The Keeper of the Door - LightNovelsOnl.com
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But I've wondered often what you meant by that."
"Great Scott!" said Noel, with a frown of bewilderment. "What night?
What were we talking about?"
She explained with a touch of embarra.s.sment. "It was the night I arrived. Don't you remember I came upon you hearing her say her prayers?--in fact you were saying them with her. I liked you for doing that," she said simply.
"Thank you," said Noel with equal simplicity. "I remember now. The kiddie said something about it being wicked to kill people, didn't she?"
"Yes. And you said--it was just before I interrupted you--you said that sometimes it was the only thing to do."
Noel nodded. "I remember. Well, can't you imagine that? Don't you agree that when a man is fighting for his country, or in defence of someone, he is justified in slaying his enemies?"
Olga was frowning also, the old, troubled frown of perplexity. "Oh, of course, when you put it like that," she said; then put her hand to her head with a puzzled air. "But that wasn't quite what I meant."
"What did you mean?" said Noel.
She shook her head. "I don't quite know. It's difficult to express things. Whenever I try to discuss anything I always seem to lose the thread."
Noel grinned boyishly. "Good for me! You'd jolly soon floor me if you didn't. Look at that parroquet, I say! He flashes like an emerald, and see that imp of a monkey! He's actually daring to rebuke us for trespa.s.sing. I call this road a disgrace to the State, don't you? If I were the Rajah--by the way, the Rajah isn't coming, is he?"
Olga thought it possible. She knew he had been asked, but he had not returned any definite reply. She hoped he would be prevented.
"Oh, don't you like him?" said Noel. "I detest him myself. That's partly why I'm so keen on smas.h.i.+ng his team to-morrow. He's a slippery customer, he and that wily old dog Kobad s.h.i.+kan. They'd erupt, the two of them, if they dared and overwhelm us all. But--they daren't!" And Noel turned his face upwards, and laughed an exceeding British laugh.
"I wonder how you know these things," said Olga, watching him.
"What? I don't know 'em of course. I'm only a.s.suming," said Noel. "I only play about on the surface, as it were, and draw my own conclusions as to the depths. It's quite a fascinating game, and n.o.body's any the worse or the wiser."
"And you think Kobad s.h.i.+kan untrustworthy?" questioned Olga.
"My dear girl, could anyone with any sense whatever think him anything else? Could he have run the show for so many years if he had been anything less than a crafty old schemer? Oh, you bet he hasn't been Prime Minister and Lord High Treasurer all this time for nothing. What does Nick think of him?"
"Nick never discusses any of them." Olga was considerably astonished by these revelations. "I thought it was fairly plain sailing," she said.
"Did you though? Well, Nick is a genius, as everyone knows. He is probably in the thick of everything, and knows all that goes on. He'll be a C.S.I. before he's done."
"Oh, do you think so?" said Olga, with s.h.i.+ning eyes.
"Rather! It's pretty evident. You wait till old Reggie comes along, and ask him. He is a great backer of Nick's. So am I," said Noel modestly.
"I'd back him against all the Kobad s.h.i.+kans in the Empire."
This, as Noel had doubtless foreseen, proved a fruitful topic of conversation and lasted them during a considerable part of their drive.
Nearly the whole of the way lay through the jungle, here and there narrowing to little more than a track over which great forest-trees stretched their boughs. It was all new country to Olga, and the quiet, sunless depths as they advanced, held her awe-struck, spellbound. She gazed into the thick undergrowth with half-fearful curiosity. Once, at a sudden loud flapping of wings, she started and changed colour.
"There must be so many wild things there," she said.
"Teeming with 'em," said Noel. "We've come along at a rattling pace.
Shall we pull up and wait for the rest to turn up?"
But Olga did not want to linger on the jungle-road. "Besides we've got most of the provisions," she pointed out. "And I want to get things arranged a little before anyone comes."
They pressed on, therefore, past glades, obscure and gloomy, where the flying-foxes hung in branches from the trees, and the little striped squirrels leaped and scuttled from bough to bough, where the blue jays laughed with abandoned mirth and the parroquets squabbled unceasingly, and cunning monkey-faces peered forth, grimaced, and vanished.
"This place is full of critics," declared Noel. "Can't you feel the nasty remarks they're making?"
Olga laughed and slightly s.h.i.+vered. "It isn't a very genial atmosphere, is it? But I think we must be nearly there. Doesn't that look like a break in the trees ahead?"
She was right. They were coming to a clearing in the jungle. Gradually it opened before them. The trees gave place to shrubs, and the shrubs to tall _kutcha_-gra.s.s which Olga viewed with deep suspicion.
"How easily a tiger could hide there!" she said.
Noel laughed aloud. "I daresay the brute's a myth, but in any case they never come out in the day-time. Are you really nervous, or only pretending?"
She was not pretending, but she did not tell him so. The _kutcha_-gra.s.s was very thick, quite impenetrable. It stretched like a solid wall on each side of them for a considerable distance--a choked wilderness of coa.r.s.e weed that grew higher than their heads.
"I say, what a charming spot!" said Noel. "Did Nick choose it for the scenery, do you think, or the excellence of the road?"
They were b.u.mping in and out of dusty holes with a violence that threatened repeatedly to overturn them altogether.
Olga laughed rather hysterically. "I'm sure the champagne will be quite unmanageable after all this shaking up. And just look what a lather your horse is in!"
"It's a case of the wicked uncle and the lost babes over again,"
declared Noel. "It also smacks of _The Pilgrim's Progress_. Old Bunyan would have made some good copy out of this. He'd have dubbed you Mistress Timorous and me Master Overbold."
Olga laughed again more naturally. Noel could be very wholesome and rea.s.suring when he liked.
"And this beastly jungle-gra.s.s," he proceeded, "is the Wilderness of Nasty Possibilities. Hold up, Tinker, my lad, and get out of it as fast as you can!"
Tinker was obviously most anxious to comply. He bent all his sweating energies to the task. The road--if such it could be called--bent in a wide curve through the high gra.s.s. As they gradually rounded this, it became evident that that stage of the journey was nearly over. The thick walls opened out. They had a glimpse of wider country ahead dotted with mango-trees.
"Hooray!" sang out Noel. "We return to civilization!"
But it was not a very populous civilization which they were approaching.
They came within view of a domed temple indeed, but it was a temple set among ruins. There was no sign of any inhabitant, near or far.
"There's a well somewhere," said Olga. "Nick said we were to camp there."
"So be it!" said Noel. "It's Nick's funeral. Let us find his precious well!"
They emerged from the jungle-road with relief, and approached a group of mango-trees. These led in a somewhat broken grove to the temple which stood amidst stunted palms and cypresses. The mid-day sun was fierce, and the shade of the mangoes was welcome. For about a hundred yards they travelled over a road that was nearly choked by stones and gra.s.s, and then somewhat unexpectedly they discovered the well.
It was plainly very ancient, its round stone mouth crumbling with age.
All about it and over its edges grew the coa.r.s.e gra.s.s. It must have been many years since native women had foregathered there to discuss the affairs of forgotten Khantali. Above it, on rising ground, stood the temple, domed, mysterious, deserted.
"A place for satyrs to dance in, what?" suggested Noel. "We ought to have come here by moonlight. Let's get down and investigate. The others can't be far behind."
"Yes, let us fix on a place before they come!" said Olga. "It will save such a lot of discussion."
"Excellent notion! I'll tie up Tinker to one of these trees. I don't call this a very promising site for a bean-feast," said Noel, wrinkling his nose. "It's so beastly stuffy."