"Don't you really know it?"
"Do you, really, Steve?"
There was a passionate second of assurance, a slight sigh; the little head warm on his shoulder, vague-eyed, serious, gazing out at the early April sunshine.
"Tell me about your little boy, Dad," she murmured presently.
"You know he isn't very little, Steve. He's fourteen, nearly fifteen."
"I forgot. Goodness!" she said softly and respectfully.
"He seems little to me," continued Cleland, "but he wouldn't like to be thought so. Little girls don't mind being considered youthful, do they?"
"Yes, they do! You are teasing me, Dad."
"Am I to understand that I have a ready-made, grown-up family, and no little child to comfort me?"
With a charming little sound in her throat like a young bird, she snuggled closer, pressing her cheek against his.