"In April! But that"s aeons away!" protested Olga.
His eyes looked down into hers, and the old gleam which once she had taken for mockery hovered there. Her own eyes flickered and sank before it. There was something quick and fiery in it that she could not meet.
"I"ll take you back with me," he said, "if you will come."
She started a little. "Oh, no!" she said.
"Why "Oh, no"?" he enquired.
She was silent for a moment, her face downcast. "I couldn"t leave Nick--possibly--out here," she said then.
"Why not? Can"t the little G.o.d take care of himself?"
"No. And I wouldn"t let him if he could. I shouldn"t feel easy about him. He--he--I feel as if he is trying to walk a tight rope every day."
"It"s a sort of thing he ought to do very well, I should say," observed Max. "But what is he doing it for?"
She looked up. "He thinks he is getting on splendidly," she said. "He and the Rajah are such friends! But the Rajah isn"t everybody, and I"m not sure even of him. Someone tried to blow up the fort with a bomb not so very long ago."
"Oh, that"s the game, is it?" said Max. "You think a similar little joke might be played on Nick, and if so you want to be there to see."
She smiled faintly, in a sense relieved that he did not treat the matter too seriously. "It makes one a little nervous for him," she said, "though of course there may be no reason for it."
"I see," said Max. "It"s just a nightmare, is it?"
He was watching her intently, and under his look her heart quickened a little.
"It may be all nonsense, yes," she admitted. "But in any case I won"t leave Nick out here. He is in my special charge."
He laughed. "Well, there"s no appealing against that. You will be home in April then. Will you marry me on Midsummer Day?"
Olga"s eyelids flickered and fell. "I must think about it," she said.
He pinched her cheek. "Say Yes," he said.
She turned her face impulsively; her lips just touched his hand. "I wonder if I shall, Max," she said.
"Say Yes," he repeated, still softly but with insistence.
She leaned her head against him. "I"d like to say Yes," she said. "But somehow--somehow--I have a feeling that--that--"
"My dear," said Max very practically, "don"t be silly!"
She turned and clung to him very tightly. "Max, I--I"ve got something--on my mind."
His arm, very steady and strong, grew close about her. "Tell me!" he said.
Haltingly she complied. "You will think me morbid. I can"t help it. Max, all last night--all last night--I felt as if--as if a spirit were with me--calling--calling--calling, trying to make me understand something, trying to--to warn me--of some danger--I couldn"t see."
She broke off in tears. It seemed impossible to put the thing into words. It was so intangible yet in her eyes so portentous. Max"s hand was on her head, stilling her agitation. She wondered if he thought her very absurd, but he did not leave her long in doubt.
"There"s nothing to cry about, my dear," he said. "Your nerves were a bit strung up after the tiger episode, that"s all. They will quiet down in a day or two. All the same"--his hand pressed a little--"I"m glad you told me. A trouble shared is only half a trouble, is it? And I have a right to all your troubles now."
He took her handkerchief, and dried her eyes with the utmost kindness; then turned her face gently upwards.
"Is that quite all?" he asked.
She tried to smile, with quivering lips.
"Not quite?" he questioned. "Come, I may as well know, mayn"t I?"
"I don"t know that there is anything gained by telling you," she said.
"You never liked talking about your cases to me."
He frowned a little. "My dear girl, what particular case is it you have on your mind?"
She hesitated. "You won"t be vexed?"
"Vexed? No!" he said; but he continued to frown slightly notwithstanding.
"I hope you won"t be," Olga said, "because I simply can"t argue about it. Max, I sometimes think to myself that if--you hadn"t known--and Violet hadn"t come to know--about--about her mother--things might have been--very different."
"Meaning I should have fallen in love with her?" said Max.
She nodded. "It may be a breach of confidence, but--I think I"ll tell you now. Max, she cared for you."
She spoke the words with an effort, her eyes turned from him. Perhaps she was afraid that she might encounter cynicism in the vigilant green eyes, and she could not have endured it at that moment.
But at least there was none in his voice when he said: "Yes, I know she did. That was what made her hate me so badly afterwards. I am very sorry, Olga; but, for your comfort let me tell you this. I should never--under any circ.u.mstances--have come to care for her. You won"t like me for saying it, but she was never more to me than a very interesting case, and, apart from medical investigation, she would simply not have existed so far as I was concerned. She didn"t appeal to me."
Olga winced a little. "Oh, Max, but she was so beautiful!" she urged wistfully.
He made a slight gesture of impatience. "I don"t dispute it. But what of it? My brain is not the sort to be turned by beauty. There was too much of it for my taste. She was exotic. That type of beauty gives me indigestion."
Olga looked at him reproachfully. "You didn"t like her, Max?"
"Not much," said Max.
She made a movement as if she would withdraw herself from him, but he quietly and very resolutely held her still. "Although you knew she cared for you!" she said.
"Yes, in spite of that;" said Max. "In fact, I felt a bit vexed with her for complicating matters in that fashion. Goodness knows I never gave her the smallest reason for it!"
Olga laughed faintly, with an unwonted touch of bitterness. "It"s a pity women are such doting fools," she said.
He looked at her attentively. "Did you say that?" he asked.
She met his look, not without defiance. "Yes, and I meant it too. It"s such a wicked waste. And I think--- I think--in her case it was something far worse. I believe it was that which in a very great measure helped to unhinge her mind."
"How could I help it?" demanded Max almost fierily. "I never wanted her to care."