<SPAN name="chap0218"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XVIII </h3>
<p>Daylight had been wholly truthful when he told Dede that he had no real
friends. On speaking terms with thousands, on fellowship and drinking
terms with hundreds, he was a lonely man. He failed to find the one
man, or group of several men, with whom he could be really intimate.
Cities did not make for comradeship as did the Alaskan trail. Besides,
the types of men were different. Scornful and contemptuous of business
men on the one hand, on the other his relations with the San Francisco
bosses had been more an alliance of expediency than anything else. He
had felt more of kinship for the franker brutality of the bosses and
their captains, but they had failed to claim any deep respect. They
were too prone to crookedness. Bonds were better than men's word in
this modern world, and one had to look carefully to the bonds.</p>
<p>In the old Yukon days it had been different. Bonds didn't go. A man
said he had so much, and even in a poker game his appeasement was
accepted.</p>
<p>Larry Hegan, who rose ably to the largest demands of Daylight's
operations and who had few illusions and less hypocrisy, might have
proved a chum had it not been for his temperamental twist. Strange
genius that he was, a Napoleon of the law, with a power of visioning
that far exceeded Daylight's, he had nothing in common with Daylight
outside the office. He spent his time with books, a thing Daylight
could not abide. Also, he devoted himself to the endless writing of
plays which never got beyond manuscript form, and, though Daylight only
sensed the secret taint of it, was a confirmed but temperate eater of
hasheesh. Hegan lived all his life cloistered with books in a world of
agitation. With the out-of-door world he had no understanding nor
tolerance. In food and drink he was abstemious as a monk, while
exercise was a thing abhorrent. Daylight's friendships, in lieu of
anything closer, were drinking friendships and roistering friendships.
And with the passing of the Sunday rides with Dede, he fell back more
and more upon these for diversion. The cocktail wall of inhibition he
reared more assiduously than ever.</p>
<p>The big red motor-car was out more frequently now, while a stable hand
was hired to give Bob exercise. In his early San Francisco days, there
had been intervals of easement between his deals, but in this present
biggest deal of all the strain was unremitting. Not in a month, or two,
or three, could his huge land investment be carried to a successful
consummation. And so complete and wide-reaching was it that
complications and knotty situations constantly arose. Every day
brought its problems, and when he had solved them in his masterful way,
he left the office in his big car, almost sighing with relief at
anticipation of the approaching double Martini. Rarely was he made
tipsy. His constitution was too strong for that. Instead, he was that
direst of all drinkers, the steady drinker, deliberate and controlled,
who averaged a far higher quantity of alcohol than the irregular and
violent drinker. For six weeks hard-running he had seen nothing of
Dede except in the office, and there he resolutely refrained from
making approaches. But by the seventh Sunday his hunger for her
overmastered him. It was a stormy day.</p>
<p>A heavy southeast gale was blowing, and squall after squall of rain and
wind swept over the city. He could not take his mind off of her, and a
persistent picture came to him of her sitting by a window and sewing
feminine fripperies of some sort. When the time came for his first
pre-luncheon cocktail to be served to him in his rooms, he did not take
it.</p>
<p>Filled with a daring determination, he glanced at his note book for
Dede's telephone number, and called for the switch.</p>
<p>At first it was her landlady's daughter who was raised, but in a minute
he heard the voice he had been hungry to hear.</p>
<p>"I just wanted to tell you that I'm coming out to see you," he said.
"I didn't want to break in on you without warning, that was all."</p>
<p>"Has something happened?" came her voice.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you when I get there," he evaded.</p>
<p>He left the red car two blocks away and arrived on foot at the pretty,
three-storied, shingled Berkeley house. For an instant only, he was
aware of an inward hesitancy, but the next moment he rang the bell. He
knew that what he was doing was in direct violation of her wishes, and
that he was setting her a difficult task to receive as a Sunday caller
the multimillionaire and notorious Elam Harnish of newspaper fame. On
the other hand, the one thing he did not expect of her was what he
would have termed "silly female capers."</p>
<p>And in this he was not disappointed.</p>
<p>She came herself to the door to receive him and shake hands with him.
He hung his mackintosh and hat on the rack in the comfortable square
hall and turned to her for direction.</p>
<p>"They are busy in there," she said, indicating the parlor from which
came the boisterous voices of young people, and through the open door
of which he could see several college youths. "So you will have to
come into my rooms."</p>
<p>She led the way through the door opening out of the hall to the right,
and, once inside, he stood awkwardly rooted to the floor, gazing about
him and at her and all the time trying not to gaze. In his perturbation
he failed to hear and see her invitation to a seat. So these were her
quarters. The intimacy of it and her making no fuss about it was
startling, but it was no more than he would have expected of her. It
was almost two rooms in one, the one he was in evidently the
sitting-room, and the one he could see into, the bedroom. Beyond an
oaken dressing-table, with an orderly litter of combs and brushes and
dainty feminine knickknacks, there was no sign of its being used as a
bedroom. The broad couch, with a cover of old rose and banked high with
cushions, he decided must be the bed, but it was farthest from any
experience of a civilized bed he had ever had.</p>
<p>Not that he saw much of detail in that awkward moment of standing. His
general impression was one of warmth and comfort and beauty. There
were no carpets, and on the hardwood floor he caught a glimpse of
several wolf and coyote skins. What captured and perceptibly held his
eye for a moment was a Crouched Venus that stood on a Steinway upright
against a background of mountain-lion skin on the wall.</p>
<p>But it was Dede herself that smote most sharply upon sense and
perception. He had always cherished the idea that she was very much a
woman—the lines of her figure, her hair, her eyes, her voice, and
birdlike laughing ways had all contributed to this; but here, in her
own rooms, clad in some flowing, clinging gown, the emphasis of sex was
startling. He had been accustomed to her only in trim tailor suits and
shirtwaists, or in riding costume of velvet corduroy, and he was not
prepared for this new revelation. She seemed so much softer, so much
more pliant, and tender, and lissome. She was a part of this
atmosphere of quietude and beauty. She fitted into it just as she had
fitted in with the sober office furnishings.</p>
<p>"Won't you sit down?" she repeated.</p>
<p>He felt like an animal long denied food. His hunger for her welled up
in him, and he proceeded to "wolf" the dainty morsel before him. Here
was no patience, no diplomacy. The straightest, direct way was none
too quick for him and, had he known it, the least unsuccessful way he
could have chosen.</p>
<p>"Look here," he said, in a voice that shook with passion, "there's one
thing I won't do, and that's propose to you in the office. That's why
I'm here. Dede Mason, I want you. I just want you."</p>
<p>While he spoke he advanced upon her, his black eyes burning with bright
fire, his aroused blood swarthy in his cheek.</p>
<p>So precipitate was he, that she had barely time to cry out her
involuntary alarm and to step back, at the same time catching one of
his hands as he attempted to gather her into his arms.</p>
<p>In contrast to him, the blood had suddenly left her cheeks. The hand
that had warded his off and that still held it, was trembling. She
relaxed her fingers, and his arm dropped to his side. She wanted to
say something, do something, to pass on from the awkwardness of the
situation, but no intelligent thought nor action came into her mind.
She was aware only of a desire to laugh. This impulse was party
hysterical and partly spontaneous humor—the latter growing from
instant to instant. Amazing as the affair was, the ridiculous side of
it was not veiled to her. She felt like one who had suffered the terror
of the onslaught of a murderous footpad only to find out that it was an
innocent pedestrian asking the time.</p>
<p>Daylight was the quicker to achieve action. "Oh, I know I'm a sure
enough fool," he said. "I—I guess I'll sit down. Don't be scairt,
Miss Mason. I'm not real dangerous."</p>
<p>"I'm not afraid," she answered, with a smile, slipping down herself
into a chair, beside which, on the floor, stood a sewing-basket from
which, Daylight noted, some white fluffy thing of lace and muslin
overflowed. Again she smiled. "Though I confess you did startle me
for the moment."</p>
<p>"It's funny," Daylight sighed, almost with regret; "here I am, strong
enough to bend you around and tie knots in you. Here I am, used to
having my will with man and beast and anything. And here I am sitting
in this chair, as weak and helpless as a little lamb. You sure take
the starch out of me."</p>
<p>Dede vainly cudgeled her brains in quest of a reply to these remarks.
