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
Petals on the river
by
Kathleen E.
Woodiwiss
This is a work of fiction.
Names, characters, places, and incidents
either are the product of the authors imagination or are used
fictitiously.
Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations,
or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the
intent of either the author or the publisher.
AVON BOOKS A division of The Hearst Corporation 1350 Avenue of the
Americas New York, New York 10019
Copyright v 1997 by Kathleen E.
Woodiwiss
Front cover illustration by
Wendy Popp
Inside back cover author photograph by Nancy Crampton
Published by arrangement with the author
ISBN 1-56865-587-8
All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S.
Copyright Law.
For information address Avon books.
AVON TRADEMARK REG.
U.S.
PAT.
OFF.
AND IN OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA
REGISTRADA, HECHO EN U.S.A.
Printed in the U.S.A.
To my yrandson, Seth Alexander Woodisiss, who was the inspiration for
the young boy in this book Seth is so engaging and delightful to be
around I couldn't help but want to convey those kind of characteristics
in 24ndre<.
I hope I was successful."
CHAPTER 1
Newpovztes Neu7es, Vicgirtia April 25, 1747
The London Pride chafed against the quay as the currents of a rising
nor'easter slowly rocked the vessel on her cables.
Close above her
mastheads, errant clouds tumbled in darkening portent of an advancing
storm.
Gulls swooped in and out of the ship's rigging, lending their
raucous cries to the rattle of chains as a double file of thin, ragged
convicts stumbled up from the companionway and shuffled in unison across
the weathered planking.
The men, hobbled by leg irons and bound to each
other by no more than a fathom's length of chain, were prodded into line
for the bosun's inspection.
The women were individually shackled and
could move at their own pace toward the forward hatch where they had
been told to wait.
Farther aft, a common swabber paused in his labors to observe the latter
group.
After casting a cautious glance toward the quatterdeck, he grew
bold at the continued absence of Captain Fitch and his bovine wife and
hastily stowed his mop and bucket before ambling across the deck.
Strutting like a well-preened rooster around the shabby women, he
provoked a near-solid bulwark of embittered glares with his leering grin
and brash manner.
The singular exception was a dark-eyed, ravenhaired
harlot who had been convicted of lifting the purses of the men she had
bedded and of seriously wounding a goodly number in the process.
She alone offered a promising smile to the tar.
"I aren't seen the bogtrotter round in nigh a week, Mr, Potts," the
strumpet remarked coarsely, tossing a triumphant smirk toward her
glowering companions.
"Ye don't suppose the li'l beggar's gone an'
caught her death in the cable her, now do ye?
Twould be a right
fittin' comeuppance for biffin' me in the nose."
A small wisp of a woman with limp brown hair pushed her way out of the
cluster of women and gave the harlot a crisp retort.
"Ye can twist that
Iyin' tongue all ye want, Morrisa Atcher, but the lot o' us know m'liedy
give ye no more'n ye deserved.
The way ye jabbed her in the ribs when
she weren't lookin', ye should've been the one what spent time in the
chain locker!
If tweren't for yer li'l lapdoggie here"þshe indicated
Potts with scathing abhorrenceþ"bendin' Mrs.
Fitch's ear, m'liedy
might've been allowed ta have her say."
Setting his beefy arms akimbo, Potts faced the small, feisty woman.
"An' ye, Annie Carver, might've done us all a heap o' good fillin' our
sheets with wind from yer ever-flappin' tongue.
Ain't no question bout
it, we'd have run ahead soarin' free on that gale."
The sound of dragging chains drifted up from the hold, claiming the
swabber's attention.
His small, beady eyes took on a sadistic gleam.
"Well, blimey!
I thinks I hear m'liedy comin' now." Chortling to
himself, he lumbered toward the companionway and hunkered down to squint
into the shadows below.
"Eh, bogtrotter?
Be it yer own bloomin' self
comin' up from em lower chambers?"
Shemaine O'Hearn lifted seething green eyes toward the broad silhouette
looming over the opening.
For daring to defend herself against this
oaf's shipboard doxy, she had spent the last four days isolated in a
dank pit in the forward depths of the ship.
There she had been forced
to scrap with rats and roaches for every morsel of bread that had been
tossed to her.
