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
upstart who had thought himself good enough to court their daughter, he
had to wonder if he was being too biased and harshminded when it came to
the cabinetmaker.
Over the years, he had won a place for himself in the
hearts of Camille's family, and they were now among the first to declare
that he was a member of their family.
Would the day ever come when he,
too, could esteem his new son-inlaw?
The question of Gage's involvement in the death of his first wife,
however, remained his primary concern.
It was a matter that had to be
reckoned with or it would remain a sharp wedge between them, dividing
one from the other.
Shemus knew in his heart that he'd have to be
totally convinced of Gage's innocence before he could ever feel
comfortable about Shemaine' s marriage, no matter how industrious the
colonial was.
Yet when questions still persisted in the hamlet after
the passage of more than a year, Shemus seriously doubted the
probability of such an occurrence.
And even if he had to drag Shemaine
aboard a ship bound for England, Shemus knew he would never leave his
daughter in the care of a suspected murderer.
Throughout the tour of the ship, Maurice du Mercer had maintained a
phlegmatic silence.
He still felt a fierce enmity against the man who
had stolen his betrothed, and he'd have choked before disclosing the
tiniest bit of interest or admiration for his rival' s achievements.
It
could not be said, however, that he wasn't impressed, despite the ill
will he bore the man.
He had no doubt that Gage Thornton had a good eye
for quality and beauty.
Shemaine was certainly proof of that.
Still,
had he been able to dictate circumstances in his favor, Maurice could
have easily wished the colonial had gone blind before laying eyes on the
dazzling beauty to whom he had offered his own heart.
The clouds that had seemed to hang in a perpetual gloomy gray over
Maurices life since their arrival that morning vanished as soon as
Shemaine joined them on the ship.
She was wearing a fetching pale blue
gown, a white lace-trimmed cap, and a white apron tied about her slender
waist.
In all, she looked very much like a colonial wife. Utterly
delicious, Maurice mused, feeding on her beauty as she hugged her
parents.
Indeed, he was so moved by her presence, he became I'
convinced that he would have given his entire wealth just to be the man
who now claimed her.
"I'm sorry Gage and I couldn't come greet you properly as soon as you
arrived," Shemaine apologized graciously.
"His lordship still hasn't
fully regained his strength, but he was greatly desirous of dispensing
with basin baths and having a good soak in a tub.
For that, he needed
Gage's assistance.
It seemed a good chance for me to clean his room.
I
hope you don't mind."
"His lordship?"' Maurice had caught the significance of the address and
was most curious.
Any doubts about the Marquess being equal in height to her husband were
put to final rest as Shemaine leaned her head back to meet his gaze.
It
was a similar necessity when loohng up into the amber-brown eyes.
"Gage's father is Lord William Thornton, Earl of Thornhedge."
A look of wonderment passed across Maurice's face.
Lord Thornton had
been his advocate on many bills before Parliament which had been
intended to define the rights of individuals under English law,
including one that would have forbidden the shipping of prisoners to
far-off ports, especially for the purpose of spilling out the refuse of
English gaols onto their colonies.
"Do you know him, your lordship?" Shemaine queried.
Maurice cocked his head and looked at her curiously, deepening the color
in her cheeks.
His dark eyes glowed with luminous warmth as a poignant
smile curved his handsome lips.
"What is that which you called me,
Shemaine?
I thought we had progressed far beyond titles and formal
addresses."
Shemaine was sure the apparent ease with which Maurice now seemed able
to disconcert her was primarily due to the prodding of her conscience.
In her eagerness to accept her husband's proposal, she had given little
heed to how Maurice might be hurt by her decision.
She had basically
taken it for granted that with so many winsome admirers among the
nobility, her former fiance would have casually directed his attention
elsewhere after her disappearance.
"We're no longer betrothed, my lord," she reminded him in muted tones,
uncomfortable beneath the fervid intensity of those dark orbs. 'And I do
not think it proper to address you by your given name any longer."
"I give you leave to do so, Shemaine," Maurice murmured, moving closer.
'You shall always have a place in my heart, even if I cannot win you
back."
Where once she had been at ease with Maurice, Shemaine now found herself
on pins and needles.
