortified by her lack of manners, she refused to lift her gaze to the
man whose tall, broad-shouldered frame sheltered her from the casual
glances of those who traversed the main thoroughfare of the town.
She
swallowed the last crumbs and took a ragged breath, meeting his probing
stare hesitantly.
"I was considerably more fortunate than some of the
other prisoners, sir.
They died from the sparse fare. Thirty-one in
all, to be exact."
Gage recalled the broad shapes of Captain Fitch and his wife and grew
incensed at the thought of them wallowing in gluttony while their
victims died of starvation.
"I've heard tales of deprivation suffered
aboard convict ships like the London Pride," he reflected.
"I sailed
here as a passenger aboard a merchant vessel some years ago and have
counted myself far luckier than most who have crossed the seas to get
here."
Self-consciously Shemaine folded her arms across her midriff as her
stomach began to rumble.
"I'm grateful to be alive, sir, though at