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Let her pity his limitations after a woman's immemorial fas.h.i.+on! How should she recognize the wisdom of the serpent which they veiled?
CHAPTER VI
CHRISTMAS MORNING
It was the strangest Christmas Day Olga had ever known, but she certainly had no time to be homesick.
She was roused by Nick scratching seductively at her window from the verandah, and, admitting him, she found him waiting to present a jeweller's box which contained a string of moonstones exquisitely set in silver. It was one of the most beautiful things she had ever seen, and she was delighted with it.
Through the medium of her _ayah_ she had purchased a carved sandal-wood box from the bazaar for Nick, which she now presented, modestly hoping he didn't hate the smell.
"I adore it," declared Nick, sniffing it loudly. "It's just the East to me. I shall steep my ties in it. Many thanks, Olga _mia!_ Thine ancient uncle values the gift for the sake of the giver." He kissed her, and sat down on the edge of the bed, dangling his feet in a pair of violently coloured Oriental slippers. "I see His Excellency has sent us a thing like a clothes-basket full of fruit. Very kind of him, but a trifle overwhelming. There is no mail in yet, but some local parcels have arrived which the _khit_ is sorting with the face of a judge. Ah, here comes your little lot!" as the _ayah_ softly opened the door. "Shall I remove myself?"
"Of course not, Nick! Smoke a cigarette while I open them. They can't be anything very much."
The _ayah,_ smiling broadly, laid two parcels on the table by Olga's bedside. A third one, which was very small, she dropped with a mysterious gesture into her hand.
"What can this be?" questioned Olga. "Sambaji, what is it?"
But Sambaji shook her head. "Miss _sahib,_ how should I know?"
Olga suddenly turned crimson. She held out the tiny packet to Nick.
"You open it!" she said. "I'm sure it's something I don't want."
Nick made no movement to take it! "Sorry, dear. Two hands are better than one," he said.
Sambaji withdrew, still smiling.
Olga looked at the thing in the palm of her hand. She was trembling a little. "I don't want it, Nick," she said almost piteously.
Nick was heartless enough to laugh.
"Don't!" she pleaded, real distress in her tone. "Can't I send it back unopened?"
"Whom do you propose to send it to?" asked Nick, still chuckling.
She smiled faintly in spite of herself. "It's pretty certain where it comes from, isn't it?"
"Is it?" said Nick.
"Well, isn't it?" she persisted, still dubiously eyeing the unwelcome gift.
"I really can't say. But I don't see why you should be afraid of it in any case. To judge by the size of it, I shouldn't say it could be a very dangerous explosive."
She smiled again with obvious reluctance, and began to study the address on the packet. It was written in a very minute hand.
There followed a pause; then with abrupt resolution Olga's fingers began to work at the outer covering.
Nick watched her, amus.e.m.e.nt on his yellow face. "I'm not quite sure that two hands are better than one when they shake like that," he observed.
"Ah, here comes the dedication!" as a tiny strip of paper fluttered from Olga's fingers. "It reminds me--vividly--of my own courts.h.i.+p. Quite sure you don't want me to go?"
"Nick!" she protested, with burning cheeks. "It's very horrid of you to laugh. Do you know what it is?"
"I can almost guess," he said, as a small leather case emerged from the paper. "I've seen 'em before."
Olga opened the case. It was lined with white velvet, and in the centre of it there flashed and glittered a diamond and emerald ring.
"Hullo!" said Nick.
Olga looked up at him with gleaming eyes. "Nick! How--how dare he!"
"It is pretty daring certainly," agreed Nick. "It's a valuable trifle--that."
Olga closed the case with a resolute snap. "I shall send it back at once."
"Hadn't you better read the dedication?" suggested Nick.
She took up the strip of paper, stretched it out, frowned at it. The writing on this also was minute. After a moment she read it out. "'_Dum spiro spero. N.W.'_ Just as I thought!"
"Do you know what it means?" asked Nick.
She shook her head vigorously. "And I don't want to know."
"Oh, that's a pity," he said. "Pray let me enlighten your ignorance. It means, '_While I breathe I hope_'--a very proper sentiment which does the young man infinite credit."
"I can't imagine how you can laugh," said Olga fierily, tearing the strip to fragments. "Can't you see I'm really angry?"
"My dear child, that's why!" chuckled Nick. "It's the best thing I've seen for a long time. The young man has all my grat.i.tude. He has done more for my little pal than I with the best intentions could ever do myself."
She stretched out her hand to him then with a little smile. "Nick, you silly old boy! Well, tell me what to do!"
"Quite sure you don't like him?" questioned Nick.
"No. I do like him." Olga's smile deepened. "But I think it was outrageous of him to send me this thing. And I shall have to tell him so."
"I should," said Nick. "You will have ample opportunities when we get to Khantali. Take the thing with you and give it back to him there.
Afterwards, if it seems necessary, I'll tell him to moderate the pace if you like. But the boy's a gentleman. I don't think it will be necessary." He smiled at her quizzically. "I knew it was coming, Olga _mia_. I can smell a love affair fifty miles away. But I shouldn't be persuaded to have him if I were you. He's altogether too young for matrimony by about ten years. Let him wait for Peggy Musgrave to grow up. He will be of a marriageable age by that time."
Olga laughed, and turned to her other parcels. Nick's worldly wisdom struck her as being a little funny when she knew herself to be so infinitely wiser than he.
She found the two remaining packets to contain presents from the Musgraves, some beautiful Indian embroidery from Daisy and a pair of little Hindu G.o.ds in carved ivory from Will. Nick stopped to admire these, and then betook himself to his own room to dress.
Left alone, Olga took up the ring-case once more, and slowly opened it.