Instead, her thought dwelt insistently upon the significance of his
stepping aside, in the middle of a violent proposal, in order to make
irrelevant remarks. What struck her was the man's certitude. So
little did he doubt that he would have her, that he could afford to
pause and generalize upon love and the effects of love.</p>
<p>She noted his hand unconsciously slipping in the familiar way into the
side coat pocket where she knew he carried his tobacco and brown papers.</p>
<p>"You may smoke, if you want to," she said. He withdrew his hand with a
jerk, as if something in the pocket had stung him.</p>
<p>"No, I wasn't thinking of smoking. I was thinking of you. What's a man
to do when he wants a woman but ask her to marry him? That's all that
I'm doing. I can't do it in style. I know that. But I can use
straight English, and that's good enough for me. I sure want you
mighty bad, Miss Mason. You're in my mind 'most all the time, now.
And what I want to know is—well, do you want me? That's all."</p>
<p>"I—I wish you hadn't asked," she said softly.</p>
<p>"Mebbe it's best you should know a few things before you give me an
answer," he went on, ignoring the fact that the answer had already been
given. "I never went after a woman before in my life, all reports to
the contrary not withstanding. The stuff you read about me in the
papers and books, about me being a lady-killer, is all wrong. There's
not an iota of truth in it. I guess I've done more than my share of
card-playing and whiskey-drinking, but women I've let alone. There was
a woman that killed herself, but I didn't know she wanted me that bad
or else I'd have married her—not for love, but to keep her from
killing herself. She was the best of the boiling, but I never gave her
any encouragement. I'm telling you all this because you've read about
it, and I want you to get it straight from me.</p>
<p>"Lady-killer!" he snorted. "Why, Miss Mason, I don't mind telling you
that I've sure been scairt of women all my life. You're the first one
I've not been afraid of. That's the strange thing about it. I just
plumb worship you, and yet I'm not afraid of you. Mebbe it's because
you're different from the women I know. You've never chased me.
Lady-killer! Why, I've been running away from ladies ever since I can
remember, and I guess all that saved me was that I was strong in the
wind and that I never fell down and broke a leg or anything.</p>
<p>"I didn't ever want to get married until after I met you, and until a
long time after I met you. I cottoned to you from the start; but I
never thought it would get as bad as marriage. Why, I can't get to
sleep nights, thinking of you and wanting you."</p>
<p>He came to a stop and waited. She had taken the lace and muslin from
the basket, possibly to settle her nerves and wits, and was sewing upon
it. As she was not looking at him, he devoured her with his eyes. He
noted the firm, efficient hands—hands that could control a horse like
Bob, that could run a typewriter almost as fast as a man could talk,
that could sew on dainty garments, and that, doubtlessly, could play on
the piano over there in the corner. Another ultra-feminine detail he
noticed—her slippers. They were small and bronze. He had never
imagined she had such a small foot. Street shoes and riding boots were
all that he had ever seen on her feet, and they had given no
advertisement of this. The bronze slippers fascinated him, and to them
his eyes repeatedly turned.</p>
<p>A knock came at the door, which she answered. Daylight could not help
hearing the conversation. She was wanted at the telephone.</p>
<p>"Tell him to call up again in ten minutes," he heard her say, and the
masculine pronoun caused in him a flashing twinge of jealousy. Well,
he decided, whoever it was, Burning Daylight would give him a run for
his money. The marvel to him was that a girl like Dede hadn't been
married long since.</p>
<p>She came back, smiling to him, and resumed her sewing. His eyes
wandered from the efficient hands to the bronze slippers and back
again, and he swore to himself that there were mighty few stenographers
like her in existence. That was because she must have come of pretty
good stock, and had a pretty good raising. Nothing else could explain
these rooms of hers and the clothes she wore and the way she wore them.</p>
<p>"Those ten minutes are flying," he suggested.</p>
<p>"I can't marry you," she said.</p>
<p>"You don't love me?"</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>"Do you like me—the littlest bit?"</p>
<p>This time she nodded, at the same time allowing the smile of amusement
to play on her lips. But it was amusement without contempt. The
humorous side of a situation rarely appealed in vain to her.</p>
<p>"Well, that's something to go on," he announced. "You've got to make a
start to get started. I just liked you at first, and look what it's
grown into. You recollect, you said you didn't like my way of life.
