Daylight followed on her horse and watched.
He saw her check the animal quickly to a standstill, and immediately, with rein across neck and a decisive prod of the left spur, whirl him back the way he had come and almost as swiftly.
"Get ready to give him the quirt on the nose," Daylight called.
But, too quickly for her, Bob whirled again, though this time, by a severe effort, she saved herself from the undignified position against his neck.
His bolt was more determined, but she pulled him into a prancing walk, and turned him roughly back with her spurred heel.
There was nothing feminine in the way she handled him; her method was imperative and masculine.
Had this not been so, Daylight would have expected her to say she had had enough.
But that little preliminary exhibition had taught him something of Dede's quality.
And if it had not, a glance at her gray eyes, just perceptibly angry with herself, and at her firm-set mouth, would have told him the same thing.
Daylight did not suggest anything, while he hung almost gleefully upon her actions in anticipation of what the fractious Bob was going to get.
And Bob got it, on his next whirl, or attempt, rather, for he was no more than halfway around when the quirt met him smack on his tender nose. There and then, in his bewilderment, surprise, and pain, his fore feet, just skimming above the road, dropped down.
"Great!" Daylight applauded.
"A couple more will fix him.
He's too smart not to know when he's beaten."
Again Bob tried.
But this time he was barely quarter around when the doubled quirt on his nose compelled him to drop his fore feet to the road.
Then, with neither rein nor spur, but by the mere threat of the quirt, she straightened him out.
Dede looked triumphantly at Daylight.
"Let me give him a run?" she asked.
Daylight nodded, and she shot down the road.
He watched her out of sight around the bend, and watched till she came into sight returning.
She certainly could sit her horse, was his thought, and she was a sure enough hummer.
God, she was the wife for a man!
Made most of them look pretty slim.
And to think of her hammering all week at a typewriter.
That was no place for her.
She should be a man's wife, taking it easy, with silks and satins and diamonds (his frontier notion of what befitted a wife beloved), and dogs, and horses, and such things—"And we'll see, Mr. Burning Daylight, what you and me can do about it," he murmured to himself! and aloud to her:—
"You'll do, Miss Mason; you'll do.
There's nothing too good in horseflesh you don't deserve, a woman who can ride like that.
No; stay with him, and we'll jog along to the quarry."
He chuckled.
"Say, he actually gave just the least mite of a groan that last time you fetched him.
Did you hear it?
And did you see the way he dropped his feet to the road—just like he'd struck a stone wall.
And he's got savvee enough to know from now on that that same stone wall will be always there ready for him to lam into."
When he parted from her that afternoon, at the gate of the road that led to Berkeley, he drew off to the edge of the intervening clump of trees, where, unobserved, he watched her out of sight.
Then, turning to ride back into Oakland, a thought came to him that made him grin ruefully as he muttered:
"And now it's up to me to make good and buy that blamed quarry.
Nothing less than that can give me an excuse for snooping around these hills."
But the quarry was doomed to pass out of his plans for a time, for on the following Sunday he rode alone.
No Dede on a chestnut sorrel came across the back-road from Berkeley that day, nor the day a week later.
Daylight was beside himself with impatience and apprehension, though in the office he contained himself.
He noted no change in her, and strove to let none show in himself.
The same old monotonous routine went on, though now it was irritating and maddening.
Daylight found a big quarrel on his hands with a world that wouldn't let a man behave toward his stenographer after the way of all men and women.
What was the good of owning millions anyway? he demanded one day of the desk-calendar, as she passed out after receiving his dictation.
As the third week drew to a close and another desolate Sunday confronted him, Daylight resolved to speak, office or no office.
And as was his nature, he went simply and directly to the point She had finished her work with him, and was gathering her note pad and pencils together to depart, when he said:—
"Oh, one thing more, Miss Mason, and I hope you won't mind my being frank and straight out.
You've struck me right along as a sensible-minded girl, and I don't think you'll take offence at what I'm going to say.