"When she died," said Aunt Emmy, "she was ill for a long time before, and I used to go and sit with her. She was fond of me, but she never quite did your Uncle Thomas justice. When she died she sent me this ring." She touched the beautiful emerald ring she always wore. "She said she had left it to him, and he had asked that she would send it to me. It had been her own engagement ring."
"Why don't you wear it on your engaged finger?"
"I did at first. It was a kind of comfort to me. But Uncle Tom was constantly vexed with me about it. He said it might keep things off. He is a very practical person, Uncle Tom, a very shrewd man of business, I'm told. So, to please him, I wear it in the daytime on my right hand."
By this time I was shedding tears of sheer sensibility.
"I have thought of him day and night; there has not been a night I have not remembered him in my prayers for nearly twenty years. It will be twenty years next April. How could I begin to think of any one else now, Colonel Stoddart or any one? Uncle Tom is very clever, and so is your Uncle Thomas, but I don't think they have ever quite understood what I feel about Mr. Kingston."
An electric bell in a little box over the door rang in a furious manner.
Aunt Emmy was on her feet in a second, smoothing her fair hair at the Venetian mirror.
"Your Uncle Thomas is awake," she said, "and is ready to be read to. He never likes being kept waiting."
This seemed to be the case, for as she left the room the electric bell rang again more furiously than before, and I shook my fist at it.