Well, I've changed it a heap. I ain't gambling like I used to. I've
gone into what you called the legitimate, making two minutes grow where
one grew before, three hundred thousand folks where only a hundred
thousand grew before. And this time next year there'll be two million
eucalyptus growing on the hills. Say do you like me more than the
littlest bit?"</p>
<p>She raised her eyes from her work and looked at him as she answered:</p>
<p>"I like you a great deal, but—"</p>
<p>He waited a moment for her to complete the sentence, failing which, he
went on himself.</p>
<p>"I haven't an exaggerated opinion of myself, so I know I ain't bragging
when I say I'll make a pretty good husband. You'd find I was no hand
at nagging and fault-finding. I can guess what it must be for a woman
like you to be independent. Well, you'd be independent as my wife. No
strings on you. You could follow your own sweet will, and nothing
would be too good for you. I'd give you everything your heart
desired—"</p>
<p>"Except yourself," she interrupted suddenly, almost sharply.</p>
<p>Daylight's astonishment was momentary.</p>
<p>"I don't know about that. I'd be straight and square, and live true.
I don't hanker after divided affections."</p>
<p>"I don't mean that," she said. "Instead of giving yourself to your
wife, you would give yourself to the three hundred thousand people of
Oakland, to your street railways and ferry-routes, to the two million
trees on the hills to everything business—and—and to all that that
means."</p>
<p>"I'd see that I didn't," he declared stoutly. "I'd be yours to
command."</p>
<p>"You think so, but it would turn out differently." She suddenly became
nervous. "We must stop this talk. It is too much like attempting to
drive a bargain. 'How much will you give?' 'I'll give so much.' 'I
want more,' and all that. I like you, but not enough to marry you, and
I'll never like you enough to marry you."</p>
<p>"How do you know that?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"Because I like you less and less."</p>
<p>Daylight sat dumfounded. The hurt showed itself plainly in his face.</p>
<p>"Oh, you don't understand," she cried wildly, beginning to lose
self-control—"It's not that way I mean. I do like you; the more I've
known you the more I've liked you. And at the same time the more I've
known you the less would I care to marry you."</p>
<p>This enigmatic utterance completed Daylight's perplexity.</p>
<p>"Don't you see?" she hurried on. "I could have far easier married the
Elam Harnish fresh from Klondike, when I first laid eyes on him long
ago, than marry you sitting before me now."</p>
<p>He shook his head slowly. "That's one too many for me. The more you
know and like a man the less you want to marry him. Familiarity breeds
contempt—I guess that's what you mean."</p>
<p>"No, no," she cried, but before she could continue, a knock came on the
door.</p>
<p>"The ten minutes is up," Daylight said.</p>
<p>His eyes, quick with observation like an Indian's, darted about the
room while she was out. The impression of warmth and comfort and
beauty predominated, though he was unable to analyze it; while the
simplicity delighted him—expensive simplicity, he decided, and most of
it leftovers from the time her father went broke and died. He had
never before appreciated a plain hardwood floor with a couple of
wolfskins; it sure beat all the carpets in creation. He stared
solemnly at a bookcase containing a couple of hundred books. There was
mystery. He could not understand what people found so much to write
about.</p>
<p>Writing things and reading things were not the same as doing things,
and himself primarily a man of action, doing things was alone
comprehensible.</p>
<p>His gaze passed on from the Crouched Venus to a little tea-table with
all its fragile and exquisite accessories, and to a shining copper
kettle and copper chafing-dish. Chafing dishes were not unknown to
him, and he wondered if she concocted suppers on this one for some of
those University young men he had heard whispers about. One or two
water-colors on the wall made him conjecture that she had painted them
herself. There were photographs of horses and of old masters, and the
trailing purple of a Burial of Christ held him for a time. But ever
his gaze returned to that Crouched Venus on the piano. To his homely,
frontier-trained mind, it seemed curious that a nice young woman should
have such a bold, if not sinful, object on display in her own room.
