[A Countess from Canada by Bessie Marchant]@TWC D-Link book
A Countess from Canada

CHAPTER XIII
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Then you must promise to come and see me." "Oh, I'll come! I shall be just delighted! You won't mind if I bring the babies, will you?
There are only three of them, and the oldest isn't five yet; so when I go out I'm forced to take them with me, don't you see," Mrs.Jenkin said, smiling at the young lady from England, and serenely oblivious of the defects in her own toilet.
"I shall be charmed to entertain the babies, and I will be sure to come and see you very soon," called Mary, as the boat moved on, leaving Mrs.Jenkin smiling and waving from the bank.
"What a nice little woman, and how friendly and kind in her manner!" exclaimed Mary, whereat Mr.Selincourt laughed.
"Has Canada bewitched you already?
What is to become of class distinctions if you are just going to hobnob with anyone who may happen along ?" he asked, his eyes twinkling with fun, for he was quoting from her own past utterances.
Mary reddened, but she laughed too, then said apologetically: "It sounds the most fearful snobbery to even mention class distinctions in these wilds, where the only aristocracy that counts is nobility of endeavour.

But I could not reckon myself that woman's superior, Father, because under the same circumstances I might have been even more untidy and down-at-heel than she is." "It is hard to realize that you could be untidy under any conditions, but perhaps you might be if you had all the work of a house and the care of three babies on your hands," Mr.Selincourt replied with a shake of his head.

Then he applied himself to a careful study of the river banks, which were mostly solitary, although at intervals rough loghouses showed among the trees.
"Listen to that noise; we are getting near to some rapids," Mary said, putting up her hand.
"Near to the end of our journey as well, for we stop below the portage," Mr.Selincourt said, and then the boat swept round the bend, and they saw before them a long, straight stretch of river, with houses visible at the far end where the milky hue of the water showed the river boiling over the rocks.
"So that is Roaring Water Portage! Well, the place is as pretty as the name is musical.

I am very glad," Mary said with a deep sigh of content, and then she sat in silence while the boats swept up the last stretch of river, and the long, long journey was done.
The boatmen drew to the left bank, leaving the store and its outbuildings on the right.

Oily Dave had told them that their house stood to the left of the falls, and although they did not see it at the first moment of landing, the well-trodden path up from the water's edge showed that it must be near at hand.
"There it is.


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