The Harvester laughed. He tipped his head again to see her face and suddenly grew quiet, for it was very serious.
"I am quite in earnest," she said. "I think the big dolls in the stores are beautiful, and I never owned only a teeny little one. All my life I've wanted a big doll as badly as I ever longed for anything that was not absolutely necessary to keep me alive. In fact, a doll is essential to a happy childhood. The mother instinct is so ingrained in a girl that if she doesn't have dolls to love, even as a baby, she is deprived of a part of her natural rights. It's a pitiful thing to have been the little girl in the picture who stands outside the window and gazes with longing soul at the doll she is anxious to own and can't ever have. Harvester, I was always that little girl. I am quite in earnest. I want a big, beautiful doll more than anything else."
As she talked the Girl's fingers were idly threading the Harvester's hair. His head lightly touched her knee, and she shifted her position to afford him a comfortable resting place. With a thrill of delight that shook him, the man laid his head in her lap and looked into the fire, his face glowing as a happy boy's.
"You shall have the loveliest doll that money can buy, Ruth," he promised. "What else do you want?"
"A roasted goose, plum pudding, and all those horrid indigestible things that Christmas stories always tell about; and popcorn balls, and candy, and everything I've always wanted and never had, and a long beautiful day with you. That's all!"
"Ruth, I'm so happy I almost wish I could go to Heaven right now before anything occurs to spoil this," said the Harvester.
The wheels of a car rattled across the bridge. He whirled to his knees, and put his arms around the Girl.
"Ruth," he said huskily. "I'll wager a thousand dollars I know what is coming. Hug me tight, quick! and give me the best kiss you can----any old kind of a one, so you touch my lips with yours before I've got to open that door and let in trouble."
The Girl threw her arms around his neck and with the imprint of her lips warm on his the Harvester crossed the room, and his heart dropped from the heights with a thud. He stepped out, closing the door behind him, and crossing the veranda, passed down the walk. He recognized the car as belonging to a garage in Onabasha, and in it sat two men, one of whom spoke.
"Are you David Langston?"
"Yes," said the Harvester.
"Did you send a couple of photographs to a New York detective agency a few days ago with inquiries concerning some parties you wanted located?"
"I did," said the Harvester. "But I was not expecting any such immediate returns."
"Your questions touched on a case that long has been in the hands of the agency, and they telegraphed the parties. The following day the people had a letter, giving them the information they required, from another source."
"That is where Uncle Henry showed his fine Spencerian hand," commented the Harvester. "It always will be a great satisfaction that I got my fist in first."
"Is Miss Jameson here?"
"No," said the Harvester. "My wife is at home. Her surname was Ruth Jameson, but we have been married since June. Did you wish to speak with Mrs. Langston?"
"I came for that purpose. My name is Kennedy.
I am the law partner and the closest friend of the young lady's grandfather. News of her location has prostrated her grandmother so that he could not leave her, and Iwas sent to bring the young woman."
"Oh!" said the Harvester. "Well you will have to interview her about that. One word first. She does not know that I sent those pictures and made that inquiry. One other word. She is just recovering from a case of fever, induced by wrong conditions of life before I met her. She is not so strong as she appears.
Understand you are not to be abrupt. Go very gently!
Her feelings and health must be guarded with extreme care."
The Harvester opened the door, and as she saw the stranger, the Girl's eyes widened, and she arose and stood waiting.
"Ruth," said the Harvester, "this is a man who has been ****** quite a search for you, and at last he has you located."
The Harvester went to the Girl's side, and put a reinforcing arm around her.
"Perhaps he brings you some news that will make life most interesting and very lovely for you. Will you shake hands with Mr. Kennedy?"
The Girl suddenly straightened to unusual height.
"I will hear why he has been ****** `quite a search for me,' and on whose authority he has me `located,' first," she said.
A diabolical grin crossed the face of the Harvester, and he took heart.
"Then please be seated, Mr. Kennedy," he said, "and we will talk over the matter. As I understand, you are a representative of my wife's people."
The Girl stared at the Harvester.
"Take your chair, Ruth, and meet this as a matter of course," he advised casually. "You always have known that some day it must come. You couldn't look in the face of those photographs of your mother in her youth and not realize that somewhere hearts were aching and breaking, and brains were busy in a search for her."
The Girl stood rigid.
"I want it distinctly understood," she said, "that Ihave no use on earth for my mother's people. They come too late. I absolutely refuse to see or to hold any communication with them."
"But young lady, that is very arbitrary!" cried Mr.
Kennedy. "You don't understand! They are a couple of old people, and they are slowly dying of broken hearts!"
"Not so badly broken or they wouldn't die slowly," commented the Girl grimly. "The heart that was really broken was my mother's. The torture of a starved, overworked body and hopeless brain was hers. There was nothing slow about her death, for she went out with only half a life spent, and much of that in acute agony, because of their negligence. David, you often have said that this is my home. I choose to take you at your word. Will you kindly tell this man that he is not welcome in this house, and I wish him to leave it at once?"
The Harvester stepped back, and his face grew very white.
"I can't, Ruth," he said gently.
"Why not?"
"Because I brought him here."