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"You mean it would be no good to discuss it with Nick?" said Daisy.
Hunt-Goring looked at the end of his cigarette. "Perhaps I do mean that," he said. "He would probably prevent it coming to Olga's knowledge if he had set his heart on the match."
"He couldn't prevent my telling her," said Daisy quickly.
"No?" Hunt-Goring gave utterance to his silky laugh. "Well," he said, "my experience of Nick Ratcliffe is not a very extensive one; but I should certainly say that he knows how to get his own way in most things. Perhaps you have never come into collision with him?"
Daisy coloured suddenly, and was silent.
Hunt-Goring laughed again. "You see my point, I perceive," he remarked.
"Well, I leave the matter in your hands, but--if you really wish to warn the girl, I should not warn Nick Ratcliffe first."
He spoke impressively, notwithstanding his laugh. And Daisy accepted his advice in silence.
Much as she loved Nick, she knew but too well how a struggle with him would end, and she shrank from risking a conflict. Besides, there was Olga to be thought of. She resumed her sewing with a puckered brow.
Certainly Olga must be warned.
There might be no truth in the story, but then rumours of that description never started themselves. And Max Wyndham--well she had been prejudiced against him from the beginning in spite of the fact that Nick was all in his favour. He was ruthless and unscrupulous; she was sure of it. How he had ever managed to win Olga was a perpetual puzzle to her.
Perhaps he really was magnetic, as Nick had said. But she believed it to be an evil magnetism. As a lover, he was the coolest she had ever seen.
"Altogether objectionable," had been her verdict from the outset.
And now came this monstrous tale to confirm her previous opinion.
Impulsively Daisy decided that Olga must not be left in ignorance.
Marriage was too great a speculation for any risk of that kind to be justifiable. She felt she owed it to the girl to warn her--to save her from a possible life-long misery. These things had such a ghastly knack of turning up afterwards. And Olga was so young, so trusting--
"Are you going to take my advice?" asked Hunt-Goring.
She looked up with a start. "What advice?"
"As to maintaining a discreet silence," he said.
His eyes were half-closed; she could not detect the narrowness of his scrutiny.
"No," she answered. "I shall certainly speak to Olga. It wouldn't be right--it wouldn't be fair--not to do so." Her look was suddenly appealing. "There is a free-masonry among women as well as men," she said. "We must keep faith with one another at least."
Hunt-Goring closed his eyes completely, and smiled a placid smile. "Dear Mrs. Musgrave," he said, "you are a true woman."
And she did not hear the note of exultation below the lazy appreciation of his words.
CHAPTER XV
THE SPREADING OF THE FLAME
Certainly Major Hunt-Goring was the last person Olga expected to meet at the Musgraves' dinner-party that night, and so astounded was she for the moment at the sight of him that she came to a sudden halt on the threshold of the drawing-room.
"Hullo!" murmured Max's voice behind her. "Here's a dear old friend!"
Max's hand gently pushed her forward, and in an instant she had mastered her astonishment. She met the dear old friend with heightened colour indeed, but with no other sign of agitation. He smiled upon her, upon Max, upon Nick, with equal geniality.
"Quite a gathering of old friends!" he remarked.
"Quite," said Nick. "Have you only just come out?"
"No, I've been out some weeks. I came after tiger," said Hunt-Goring, with his eyes on Olga, who had pa.s.sed on to her host.
"You won't find any in this direction," said Nick. "Wyndham bagged the last survivor on Christmas Day, and a mangy old brute it was."
"I daresay I shall come across other game," said Hunt-Goring, bringing his eyes slowly back to Nick.
Nick laughed. "It's not particularly plentiful here. You'll find it a waste of time hunting in these parts."
"Oh, I have plenty of time at my disposal," smiled Hunt-Goring.
Nick's eyes flickered over him. He also was smiling. "Perseverance deserves to be rewarded," he said.
"And usually is," said Hunt-Goring. He held out his hand to Max. "Ah, Dr. Wyndham, I'm delighted to meet you again. You will be gratified to hear that, thanks to your skilful treatment, my thumb has mended quite satisfactorily."
Max looked at the hand critically; he did not offer to take it. "I am--greatly gratified," he said.
Hunt-Goring withdrew it, still smiling. "May I congratulate you on your engagement," he said.
Max's mouth went down ironically. "Certainly if you feel so disposed,"
he said.
Hunt-Goring laughed easily. "You young fellows have all the luck," he said. "When do you expect to be married?"
"On Midsummer Day," said Max.
"Really!" Hunt-Goring's laugh was silken in its softness. "Your plans are all cut and dried then. Yet, you know, 'there's many a slip,' etc."
"Not under my management," said Max.
He looked hard and straight into the other man's eyes, and turned aside.
Nick had already joined his hostess, and was making gay conversation about nothing in particular.
Noel came in late, acknowledged everyone with a deep salaam, and attached himself instantly to Olga.
With relief she found that he was to take her in to dinner. He was in a mood of charming inconsequence, and under his easy guidance she gradually recovered from the shock of her enemy's appearance on the scene.
"I hear on the best authority that General Ba.s.sett is expected in a fortnight," he told her. "We are going to treat him royally. You ladies will have to work hard."
"Max will be on his way Home by then," said Olga, with a sigh.