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.
Writing things and reading things were not the same as doing things, and himself primarily a man of action, doing things was alone comprehensible.
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.
She reentered the room, and as she crossed it to her chair, he admired the way she walked, while the bronze slippers were maddening.
"I'd like to ask you several questions," he began immediately
"Are you thinking of marrying somebody?"
She laughed merrily and shook her head.
"Do you like anybody else more than you like me?—that man at the 'phone just now, for instance?"
"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."
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.
"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?"
But Dede had herself well in hand.
"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?"
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.
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.