If not for her sorely depleted strength, she might have
clawed her way up the stairs and raked the tar's ugly visage with ragged
nails, but heavy sarcasm was the most she could muster energy for.
"And
what other poor wretch would this smelly toad have come to fetch, if not
me, Mr.
Potts?" she asked, jerking her head to indicate the squat,
little man who limped along beside her.
"I was sure you had persuaded Mrs.
Fitch to reserve those quarters for
me alone."
Potts heaved an exaggerated sigh of displeasure, making much of her
disparagement.
"There ye go, Sh'maine, insultin' me friends again."
Her escort reached out and viciously pinched her arm for a second time
since freeing her from the cable her.
Freddy was every bit as mean as
Potts and needed no coaxing to take his spite out on anyone who couldn't
fight back.
"Watch yer manners, ye highfalutin tootie!"
"I will, Freddy," she gritted, snatching her arm away from his grubby
fingers, "the very day the lot of you learn some."
Potts's gruff voice resonated through the companionway.
"Ye'd better
get up here an' be quick bout it, Sh'maine, or I'll have ta teach ye
nother lesson."
The girl scoffed at the ogre's rapidly diminishing leverage. "Captain
Fitch may have something to say about your heavy-handed ways if he
intends to sell me today."
"The cap'n may have his say, alright," Potts allowed, bestowing a cocky
grin upon her as she struggled to make an ascent hindered by weighty
iron anklets and chains.
"But ever'body knows his missus has the final
say on this here voyage."
Since being hauled in shackles aboard the bark, Shemaine had become
convinced that no other place on earth was more akin to the pits of hell
than an English prison ship bound for the colonies.
And surely, no
other person had done as much to advance that belief as Gertrude
Turnbull Fitch, wife of its captain and only offspring of J. Horace
Turnbull, solitary owner of the London Pride and a small fleet of other
merchant ships.
With such a formidable reminder as Gertrude Fitch goading her to be
wary, Shemaine paused to readjust a makeshift kerchief over her head.
During several outings on deck, her fiery red tresses had incensed the
dour-faced virago, causing Gertrude to berate the whole Irish race as a
crass, slow-witted lot and to demean Shemaine as a filthy little
bogtrotter, a derogatory appellation many an Englishman was wont to lay
on the Irish.
"Don't ye dare dawdle now," Potts taunted.
His pig eyes gleamed
overbright, attesting to his penchant for cruelty as he eagerly watched
for any infraction that he could pounce on.
"I'm coming!
I'm coming!" Shemaine muttered testily, emerging from the
passageway.
The injustices she had suffered during the threemonth
voyage swept through her mind in bitter recall, sparking her resentment
anew until she longed to spit a token of her rancor in the huge lummox's
face.
But experience had been a harsh taskmaster since her arrest in
London, brutally convincing her that a coolheaded compliance was the
only way a prisoner could ever hope to survive in an English court of
law or on one of their hell ships.
Averse to revealing any hint of her waning strength, Shemaine managed to
drag her encumbered limbs forward with a modicum of dignity.
The scourging wind buffeted her, and she braced her bare feet slightly
apart to steady herself and straightened her spine with tenacious
resolve.
The fresh air was a luxury that had become much too rare of
late, and she lifted her head to slowly savor the salt-tinged essence of
the coastal waters.
Potts's eyes narrowed as he noted the girl's stance.
It seemed much too
proud and undaunted to suit him.
"Puttin' on airs gain, are ye?
Like
some high-flown doxy from court." Sweeping a hand downward to indicate
her tattered garments, he brayed in loud amusement, "Beggars' court in
Whitefriars, I'd be a-thinkin'!"
Shemaine had no difficulty imagining how pathetic she looked in soiled
rags and iron fetters.
Though her green velvet riding habit had once
drawn envious stares from many overly pampered daughters of wealthy
aristocrats (those same who had pettishly bemoaned her betrothal to the
most handsome and possibly the richest bachelor in all of London), her
present plight might have caused those same ladies to laugh in haughty
pleasure.
Shemaine's forlorn sigh was certainly more heartfelt than feigned.
Having known only a life of comfort and ease before her arrest, she had
been thrust without cause into a vile prison where the pitifully
destitute found naught but hatred, oppression and utter despair.
" Tis
indeed a dreadful inconvenience when a gentle-born lady must go abroad