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
with him, knowing there's a chance you might not be safe...
that he
might kill you, too?"
"Mama, please," Shemaine murmured cajolingly.
"Don't worry about
Gage...."
"I can't help it, Shemaine," Camille moaned in abject misery. "You're
our only child .
.
.
our darling little g*l.
We could not bear it if
you were slain!
And you are so very young!
You've not had much
experience with men!
Gage is so much older...."
"He's no more than two years older than Maurice," Shemaine argued
desperately.
"Do those two years make such a difference in your mind?"
Camille's brows flicked upward briefly as she tried to find a suitable
justification for her prejudice.
"Gage seems much older."
"Perhaps because he's not had the world delivered to him on a silver
tray, Mama.
He's had to work hard for what he has achieved. Just like
Papa had to do once."
"Your father was much younger when he and I married."
"Let this discussion be at a end," Shemaine urged.
Her mother tried
once more to speak, but her daughter shook her head passionately.
"I'm going outside to show Gage my gown.
When I return, I hope you will
have settled it in your mind that I'm married to him and I will not let
that fact be undone.
You have a grandchild on the way, Mama, and I'd
like to think that you are looking forward to that event as much as I
am.
Please, don't waste your time telling me how you abhor and distrust my
husband, because it will only drive me away from you."
Camille shook her head sadly and sniffed as she wiped her nose on a
dainty handkerchief.
"I do not abhor Gage, Shemaine.
Truly, if I could
be assured the accusations against him are only lies, I'd be content and
pleased that you love him so." I "Then I shall pray that something may
come to light to ease your fears," Shemaine said softly. "Because I
cannot bear to see you cry."
Shemaine gently kissed her mother and then left, closing the bedroom
door behind her.
William was the first to notice her change of attire
and artfully arranged coiffure, and offered praises equal to those of a
courtly swam.
"I'd have sworn by the glow filling the room that the sun had risen for
a second time today, but I can see for myself that it's only your
beautiful radiance."
"You're most gallant, my lord," Shemaine responded with a gracious
smile, dipping into a curtsy.
Stepping to the front door, she paused there to look back at Andrew, who
had charmed his way onto his grandfather's lap.
"I'm going outside to
see your father, Andy.
Want to come along?"
"Going' ta see Daddee!" he informed William happily, and wriggled quickly
to the floor.
Taking the child's small hand in hers, Shemaine met her father's worried
stare and managed a fleeting smile before she took her leave.
Her return to the ship caused both Gage and Maurice to stop and stare in
deep appreciation of her beauty, but as her husband slipped his arms
about her and drew her close for a kiss, Maurice felt a torturous pang
of envy wrench his vitals.
The need to escape the couple's presence
became needful and paramount.
He had endured their marital courtship
too much for one day.
With hands clenched, spine rigid, he stalked
across the deck and never looked back as he descended the building slip.
In the absence of his daughter, Shemus hurried into the bedroom to find
his wife weeping silently in her handkerchief.
"Did ye have a chance ta talk with her?" he asked anxiously.
"Yes, but no good came of it, Shemus.
Shemaine is determined to stay
with Gage.
She says she loves him and will have no other."
"Damn the Irish pigheadedness!"
"Shemus!
For shame!
She is our daughter."
"Aye, but tis me own stubborn self I see in her."
"Perhaps she's right, Shemus," Camille offered dolefully.
"What right
do we have to condemn the man when we know so little of the truth?
Shemaine swears tis envy behind part of the gossip.
A spinster who
wanted Gage to marry herþ"
"We'll see what Maurice can do," Shemus mumbled, hardly hearing his
wife.
"Perhaps he'll be able to talk her into coming back with us.
She
said she loved him once, and I know he loves her."' "I don't think
Shemaine will come home with us, Shemus, not without her husband.
And
if we force her, she'll hate both of us forever."
"Have we lost her?"
"Aye, Shemus, tis what I now fear.
We've lost our little darling.
She's grown up into a woman, and she has a mind of her own."' , .
i2J
CHAPTER 22
"They're comin' now," Flannery announced shortty after Gillian had taken
Andrew out to scout the woods for small animals.
