“Don't, Carl!” she cried, “I don't want to know!”
“You're a sweet girl, Ruth,” he said, tenderly, touching her hand to his lips. “Father died when I was ten or twelve years old and I can't remember him very well, though I have one picture, taken a little while before he was married. He was a moody, silent man, who hardly ever spoke to any one. I know now that he was broken-hearted. I can't remember even the tones of his voice, but only one or two little peculiarities. He couldn't bear the smell of lavender and the sight of any shade of purple actually made him suffer. It was very strange.
“I've picked up what education I have,” he went on. “I have nothing to give you, Ruth, but these—” he held out his hands—“and my heart.”
“That's all I want, dearest—don't tell me any more!”
A bell rang cheerily, and, when they went in, Aunt Jane welcomed him with apparent cordiality, though a close observer might have detected a tinge of suspicion. She liked the ring on Ruth's finger, which she noticed for the first time. “It's real pretty, ain't it, James?” she asked.
“Yes'm, 't is so.”
“It's just come to my mind now that you never give me no ring except this here one we was married with. I guess we'd better take some of that two hundred dollars you've got sewed up in that unchristian belt you insist on wearin' and get me a ring like Ruth's, and use the rest for furniture, don't you think so?”
“Yes'm,” he replied. “Ring and furniture—or anythin' you'd like.”
“James is real indulgent,” she said to Winfield, with a certain modest pride which was at once ludicrous and pathetic.
“He should be, Mrs. Ball,” returned the young man, gallantly.