She was convinced that his nearness .
would bring about another confrontation after her husband joined them,
and she was bemused by it.
Was it some deliberate strategy on his part
to rile Gage, or did he hope his proximity would play upon her emotions,
perhaps mahng her regret her marriage to another?
Whatever his reasons,
Shemaine would have preferred him at a safer distance. Any moment now
Gage would be coming up the building slip, and if there was one thing
she had noticed since last night in Newportes Newes, it was the fact
that her husband now seemed quite possessive of her, as if he feared
losing her to her former betrothed.
In the awkward silence that followed, Camille stepped forward and placed
a doting kiss upon her daughter's brow.
"My dear, you look lovely." She
had seized upon a portion of Shemaine' s earlier statement and greatly
desired to hnow more.
"But tell me, dear, do you not have servants to
clean for you?"
Shemaine laughed blithely, thankful for the interruption.
"No, Mama, I
do all the coohng and cleaning myself."
"The cookin'?" Bess repeated, staring agog at her former student.
"Ye mean all of it?"
The cook's rampant astonishment drew an amused chuckle from Shemaine.
"You'd be amazed by what I've been able to remember from your
instructions, Bess.
In fact, Gage has said that I'm the best cook in
the area."
Bess was flabbergasted.
'My goodness, darling', an' here I was thinkin'
I had failed ta teach ye even the basics."
Camille had been the one to insist that Shemaine learn such wifely
duties, but she was certainly no different from other doting mothers who
preferred to pamper her only offspring, at least for as long as they
were near.
Camille had wanted the servants to accompany them to ease
their own adjustment to the untamed wilderness, and she now saw even
more advantage in their presence.
"Perhaps while we're here, Shemaine,
you might enjoy having Bess and Nola take over those duties so we can
visit together.
Would you mind terribly?"
Shemaine wrapped her arms around her mother and hugged her close. "No,
of course not, Mama.
I've been missing Bess's cooking so much lately,
my mouth waters just thinking about it."
"And Gage?
Would he think us presumptuous if we took over his
household?" Camille asked hesitantly.
Espying her husband coming up the building slip, Shemaine hurried to
meet him.
Noticing the frigid scowl that he bestowed upon the Marquess,
she slipped an arm through his and gave it a reassuring squeeze as she
whispered, "I love you."
A lean hand caressed hers as he breathed, "You make my heart sing , .
even in the midst of anger, my sweet.
You're my love .
.
.
my
heart's desire."
Beneath his warm smile, Shemaine could feel her own heart swelling with
the joy of her devotion.
Drawing him back to her mother, she presented
the matter which she and her parent had been discussing. "Gage, Mama
would like to know if you would mind Bess and Nola doing the cooking and
the chores while they're here."
Gazing at Camille Thornton, Gage realized his wife had been bequeathed
her mother's regal beauty.
Shemaine might have inherited her coloring
from her father, but she had definitely inherited the delicate features
of her mother.
"If Bess taught my wife, Mrs. O'Hearn, I have no doubt
that she's an exceptional cook.
I'm sure Shemaine will enjoy some
leisured moments to spend with you."
Shemaine squeezed her mother's hand.
"You see, Mama.
He's not an
ogre."
Camille reddened and was immediately reluctant to meet the smiling
amber-brown eyes that rested on her.
"I fear my daughter exaggerates,
sir.
I never thought you an ogre."
" Tis good to know that, madam," Gage replied easily, though he was just
as certain she still believed him a murderer.
Gage moved away slightly, facing his rival, and silently presented a
challenge with a cold-eyed stare.
As handsome as the Marquess was, it
was understandable that he had suffered pangs of jealousy when he had
noticed the man hovering near his wife.
Though the nobleman had doffed
his tricorn after leaving the carriage, he was nevertheless meticulously
garbed, wearing a royal blue frock coat with narrow breeches, waistcoat,
stockings and costly shoes, all of a rich creamy hue.
In the bright
sunlight the much lighter creaminess of his shirt and stock nearly
bedazzled the eye.
His black hair was neatly tied in a queue at his
nape, and his skin had taken on a deep, rich hue from his recent sea
passage.
Gage could now understand why Shemaine had been so sure that
Maurice would find another.
He was good-looking enough to attract women