Gage and Shemaine
joined the shipwright at the rail as he pointed a gnarled finger toward
a large dinghy nearing the loading dock.
A tall man wearing a tricorn
jumped out and secured the painter to a post while his male companion
drew the oars into the craft.
The first gentleman escorted two of the young ladies up the building
slip while the man who had been at the oars lent assistance to the
third.
Upon espying Shemaine, the two men swept off their tricorns in
courteous manner.
They were as tall as Gage, but the older one had a
thick crop of dark auburn hair tied in a queue behind the high, stiff
collar of his frock coat.
His face was rather squarish and angular, his
eyes brown.
An unquenchable humor was evident in the tiny lines around
his mouth, behind which gleamed a fine collection of white teeth.
Flannery introduced him as his former captain.
"Cap'n Thornton," he
said, turning to Gage.
"This here be Cap'n Beauchamp...."
"Nathanial Beauchamp," the stranger announced, extending a hand of
greeting toward Gage.
"Or Nathan, if you'd prefer...."
The usual response came as promptly as expected by those who knew the
man.
"Everyone calls me Gage."
After Shemaine was introduced, Nathanial identified the women I
who were with him.
"These are my twin sisters, (,,abrielle and
Garland," he said, indicating the younger two.
Then he laid an arm
about the brown-haired woman who stood beside him.
"And this is my
wife, Charlotte."
The twins had hair as black as the mane of the younger man, and it was
he, rather than her twin, to whom Garland bore a striking resemblance.
The pair had eyes as golden and translucent as polished amber.
"My younger brother, Ruark," Nathanial announced, clapping a large hand
upon that one's shoulder.
"Your servant, Madam Thornton." Ruark flashed a dazzling display of
white teeth in a wide grin before he swept a gallant bow before
Shemaine.
"Your beauty bears more than a wee trace of the Irish
colleens I've seen on that verdant isle, madam."
The green eyes sparkled back at him.
"And you, sir, must have been
blessed with the Irish way for your tongue to be so glib."
Ruark threw back his head and laughed in pure delight.
"I do have a
fondness for the Irish, to be sure."
"Then I'll warrant you have excellent taste, sir," Shemaine rejoined,
drawing amused chuckles from the men.
Gabrielle came forward with a teasing gleam in her eyes.
"I think I'd
better warn you about my brother, Mrs.
Thornton.
He seems resolved to
remain unfettered despite his advancing years.
Yet he treats every
winsome maid that comes within proximity as if she were the only one who
could steal his heart away.
In truth, he'll steal your heart if he
can."
"For shame, you little gosling," Ruark chided his sister with a chuckle.
"You judge me freely enough, but may I point out that you've now reached
a score of years and have not yet found a mate whom you deem suitable."
"No need for your warning, Mistress Beauchamp," Shemaine responded,
slipping an arm around her husband's narrow waist as he pulled her
close.
"My heart has already been taken."
"You're safe then.
That's good!" Gabrielle tossed a teasingly
triumphant smirk toward her handsome brother, who, in good humor, lifted
a finger of warning toward her as if silently threatening her with dire
consequences.
She tossed her head with coquettish disregard of his
silent admonition and then gave a sudden squeal and danced away as he
stepped forward menacingly.
"I'll tell Mama if you hurt me again!"
Shaking her head as she observed her gamboling kin, Garland approached
Shemaine.
"As you've probably noticed, madam, I'm the only sane one in
the family," she claimed, drawing dissenting hoots from her grinning
brothers.
Snubbing them, she lifted her fine, straight nose to a lofty
angle, but her golden eyes were aglow with merriment as she turned back
to Shemaine.
"Please call me Garland, Mrs.
Thornton, and I shall also
give you leave to address my sister by her given name"þshe tossed a
teasing glance toward Gabrielle as if to shame herþ"since she lacked the
manners to do so herself."
"And I shall be honored if you'd call me Shemaine."
Strolling forward, Gabrielle shrugged her slender shoulders, totally
unrepentant.
"Garland thinks she's far more dignified and mentally