He had her fairly. “Then you did read the letter.”
“Yes, sir, I read it—and for sheer, unmatched impudence I have never seen its like.”
“Now, I wish you would tell me what you really think,” he drawled.
Not being able, for reasons equestrian, to stamp her foot, she gave her bronco the spur.
When Collins again found conversation practicable, the Rocking Chair, a white adobe huddle in the moonlight, lay peacefully beneath them in the alley.
“It’s a right quaint old ranch, and it’s seen a heap of rough-and-tumble life in its day. If those old adobe bricks could tell stories, I expect they could put some of these romances out of business.” Miss Mackenzie’s covert glance questioned suspiciously what this diversion might mean.
“All this country’s interesting. Take Tucson now that burg is loaded to the roofs with live stories. It’s an all-right business town, too—the best in the territory,” he continued patriotically. “She ain’t so great as Douglas on ore or as Phoenix on lungers, but when it comes, to the git-up-and-git hustle, she’s there rounding up the trade from early morn till dine.”
He was still expatiating in a monologue with grave enthusiasm on the town of his choice, when they came to the pasture fence of the ranch.
“Some folks don’t like it—call it adobe-town, and say it’s full of greasers. Everybody to his taste, I say. Little old Tucson is good enough for me.”
She gave a queer little laugh as he talked. She had put a taboo on his love story herself, but she resented the perfectly unmoved good humor with which he seemed to be accepting her verdict. She made up her mind to punish him, but he gave her no chance. As he helped her to dismount, he said: