“It isn’t me. It ain’t my fault. It sure ain’t, Jess,” he declared wistfully. “I’ve seen it. It’s there. My pore claim’s jest drowned with it. I’ll never find that gold now––not if I was to pump a year. It’s just bubbling up an’ up out o’ the bowels of the earth, an’––an’ Minky says I’ll have to set up pumps an’ things, an’ he’s goin’ to help me. So is Sunny Oak, an’ Toby, an’ Sandy, an’ he sez we’ll find the gold sure if we pump the oil. Sez it’s there, an’ I’ll be rich as Rockefeller an’ all them millionaires. But I can’t seem to see it, if the gold’s drownded in that messy, smelly oil. Maybe you ken see. You’re quicker’n me. You––”
But Jessie never let him finish.
“Oil?” she cried, her eyes swimming with tears of joy and gentle affection for the simple soul so incapable of grasping anything but his own single purpose. “Oil?” she cried. “Oh, Zip, don’t you understand? Don’t you see? It’s oil––coal-oil. You’ve been searching for gold and found oil. And there’s millions of dollars in coal-oil.”
But the little man’s face dropped.
“Seems a pity,” he said dispiritedly. “I could ’a’ swore ther’ was gold there––I sure could. I’d have found it, too––if the oil hadn’t washed us out. Bill thought so, too; an’ Bill was right smart. Guess we’ll find it, though, after we pumped the oil.”
Suddenly the woman reached out both arms and laid her hands upon his diminutive shoulders. Her eyes had grown very tender.
“Zip,” she cried gently, “Zip, I think God has been very good to me. He’s been kinder to me than He has been to you. You deserve His goodness; I don’t. And yet He’s given me a man with a heart of––of gold. He’s given me a man whose love I have trampled under-foot and flung away. He’s given me a man who, by his own simple honesty, his goodness, has shown me the road to perfect happiness. He’s given me all this in return for a sin that can never be wiped out––”
But suddenly Scipio freed himself from the gentle grasp of her restraining hands, and caught her in his arms.
“Don’t you––don’t you to say it, Jess,” he cried, all his great love shining in his eyes. His perplexity and regret were all gone now, and only had he thought of his love. “Don’t you to say nuthin’ against yourself. You’re my wife––my Jessie. An’ as long as I’ve got life I don’t want nothin’ else––but my Jessie. Say, gal, I do love you.”
“And––and––oh, if you can only believe me, Zip, I love you.”