A Countess from Canada eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about A Countess from Canada.

A Countess from Canada eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about A Countess from Canada.

The register was signed in the kitchen, and it was there that the revelation took place which came as a thunderclap of surprise to everyone concerned, except Jervis and Mr. Clay, the latter of whom, when the bishop’s part of the ceremony was done, took the remainder upon himself, and proceeded to make his explanations in a voice which Mary declared made her think of musty parchments and red tape.

He addressed himself to Katherine, bowing so profoundly that it was wonderful he was able to return to a perpendicular position without catching hold of something with which to pull himself up.  “I have to congratulate you on becoming the Countess of Compton, and I am quite certain the title was never worn by one more worthy to adorn it.”

Katherine shrank a step nearer to her husband, and there was a look of positive fear in her eyes, for privately she thought Mr. Clay must be mad.  “I do not understand you,” she said gently, and the silence in the kitchen was so profound, as they waited for Mr. Clay’s reply, that the buzz of talk which had broken out in the crowded store seemed tremendously loud by contrast.

Mr. Clay cleared his throat with a dry little cough, intended to emphasize the importance of the remarks which he had to make, then he said:  “Lord Compton insisted last night that no word should be spoken concerning his accession to the title until after the ceremony of to-day; but now it must be known, and I have to inform you that your husband has been seventh Earl of Compton since the 18th of February last, only it seems he did not know of his cousin’s death until yesterday, when I arrived with papers for him to sign.”

Katherine became very pale, and turned with a quick movement to Jervis, who stood looking down upon her with a smile.  “Even now I do not understand; please tell me,” she said, with a bewildered expression.

“My cousin Samuel was the sixth earl,” said Jervis, taking his wife’s hand and talking to her in the same quietly confidential tone that he might have used had they two been alone, instead of the centre figures of a crowded room.  “My father was the son of the younger son, with three lives between him and the title.  As I have told you, Samuel, old Lord Compton, was very cruel to my mother in her widowhood, and I hotly determined never to have anything to do with him.  Then his son and his grandson died within a few weeks of each other, and Mr. Clay, who is the family lawyer, wrote to me telling me that I was the next heir, and Cousin Samuel wanted me to go home and take up the duties of my new position.  That letter came last summer, but I would not go, and I would not accept an allowance for myself; but I asked for one for my mother, and education for my brothers.  I have not deceived you, my dearest.  I have only withheld from you facts which did not matter until now.”

Katherine flushed and then grew pale; she knew that all eyes were upon her, but there was one thing she must know, and her voice had an anxious ring as she asked:  “Did you—­did you know this, I mean that you were the next heir, when you asked me to marry you?”

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A Countess from Canada from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.