But he reconciled himself to it by an act of faith. Since it was Dede,
it must be eminently all right. Evidently such things went along with
culture. Larry Hegan had similar casts and photographs in his
book-cluttered quarters. But then, Larry Hegan was different. There
was that hint of unhealth about him that Daylight invariably sensed in
his presence, while Dede, on the contrary, seemed always so robustly
wholesome, radiating an atmosphere compounded of the sun and wind and
dust of the open road. And yet, if such a clean, healthy woman as she
went in for naked women crouching on her piano, it must be all right.
Dede made it all right. She could come pretty close to making anything
all right. Besides, he didn't understand culture anyway.</p>
<p>She reentered the room, and as she crossed it to her chair, he admired
the way she walked, while the bronze slippers were maddening.</p>
<p>"I'd like to ask you several questions," he began immediately "Are you
thinking of marrying somebody?"</p>
<p>She laughed merrily and shook her head.</p>
<p>"Do you like anybody else more than you like me?—that man at the
'phone just now, for instance?"</p>
<p>"There isn't anybody else. I don't know anybody I like well enough to
marry. For that matter, I don't think I am a marrying woman. Office
work seems to spoil one for that."</p>
<p>Daylight ran his eyes over her, from her face to the tip of a bronze
slipper, in a way that made the color mantle in her cheeks. At the
same time he shook his head sceptically.</p>
<p>"It strikes me that you're the most marryingest woman that ever made a
man sit up and take notice. And now another question. You see, I've
just got to locate the lay of the land. Is there anybody you like as
much as you like me?"</p>
<p>But Dede had herself well in hand.</p>
<p>"That's unfair," she said. "And if you stop and consider, you will
find that you are doing the very thing you disclaimed—namely, nagging.
I refuse to answer any more of your questions. Let us talk about other
things. How is Bob?"</p>
<p>Half an hour later, whirling along through the rain on Telegraph Avenue
toward Oakland, Daylight smoked one of his brown-paper cigarettes and
reviewed what had taken place. It was not at all bad, was his summing
up, though there was much about it that was baffling. There was that
liking him the more she knew him and at the same time wanting to marry
him less. That was a puzzler.</p>
<p>But the fact that she had refused him carried with it a certain
elation. In refusing him she had refused his thirty million dollars.
That was going some for a ninety dollar-a-month stenographer who had
known better ties. She wasn't after money, that was patent. Every
woman he had encountered had seemed willing to swallow him down for the
sake of his money. Why, he had doubled his fortune, made fifteen
millions, since the day she first came to work for him, and behold, any
willingness to marry him she might have possessed had diminished as his
money had increased.</p>
<p>"Gosh!" he muttered. "If I clean up a hundred million on this land
deal she won't even be on speaking terms with me."</p>
<p>But he could not smile the thing away. It remained to baffle him, that
enigmatic statement of hers that she could more easily have married the
Elam Harnish fresh from the Klondike than the present Elam Harnish.
Well, he concluded, the thing to do was for him to become more like
that old-time Daylight who had come down out of the North to try his
luck at the bigger game. But that was impossible. He could not set
back the flight of time. Wishing wouldn't do it, and there was no other
way. He might as well wish himself a boy again.</p>
<p>Another satisfaction he cuddled to himself from their interview. He had
heard of stenographers before, who refused their employers, and who
invariably quit their positions immediately afterward. But Dede had
not even hinted at such a thing. No matter how baffling she was, there
was no nonsensical silliness about her. She was level headed. But,
also, he had been level-headed and was partly responsible for this. He
hadn't taken advantage of her in the office. True, he had twice
overstepped the bounds, but he had not followed it up and made a
practice of it. She knew she could trust him. But in spite of all
this he was confident that most young women would have been silly
enough to resign a position with a man they had turned down. And
besides, after he had put it to her in the right light, she had not
been silly over his sending her brother to Germany.</p>
<p>"Gee!" he concluded, as the car drew up before his hotel. "If I'd only
known it as I do now, I'd have popped the question the first day she
came to work. According to her say-so, that would have been the proper
moment. She likes me more and more, and the more she likes me the less
she'd care to marry me! Now what do you think of that? She sure must
be fooling."</p>
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